 So this here as soldiers are doing shoot move and communicate They're doing battle buddy team drills bounding Taking cover behind a palette. I here you can see soldiers low crawling It's one of the movement techniques when navigating low obstacles. So yeah, they're all health care providers technicians I think the highest-ranking individual we had the 06 Colonel Dentat commander was out doing some of these drills all the way down to the newest privates working in pharmacy and radiology Right here. They're just bounding one soldier sets up takes point Lays down fire on the enemy That suppresses the enemy it gives the other soldier an opportunity to stand up and bound They alternate and that's how they cover ground to get closer to their objective If we get out there and we can provide good training to the soldiers and get after these army warrior tasks And the soldiers can have fun while they're doing it. It's even better It takes a little more we instill that in them. They're getting good training and not they're not miserable This year, this is Staff Sergeant Conley's the answer I see of our SRP on Fort Riley He's also an expert field medical badge holder one of the few on the installation So right now he's he's going over different movement techniques The soldiers are battle buddy paired up and they're demonstrating and practicing these these movement techniques to move across a 25 meter field the one soldier Imitates a casualty that's unconscious Severely wounded that can't move on their own and they're just practicing the several different movement techniques to get a soldier Out of out of fire and back into cover Take these the knot will catch on the other side Yeah, what they're doing there. They're strapping the soldier up and moving them to an HLZ helicopter landing zone To to evacuate them out of the area What we're seeing here for patient loading. This is hot and the difference is the helicopters on it's running It's ready to take off cold in perspective is just the Helicopter isn't running So that's all this is is where we've moved the soldier from point of contact or point of injury to behind cover We've transported them on skater litter to an HLZ for evacuation And then we finish that up with the the hot and cold training on how to actually load a patient into an aircraft So this is Sergeant Rasmussen, he's an NCO in our radiology department here at the hospital He is also a professional weapons instructor. So that's a great asset here within the hospital Right here what he's doing is the assembly and disassembly of an M17 pistol for one of the soldiers There's several several parts to being trained on the chute aspect of army war tasks and battle drills this portion weapon familiarization is the Disassembly and reassembly of the weapon soldiers Were also required to go to a range and qualify either on the M17 pistol the M4 rifle So what we're doing here in a classroom environment is doing the familiarization with the weapons and to include that that disassembly and Reassembly of the firearm while learning what all of the components are and how they work in conjunction to make the weapon Right here. This is Staff Sergeant Blake He's he's going over the proper There's new standards for the M4 qualification where we utilize this wall for stability when we're firing down range And he's he's just going over a steady practice name We're using a laser mounted boar scope so that although we can't fire in the classroom The soldiers are able to monitor the placement of their bullet during the firing process by using the The boar scope with the laser on the target on the other side of the classroom So this is c burn training chemical biological radiological and nuclear What they're doing is they have what we call a pro mask gas mask And they're they're demonstrating the proper technique on how to don that mask Within the set time limit now bystander at every soldier as you can see here from the moment Gas is announced in the area. They have nine seconds to open up their the pro mask case on their left hip Don the mask clear it And then close the mask and then signal To their their battle buddies on the left and right that there's gas in the area Some of these skills Although we learn them we do them over time if you don't do them for a while you You lose that edge and for something as critical as donning a gas mask during a chemical attack Nine seconds is a standard Nine seconds is a standard because if you don't do it with that time and you don't Know how to fit the mask properly and clear it properly Those seconds can cost you it's valuable time that can make the difference to a life and death