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MANEUVER CENTER OF EXCELLENCE - TEAM OF SOLDIERS, FAMILIES, AND CIVILIANS FROM THE BEST ARMY IN THE WORLD!

In This Issue
Hot Topics
BRAC To The Future Event!
BRAC Falls Into Place
News
Faces of BRAC
The Benning Report
Book signing at NIM

Quick Links

Hot Topics:     

 

MCoE HQ dedication set for Friday

Fort Benning's newly renovated headquarters building will be dedicated at 8 a.m. Friday.

The building will be named McGinnis-Wickham Hall for two Medal of Honor recipients, Spc. Ross A. McGinnis and Cpl. Jerry W. Wickham.

    

What's that noise?  

There will be heavy weapons firing on Fort Benning today through Sept. 23 in the northeast portion of post. For more information on weapons firing,  click here  

 

Change to Telephone Dialing Prefixes 

Starting Oct. 16, 2011, dialing prefixes 7 and 8 will be replaced permanently with the new dialing prefixes:   94 (DSN) and 99 (Commercial), so please start using them now to become familiar with the new dialing patterns.

 

Concert Postponed 

The free concert scheduled for Sept. 25 on the lawn of the commanding general's quarters has been postponed.

BRAC to the Future png

By Cheryl Rodewig 

 

You may have heard the buzz - BRAC: To the Future! is coming.

 

A celebration of Armor and Infantry, the festival begins at 1 p.m. Sept. 23 and closes with fireworks at 9:30. The location is York Field, facing the recently renovated Maneuver Center of Excellence headquarters (Building 4).

 

Pictures with a tank, live music, more than 20 inflatables, military demonstrations and prizes are just a few of the items the Directorate of Family and Morale, Welfare and Recreation has planned for the day. And it's all free, said Bridgett Siter, DFMWR marketing specialist.

 

So how do you get an invitation to this extravaganza?

 

A welcome is extended to all Soldiers, retirees and civilian employees of the Fort Benning community and their families, Siter said.

 

"All these groups have patiently endured this lengthy construction process," she said. "They've embraced change and heartily welcomed all the new folks. Many of them have been uprooted and replanted far from home and family and all that was familiar to them. Mostly, these are the civilian employees who brought their skills and institutional knowledge - and families - to Fort Benning to make this transition a success."

 

The event highlights both the Congress-mandated end of Base Realignment and Closure Sept. 15 and the "future" that's just starting here on post between the Infantry and Armor units.

 

"It's a celebration (of) the beginning of a beautiful relationship between the Army's mightiest fighting forces," Siter said. "This event will combine all the best elements of an open house and a street fair. It will be fun and informative. I think it will make our annual Independence Celebration look like a backyard barbecue."

 

Guests can touch a tank, jump with a harness from a 34-foot tower, see the Silver Wings drop in from the sky and watch the airborne Ranger SPIES and FRIES demonstration. DFMWR patrons 18 and older can pass the time with mechanical bull rides, sumo wrestling, airbrush tattoos, caricatures, cornhole and party pong - all courtesy of the BOSS program.

 

"A number of community agencies, civic organizations and schools will be present to help us celebrate," Siter said. "Entertainment will include Kenneth 'Babyface' Edmonds, Natalie Stoval, Appetite for Disaster, a Guns & Roses tribute band, and our very own MCoE Band, which will accompany the fireworks show that will cap the event at 9:30 p.m."

 

Military ID cardholders can register to win a Kia Soul, a Masterbuilt electric smoker or turkey fryer, diamonds, a big-screen TV, bikes and more online at www.benningmwr.com. Winners must be present to receive their prizes.

 

If you work up an appetite, food and refreshments are available. Tokens to purchase food will be sold onsite and in advance at DFMWR headquarters in Building 2783. Tokens are $1 each and unused tokens can be redeemed for full value.

 

Officials will be directing traffic the day of the event. Handicap parking will be available on the west side of Building 4. Parking on the grass is prohibited.

 

One last word of advice: "Don't forget your sunblock, lawnchairs, cameras and comfortable shoes, but please leave your four-legged friends at home," Siter said.

For more information, call 706-545-3328 or click here  

BRAC falls into place

 

mcOe hq

By Vince Little

 

Years of planning, along with a few billion dollars in renovations and construction, officially came to fruition Thursday as the Maneuver Center of Excellence met the Base Realignment and Closure deadline for full operating capacity.

 

With the Armor School's transfer from Fort Knox, Ky., complete, post leaders discussed the way ahead for the Maneuver Center and Fort Benning during a press conference at the newly restored MCoE headquarters building. The entire installation will mark the occasion Friday at the "BRAC: To the Future!" festival on nearby York Field.

 

"This will be the biggest celebration ever on post," said Maj. Gen. Robert Brown, the MCoE and Fort Benning commanding general. "We're celebrating Armor finally being down here. They're a part of our family now and the whole community."

 

Col. Tom James, the Armor School commandant, said the organization has about 2,300 Soldiers and civilians. While roughly half made the move from Fort Knox, others were reassigned here from elsewhere as the process unfolded.

 

"We've closed out everybody at Fort Knox that's going to be here," he said. "We're fully forced and excited to be at Fort Benning."

 

Unifying the Infantry and Armor schools at a single location will have a profound impact on Army operations and training moving forward, the leaders said.

 

"We fight together, and we learned years ago how effective combined-arms maneuver can be," Brown said, "but it's tough to train together when you're apart back home. ... I have come across Infantry second lieutenants who had never even seen a tank in person before they went into combat. That doesn't make any sense to me.

 

"Here, they can get exposed, and we can train together. It's going to have a huge impact. Combined-arms maneuver and fighting jointly is critical to our success."

 

Col. Walter Piatt, the Infantry School commandant, said Fort Benning will continue providing the Army with trained, ready forces, and the consolidation of both branches here is only going to add to the Maneuver Center's relevance.

 

"The Soldiers who train here are going to be even better," he said. "We're going to lead the way for the Army in how we train our Soldiers for the future."

 

Brown praised the BRAC plan put in motion and hard work by a cast of thousands, including his predecessors - Lt. Gen. Michael Ferriter and retired Maj. Gen. Walter Wojdakowski. The roadmap was so well conceived it practically ran on "auto pilot," he said.

 

"It's all about precision," James said. "(Armor and Infantry formations) deal with an objective area that requires it. We can dissect that area together, and it starts with training. Now that the schoolhouses are in the same place, we can feel the synergy and power of it."

 

The MCoE will teach 195 courses and programs of instruction and train about 145,000 Soldiers and leaders a year, including 30 percent of all civilians coming into the Army.

 

Although construction will continue around post through 2016, the multitude of requirements that went into creating the Maneuver Center have been accomplished, Brown said. Dixie Road, the Good Hope training area and a few other ranges are among the BRAC projects still under way.

 

"We're perfect space-wise," he said. "We have more than enough (ranges) to do our mission. In fact, we have the highest range-utilization rate in the Army."

 

Finalizing a campaign plan for 2015 is the MCoE's top priority, the general said. The schools are focusing on the future and the significant role the command plays in reshaping Army training, doctrine and requirements for the maneuver force, which faces an increasingly complex battlefield.

 

In addition to cultivating the baseline requirements and model for 21st-century maneuver training, other MCoE initiatives include the "Squad: Foundation of the Decisive Force" and Brigade Combat Team 2020. The leaders said cutting-edge technology and equipment will always be pushed, but not at the expense of a human dimension that goes into Soldier skills and leader development.

 

"Our best weapon on the ground is the Soldier. It comes down to people," Piatt said. "It's all about their minds and physical abilities. How do we develop that better in the future, when the challenges are going to be even more difficult?"

 

Armor was the largest chunk of MCoE transformation but not the only one, Fort Benning officials said. It also includes consolidation of an Armed Forces Reserve Center and relocation of the 43rd Equipment Concentration Site from Fort Gillem, Ga.

 

Brown thanked the Columbus and Phenix City communities for its longstanding support of Fort Benning and said the relationship remains solid.

 

"We have big-city capability in a small-town atmosphere," he said of the tricommunity. "We're excited, and the future is bright. We're actually pretty lucky here in the Chattahoochee Valley - so many other places are shrinking because of the economy. We're growing."

2011 Sniper Competition

sniper

The U.S. Army Sniper School and the Army Sniper Association will host the 2011 International Sniper Competition and Symposium from Sept. 23-30. The competition is open to all active duty, National Guard, Reserve Soldiers, other U.S. and international service members, and civilian law enforcement agencies. There are slots for 32 two-man sniper/observer teams to compete. Eight of these slots are reserved for international teams, four for law enforcement, and 20 slots military teams. Prior to the start of the competition, there will be a two-day symposium focused on sharing of the tactics, techniques, procedures and lessons learned from subject matter experts who have recent operational experience. For more information, visit the

Sniper School website or the Army Sniper Association website.

News

  

From hospital to Hollywood: a Soldier's story     

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Ranger medic memorialized with aid station dedication  

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Joe Theismann to appear at 'BRAC: To the Future!' festival   

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Defense leaders laud DADT repeal, return of 'equality'   

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Panetta: Budget cuts will boost risk to nation at war    

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Rangers get 'adrenaline rush' on paintball field   

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Faces of BRAC

Many people work behind the scenes to shape the Maneuver Center of Excellence


Tom O'Buckley and Brian Hilton, project engineers with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, oversaw a $60 million infrastructure project that enables tank traffic on and to Fort Benning ranges and training areas north of Harmony Church. Photo by Cindy Andruss.

 

Faces of BRAC

 

Faces of BRAC - O'Buckley/HiltonAsk Tom O'Buckley and Brian Hilton and they'll tell you that any major infrastructure project requires teamwork, coordination and hard work. That was especially the case when the two project engineers with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers were tasked in June 2010, to oversee the construction and repair of more than 60 miles of gravel tank trails and a 16 mile concrete-paved road that included three bridges. The road leads to Hasting Range, which is north of Harmony Church.

 

The project, integral to Fort Benning's transformation to the Maneuver Center of Excellence by fall 2011, comprises part of a $60 million road infrastructure that will support future generations of warriors as they travel to the ranges and training areas dotting the northern and southern borders of Fort Benning. The transportation network includes a main supply route between Hastings Range and the Good Hope Maneuver Training Area. Secondary roads leading to the 19K and 19D one-station-unit training and the Northern Tank Maneuver Corridor connect to the route.

 

The Corps celebrated the functional completion of the 16-mile stretch of Lorraine Road in a ribbon-cutting ceremony Sept. 15, 2011. O'Buckley credits the project's timely completion to USACE's partnerships with its district headquarters in Savannah and MCoE departments including the Facilities Planning Office, Environmental Management Division, Range Operations, and the Directorates of Public Works and Emergency Services. He also praises the contractors, subcontractors and suppliers for their extraordinary commitment to the projects.

 

"It was an incredible amount of work that had to get done in a short time," O'Buckley said. "It usually takes one year to build just one to two miles of road; but here, we've paved 16 miles and built 60 miles of tank trails in only a year."  

 

Hilton agrees.  

 

"What the contractors did to get these projects done in such a compressed amount of time is phenomenal," Hilton said. "I will not be surprised if I never see this volume of commitment from a contractor side again in my career."

The Benning Report

Fort Benning TV

 

September 12, 2011

 

Author to sign copies of Vietnam tribute book at National Infantry Museum and Soldier Center

 

by Borden Black  

 

NahasMany Vietnam veterans have never heard "Thank you for your service" or "Welcome home." That is one purpose of Warriors Remembered, a 240-page, hard cover, 11.5"x 11.5" coffee-table format photo documentary of Vietnam veterans memorials. The author, Colonel (Ret) Albert Nahas, will be signing copies of his book in the lobby of the National Infantry Museum and Soldier Center on September 30 from 9:00 a.m. until 1:00 p.m.  

 

Nahas spent six years and traveled 35,000 miles to complete the book, which is intended to make people aware of the hundreds of memorials in all 50 states. Most of the monuments selected for inclusion in "Warriors Remembered" were built by Vietnam veterans. Their struggles and dedication to recognizing their fallen comrades are also honored in the book.  

 

The unique diversity of Vietnam veterans' memorials and how they differ from memorials of other wars is told through more than 285 photos and the descriptions of the unique features of each memorial.   

 

Nahas, himself a Vietnam veteran of 18 months with the 101st Airborne Division, was wounded after six weeks and worked his way back from the hospital to his same platoon in C Co, 2nd Bn, 502nd Infantry. He retired after an illustrious twenty-six year career in the Army.  

 

Warriors Remembered can be previewed at www.warriorsremembered.com and more information is available at www.nationalinfantrymuseum.com.