This documentary is a bit dated, being from somewhere around 2000 or so, I’d guess based on the weapons, uniforms, and equipment.
First formed in1980, the NTC was originally intended to give brigades a realistic taste of what they would face when battling a Soviet Motorized Rifle Regiment. As the threat has changed over the years, the threat presentation at NTC has evolved as well. During the height of the war in Iraq, BCTs rotating through would have a training experience highly tailored to their anticipated deployment to Iraq, complete with actors portraying tribal leaders, and mock urban environments that mirrored the location they were deploying to.
But as the COIN emphasis of the Army has shifted with our much reduced presence in Iraq, the NTC has returned to its roots of major force on force training evolutions.
The NTC was such a monumental success in training the heavy brigades of the Army that a second center, the Joint Training Readiness Center was established at Fort Chaffee, AR, though later moved to Fort Polk, LA. And in Europe, the training area at Hohenfels became the Combat Maneuver Training Center, now known as Joint Multinational Training Center.
Ideally, an Army BCT will go through a training cycle of about 18 months, starting with individual tasks, small team tasks, and progressing through squad, platoon, company and battalion level collective training, each training evolution building upon the lessons learned at the previous echelon. BCT level training would culminate with a rotation through one of the three training centers, followed by a major deployment, or period of readiness for contingency deployment. At the end of that cycle, the process starts again.
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