 How do you combat communicate at a multinational exercise like Saber Strike if you're sitting in the next trailer over voice power? We yell at each other so we get the information we need. You can always use the dependable World War I era phone or if you need to make a longer distance phone call there's the UHF radio. But using these communication tools only gets you halfway there. We're talking about different countries mission coordinating. How do you solve the problem of getting artillery rounds on target when nations don't use the same words? NATO's solution is simple. It's specific in the military terms. We have also English lessons in our military academies so we have actually no problem for communication in English with our allies. No problem you say? That is what I heard too. Although the soldiers come from different countries and speak in different tongues they're on the same page here at Saber Strike speaking the language of combat power. From the Drasko Pomorski training area in Poland I'm Staff Sergeant Ben Woken.