CAMP ATTERBURY, Ind. –
Many Americans' worst nightmare has just come true. A five-kiloton nuclear device was detonated in a major U.S. metropolis. The nation is under attack. Hundreds of thousands of people were killed, thousands more missing.
That was the scenario for Joint Task Force Civil Support and the Defense Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear Response Force during Vibrant Response 13. Vibrant Response is an annual, national-level training exercise used by U.S. Northern Command and led by U.S. Army North to certify select military units' abilities to conduct life-saving and life-sustaining operations. The exercise also tests the military's ability to integrate with local, state and federal government agencies following a catastrophic CBRN incident.
More than 9,000 Service members and civilians took part in the exercise from July 26 - Aug. 14 at the Army's urban disaster training area in Muscatatuck, Ind., as well as 10 other training areas and airfields throughout southern Indiana and northern Kentucky.
JTF-CS and more than 4,000 service members and civilians of the Response Force participated in the first phase of Vibrant Response July 26 - Aug. 4. Phase two of the exercise, which ended Aug. 14, involves certification of more than 4,500 additional U.S. Army North military responders who are responding to a separate scenario: detonation of three radiological-dispersal devices.
Scattered throughout more than 36 locations within the continental U.S., the Response Force is divided into deployable force packages designed to respond within set time periods following a catastrophic CBRN incident. The first force package, designed to respond to an incident within 24 hours of activation, is front loaded with various life-saving military assets, such as search and rescue and emergency medical treatment personnel and equipment.
Follow on forces provide more long-term logistical, engineering and medical support. Made up of military units from all branches of service, these forces must be able to integrate with not only National Guard units, but also civilian, federal, state and local responders as well.
Still, JTF-CS and the Response Force respond only at the request of a state Governor, on approval of the secretary of defense and the U.S. president, and always in support of a lead federal agency, such as FEMA.
U.S. Army Maj. Gen. Jeff Mathis III, commander, JTF-CS, said this type of field exercise is vital for validating the DCRF's capability to respond to a catastrophic incident and be able to "meet the call of duty."
"This is a very laser-focused radiological response force that is thinking about search and rescue, mass casualty decontamination, medical triage and medical evacuation," said Mathis. "I am confident that if we are called for duty, our personnel will be able to meet the point of impact and do those kinds of things."
Equally important to validating the Response Force's life-saving capabilities was the opportunity for JTF-CS to interact directly with other federal, state and local level response agencies, such as FEMA, state National Guard units and local first responders. JTF-CS trains and plans to integrate seamlessly with these agencies before an incident occurs. That way, less times is spent on roles and responsibilities during a response and is instead focused on saving lives.
"We've made huge strides in coordinating with our community of partners and synchronizing together," said Mathis. "Otherwise, we wouldn't be very effective. I've talked with the Federal Emergency Management Agency about exercise operations and our coordination will just continue to get better."
Training with agencies that JTF-CS would actually work and interact with during a catastrophic incident made Vibrant Response that much more valuable, according to Mathis. The ability to integrate resources quickly, such as communications systems, allows JTF-CS and the Response Force to begin life-saving operations faster. JTF-CS and other agencies can then use those shared experiences, to refine future planning efforts if a real disaster were to occur.
Mathis also said that simulating 400,000 casualties and 3 to 4 million evacuees in the scenario, the exercise scope was vast. Still, the Response Force maximized its resources to perform 82 life-saving and life-sustaining missions in support of the state-led response during the exercise. Military search and rescue teams decontaminated, triaged and evacuated more than 800 survivors in the first 48 hours of the simulated response - an effort that received praise from the local "incident commander."
"One of the great things about our military is when Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen and Marines are given a mission, they throw themselves into it," said Mathis. "There is absolutely a dedication to do everything they can to get it right and get the most training out of any exercise."
JTF-CS redeployed to Fort Eustis, Va., Aug. 4, but the training exercise continued until Aug. 13.