Texas National Guard engineer mission making history

By Capt. Maria MengroneFebruary 8, 2017

Texas guard engineer mission making history
1 / 5 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Task Force Chaos Commander Col. Charles Schoening (far left) and Senior Advisor Command Sgt. Maj. Anthony Simms (far right) pose with Soldiers from the 310th Multi Role Bridge Company during their battlefield rotation in Iraq. Task Force Chaos is res... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Texas guard engineer mission making history
2 / 5 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Horizontal construction engineers assigned to the 368th Engineer Battalion of the U.S. Army Reserve use a cement truck to build a concrete slab in Afghanistan. The battalion is assigned to the 176th Engineer Brigade (Task Force Chaos). Task Force Cha... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Texas guard engineer mission making history
3 / 5 Show Caption + Hide Caption – A carpentry and masonry specialist assigned to 1156th Engineer Company of the New York National Guard hammers out sections of wood to complete construction for an ammo control point tower at Camp Taji, Iraq. The 176th Engineer Brigade (Task Force Ch... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Texas guard engineer mission making history
4 / 5 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Soldiers from the 310th Multi-Role Bridge Company work alongside engineers from the British Army to dismantle an Acrow bridge they built together. The Acrow bridge built helped hone the skills of U.S. and British engineers in preparation to train Ir... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
Texas guard engineer mission making history
5 / 5 Show Caption + Hide Caption – The 176th Engineer Brigade S3 Operations Officer Lt. Col. Robert Crockem briefs Task Force Chaos Commander Col. Charles Schoening and Senior Advisor Command Sgt. Maj. Anthony Simms during the weekly staff update brief at Camp Buerhing, Kuwait, Feb. 8... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL

CAMP BUERHING, Kuwait - Approximately 135 Soldiers of the 176th Engineer Brigade, Texas Army National Guard continue to provide command and control of more than 1,600 Active Duty, National Guard and Army Reserve engineer forces across the U.S. Central Command area of responsibility while deployed.

"This is a historic mission for the engineer brigade. This is the first time an engineer brigade headquarters has had this type of mission in a contingency environment," said 176th Engineer Brigade Commander, Col. Charles Schoening, a resident of Georgetown, Texas.

Since arriving in theater, the brigade tackled many challenges in order to develop operational capability.

"The greatest challenge we initially faced was not having our network infrastructure and connectivity in place," said Schoening. "We overcame these shortfalls and were able to become fully operationally capable within the first 30 days."

The brigade is responsible for engineer forces spanning eight countries in 19 separate locations.

"Our primary focus is providing command and control for engineer missions in the CENTCOM area of responsibility. This includes providing support for our down trace battalions and companies. Since arriving in theater, we have made it possible for battalion and company commanders to conduct battlefield circulation, and we immediately started pushing our brigade resources, such as behavioral health, religious services support, and medical support to all the different locations," said Schoening.

Many of the missions across the various countries are heavily focused on general engineer construction tasks.

"We are in charge of troop labor construction planning; we help the stakeholders plan the project all the way through execution," said Lt. Col. Robert Crockem Jr., operations officer of the 176th Eng. Bde. and native of New Orleans, La.

To facilitate the execution of the engineer projects the brigade assigned portfolio managers to each area of operation.

"Our portfolio managers coordinate with stakeholders to understand their requirements and we help them build those requirements into construction projects. Once coordinated we push the project through the funding process to get materials and then start tasking our battalions against that," said Crockem.

The brigade also touts a ready and equipped geospatial team that utilizes geographic data to compile maps which support military engineer operations.

"We provide geospatial products that enhance decision making," said Warrant Officer 1 Steven Machado, geospatial technician and native of Hobbs, N.M.

"We have received positive feedback because we are able to provide perspective on the ground for the entire CENTCOM area of responsibility," said Machado.

Allowing movements across the various regions is required to obtain critical data to assist in the planning process.

"We survey different base camps and use our instruments to map out what you see on the ground," said Spc. Quincy Daniels, technical engineer, 176th En. Bde. and native of Dallas, Texas.

"We then get important to know information for things like drainage flow," said Daniels.

The arrival of the engineer brigade also helped serve as a conduit to assist its two battalions in prioritizing its various missions.

Additionally, the brigade provides liaison officers to help support and build the various higher command relationships, and provide visibility of future construction requirements.

"There is a lot of pride in the work being done. Our Soldiers are motivated and there are a lot of eyes on the work that they are doing. They are doing everything they can to make Texas proud," said Schoening.

The headquarters element of the 176th Engineer Brigade is a Texas Army National Guard unit based in Grand Prairie, Texas. The unit is serving a nine-month deployment to the Middle East in support of Operation Spartan Shield, Operation Inherent Resolve, and Operation Freedom's Sentinel.