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Exercise simulates home-grown terrorists, nuclear incident

“One agency might say that they need contamination,” Kershner said. “Another agency might say, that they want to work on security, or another agency might say that they want to work on communications. We took all those and … and from there determined what the scenario needed to be in order to achieve as many of the training objectives as possible.”

Next came the planning meetings — initial, mid and final.

The big concept
In the initial meeting, he said, we “hammered out all the differences with regards to the equities everybody wanted,” the major said.

“At that point you agree to the big concepts. For example, we all agreed on the number of weapons systems, we all agreed there would be contamination — so you start trying to finalize as many of the details as possible,” he added.

By the mid planning meeting the scenario was complete except for logistics, Kershner said — how many people and vehicles needed to be in each of three field-training sites for the exercise.

“The final planning meeting was fine tuning the last-minute details — the major logistics,” he said, adding that one of the most complex jobs this year was scheduling and coordinating military flights for equipment and people from different organizations.

Remaining issues
In March, DTRA conducted a senior leader facilitated discussion to give senior leaders of those who would participate in the exercise an opportunity to work through and talk through remaining issues without going through the exercise, Kershner said.

The details of the exercise were closely held and never revealed to the players, he added.

During the week of the exercise, coordinators did last-minute fixes, trained the exercise observers/controllers, held safety and security briefings, and pre-staged three remote sites to be used in the exercise.

On 5 May, the exercise began. Here is the scenario:

A domestic terrorist organization with a transnational connection attacked a weapons convoy on Naval Base Kitsap-Bangor. An NBK-B weapons movement supervisor who works onsite helped the terrorists do this. The attack killed and injured many Marine Corps Security Force Battalion members. In the exercise, this was Site 1.

The attacking force then removed the weapon from the convoy and ran, with responders in pursuit. During pursuit and before leaving the base, the terrorists detonated an explosive device.

The site and weapon suffered damage, and the explosion caused radiological contamination. The Strategic Weapons Facility responded as the Navy Initial Response Force. This was Site 2.

Weapon incident response
Federal departments and agencies determined the weapon was in Kitsap County, and the Navy Region Northwest Response Task Force was activated on the base. Federal agencies deployed specialized personnel and technical teams to conduct weapon incident response operations in the Kitsap County area. This was Site 3, at a location near NBK-B.

After the weapon was returned to federal control and determined to be safe, it was prepared for shipment and moved to a designated facility.

Describing the three remote sites, Kershner said Site 1, also known as the “Attack” site, was pre-staged with wrecked vehicles and dead and wounded bodies of Marines and terrorists. All bodies were adorned with realistic-looking mock wounds and injuries, a practice called moulage that is used for medical training.

“Site 2 was the explosion, where the U.S. stockpile weapon did not function as designed but was rather damaged, he said, adding that the explosion “gave us the contamination we needed for the event.”

Tactical actions
Also at that site, Kershner said, technical assets from different government agencies were able to “get into the immediate actions of dealing with that type of weapon system.”

Site 3, a geographically separated area about ten miles away, involved tactical actions and investigative issues that follow such an event, he said.

This included “tracking down leads and conducting interviews, that led to and culminated in tactical actions — tactical meaning civilian law enforcement assets forcefully capturing or killing terrorists,” Kershner said.

The exercise was over when most or all training objectives were met and the exercise director determined that the exercise was complete.

After-action review
Immediately afterward, with input from the observers/controllers, the lead team offered what Kershner called a “hot wash,” or a facilitated after-action review that provided initial feedback on the exercise performance.

In about ninety days, a comprehensive after-action review will be produced in classified and unclassified versions, he explained.

Exercise personnel included role players, observers/controllers and players.

Observers/controllers observed the players and noted positive and negative actions which would be the foundation of the after-action report, Kershner said. Players are always experts — the people who actually do the jobs that are focused on in the exercise — so during the exercise they were allowed to work freely.

Setting the stage
In the exercise, Kershner said, “the scenario really sets the stage for actions required within the whole-of government response framework.”

He added, “That goes to consequence management, the immediate actions that would require the recapture and recovery of U.S. assets, and the deployment of these types of teams and organizations and agencies throughout the United States.”

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