• Sample Page
American Defense News
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
American Defense News
No Result
View All Result

Wisconsin Guard Fights Elements in Urban Operations Training

U.S. Army News by U.S. Army News
January 27, 2024
in Uncategorized
0
Illinois Guard Soldiers Receive Polish Armed Forces Medal



Wisconsin Army National Guard Soldiers with Company A, 2nd Battalion, 127th Infantry Regiment, approach the High Risk Entry Facility Jan. 17 at Volk Field, Wis., during urban warfare training.
(32nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team photo by Staff Sgt. Kati Volkman)




Wisconsin Army National Guard Soldiers with Company A, 2nd Battalion, 127th Infantry Regiment, approach the High Risk Entry Facility Jan. 17 at Volk Field, Wis., during urban warfare training.
(32nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team photo by Staff Sgt. Kati Volkman)
(Photo Credit: Staff Sgt. Kati Volkman)

VIEW ORIGINAL

VOLK FIELD, Wis. — For 24 frigid hours Jan. 17-18, Wisconsin Army National Guard Soldiers with Company A, 2nd Battalion, 127th Infantry Regiment, 32nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team, used the High Risk Entry Facility and grounds at Volk Field — part of the Regional Emergency All-Climate Training Center — to train and perfect their urban operations in preparation for training at the Joint Readiness Training Center.

Sgt. 1st Class Charles Hensen, a platoon sergeant with Company A, explained the importance of conducting these kinds of training events.

“Some of these guys are potentially a year and a half away from combat,” Hensen said. “Whether they see combat or not is not my decision — it’s my decision to make sure they are ready for it.”

Staff Sgt. Justin Swiersz, weapons squad leader for Company A’s 1st Platoon, was stationed at JRTC for four years, completing 37 rotations with the opposition forces. He explained that the training Company A is doing will be useful for its Soldiers.

“It gets our feet wet, because we haven’t typically done shoot houses in the National Guard,” Swiersz said. “The additional training and unique situations that we’ve gotten to see has definitely improved our lethality and confidence in completing these mission-oriented tasks.”

2nd Lt. Reed Matz, Company A’s 2nd Platoon leader, was impressed with how his Soldiers performed.

“There are things we need to get consistent on as a platoon, like communication plans and methods of marking,” Matz reflected. “Overall, we were able to breach the building, use some simulation rounds to take down the bad guys, and learn a lot in the process.”

Hensen sees training opportunities like this as a chance to set his Soldiers apart from others who have come before them.

“It ripped the Band-Aid off on the things our Soldiers can work on at the individual level,” Hensen said. “I enjoyed observing the thought processes, the fact that it’s a situation our teams aren’t used to, and we saw that they were able to utilize what they had and adjust as they needed.”

For more National Guard news

National Guard Facebook

National Guard X (Twitter)

Previous Post

88th Readiness Division Soldiers embrace cold weather training at Fort McCoy

Next Post

African Land Forces Summit 2024 planning continues in Zambia

Next Post

Navy rolling out Wi-Fi to 4,000 sailors in pilot program at Norfolk, Portsmouth barracks [The Virginian-Pilot :: BC-NAVY-FREE-WIFI:VP]

Recent Posts

  • The history of addiction treatment at VA: Part 1
  • Apply now: Hiring Our Heroes Small Business Grant Program
  • Find your next career at a rural VA 
  • How to get better sleep
  • Vacation at VA: One woman’s mindset to master blindness

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.

No Result
View All Result

© 2026 JNews - Premium WordPress news & magazine theme by Jegtheme.