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Paratroopers assigned to 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division disassemble foreign AK-47 rifles, Jan. 22, during a class at the U.S. Army John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School at Fort Bragg. Special Forces Soldiers with the U.S. Army’s Special Operations Center of Excellence taught the paratroopers about AK-47 rifles in preparation for the deployment of paratroopers to Iraq to advise and assist Iraqi Security Forces.

U.S. Air Force Staff Sgt. Anthony Torres does a pre-flight walk around of an F-16C Fighting Falcon from the New Jersey Air National Guard's 177th Fighter Wing "Jersey Devils" at Atlantic City Air National Guard Base, N.J. on Oct. 2, 2014 as seen through a night vision lens. The 177th Fighter Wing wrapped up several weeks of night operations. Night flying is vitally important to the overall training of F-16 fighter pilots since the majority of combat missions over hostile environments are conducted at night. Torres is an F-16 Fighting Falcon crew chief from the 177th Aircraft Maintenance Squadron. (U.S. Air National Guard photo by Tech. Sgt. Matt Hecht/Released)

Midday sun shines off the tail of 64-0559, a MC-130E Combat Talon I, on the Duke Field flightline. 0559 is just one of four aircraft scheduled to be retired by the end of fiscal year 2012 as part of the 919th Special Operations Wing’s remissioning. Eventually, all of the Talons will disappear from the Duke flightline to be replaced by an aviation foreign internal defense aircraft. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Samuel King Jr.)

15th National Leadership Retreat / RDF Combat Training Center ,Gabiro , 26 Feb. 2018 - 1 March 2018

UH-60 Blackhawks from A Co., 3-142nd Assault Helicopter Company, 42nd Combat Aviation Brigade, air drop soldiers from A Co., 1-67th Infantry (Heavy), 2-4th Infantry Division during a training exercise on Dec. 28th, 2013, outside of Camp Buehring, Kuwait.

 

The 42nd CAB, New York Army National Guard, is currently deployed overseas to operate rotary winged aircraft in suport of Operation Enduring Freedom. (U.S. Army photo by Spc. Harley Jelis/Released)

CORAL SEA (July 8, 2017) Combat Cargo Marines move vehicles from the upper vehicle deck to the well deck during a Landing craft air cushion (LCAC) unload rehearsal aboard the amphibious assault ship USS Bonhomme Richard (LHD 6) during a replenishment-at-sea during Talisman Saber 17. Bonhomme Richard, part of a combined U.S.-Australia-New Zealand expeditionary strike group, is undergoing a series of scenarios that will increase naval proficiencies in operating against blue-water adversarial threats and in its primary mission of launching Marine forces ashore in the littorals. Talisman Saber is a biennial U.S.-Australia bilateral exercise held off the coast of Australia meant to achieve interoperability and strengthen the U.S.-Australia alliance. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Cameron McCulloch/Released)

An Afghan soldier directs fellow soldiers during a firefight near Combat Outpost Giro while a paratrooper with 3rd Squadron, 73rd Cavalry Regiment, fires on insurgent positions May 17, 2012, Ghazni Province, Afghanistan. The paratrooper’s parent unit, the 82nd Airborne Division’s 1st Brigade Combat Team, deployed to Ghazni in March to help Afghan National Security Forces secure Highway 1 between Kabul and Kandahar.

U.S. 5th FLEET AREA OF RESPONSIBILITY (Sept. 16, 2014) – Marines with combat cargo, USS Comstock (LSD 45), help a heavy equipment operator load and transport a pallet during a replenishment at sea, Sept. 16. The Comstock is part of the Makin Island Amphibious Ready Group and, with the embarked 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit, is deployed in support of maritime and theater security operations in the U.S. 5th Fleet area of responsibility. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Sgt. Melissa Wenger/ Released)

A MC-130E Combat Talon I awaits its next mission on the Duke Field flightline. Four of Duke’s nine Talons will be retired by the end of fiscal year 2012. Eventually, all of the Talons will disappear from the 919th Special Operations Wing flightline to be replaced by an aviation foreign internal defense aircraft. (U.S. Air Force photo/Tech. Sgt. Samuel King Jr.)

La médaillée de bronze olympique de taekwondo (-57kg) à Londres, Marlène Harnois (en bleu) et la championne de France (-57kg), Vinciane Douet (en rouge)

Close up of Combat video game cabinet. (Exidy, 1985)

194th Combat Sustainment Support Battalion conducts

convoy live-fire at Story Range, Republic of Korea.

 

Story and photos by Edward Johnson

IMCOM-Korea Public Affairs

imcom.korea.army.mil

 

PANMUNJOM - With weapons at the ready, members of 194th Combat

Sustainment Support Battalion set out at dawn to conduct convoy

live-fire training here, March 25.

 

The fast-paced exercise exposed Soldiers to many of the real-world

perils found on today's asymmetric battlefield, culminating in a series

of drills designed to hone their skills in reacting to road-side bombs

and enemy small-arms fire.

 

"These Soldiers have been training for the past six months to prepare

for this day and their hard work is evident in the outstanding

performance I've seen throughout the battalion," said Command Sgt. Maj.

Nichelle S. Fails.

 

At times gritty and intense, the Soldiers worked in teams to zero in on

enemy targets with their rifles and machine guns.

 

"This scenario is interesting and very realistic," said Pvt. Jiwoo Kim,

a KATUSA assigned to the battalion.

 

Pvt. Dylan Florres, a battalion mechanic and one of the day's enemy

combatant role-players, sees the training as realistic and a good way to

build unit cohesion. "What we are doing is basically helping Soldiers

learn how to train safely and work as a team," he said.

 

"Everybody is highly motivated and ready to fight," said Chief Warrant

Officer 4 Joseph Williams, HHC, 194th Combat Support Sustainment

Battalion, safety officer. "Taking care of our Soldiers is very

important, we don't want any injuries. That's why we do risk assessments

and go over all of the details to make this a very safe, yet realistic,

training environment."

 

Master Sgt. Kenneth Ashley, the day's pyrotechnics NCO, described the

training as important in building teamwork within the battalion. "Here

in Korea and in places like Iraq and Afghanistan, we need to make sure

our Soldiers know how to react under fire and to ensure they are

prepared for anything the enemy throws at them."

 

For more news from the U.S. Army in Korea visit us online at imcom.korea.army.mil

Ace Combat: Assault Horizon

Reshade

Various resolutions / crops

 

In-game theater mode with HUD turned off

2nd Combat Aviation Brigade hosts the 2014 Army Aviation Birthday Ball, May 2, 2014 at the Sgrand Hyatt Hotel in Seoul, South Korea. Aviation Soldiers from the Brigade, 3rd Military Intelligence Battalion and 4-58 Aviation Operations Battalion come out for the event. The evening included music from the 2nd Infantry Division Band, great food, awards and guest speaker General James D. Thurman, Commander of the United Nations Command, Combined Forces Command and United States Forces Korea.

Obscuuri Race and new Synergy WIP

Soldats, à Douaumont.

Army Reserve combat engineer medics from the 321st Engineer Battalion teach an 18-day Sapper Advanced Tactical Medical Course to approximately 20 Army medics on Gowen Field Air National Guard Base, Idaho, in January, 2015. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. 1st Class Michel Sauret)

BA veterans with combi-weapons.

BAN CHAM KREM, Kingdom of Thailand – Staff Sgt. Peter A. Scott, a platoon sergeant with Combat Engineer Company, Combat Assault Battalion, 3rd Marine Division, III Marine Expeditionary Force, gives a demolition handling and usage class during demolitions training. Scott, a 29-year-old Miami, Fla native, stressed gear familiarization and safety before conducting training during Exercise Cobra Gold 2012. Cobra Gold is a recurring multinational and multiservice exercise co-hosted by the U.S. and the Royal Kingdom of Thailand designed to advance regional security by exercising a multinational force from nations sharing common goals and security commitments in the Asia-Pacific region (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Staff Sgt. Ken Melton/Released)

For combat on easy terrain, a small vehicle was engineered to get small squads of troops moved very quickly. One driver - usually a full-armored trooper - and one passenger can traverse long distances in no time. Armed with two detachable heavy cannons and a small rocket launcher.

 

You`ll find more information on this and all other StarCorps units here !

 

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