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Afghan Field Artillery School Opens...

Heh. If you're learning your trade from the Australians and the Mongolians... if they're true to form, those will be some tough, well-schooled Redlegs. I do like the D-30, it's a damn good gun.

Two Afghan National Army (ANA) Soldiers fire a 122 mm D-30 howitzer during a live-fire demonstration Oct. 4, 2010, at Kabul Military Training Center, outside of Kabul, Afghanistan. Several Afghan Soldiers, U.S. and coalition forces attended the demonstration, which was part of a ceremony to celebrate the official opening of the ANA School of Artillery. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Rebecca Linder) 
Two Afghan National Army (ANA) Soldiers fire a 122 mm D-30 howitzer during a live-fire demonstration Oct. 4, 2010, at Kabul Military Training Center, outside of Kabul, Afghanistan. Several Afghan Soldiers, U.S. and coalition forces attended the demonstration, which was part of a ceremony to celebrate the official opening of the ANA School of Artillery. (U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Rebecca Linder)

Afghan National Army School of Artillery officially opens

By Sgt. Rebecca Linder
Task Force Rushmore Public Affairs

KABUL MILITARY TRAINING CENTER, Afghanistan – Afghan National Army (ANA) Soldiers along with U.S. and coalition forces took part in the official opening ceremony of the ANA School of Artillery Oct. 4 at Kabul Military Training Center in Kabul, Afghanistan.

The ceremony included a live-fire demonstration by ANA student instructors who fired 122 mm D-30 howitzers, which finalized the completion of a two-month, train-the-trainer course taught by the Australian Training Team – Kabul (ATT- K).

According to a fact sheet by NATO Training Mission - Afghanistan and Combined Security Transition Command – Afghanistan, the new school will serve as the foundation for the professionalization of the ANA artillery branch. The school’s opening is the first major step forward in developing a capable and professional ANA artillery branch.

“Mastering artillery will add a greater level of capability to the ANA,” said Australian Army Maj. Piero Bertocchi, executive officer, ATT- K. “This enhanced capability equates to more fire power and an increased ability to fight.”

About 20 to 170 students will attend one of nine different courses targeted for enlisted and officer personnel. Each course ranges from eight to 16 week classes, and this year, nearly 2,500 students will graduate as artillerymen.

Soldiers at the school will be educated on gun drills, fire support and direction of fire and further learn about artillery tactics, leadership responsibilities, radio procedures, map reading and navigation skills. In addition artillery education, each Soldier will have approximately 70 hours of literacy and numeracy training in the curriculum, added Bertocchi.

The Australians are not alone in training the Afghan students. With expertise from 10 Soldiers of the Mongolian Mobile Training Team (MTT), Soldiers are able to train on weapons such as the 122 mm D-30.

“The MTT brings a wealth of knowledge on the technical and tactical aspects of field artillery,” said Maj. Kyle Holt, liaison officer, Mongolian Expeditionary Task Force III, 761st Military Police Battalion, Alaska Army National Guard. “The Mongolians have had a train-the-trainer relationship with the ANA for 10 years. They live and work with the ANA at Camp Alamo (Kabul) for six-month stints and help train the Soldiers.”

With a partnership of training from the Australians and the Mongolians, ANA Soldiers will be ready to fight with the skills and knowledge they learn at the ANA School of Artillery.
 


If you're like me, and just lurves you some artillery, click here for the full-size version of that picture.. [not that it even begins to compete with Boq's pic in the post above this one!)

4 Comments

The literacy and numeracy training are the key - the biggest obstacle to getting the ANA the ability to do indirect fire is the fact that so many of them can't read - and thus can't read maps or firing tables.  (Actually, both the ANA and ANP use learning to read as a recruiting incentive.)
 
Hope they don't learn just enoughm, and then change sides...
 
It'll be a change from the way they used to do business.

In the old Afghan Army, if you could read, you became a cook, because you could follow the recipes.

No, that's not a joke.
 
I had a friend at OHDOT that had been company clerk in the Marines when he was in Vietnam. He got the job because he was, literally, the only guy among the junior enlisted that could read.