Patriot Soldiers partner with Arrowhead Division

By Staff Sgt. Nathan Akridge, 3rd Brigade Combat Team JournalistMarch 9, 2017

3 BCT Mountain Peak 1
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3 BCT Mountain Peak 2
2 / 2 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Col. Clarence Henderson Jr., left, commander of the 72nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team, 36th Infantry Division, and Col. Brian Sullivan, commander of the 3rd Brigade Combat Team, 10th Mountain Division (LI), discuss lessons learned while conducting a ... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL

FORT POLK, La. -- Soldiers from the 3rd Brigade, 10th Mountain Division (LI) "Patriots" trained side by side with members of the 36th Infantry Division "Arrowhead" during the Mountain Peak exercise here, writing history as the first two units in the Associated Unit Pilot program, or AUP, to participate in a major training event together.

In September, the Patriot Brigade became the only active-duty brigade combat team to wear a National Guard patch. By partnering an active-duty brigade with a National Guard unit, the Army hoped to drastically cut the time needed for the National Guard to prepare for a deployment.

Col. Brian Sullivan, 3rd BCT commander, said that this training exercise shows that the AUP program is more than just a patch change.

"The pilot has specific benchmark events that assess the effectiveness of the particular associations increasing readiness. For (3rd BCT) and 36th ID, our benchmark for this year is our (Joint Readiness Training Center) rotation in May," Sullivan said. "Mountain Peak serves as a critical rehearsal to ensure we are successful at JRTC. Right now there are 80 Soldiers from the 72nd (Infantry Brigade Combat Team), 36th ID, serving as the exercise control for Mountain Peak, which means a National Guard IBCT from 36th ID is training its sister active component BCT (3rd BCT)."

Sullivan also stressed that the AUP partnership has already paid dividends to the Soldiers of 3rd BCT.

"(The (3rd BCT) has already benefitted greatly from our association with 36th ID," Sullivan said. "The knowledge of their division master gunner exceeds any on active duty I've known.

Without him, we would not have been able to train our cavalry squadron to standard."

Col. Clarence Henderson, 72nd IBCT commander, said that both the 72nd and 3rd BCT leadership have a specific goal in mind: readiness.

"This is our first opportunity to partner with (3rd BCT) and develop and mature the AUP program, as well as share the challenges that our units face," Henderson said.

Soldiers from the 36th Infantry Division participated in all facets of the training during Mountain Peak, including the preparation, planning and execution phases of the exercise. Command Sgt. Maj. Richard Sublett, 72nd IBCT senior enlisted adviser, whose 34 years of service include 13 on active duty, said the AUP program has helped both the active duty and National Guard units involved.

"It gives us a better insight on lessons learned from the active duty side to the National Guard side and vice versa," he said. "What do we each do better than the other? It's more of a best practices -- what we learn from you and what you learn from us."

Both sides profited tremendously from the training. Maj. Philip Waggoner, 3rd BCT plans and operations officer in charge, said the National Guard enhanced the effectiveness and training value of the Mountain Peak exercise.

"I think this exercise proves that the National Guard and active-duty components are very capable of working together. (The) 36th ID, 10th Mountain Division and 3rd BCT have conducted integrated planning on this exercise since October to make it a worthwhile training event for the 3rd BCT Soldiers," Waggoner said.

So as the Army goes rolling along, the AUP program charges full speed ahead, strengthening the bond between active-duty and National Guard forces.