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AUSA Conference 2009
Training for Full Spectrum Operations
LTG Thomas G. MillerLTG Mark P. Hertling
MG James L. Huggins, Jr.COL (P) Paul Funk IICOL Mark McKnight
Agenda
LTG Thomas G. MillerCommanding General, First Army
MG James L. Huggins, Jr.Director of Readiness and
Mobilization, ODCS, G3/5/7, US Army
COL (P) Paul Funk IICommander, CAC-T
COL Mark McKnightCommander, BCTP
LTG Mark P. HertlingTraining and Executing DCG,
Initial Military Training, TRADOC
• Introduction
• Readiness Reporting Update
• Integrated Training Environment (ITE)
• Progression Towards BCTPFull Spectrum Exercises
• FSO in combat from a DIV CG perspective
3
Training for Full Spectrum Operations
SPECTRUM OF CONFLICTIncreasing Violence
OffenseOffense
DefenseDefenseStabilityStabilityStabilityStability
DefenseDefense
StabilityStabilityStabilityStabilityOffenseOffense
DefenseDefense
StabilityStabilityStabilityStabilityOffenseOffense
StabilityStabilityStabilityStability
OffenseOffense
DefenseDefense
FULL SPECTRUM OPERATIONS
OPERATIONAL THEMES
Stable Peace
GeneralWar
InsurgencyUnstablePeace
(Under Revision)
FSO occurs across the spectrum, with any combination of operations – the level of effort in each operation varies
Commanders agree on how FSO METL is trained, on conditions, and risks associated with not training on tasks
How We Train - Tomorrow
Initially focus on STD FSO METL
At LAD - 9 months deployed mission environment
Maintain focus on FSO METL for deployed environment
FSO METL Training
Dwell less than
18 months
Dwell more than
18 months
Our challenge is to set conditions to train FSO, anywhere along the spectrum, at home station and CTCs
CSA: “We need to leverage the combat experience of our Army…We can and must train differently than we did before 9/11”
• Do a few key tasks very well• Train smart and balance with the need to rest a seasoned force• Decentralize and reduce training overhead at home station• Maximize use of mobile training teams and distributed learning
Reserve Component Full Spectrum Training Challenges
• Complexities– Varied mission sets
• Full Spectrum Operations• Non-Standard (SECFOR)• Homeland Security (CCMRF)• State missions
• Challenges– Manning shortfalls/turbulence– Available time– Training enablers– Equipping/Training sets– Ability to achieve aggregate collective
proficiency
Requires implementation concepts for Reserve Components
Reserve Component ARFORGEN CYCLE 1:4
Train/Ready 1Reset Train/Ready 2 Train/Ready 3 Available
Reconstitution
Family Time
Equipment & Personnel Reset
Individual & Crew Training
New Equipment Training
Battle Command and Staff Training
Platoon Maneuver and
BCT Staff Proficiency
BWFX/LTP
Company and BCT Staff
Proficiency
Post MOB Training
MRE CTC
Assume MissionSustain Capability
Year 2Year 1 Year 3 Year 4 Available
NOS