A soldier who should've been firing blanks hit an Apache helicopter with live rounds last week during training at Fort Irwin, California, an Army spokesman confirmed on Tuesday.
The soldier, with 1st Battalion, 17th Infantry Regiment, out of Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Washington, was augmenting the 11th Armored Cavalry Regiment for the exercise, Fort Irwin spokesman Ken Drylie said. The cavalry regiment provides opposing-force personnel for rotations at the National Training Center.
This story surfaced yesterday, but I sat on it until I could get a wee bit more information.
There's two phases to each rotation at Ft. Irwin, the force-on-force that uses blanks, then the large scale live fire exercise.
This incident took place during the force-on-force, and no one should have had any live ammunition at all. Where the ammo came from is going to be a focus of the AR15-6 investigation.
We're first and foremost glad that no one was injured in the incident. But we're also rather troubled that it happened in the first place. Obviously, the brunt of the blame falls on the soldier who shot at the Apache. But it also means we have to ask what was going on in the unit that the first line supervisors didn't catch on to live ammo floating around, and the company level leadership that let first line supervisors get away with not knowing there was ammo floating around.
I'm not calling for everyone to be relieved, but I am saying that this unit needs to take a long, hard look at the standards, and what is actually going on in the unit.
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