4-31IN platoon leaders prepare for deployment

By Staff Sgt. Jennifer BunnApril 29, 2015

4-31IN platoon leaders prepare for deployment
1 / 5 Show Caption + Hide Caption – 2nd Lt. Max Rossignol (L) assembles a M249 Machine Gun and 2nd Lt. Zack McClellen (R) assembles a 240B machine Gun during the weapons maintenance event for the Platoon Leaders Challenge. Both lieutenants are platoon leaders assigned to 4th Battalion,... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
4-31IN platoon leaders prepare for deployment
2 / 5 Show Caption + Hide Caption – A team of lieutenants ruck march to their next grid coordinate April 23 during 4th Battalion, 31st Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team's Platoon Leader Challenge. The officers completed events at five stations along the route that will help th... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
4-31IN platoon leaders prepare for deployment
3 / 5 Show Caption + Hide Caption – A team of lieutenants are given the tasks, conditions and standards on how to accurately complete the weapons maintenance event during the Platoon Leaders Challenge. 4th Battalion, 31st Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team conducted the challen... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
4-31IN platoon leaders prepare for deployment
4 / 5 Show Caption + Hide Caption – 2nd Lt. Zack McClellen, leader for 1st Platoon, C Company, 4th Battalion, 31st Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team, assembles a 240B Machine Gun during the weapons maintenance event for the Platoon Leaders Challenge. 4th Battalion, 31st Infant... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
4-31IN platoon leaders prepare for deployment
5 / 5 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Officers perform the 225 lb. dead lift April 21 during 4th Battalion, 31st Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team's Platoon Leader Challenge. 4th Battalion, 31st Infantry Regiment, 2nd Brigade Combat Team conducted the challenge April 21-23 on Fo... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL

"You cannot substitute (this event) for experience," Landers said. "A lot of these lieutenants have not deployed before. The best we can do is try to replicate that combat experience as closely as possible."

The battalion will be spread out to nine different locations within Afghanistan.

"Most of the lieutenants will be geographically dispersed and have no interaction with each other at all for the entire time," Landers explained. "This is one opportunity before we leave to get them all together and do some team building."

The focus of the challenge was not to have teams complete a task or compete for a score. The challenging tasks were a method to teach the lieutenants how to be better officers.

Landers and the company commanders spent nearly six hours talking to the lieutenants on several topics ranging from Army values and personal values, Sexual Harassment Assault Response Program to tactical situational awareness and patients.

"I'm not evaluating tasks. The principle training focus is building teamwork among them through shared hardship and through an introspective look at our own values and focus on their decision making as they get ready to deploy," Landers said.

With that in mind, the events not only included basic soldier skills like weapons maintenance and casualty assistance, which everyone needs to know, but also conflict mediation and critical thinking. Strenuous physical fitness activities like the Mountain Athlete Warrior assessment and an 8-mile ruck march added were added stressors.

Within the first 24 hours, after a long day of physical activity and the discussion panel, the lieutenants found themselves conducting a situational training lane at a village in the middle of the night.

Using concepts learned earlier in the day, the village scenario tested the lieutenants' ability to assess a situation and come up with a reasonable solution that diminished hostilities and disagreements. A technique needed as they deploy more as advisors than combatants.

"The fight that we are having now, overseas, is not going to be so much kinetic as it is building relationships, building teams, working with our Afghan partners and working with partners from other countries," said 1st Lt. Nikolas Anninos, who planned the event. "So, one of the things we want to get out (of this training) is not just a kinetic raid on a village, but actually go through and do something more realistic of what we will see."

Never the less, Soldiers need to be proficient on their weapon. So, on the second day, with less than five hours of sleep, they had to maneuver a short range marksmanship course with an M4 rifle. The ability to engage enemy fire while tired can be crucial to mission accomplishment.

On day three, with ruck on their backs and weapons in hand, the officers broke into four teams to navigate a round robin type course of five stations. The whole group had to work together to complete the tasks, which included a memory game and setting up a tactical check point.

All in all the challenge was a training event that focused on interpersonal skills that will not only help the platoon leaders face difficult situations within Afghanistan, but also be more effective leaders for their Soldiers.