What actually happened during the FSTE?
Three first of a kind events took place at the U.S. training area in southern Germany Oct 3 to 24.
The U.S. Airborne Brigade Combat Team stationed in Italy is conducting Europe's first full-spectrum training operation, and it began with a bang: 1,500 paratroopers jumped in to Hohenfels Oct. 5 in the first brigade-sized airborne operation in Europe since the unit's combat jump into Iraq in 2003.
A battalion of Slovakian soldiers augmented the U.S. Soldiers fighting in the role of enemy forces. Never before have former eastern bloc and U.S. forces worked together as opposing forces in such numbers. Twenty-five years ago we trained to fight against Eastern Europe, now we fight and train with them.
This training is also a change from the exercises that prepare units for operations in Afghanistan and Iraq since 2001. Instead of focusing on counterinsurgency operations, the U.S., alongside troops from more than 10 other nations, encountered complex training scenarios where they attacked and seized objectives, defended against or attacked conventional enemy forces and rapidly transitioned into a stability operations posture.
The Joint Multinational Training Center is the most high-tech training center in the world combining live-fire ranges, with simulations and with fully digitally tracked force-on-force maneuver.
Joint Multinational Training Command
This training is a departure from counter-insurgency training, which has become the norm because of mission in Afghanistan and Iraq, since 2001. Using the Army's Full-Spectrum Operations, Field Manual 3-0 as a guide, the U.S. Army in Europe is training 173rd ABCT with forces from more than 17 nations, about 1,000 multinational forces. MORE
