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    Bold Quest brings its own challenges

    Bold Quest 16.1 at MUTC

    Photo By Master Sgt. Brad Staggs | Indiana National Guard Assistant Adjutant General Brig. Gen. John McGoff (right,...... read more read more

    BUTLERVILLE, IN, UNITED STATES

    04.08.2016

    Story by Master Sgt. Brad Staggs 

    Camp Atterbury Indiana

    The demonstration seeks to create the means to improve communication and information sharing across a wide variety of coalition networks and resources. Deputy Director of Cyber and C4 Integration for the Joint Staff Stuart Whitehead is one of the individuals in charge of ensuring that the exercise creates the atmosphere necessary to run tests.

    “Depending on what the topic is, nations will make recommendations on what objectives they want to achieve during Bold Quest,” Whitehead explains. “We’ll actually design the environment to allow us to work together to solve those interoperability issues.”

    During the Bold Quest Distinguished Visitor’s Day on Wednesday, April 6, visitors from Sweden, France, Spain, Poland, and Finland saw first-hand what Bold Quest had achieved at the Atterbury-Muscatatuck Complex. From equipment testing between air assets while still on the ground to air-to-ground communication problems, new technologies and, in some cases, old technologies used in a new way are being put into play in order to allow forces to communicate where they couldn’t before.

    For the first time, Bold Quest aligned with an Indiana National Guard sponsored coalition exercise called Iron Express which allowed the seamless integration of ground troops from coalition countries with Indiana Guard Soldiers performing full-mission profiles along with air support from the Indiana Air National Guard’s 122nd Fighter Wing flying A-10’s from Ft. Wayne, Ind.

    Using coalition-wide technology, a coalition unit making their way to an objective will have the ability to coordinate and communicate with other allied units or aircraft in the area and vice-versa. That coalition coordination could mean the difference between life and death during split-second decisions in the field for these Soldiers.

    “It’s impressive and to see all of the interoperability, all of the small things, to get those together,” said Lt. Gen. Anders Silwer, Chief of Swedish Armed Forces Training and Development. “When I see them working together, I know that it most likely will happen for the pilots or for the ground troops.”

    15 countries and NATO Headquarters participate in the Bold Quest exercise alongside Soldiers, Airmen, and air assets from the Indiana National Guard, giving the Guardsmen an unparalleled chance to train alongside forces from around the world. Coupled with the one-of-a-kind training space offered at the Atterbury-Muscatatuck Complex, Bold Quest has come back to the facilities four times and wants to continue.

    “The venue is excellent, the support we get here is first rate, our ability to get the air-space necessary for our actions is really the best,” Whitehead continued. “Just as our own activities continue to evolve, you do the same thing in terms of the resources and facilities here and that’s what makes us keep coming back because it’s the right place to do the things that we need to do.”

    -30-

    160406-Z-YX241-045: General Brig. Gen. John McGoff, Indiana National Guard Assistant Adjutant, watches out of the window of the Indiana National Guard UH-60 Blackhawk during the Bold Quest 16.1 Distinguished Visitors Day on Wednesday, April 6. (Indiana National Guard photo by Master Sgt. Brad Staggs, Atterbury-Muscatatuck Public Affairs)

    160406-Z-YX241-096: Members of the Bold Quest 16.1 Distinguished Visitors delegation from the United States, Sweden, Spain, Finland, and France listen to Maj. Nicholas Roukas, Muscatatuck Urban Training Center Operations Officer In Charge, give them a run-down of what Muscatatuck offers during the Bold Quest 16.1 Distinguished Visitors Day on Wednesday, April 6. (Indiana National Guard photo by Master Sgt. Brad Staggs, Atterbury-Muscatatuck Public Affairs)

    160406-Z-YX241-148: An Indiana National Guard A-10 from the 122nd Fighter Wing in Ft. Wayne, Ind., performs a maneuver as dignitaries watch from the top of the collapsed parking structure at Muscatatuck Urban Training Center during the Bold Quest 16.1 Distinguished Visitors Day on Wednesday, April 6. (Indiana National Guard photo by Master Sgt. Brad Staggs, Atterbury-Muscatatuck Public Affairs)

    160406-Z-YX241-332: Indiana National Guard Assistant Adjutant General Brig. Gen. John McGoff (right, nearest window) speaks with Lt. Gen. Ander Silwer, Chief of Swedish Armed Forces Training and Development, as they circle the Atterbury-Muscatatuck Complex in a UH-60 Blackhawk helicopter during the Bold Quest 16.1 Distinguished Visitors Day on Wednesday, April 6. (Indiana National Guard photo by Master Sgt. Brad Staggs, Atterbury-Muscatatuck Public Affairs)

    160406-Z-YX241-276: Soldiers and Airmen from the Indiana National Guard move into a building at Muscatatuck Urban Training Center during the Bold Quest 16.1 Distinguished Visitors Day on Wednesday, April 6. (Indiana National Guard photo by Master Sgt. Brad Staggs, Atterbury-Muscatatuck Public Affairs)

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 04.08.2016
    Date Posted: 04.11.2016 10:18
    Story ID: 194986
    Location: BUTLERVILLE, IN, US

    Web Views: 318
    Downloads: 0

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