We met at 0600 near City Hall (the parking lot was convenient in the morning, much less so when all of us returned at the same time and tried to leave at 2200), and we got on a set of buses. While waiting, I met some of my company-mates (a company is roughly 100 soldiers, and we had 108 or so people going) including young policy officers serving at DND including at least one NPSIA student and one #BattleRhythm fan, one head of CDAI (a CDSN partner), and many others. At the end of the bus ride, we met in a very large room that had a big map of the exercise on the floor, a very efficient set of soldiers who gave us bags containing our gear (we had given our sizes ahead of time) and took our valuables for safe-keeping. We were to change in tents set up inside the building, and I was surprised but pleased to see a gender-neutral tent in addition to the male and female tents.
I got into my gear--they gave us pants, t-shirt (the one item we could keep), overshirt, protective vest or whatever it is called, and then the external harness to carry our magazines and other stuff (I used the spare pockets to carry my camera and my notebook). Yes, I had the full battle-rattle. In addition to the helmet, they gave us a soft cover (floppy hat), but we never had much use for it.
They then briefed (we got heaps of briefings) about the day ahead. We were to get basic training, then take the urban area, and then invade a beach.
The premise was that a country invaded an ally, had been pushed back by the coalition (there was no interactions with allied forces, so I couldn't ask about caveats), and our job was to mop up the folks who remained in our friend's town and then disrupt their use of a beach for shipping arms/people/drugs/etc.
Part of the tech display |
Yeah, the 155mm gun is pretty big, even bigger than my head. |
Room clearing training |
Holy Sandtable |
The village we were to attack |
This is the room we cleared--no adversaries present so no shots fired. No, I did not take any pics during the attack.
We then met for an after-action review. The commander asked each platoon as well as the enemy what they did well and what they did poorly, so we could sustain the former and improve on the latter. Definitely something to borrow perhaps as the last session of CDSN events.
The next step was the beach invasion. We got mighty wet as we were positioned with one foot inside the rubber boat and one outside. It was most unrealistic in that we had to connect our rifle slings to the boat so we didn't lose the guns, and we had to wear life vests. Which meant as our boat landed, we had to undo that stuff, making us sitting ducks. I ended up grabbing my backpack (full of snacks since I didn't trust the Canadian version of MRE's--IMPs--good for pre-colonoscopy prep) and throwing it ahead of me as I hit the beach, then ran to behind a tree, and the up to a fallen log that I used as both cover and to prop up my rifle. In the proces
I tried to take a pic of the beach-post invasion |
My battle buddy (the master corporal) and firefighter Mike. We were a very good fireteam. |
Waiting to get the next Chinook |
Ugly helo looks pretty in the right scenery |
Former NPSIA student (2nd from left) and his fellow DND policy officer (newbies, I think) next to him |
Are we having fun yet? Hells yeah |
What did I notice and/or learn:
- No mention of peacekeeping except for a streetsign on the way in. The Army wants to make clear to all of the "stakeholders" that they are warriors doing war stuff.
- The participants included DND officials from a variety of offices and defence contractors but also folks much more distant from the event. I wonder if the organizers will do a survey to figure out which folks are better transmitters
- Because, hell, yeah, this is an information operation campaign to educate the Canadian public about how wonderful the Army is. And, yeah, it is pretty damned wonderful. BUT we can still be critical when they do stuff that is wrong. On the other hand, doing public engagement is a good thing, and the Canadians should know what their military is doing (they kept emphasizing this is not our (the Army's) army but your (Canada's) army.
- I do wonder about the cost/benefit calculation--can they measure whether this stuff makes a difference because it was not cheap. Given the usual studies that show that the public does not understand the armed forces, efforts like this to create contact and some understanding are well worth it, I think.
- That the equipment we carried was mighty heavy and restricted our movement and our vision to a degree and we were not carrying half the load that these soldiers do under much harsher conditions (Kandahar) did build a healthy amount of respect. I was tired and sore after a half-day without any long marches. I can't imagine what the soldiers go through.
- It was pretty cool to see women in a variety of army positions--Master Corporals, Sergeants, Officers of all kinds. Definitely far from the 25% goal the Liberals set with the Defence Policy Review, but all these women would not have been in a similar brigade in the US not that long ago.
- Speaking of the Defence Policy Review, it was interesting to see at the starting briefing reference to that and then how the brigade saw itself in that larger context.
- Oh and some Hobbes:
PS I disappointed my wife by failing to respond at some point during the day with a Bill Murray-esque "Army Training, Sir!"
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