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    California National Guard's combined arms battalion displays their might in the Mojave Desert

    California's only National Guard armored unit displays their might during maneuvers at Fort Irwin's National Training Center

    Photo By Sgt. Nevada Jack Smith | Bradley Fighting Vehicles belonging to the 1st Battalion, 185th Armor (Combined Arms...... read more read more

    FORT IRWIN, CA, UNITED STATES

    11.05.2011

    Story by Spc. Nevada Jack Smith 

    69th Public Affairs Detachment

    FORT IRWIN, Calif. — In the immense barren landscape of the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, Calif., hulking armored machines belonging to the California Army National Guard’s 1st Battalion, 185th Armor Battalion, grind and clank as their heavy steel tracks churn up the Mojave Desert. The sharp cracks of M4 Carbine rifles echo off the surrounding hills. These noises blended with a biting wind and pouring rain were the sights and sounds that flooded the senses, as citizen-soldiers from the Golden State sent volleys of bullets down range during weapons qualification and ripped up the terrain in their Bradley Fighting Vehicles running maneuver exercises.

    This armored legion, which has 16 subordinate units commanded by its Headquarters and Headquarters Company out of San Bernardino, is the largest battalion in the California Army National Guard and its only armor unit. It supports a myriad of military occupational specialties such as tanker, mechanic, sniper, artillery and infantry, giving the unit the additional designation of a combined arms battalion, or CAB. All those elements were on hand Nov. 4-5, on Fort Irwin to showcase their capabilities at the Army’s premier training ground.

    The training started early Friday as troops fired their rifles on the qualification range.

    “Shooting is a perishable skill,” said Sgt. Thomas Wituschek, an infantryman and senior sniper for HHC. “You don’t get to use these skills every day, but they are the most critical skills a soldier needs to survive, because at the end of the day, you are a rifleman first. And that’s why it’s so important to come out here and train.”

    Though the soldiers had to shoot in poor weather Friday, it did nothing to dampen their excitement to get out of the armory and get some field time under their belts.

    “I’m proud to be here and be a part of this organization,” said the Ramona, Calif., native. “For some soldiers, coming to drill is a detriment to their pay. They make more as civilians but they want to serve anyway. That’s what makes me so proud, because here in California, it’s not just about showing up and shooting a rifle. The California National Guard will always have a mission, and we will always be ready to serve the state,” said Wituschek.

    “It may be cold out here, but we are still training because training is important,” said Pfc. Jesus Becerra, an infantryman and Cathedral City, Calif., resident.

    Luck was on the soldiers’ side on Saturday, which presented clear blue skies for the crews practicing with mortars.

    “We as artillery are essential combat multipliers,” said Staff Sgt. Gregory Bell, an 11C Mortarman with HHC, who lives in San Gabriel, Calif. “We have the ability to react to an enemy situation far faster than a Quick Reaction Force. Our ability to provide timely and accurate indirect fire can save Soldiers lives.”

    Another group of soldiers on Saturday rolled out their preferred weapon, the M2A3 Operation Desert Storm - Situational Awareness Bradley Infantry Fighting Vehicle, or more simply put, The Bradley.

    The tank killers operating the multi-ton, fast-moving behemoths had a chance to play in the biggest game of hide-and-seek in their lives as they conducted vehicle maneuver operations in the hot, 1,000-square-mile sandbox of the southern California High Desert on Fort Irwin.

    The game didn’t last long. A Bradley commander’s independent viewer enables him to scan for the enemy using both laser range-finder and direct-view optics without interfering with the gunner’s acquisition and engagement of targets. They hunt, they find, they kill.

    During the Gulf War, M2 Bradleys destroyed more Iraqi armored vehicles than the M1 Abrams battle tank.

    Sgt. Patrick Castillo, a 13F Forward Observer with an HHC fire support team, or FIST, said the new Bradleys are able to track the battle better than ever.

    “The gunner can laser a target without firing and giving away his position, and then the [forward observer] in the back can take that data and use it to call down [an air] strike,” said Castillo, who calls Watsonville, Calif., his home.

    “We are not just training soldiers to be familiar with their equipment, they need to be proficient,” he continued. “The best part is the tactical aspects we learn as we move and operate out here in the desert environment. When we get the chance to train like this, we don’t waste it.”

    There are multiple versions of the $3.1 million armored troop transport named after the World War II general, including specialized chassis’ and armaments for infantry and FIST crews.

    The CAB soldiers made it a special training weekend by inviting their families and employers to Fort Irwin to observe the various training events.

    “We are showcasing to the families and employers just what the soldiers do and its importance,” said Marion F. Lattus, the family support coordinator of the 185th. “We all have our families, but the [National Guard] is our family too.”

    The National Guard is a family dedicated to serving the American people, which showed in the soldiers’ enthusiasm for the training at hand. They displayed it loudly with the expert handling of their vehicles, the shredded centers of their targets, and the quickness at employing their mortars.

    The combat arms troops showed what they could do during the heat of battle and what fate awaits the enemy when the full brunt of a combined arms battalion lays down its power.

    Just make sure you bring ear protection because the sound is deafening.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 11.05.2011
    Date Posted: 12.06.2011 18:14
    Story ID: 80974
    Location: FORT IRWIN, CA, US

    Web Views: 479
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN