PICATINNY ARSENAL, N.J. (Feb. 22, 2010) -- With the surge to Afghanistan now underway, thousands of XM-153 Common Remotely Operated Weapons Stations, known as CROWS, will soon be taking flight to strengthen U.S. Army forces in theater.
Program Executive Office Soldier is ramping up its stateside logistics
efforts and is in the process of establishing three new CROWS support
sites in Afghanistan. The sites -- under PEO Soldier 's Project Manager
for Soldier Weapons -- will manage the fielding, training, and
sustainment of the XM-153 CROWS.
The CROWS systems mount what is essentially a small turret on top of
Army combat vehicles that provides Soldiers the ability to employ their
machine guns while using a control grip and video monitor from inside
the protection of an armored vehicle. There are currently about 1,000
CROWS systems already in use in Iraq and Afghanistan.
"We are embedding the new CROWS support sites with units that are
farther afield to enhance our support of the warfighter," said Lt. Col.
Michael Ascura, product manager for crew-served weapons. "We fielded
one new site in December and will bring two more online by April in
Afghanistan."
The complexity of the fielding is magnified by the sheer number of
military vehicles and vehicle variants that are now employing CROWS;
including MRAPS, Humvees, route clearance vehicles, the new MRAP
All-Terrain Vehicles or MATVs, and others.
Each vehicle requires customized vehicle integration kits to bring the
units online, PEO Soldiers officials explained. They said CROWS field
service representatives are charged with meeting those challenges in
the combat zone as they staff support sites in some of the toughest and
most dangerous environments on earth.
'Building in a Box'
Staffed by Department of Defense civilians and contractors serving
six-month deployments, the CROWS support sites need to serve as a
one-stop shop in theater, PEO Soldier officials said.
Maj. Michael Pottratz, assistant product manager for crew-served
weapons, manages the logistical field support of the entire system. To
accomplish his mission, he has devised a "building in a box" concept
that enables field service representatives to independently set up
support sites in a matter of days. All they need is a piece of real
estate and some JP-8 to get underway.
"We wanted to put together a custom kit for our field service reps that
enables them to become fully operational as soon as possible," Pottratz
said. "All the components necessary to establish the support site come
in a single container: tools, equipment, computers, classroom space and
materials, generators, air conditioners, even a Gator ATV. Our FSRs can
provide CROWS support within 48 hours after offloading."
Once operational, FSRs can begin comprehensive, hands-on training
sessions with Soldiers, which run 40-60 hours. To begin, Soldiers learn
all the functions of the sensors and fire control system, including how
to lase and engage targets. Soldiers also learn how to mount four
different weapons systems on the CROWS, including the M-2, Mk-19,
M-240B, and M-249 machine guns.
Soldiers conclude their training with a day and night operation, and
fire live ammunition. To enhance a unit's operational capabilities,
Ascura recommends that every member of a unit receives training on the
system, not just operators. CROWS training provides leaders with
critical knowledge on how best to employ CROWS to support a diverse set
of missions, he said.
With its day and night cameras, CROWS provides target identification
and surveillance capabilities that are well beyond what small-unit
leaders have had previously.
"Soldiers learn how they can turn 'area weapons,' such as the M-2, into
precision engagement weapons," Ascura said. "Beyond the guns, leaders
begin to think about how to integrate the system capabilities into
their tactics, techniques and procedures. In the past, Soldiers had to
perform the same functions with the naked eye from an exposed position
in the turret. Those days are coming to an end."
As a next step, PM Soldier Weapons is developing a stateside
home-station training program. The initiative is designed to enable a
unit to be operationally ready upon arrival in theater and improve
Soldiers' confidence on the system's ability to successfully support
their mission.
Field service goes mobile
When it comes to FSRs, "instructors repair, and repairers instruct,"
said a PEO Soldier official. That means experts that deliver the
training often find themselves working in all types of environments.
Many units are positioned in remote areas, and getting a damaged CROWS
system back for support may be difficult given the unit's mission.
Moreover, travel along poor or nonexistent roads exposes Soldiers and
FSRs to ambushes or IEDs.
To reduce risk, FSRs will travel out to unit locations by air,
performing on the spot servicing for CROWS. FSRs jump on supply
helicopters with their bag of tools and parts and are flown hundreds of
miles to remote outposts.
Gary Decker, Crows II FSR fielding team chief at PM Soldier Weapons,
manages the FSR program out of Picatinny Arsenal, N.J. A former Marine
and combat veteran of the Gulf War, Decker himself has 24 months of
deployments between Iraq and Afghanistan as an FSR. On one of his most
memorable trips, he flew out to a fire base to repair a CROWS system
for a Special Forces team.
"Helo supply runs can be days apart and sometimes an FSR can find
himself sitting in an outpost for 10 days after finishing a 10-minute
repair job," Decker ," said. "At that point, the FSR makes the best use
of his time by supporting the unit any way possible. When you get back,
you turn in the damaged parts and get ready to go on the next mission."
With thousands of CROWS on their way to Afghanistan, there is no
shortage of work to be done to get the new systems in place and
deployed, PEO Soldier officials said. They added hat soon, thousands of
Soldiers will be able to employ all the advanced capabilities of this
high-tech weapons system while benefiting from an increased level of
safety.
Decker said the Army has come a long way from the days when Soldiers
drove around in Humvees with no doors and with the M-2 gunner riding on
the top with nothing but a flak vest on.
"In Desert Storm, we were totally exposed," Decker said. "Then we
armored up with the gunner protection kit. Now, Soldiers are coming out
of the turret thanks to CROWS. It's no surprise that the Soldiers just
love it. CROWS saves lives."
Source and credits : http://www.army.mil/-news/2010/02/23/34867-crows-surge-to-afghanistan-along-with-troops/
|