| FORT RILEY, Kan. (April 11, 2012) -- As current and future 
			enemies attempt to adapt to the Army's tactics, techniques and 
			procedures down range, counteraction seems to be a critical aspect 
			of the training mission stateside. 
 Soldiers training at Fort 
			Riley have the advantage of one of the Army's first computer-based 
			mission training complexes. The MTC is integrated with other 
			training capabilities that form the digital training campus that 
			opened in June 2009.
 
		
			|  April 10 2012 - Using the Virtual Battle Space 2 program in the mission training complex Gaming Lab, Soldiers create personal avatars and enter into a realistic virtual mission scenario, tailored to meet their unit's training needs. 
			Photo by Pamela Redford, Fort Riley Public Affairs
 |  The 160,000-square-foot Leadership in Energy and 
					Environmental Design gold-certified building is just one of 
					many resources at Fort Riley's Regional Training Campus -- a 
					major facet in the new Forces Command Regional Collective 
					Training Capability concept. Fort Riley was identified as an 
					RCTC-host installation in July 2011, one of 27 in the Army, 
					because of its centralized location and efficient training 
					capabilities.
 The MTC plays a vital role in the RCTC 
					initiative because it provides an integrated training 
					environment where skills are built with cutting-edge 
					technology in support of the Army Digital Training Strategy 
					-- all before a Soldier ever sets foot in the field.
 
 "In this era of budget constraints, one of the key 
					efficiencies in training is virtual, constructive and gaming 
					training before doing it live," said Tim Livsey, director, 
					Fort Riley's Directorate of Plans, Training, Mobilization 
					and Security.
 
 It's efficient, Livsey said. Soldiers 
					can use the MTC's many computers, individually or 
					collectively, to set up simulations based on their unit's 
					training needs. Simulations also can be linked to unit 
					components in widespread locations for large scale training 
					or can be limited to a squad or platoon.
 
 On an 
					individual level, the campus's Engagement Skills Trainer 
					allows Soldiers to qualify with a weapon in an arcade-type 
					system before actually going out on the range. This 
					pre-training, or gated training strategy, allows Soldiers to 
					build their skill sets on virtual trainers at a pittance of 
					taxpayer dollars rather than the expense of training on the 
					range with real bullets, Livsey said.
 
 "It's 
					efficient, saves money, saves time, and the Soldier enters 
					the live-training phase at a higher level of training than 
					if he entered at square zero," Livsey said.
 
 On a 
					collective level, Unified Endeavor 12-01, a three-week joint 
					and combined command post exercise last January, allowed 
					Soldiers with the 3rd Infantry, 1st Cavalry and 101st 
					Airborne divisions; contractors, observers, trainers and 
					senior mentors with the Mission Command Training Program, 
					Fort Leavenworth, Kan.; select leadership with the Afghan 
					national security forces; Soldiers with the Polish and 
					French Armies and Soldiers with V Corps in Germany to 
					participate in the training event from remote locations in 
					preparation for the "Big Red One's" Headquarters deployments 
					to Afghanistan in 2012.
 
 Active and Reserve components 
					have used the MTC, as well as ROTC cadets, SWAT teams and 
					other groups in the region, Livsey added.
 
 "By 
					leveraging this technology, you're not shooting as many 
					bullets and burning as much fuel in the training area," said 
					Bill Raymann, chief, Training Division, DPTMS.
 
 And 
					not only is the MTC efficient with time and taxpayer 
					dollars, the training is the best in the Army, Livsey said.
 
 Based on a unit's training needs, the MTC can:
 
				Provide contract and resource managementProvide training for low-density Battle Command Systems with 
				22 separate classesProvide "train the trainer" assistance for new simulation 
				equipment training, software version releases and contract 
				instructor certification on Battle Command SystemsProvide technical subject matter experts relating to 
				simulations, training infrastructure or Battle Command Systems 
				trainingCoordinate for and provide additional personnel to support 
				training and exercise eventsPerform configuration management for software and integrate 
				equipment and systems in classrooms, work cells and other 
				activitiesCoordinate for the maintenance of simulation and hardwareProvide representation at the program management review and 
				training-related venuesProvide gaming and convoy training at map sites at Fort 
				Riley; the National Training Center, Fort Irwin, Calif.; Joint 
				Readiness Training Center, Fort Polk, La.; Korea, Iraq and 
				GermanyProvide staff training at company, battalion, brigade and 
				division levels. All of the MTC's facilities are linked by an internal local area 
			network and are re-configurable to support a multitude of 
			multi-echelon training scenarios, said Randall Curry, chief, MTC.
			
 Using the Gaming Lab's Virtual Battle Space 2 program, the 
			Army's approved off-the-shelf training game, MTC staff can replicate 
			every vehicle and aircraft in NATO's inventory, versus buying 
			separate simulations.
 
 "Just about anything you can imagine, 
			we can do in here. It's constantly evolving," Curry said.
 
 Curry and his staff set the training conditions to be as specific 
			and realistic as possible to try to replicate the environment 
			Soldiers will face during deployment, he said.
 
 "Because it's 
			a game, you can make it do whatever you want. You can load in your 
			personal statistics, your (physical training) test, marksmanship 
			skills -- and your avatar in the game will react like you do," Curry 
			said.
 
 Using this technology is so effective, Curry said, 
			because young Soldiers already love gaming; they do it daily.
 
 "It's like Soldier Disneyland," Livsey said. "We have a great 
			suite of live-training capability currently on Fort Riley. We have 
			state-of-the-art, best in the Army, virtual training capability. We 
			are cutting edge right now."
 
 Along with the Warrior Skills 
			Trainer, the Virtual Battle Space 2 serves as the primary convoy and 
			improvised explosive device trainer, said Anthony Dokes, digital 
			system integration manager, MTC.
 
 Another virtual training 
			program Soldiers can use is the Intelligence Electronic Warfare 
			Tactical Proficiency Trainer, or IEW-TPT. Before a deployment, 
			Soldiers must learn cultural awareness and be prepared to 
			communicate with an interpreter. These skills can be vital to the 
			mission.
 
 With the IEW-TPT, Soldiers learn how to ask the 
			interpreter good questions so they can gather information from 
			community leaders and take it back to the convoy to complete a 
			mission, Curry said.
 
 The MTC also has reconfigurable 
			classroom space, up to seven rooms, to teach all the different 
			battle command systems utilized by commanders and their staff to 
			create an up-to-date common operating picture of the battlefield, 
			Dokes said.
 
 The Unit Command Post of the Future Trainer, 
			Fixed-Reconfigurable Vehicle Simulator and Reconfigurable Tactical 
			Operations Center also are facets of the MTC that units can tap into 
			to fulfill their training needs.
 
 The MTC has many components, 
			but what they have in common is they all allow for multi-echelon 
			training, Livsey said.
 
 Training at the MTC is enhanced 
			because units can multitask by training Soldiers working on 
			different levels on the same scenario at the same time frame.
 
 A Soldier can stair step his training by working on an 
			individual skill set, then mix with others in a crew-training 
			device, eventually building toward a company-sized element, while 
			commanders simultaneously move units and monitor the battlefield.
 
 This Blended Integrated Training Environment concept allows 
			Soldiers to "see" each other through tactical systems and work 
			together for the same purpose, while saving the Army time and money 
			in the process, Raymann said.
 
 "They are achieving training 
			objectives just the way they would be operating out in the field ... 
			where it would take you all day to do one live-fire iteration, you 
			could go through it eight times (during the same time period) at the 
			MTC," he said.
 
 The MTC is used to not only train Fort Riley 
			Soldiers, Livsey said, but it also is truly a Regional Collective 
			Training Capability for the Joint, Interagency, Intergovernmental 
			and Multinational partners in the region.
 By Army Pamela Redford, Fort Riley Public Affairs Army News Service
 Copyright 2012
 
					
					
					
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