South Dakota National Guard
RAPID CITY, S.D. – The South Dakota
National Guard's 28th annual Golden Coyote training exercise is underway in
Rapid City and the southern Black Hills, with more than 2,200 service members
participating from across the country and the world.
The two-week training exercise, which
began June 9 and is scheduled to continue until June 23, allows military forces
to conduct combat support and combat service support missions in a realistic
training environment and provide valuable services to the public.
Created in the mid-1980s with the
cooperation of the National Forest Service and Custer State Park, the exercise
provides relevant training opportunities in support of overseas contingency
operations and homeland defense. Golden Coyote has developed into one of the
nation's top training opportunities for National Guard, Reserve and active-duty
forces, as well as military personnel from foreign countries.
"This exercise is a great
opportunity for units to tailor their training to their needs," said Army
Brig. Gen. Jeff Marlette, commander of forces for Golden Coyote.
"Nationwide there are very few exercises that are designed for National
Guard, U.S. Reserve and international forces to come together and train. It
helps to prepare units to be able to go abroad and support operations overseas,
as well as train on homeland security missions right here in the United
States."
There are 37 units representing 17
states, and six foreign nations participating in the exercise from multiple
branches of military service – Army, Navy, and Air Force – working together to
create an invaluable training experience. This includes medical, chemical,
transportation, signal, aviation, military police, engineer and quartermaster
units. These military forces train on their equipment and employ tactics to
prepare them for any future overseas deployment.
"Military forces are able to
participate in numerous warrior training tasks and battle drills, such as urban
combat operations, medical aid, and day and night convoy operations," said
Army Maj. Travis Eastman, exercise coordinator.
Units can also participate in combat
patrols, fire arms training and reacting to improvised explosive devices,
Eastman said.
Participating units also complete
various projects that help improve the forest and local communities. Local
residents receive numerous benefits of the many engineering projects being
conducted during the training exercise.
Units will be repairing roadways,
providing reclamation of hazardous wilderness areas and hauling cut timber from
the forest.
"We have transportation units
moving timber cut by the National Forest Service for fire control purposes to
Native American reservation communities who can use it as firewood,"
Eastman said. "Our engineers will also repair hazardous wilderness areas
and make them safe for public use, and re-surface local roadways that have
fallen into disrepair."
"This exercise is a great testament
to how we come together with the civilian public," Marlette said. "We
coordinate with the National Forest Service, Custer State Park and other local
agencies, and the event allows both their agencies and us to be better prepared
to meet homeland security missions and provide services to the public."
This year's exercise also includes
members from the United Kingdom, Denmark, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and
Suriname.
"The training aim for this exercise
is the interoperability with our allies and synchronization between different
work forces and equipment," said United Kingdom Territorial Army Maj.
Andrew Inglis, Headquarters, 71st Engineer Regiment. "We are looking to
provide aid to your civil community here; mainly to conduct route construction,
hauling missions and other construction projects.
"As combat engineers we are
soldiers first, so we will take part in the exercise's warrior lanes,"
said Inglis. "The majority of [soldiers] here will probably deploy in the
next two to three years, so this is a method of the sub-unit commander to look
at his people and make sure they are ready to deploy."
"The international units here
provide us an opportunity for joint operations that we will conduct serving our
counties abroad," Marlette said.
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