Atlas Drop 2011 - Carving DZs, understanding out of Uganda bush

By U.S. Army Africa Public AffairsJuly 22, 2011

Atlas Drop 2011 - Carving DZs, understanding out of Uganda bush
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Atlas Drop 2011 - Carving DZs, understanding out of Uganda bush
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SOLDIERS from the Uganda Peoples Defense Force and Georgia National Guard trained and lived together in the bush north of Soroti as part of Atlas Drop 11.

Infantrymen, cavalry scouts and pathfinders from 3rd Squadron, 108th Cavalry Regiment, 560th Battlefield Surveillance Brigade, and the soldiers from UPDF’s 27th Infantry Battalion trained alongside each other on patrolling and clearing aerial-resupply drop zones in three locations in the Olilim and Kapelebyong areas of Uganda.

“We’ve been out here since yesterday (April 13), and by here I mean at Drop Zone Red in Kapelebyong, working with the 27th Infantry, UPDF, training with them on pathfinder operations and some of our troop tactics and procedures,” said 1st Lt. Steven Russell of Dahlonega, Ga., a member of Troop A, 3rd Sqdn., 108th Cav. Regt., who serves as the pathfinder team leader and lead instructor for the UPDF training team at DZ Red. “In addition to that, we’ve been working hand in hand with the UPDF. They have been showing us how to conduct field operations and how they operate in tactical and combat environments.”

DZ Red (Kapelebyong), along with DZ White and Blue (Olilim), was used during three days of live aerial-resupply practice drops that concluded AD 11. The training conducted during this year’s iteration of the annual exercise, sponsored by U.S. Army Africa increased the capability of both UPDF and U.S. forces to resupply soldiers operating in remote areas.

UPDF Lt. Stephen Omuya, an instructor from Olilim Training School, said the training conducted as part of AD 11 will be helpful in whatever environment soldiers may find themselves working in.

“This (training) is very important for us to have such technical and tactical training exercises,” he said.

In training and living together, the U.S. and Ugandan soldiers came to know each other better, both as professional soldiers and as people.

The UPDF soldiers were eager to learn and many of them filled notebooks with information presented during classes, even remaining after a training class was over to get any notes they may have missed, said Staff Sgt. Jeremiah Stafford of Charleston, S.C., who serves as a pathfinder with 3rd Sqdn., 108th Cav. Regt.

“The UPDF soldiers are all very eager to learn,” he said.

The main challenge the Ugandan and U.S. soldiers training at DZ Red noted has to do with communicating the technical nature of aerial delivery operations.

“Our biggest challenge out here has been the language barrier, absolutely,” Stafford said.

To help with the language differences, one of the UPDF noncommissioned officers stepped forward to translate the U.S. instructors’ English into Swahili, and a few of the U.S. Soldiers figured out their own means to communicate.

“The guys came up with some training aids to help with the language barrier,” said Staff Sgt. Gabriel Brooks of Douglasville, Ga., a section leader with Troop A, 3rd Sqdn., 108th Cav. Regt. During some of the breaks in the busy training schedule, a few of the Georgia Soldiers created a miniature C-130 Hercules aircraft and a Black Hawk helicopter with rotors that actually turned out of water bottles, duct tape and sticks. They used the models to provide the UPDF soldiers with visual means of grasping the technical information they were presenting.

Through working together to make the training as beneficial and pertinent as possible for each soldier on the ground at DZ Red, the UPDF and U.S. forces not only became more proficient at establishing drop zones, but also at how to seeing challenges as opportunities that, if overcome, can lead to greater understanding and perhaps even friendship.

“(We are getting) an immense sense of fulfillment and enjoyment from working with a very professional force, getting to see a beautiful part of our world and getting a tremendous amount of multicultural and multinational experience and working with one of our strong allies,” said Russell.

During a recent radio broadcast at an FM station in Soroti by the Ugandan and U.S. leadership of AD 11, Lt. Col. Jeffrey Dickerson, 3rd Sqdn., 108th Cav. Regt. commander and deputy director of the exercise, said that the enjoyment expressed by Russell will be the most valuable of all outcomes for everyone involved with AD 11.

“Years from now the most valuable thing that will come out of this for both the soldiers of the UPDF and the Soldiers of the U.S. Army…is the memory of the interactions that we had, when we were able to learn about each other’s cultures and gain a much greater appreciation for each other.”