Bagram VII prepares troops for deployment

by Capt. Sonie L. Munson
18th Engineer Brigade Public Affairs


KIELCE, Poland — The phrase “train as we fight” is applicable across the Army and around the world, and it was the standard during the recent training exercise March 4 to 10 at Bukowka Barracks here.

Bagram VII is a joint training exercise that included members of the 21st Theater Sustainment Command’s 18th Engineer Brigade, the Joint Forces Headquarters of the Illinois National Guard, the Polish 2nd Mechanized Corps and the Joint Multi-National Simulations Center Grafenwöhr. These agencies worked together to prepare and certify the 1st Polish Armored Brigade and Soldiers from the Illinois National Guard for their upcoming deployment to Afghanistan.

During the opening ceremony, Polish army Maj. Gen. Zbigniew Glowienka, the exercise director and commander of the Polish 2nd Mech. Corps, said the exercise’s aim was to ensure the Task Force White Eagle’s headquarters was prepared for International Security Assistance Force operations in Afghanistan.

During the exercise, the unit will be tested for combat for the first time using Joint Conflict and Tactical Simulations, Major General Glowienka added.

Bagram VII was the seventh readiness exercise to certify the Polish task force is ready for its six-month rotation to Afghanistan. However, there were a lot of firsts during the exercise.

Some of these firsts included the use of simulation platforms provided by the Joint Multi-National Simulations Center Grafenwöhr, the use of the 18th Eng. Bde. as the higher headquarters and the embedding of Soldiers from the Illinois National Guard, which will deploy with the 1st Polish Armored Bde. to Afghanistan.

The Joint Multi-National Simulations Center Grafenwöhr assisted the exercise by providing all the simulation systems for free, including JCATS, Blue Force Tracker, Command Post of the Future and Unmanned Aerial Simulation Systems. These simulation systems provided the task force with the ability to respond to numerous scenarios, which better tested the task force’s tactical operations procedures.
When Polish army Lt. Col. Piotr Fajkowski, B Battle Group commander, 1st Polish Armored Bde., was asked what the hardest part of Bagram VII was, he said, “to learn the systems and to compare what information it provided. But it was nice to learn the systems we will use in theater step-by-step before our deployment.”

The 18th Eng. Bde., with members of the Illinois National Guard and the Polish 2nd Mech. Corps, made the exercise even more realistic by role-playing Combined Joint Task Force-East, the unit the task force will report to in Afghanistan.

During the exercise, the 18th Eng. Bde. monitored how Task Force White Eagle responded to the scenarios, from tactical operations to responding to the civilian populous and the local media.

“Our mission is twofold: to ensure Task Force White Eagle receives the most realistic training possible and to build a positive relationship with our Polish allies,” said Col. Paul M. Paolozzi, the 18th Eng. Bde. commander.

This was accomplished by selecting subject matter experts from the brigade in areas such as operations, logistics, intelligence, signal, interpreters and
public affairs, resulting in relevant training and a new lasting relationship with the 2nd Mech. Corps and Task Force White Eagle.

“We are one team, not Polish or American Soldiers,” said Polish army
Maj. Stanislaw Koppczynski, the chief of the Tactical Operation Center for Polish Land Forces.

This exercise and the upcoming deployment is the first time in the 17-year relationship between the Illinois National Guard and the Polish army where National Guard Soldiers will embed with Task Force White Eagle during its six-month rotation.

“Partnering with the Polish army is a vital part of our mission success and being allowed to train prior to deployment together will allow us to be mission effective once we reach Afghanistan,” said Capt. Tim Newman, the battle captain for Task Force White Eagle, from Plainfield, Ill.