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Day
One begins for large Indiana unit
deploying
to Iraq
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Nearly
700 Indiana National Guard Soldiers completed their
initial mobilization process yesterday (Dec. 10) at Camp
Atterbury as part of one of the state’s largest
deployment since World War II.
About one fifth of the 76th Interim Brigade Combat Team
began the long, intensive process of mobilizing for next
year’s scheduled deployment early this morning, filling
out essential paperwork and taking the necessary steps in
preparation for a 12-month deployment to Iraq.
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Mobilization
process started at Camp Atterbury Joint Maneuver Training
Center in Edinburgh, Ind.for more then 3,400 members of the
76th Infantry Brigade Combat Team Indiana Army National
Guard as part of one of the stateÕs largest deployment
efforts to Iraq in history. The Brigade is scheduled to ship
out from Fort Stewart,Ga.,in January as part of their
scheduled deployment. Photos by Staff SGT. Russell Lee Klika |
The
road to deployment began around 7 a.m., as Soldiers moved from one
station to another throughout a large building reserved specifically
for the unit’s mobilization efforts. Soldiers throughout the 76th
received medical evaluations, immunizations, legal advice, insurance
coverage assistance and identification cards.
The
process, which is scheduled to last until mid December, is similar
to what most deploying Soldiers receive prior to leaving, said Sgt.
Maj. Phil Carney, the chief personnel sergeant for the Camp
Atterbury Department of Personnel Communication Activities.
“This
process is to make sure that everything is made available to
Soldiers and their families prior to them leaving,” he said.
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Mobilization process
started at Camp Atterbury Joint Maneuver Training Center
in Edinburgh, Ind.for more then 3,400 members of the 76th
Infantry Brigade Combat Team Indiana Army National Guard
as part of one of the stateÕs largest deployment efforts
to Iraq in history. The Brigade is scheduled to ship out
from Fort Stewart,Ga.,in January as part of their
scheduled deployment.
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Normally, Camp
Atterbury’s facilities ensure that all deploying
servicemembers receive the same level of care, but the
sheer size of the deploying force warranted a larger
facility for the BCT.
“We have made this
amount of care available in one place just because of the
number of individuals deploying,” Carney said. “Right
now, we’re on schedule to process more than 100 Soldiers
every hour.”
Col. Kenneth Newlin, the
deputy commander for the 76th, said that he was pleased
with the initial mobilization process.
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“If you look at the sheer
magnitude of how many Soldiers we’re processing here, it’s been
very successful so far,” Newlin said. “It looks like most of the
bottlenecks at some of the stations have been mitigated, and the
flow is well.”
Newlin said that the reason the
initial phase of the mobilization is going so well is due to the
unit’s proactive approach to deploying.
“The reason we can do this is
because 90 percent of this process has been accomplished prior to
mobilizing, during the Soldier’s weekend drills,” he said.
“This is a radically different approach to how a mobilization
usually operates and our goal is to shift reduction in
post-mobilization training.”
Getting the paperwork out of the way initially paves the road for
more time to train in the end, Newlin added.
“Our core warrior tasks and
readiness training have been completed already, so we can go
directly into mission-specific training,” Newlin said. “Under
the old training model, a unit of our size would conduct 150 days of
training at mobilization. We are essentially cutting it down to 72
training days as a result of this process.”
Some of the Soldiers deploying
praised the process, which included coffee and fresh-baked cookies
while they waited in line to finalize their paperwork. Pvt. Joshua
Raffanti, an infantryman with Bravo Company, 152nd Reconnaissance,
Surveillance, and Target Acquisition Squadron, said that
in-processing went well despite being anxious about deploying.
“I’m excited and nervous, but
today has been real easy,” he said. “I haven’t hit any snags
with my paperwork, which is great. We did this initially in October,
which was terrible; it was basically standing in line all day for
three days straight. That fact that we can jump through the lines
here really reduces the overall stress levels.”
More than 3,400 Soldiers throughout
Indiana are scheduled for mobilization to Fort Stewart, Ga., in
early January, where they will finish their training and deploy to
Iraq. Members of the 76th will have the opportunity to enjoy a
holiday exodus in December prior to leaving
By
Rob Cooper
Crier
Staff Writer
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