March brings Joint Pacific Multi-national Readiness Center Exercise to Fort Greely, DTA

By Jim Verchio, Chief, Fort Greely Public AffairsFebruary 17, 2022

ArcticTough
1 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – JPMRC 22-02 will bring units from around the globe March 7-27 to train in Alaska's remote interior. The exercise will validate the units’ cold weather training readiness and capabilities, current equipment cold weather capability and provide detailed feedback and observation of current equipment sets to U.S. Army Alaska. (Photo Credit: Photo courtesy of U.S. Army Alaska) VIEW ORIGINAL
Arctic Tough
2 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Paratroopers from the 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division, U.S. Army Alaska, drop into Allen Army Airfield in a simulated joint forcible entry operation, with the Alaska Range silhouetted in the background.
Similar scenarios will play out during JPMRC 22-02 when Army, and coalition partners exercise to validate the ability of U.S. Army Alaska units and their partners to deploy, fight, and win in an arctic environment. (Photo Credit: Photo courtesy of U.S. Army Alaska)
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Airborne operations like this one into Malemute Drop Zone help maintain proficiency across the formation, from planners, to riggers, to maintainers and infantry Paratroopers. Focusing on training and tactics, techniques and procedures development...
3 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Airborne operations like this one into Malemute Drop Zone help maintain proficiency across the formation, from planners, to riggers, to maintainers and infantry Paratroopers. Focusing on training and tactics, techniques and procedures development for deployment operations in an arctic environment, JPMRC 22-02 is designed to validate the ability to rapidly deploy a brigade-sized force package quickly and integrate with external elements.
(Photo Credit: Photo courtesy of U.S. Army Alaska)
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Soldiers from the 1st Battalion, 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment drop into Malemute Drop Zone for training in an arctic environment. ...
4 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Soldiers from the 1st Battalion, 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment drop into Malemute Drop Zone for training in an arctic environment.
JPMRC 22-02 will test units' ability to fight, survive and win in the most extreme conditions. These scenarios provide realistic and relevant training that enables the U.S. Army to respond more effectively to regional crises, meet future security needs, and is critical to sustaining readiness. (Photo Credit: Photo courtesy of U.S. Army Alaska)
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JPMRC 22-02, the first Home Station-Combat Training Center rotation in Alaska, will focuses on Large Scale Combat Operations and is a cold weather training event that includes Situational Training and Live-Fire Exercises....
5 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – JPMRC 22-02, the first Home Station-Combat Training Center rotation in Alaska, will focuses on Large Scale Combat Operations and is a cold weather training event that includes Situational Training and Live-Fire Exercises.
The exercise will validate the units’ cold weather training readiness and capabilities, current equipment cold weather capability and provide detailed feedback and observation of current equipment sets to U.S. Army Alaska. (Photo Credit: Photo courtesy of U.S. Army Alaska)
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We have the equipment! JPMRC equipment has completed its journey across the Pacific Ocean and is being delivered into the Donnelly Training Area in preparation for JPMRC 22-02 ...
6 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – We have the equipment! JPMRC equipment has completed its journey across the Pacific Ocean and is being delivered into the Donnelly Training Area in preparation for JPMRC 22-02

JPMRC appreciates the hard work from U.S. Army Alaska, 833d Transportation Battalion and 596th Transportation Brigade to make this movement happen. (Photo Credit: Photo by Capt. Edwin Lopez)
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Live-fire exercises play a key role for evaluating unit readiness. These evaluations increase America’s arctic readiness and improve the competence and professionalism of  Soldiers and leaders.
7 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Live-fire exercises play a key role for evaluating unit readiness. These evaluations increase America’s arctic readiness and improve the competence and professionalism of Soldiers and leaders. (Photo Credit: Photo courtesy of the 95th CBRN Company 'Arctic Dragons') VIEW ORIGINAL

FORT GREELY, Alaska – Recognizing that dynamic security challenges demand dynamic training environments, remote, Interior Alaska and the Donnelly Training Area are being called upon to host Joint Pacific Multi-national Readiness Center exercise 22-02 March 7-27.

This exercise provides the Army, and coalition partners, an opportunity to validate the ability of U.S. Army Alaska units and their partners to deploy, fight, and win in an arctic environment.

The first Home Station-Combat Training Center rotation in Alaska, the exercise focuses on Large Scale Combat Operations and is a cold weather training event that includes Situational Training and Live-Fire Exercises.

The exercise will validate the units’ cold weather training readiness and capabilities, current equipment cold weather capability and provide detailed feedback and observation of current equipment sets to USARAK.

“Supporting Alaska-based units like this with HS-CTC exercises proves the importance of having Alaska-based assets and relationships in place,” said Fort Greely’s Chief of Plans and Operations Maj. Scott Beckett. “Living and training alongside our partners helps the U.S. maintain the relationships and trust that are essential for ensuring not only arctic readiness, but also regional and global security.”

According to a press release by USARAK, residents in and around Delta Junction will see an increased military presence on the Richardson Highway.

“Interior Alaska residents will see an increase in convoy traffic and military movements around the Donnelly Training Area in March,” the release reads. “Military vehicles and personnel will be moving between Fort Wainwright in Fairbanks and Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson in Anchorage to the Fort Greely area before and after the exercise dates.”

Focusing on training and tactics, techniques and procedures development for deployment operations in an arctic environment, JPMRC 22-02 is designed to validate the ability to rapidly deploy a brigade-sized force package quickly and integrate with external elements.

Participants include members from 2nd Division, Canadian Army paratroopers; the 450th Tactical Helicopter Squadron, Canadian Army; HIMARS from 17th Field Artillery Brigade, 7th Infantry Division; and other enablers from across the total Army.

“The Army is a globally responsive force ready to deploy at a moment’s notice,” said Fort Greely Garrison Commander, Lt. Col. Joey Orr. “This scenario provides realistic and relevant training that enables us to respond more effectively to regional crises, meet future security needs, and is critical to sustaining readiness.”

The exercise will involve the movement of a Stryker infantry brigade from Fort Wainwright to the Donnelly Training Area by road. The exercise will test the deployment processes of the units involved and the support agencies and their collective ability to rapidly prepare and deploy forces for extreme cold-weather operations.

It will also test subordinate and supporting units’ ability to conduct offensive and defensive operations against a near-peer threat as the 1st Battalion, 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment from the 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division assumes the role as opposing forces.

A command element from USARAK, along with support elements from the 4/25th Infantry Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), and the 17th Combat Sustainment Support Battalion will provide additional personnel and equipment to increase the realism of the exercise.

Roughly 8,000 soldiers from across USARAK along with JPMRC and JRTC personnel will have a role in the exercise, in addition to the many support personnel from across Alaska working to make this exercise a success.

“Successful execution of JPMRC 22-02 takes a total team effort,” Orr said. “It exercises unit and installation-support agencies and builds readiness from Alaska to Hawaii to Fort Polk. There is no doubt it will increase America’s arctic readiness and improve the competence and professionalism of our Soldiers and leaders.”

According to the release, Fort Greely and Delta Junction can expect minimal impact to normal traffic and activities.

“This exercise will not significantly affect civilian communities,” reads the release. “The movement of equipment by air and road may be evident to people who live in proximity to DTA and Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson. Equipment moved by line haul on the Richardson and Glenn highways will be scheduled to have minimal impact to traffic.”

All JPMRC 22-02 participants will practice comprehensive COVID-19 mitigation measures that include, but are not limited to, batch and pool testing, social distancing and the wearing of masks, monitoring from on-ground medical personnel, and sanitization of living, dining, work, and medical treatment areas.

Fort Greely, known as the ‘Home of the Rugged Professional,’ is strategically located in remote, Interior Alaska, and its mission is midcourse missile defense. Fort Greely Garrison supported tenants include: Ground-Based Midcourse Defense, 49th Missile Defense Battalion, 59th Signal Battalion, Cold Regions Test Center, Army and Air Force Exchange Service, Defense Commissary Agency, Logistics Readiness Center, and the U.S. Postal Service.

The garrison commander at Fort Greely is dual-hatted and reports to both Installation Management Command through the Pacific Area Region Office and the senior mission commander through U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command.