 When it comes to combat engineers or sappers are trained professionals. However, during the Master Breachers course held at the Adizee training area in Latvia, soldiers from the first brigade combat team with different professions got to learn the ropes. Personally, I'm not an engineer, I'm an 11 Bravo and I take this training as a cross training as a great experience because not many infantrymen know how to attach a C4 to a door and when the engineer guy is falling, he just picks his kid up and pursue the mission. The class wasn't just an opportunity for non-combat engineers, but also some Norwegian sappers. Today we're here with the Master Breachers course to basically just to see how you guys are doing it. It's much of the same but your sappers I think you are more specialized to what you do. So we are always with our infantry guys. So we're closer to the infantry doing much more of what they're doing and providing our service directly to them. On the range, the soldiers got to apply the skills they learned in the classroom from both the American and Norwegian forces. Though the knowledge they gained extends past the classroom and range. It's preparing me to build upon leadership. Being in all different countries and different languages, the barrier, the friendship that you have to understand one another. Not only to see, like I said earlier, don't be one-minded. Always understand that you have to only one. I mean there's no iron army is there. We're all a team. Whether it's from USA to Norwegian to Latvia to Lithuania, Poland to Germany, we're all one. We're here to fight together and we stand together. All the soldiers are eager to take their knowledge and experience back home to share. Reporting from Adizee Training Area, Latvia, I'm Army Sergeant Allison Pelletier.