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Under pressure: More than 4,000 Iowa National Guard soldiers train at Fort Polk

Under pressure: More than 4,000 Iowa National Guard soldiers train at Fort Polk

American Press5 hours ago

From junior enlisted soldiers to senior Iowa Army National Guard leaders, all participants endured mental, physical and emotional exhaustion during their training at Fort Polk. (Special to the American Press)
By Sgt. Ryan Reed | Special to the News Leader
FORT POLK — More than 4,000 soldiers from the Iowa Army National Guard trained throughout June at Fort Polk, undergoing one of the Army's most demanding combat training events in preparation for an upcoming overseas deployment.
Known since the Vietnam War era as 'Tigerland,' Fort Polk and the Joint Readiness Training Center have become synonymous with forging combat-ready soldiers through intense, realistic training. For Iowa's 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 34th Infantry division, this rotation marks a pivotal moment: their first full brigade deployment since 2010.
At the Joint Readiness Training Center, or JRTC, soldiers are evaluated under pressure. Their minds are stressed, their physical limits are tested and their endurance is pushed to the edge. From junior enlisted soldiers to senior Iowa Army National Guard leaders, all participants endure mental, physical and emotional exhaustion.
The JRTC is one of four Army combat training centers. The others are the Joint Multinational Readiness Cente in Hohenfels, Germany; the Joint Pacific Multinational Readiness Center at Schofield Barracks, Hawaii; and the National Training Center at Fort Irwin, Calif.
The JRTC, however, is known for being the most grueling. The simulated combat environment, complete with force-on-force scenarios and constant stressors, provides soldiers with some of the most realistic training they will encounter in their careers.
'There are a lot of methods that we use to test soldiers while they're in the training area. One is simply the stress and pressure of combat,' said Brig. Gen. Derek Adams, the senior trainer for rotation 25-08. 'We try to simulate that as best we can.'
As the senior trainer, Adams works closely with observer-coach/trainers and the JRTC leadership to design, execute and evaluate the training rotation. He coordinates with the operations group, which oversees the exercise, monitors unit performance across all war-fighting functions and delivers objective feedback through after-action reviews to improve readiness at every level.
'JRTC emphasizes DOD's priorities of lethality, war fighting and readiness by training the entire brigade combat team, from the individual Soldiers to the brigade combat team level,' Adams said. 'It's a large, complex organization, and this training reflects that.'
This type of training marks a broader shift in Army doctrine.
The Army is transitioning from the counterinsurgency operations of the past two decades to large-scale combat operations, or LSCO. Large-scale combat operations prepare soldiers for potential conflicts with near-peer adversaries by emphasizing large-scale maneuvers, complex logistics and sustained combat power.
'LSCO changes sustainment operations sheerly in the magnitude of what occurs,' said Col. Tony Smithhart, commander of the 734th Regional Support Group. 'You're talking about large numbers of soldiers, large numbers of equipment.'
The Regional Support Group is structured to provide logistical support to up to 20,000 soldiers in a deployed environment. As the Regional Support Command for the JRTC, the RSG was tasked with coordinating all sustainment efforts. This included feeding more than 5,800 soldiers, managing medical treatment and staging and preparing more than 2,500 pieces of equipment for operation.
Planning for the JRTC began more than a year before the first boots hit the ground.
'I made my first trip to Fort Polk about 18 months ago to determine the actual area we'd operate in,' Smithhart said. 'Since then, my team at the 734th Regional Support Group has returned about six times to coordinate with Fort Polk staff, validate our node concepts and rehearse operations to support reception, staging, onward integration and base camp management.'
The JRTC has earned its reputation. The environment is humid and rainy, the terrain is unforgiving and the scenarios evolve constantly.
All of these factors come together to form a stressful and taxing exercise, but one that will toughen Soldiers.
'The scale of this operation is critical to the development of our soldiers,' Smithhart said. 'It's been called a generational training opportunity, and I believe that's accurate.'

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