View allAll Photos Tagged combat
Army Sgt. Bobby Jones, a Des Moines, Iowa, native and broadcast journalist with 135th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment, Iowa National Guard, is currently serving a deployment to Contingency Operating Base Speicher, Tikrit, Iraq. (U.S. Army photo by Spc. Cassandra Monroe)
An Alaska Army National Guard UH-60L Black Hawk helicopter operated by aviators from the 1st Battalion, 207th Aviation Regiment, approaches a landing zone while supporting Air Force casualty evacuation training during a readiness and training exercise, Polar Force 20-1, at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska, Oct. 8, 2019. Designed to test JBER’s mission readiness, Polar Force 20-1 is a two-week exercise that hones Airmen’s skills and experience when facing adverse situations. Airmen refined their contingency tactics, techniques and procedures in support of the Pacific Air Force’s Agile Combat Employment concept of operations. Agile Combat Support excellence yields multi-domain operations success. (U.S. Air Force photo by Alejandro Peña)
偵察用オートバイ(川崎 KLX250)
Motorcycle for patrolling (Kawasaki KLX250)
2019年1月13日 陸上自衛隊 習志野演習場(第1空挺団降下訓練初め)にて撮影
January 13, 2019 at JGSDF Narashino Exercise Field (New year military exercise by 1st Airborne Brigade).
Two-person demonstration of iaido at the Powell St. Festival celebrating Japanese heritage in Vancouver, B.C. They are from the Vancouver Eishin-Ryu school.
Photos prise lors d'une démonstration/spectacle au château de Tiffauges.
Il n'y a pas eu de blessés et aucun chevalier n'a été maltraité :-)
23 Soldiers from the Military Police Units participated in Combat Lifesaver (ADT) Course offered through 2ndBN General Studies at Camp Fretterd 05-08 Nov
Diesmal nicht mit Jetantrieb, sondern mit Propeller!
Federstahlwellenanlage von Hopf! Das Ruder mußte ein wenig verlängert werden.
A abertura do evento foi conduzida pelo vice-presidente do TST no exercício da Presidência, ministro Ives Gandra Martins Filho, com a presença da vice-procuradora-geral do Trabalho, Eliane Araque dos Santos, da secretária-executiva do Fórum Nacional de Erradicação e Prevenção do Trabalho Infantil (FNPETI), Isa Maria de Oliveira, e do secretário do Trabalho do Estado de Chiapas (México), Manuel Sobrino Durán, palestrante da noite.
Fotos: Aldo Dias/TST
Several North Carolina National Guard Leaders learn more about the new Army Combat Fitness Test at the NCNG Joint Force Headquarters in Raleigh, North Carolina, June 3, 2019. The NCNG’s State Fitness Improvement Contractor Bobby Wheeler, a retired NCNG Army Master Sergeant and master fitness trainer, familiarized the leaders with the six-event test (deadlift, standing power throw, hand-release push-up, sprint, drag, carry relay, leg tuck and two-mile run) meant to better prepare Soldiers for combat. (U.S. Army National Guard Photo by Sgt. 1st Class Robert Jordan, North Carolina National Guard Public Affairs)
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
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