Connecting Alaska to the World And the World to Alaska
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations
News

Arctic Warrior: U.S. Army Alaska Launches Its First Annual Wintertime Training Exercise

Alex Skripnichuk/4th BCT, 25th Infantry Division public affairs

U.S. Army Alaska begins a new annual combat training exercise today on ranges around Fort Greely.

The 11-day training exercise called Arctic Warrior mainly involves the 4th Infantry Brigade Combat Team Airborne out of Joint Base Elemendorf Richardson. It’ll be supported by Air Force personnel and aircraft based at JBER, and units from Fort Wainwright and the Canadian air force.

“We’ll have probably more than 1,200 soldiers, all told, between the line units – the infantry, the artillery, and all the support units that have to come in to back those guys up,”  U.S. Army Alaska spokesman John Pennell said Friday.

Pennell says the exercise will give soldiers a chance to train in cold weather and  test their readiness, and their equipment’s, to operate in extreme cold.

“You have to be specially trained to deal with the cold and everything that comes with it,” he said.

This is the first Arctic Warrior exercise. Pennell says the Army has always conducted smaller-scale winter training in Alaska, but nothing as big as Arctic Warrior, nor Northern Edge, the bigger biennial exercise conducted by the Alaskan Command, which also is based at JBER.

“We plan on doing it annually from now on, always as a winter exercise, and hopefully growing in scale,” he said.

Pennell says Arctic Warrior reflects the Army’s renewed emphasis on operating at high latitudes, after 20 years of primarily focusing on fighting terrorists elsewhere in the world.   

“With the global war on terror, the Army kind of shifted our focus away from the Arctic, and more into being prepared to rotate forces into Iraq or Afghanistan, or wherever they’re needed,” he said. “And so, some of our Arctic training has atrophied.”

Pennell says greater readiness is needed because of Alaska’s strategic location, which enables the U.S. military to project power globally. And there’s more activity in the Arctic region now that it’s more accessible since climate change has sharply reduced sea ice and opened up shipping lanes.

“With the warming Arctic, we’re seeing a lot more traffic in the waters off Alaska,” he said. “We’re seeing all the Arctic nations are now having to reconsider defending their northern border.”

Pennell says preparations for this year’s exercise includes preparation for a different kind of adversary – the coronavirus. He says covid precautions include frequent testing and maintaining separation between units, as much as possible.

Tim has worked in the news business for over three decades, mainly as a newspaper reporter and editor in southern Arizona. Tim first came to Alaska with his family in 1967, and grew up in Delta Junction before emigrating to the Lower 48 in 1977 to get a college education and see the world.