New Drone School Trains Young Soldiers to Survive Enemy UAS

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Chief Warrant Officer 4 Ralph Stroup, a student with the small unmanned aerial system (SUAS) course, launches a fixed-wing drone during joint training with D Company, 2nd Battalion, 58th Infantry Regiment. The 3rd Squadron, 16th Cavalry Regiment, 316th Cavalry Brigade, opened its new small unmanned aerial system (SUAS) course facility June 11, 2018. (U.S. Army photo/Joshua Good)
Chief Warrant Officer 4 Ralph Stroup, a student with the small unmanned aerial system (SUAS) course, launches a fixed-wing drone during joint training with D Company, 2nd Battalion, 58th Infantry Regiment. The 3rd Squadron, 16th Cavalry Regiment, 316th Cavalry Brigade, opened its new small unmanned aerial system (SUAS) course facility June 11, 2018. (U.S. Army photo/Joshua Good)

Army instructors at Fort Benning, Georgia recently opened a new drone training school to teach young soldiers to become as familiar with these tiny flying devices as they are handling M4 carbines.

The 3rd Squadron, 16th Cavalry Regiment, 316th Cavalry Brigade opened its new small unmanned aerial system, or SUAS, course facility June 11 and recently began giving classes to basic trainees "so they can become familiar with drones before they show up to their units," Sgt. 1st Class Hilario Dominguez, the lead instructor for the class, said in a recent Defense Department news release.

Students at the SUAS course showed basic trainees how the drones fly and how to describe them if they see one flying over their formation.

Capt. Sean Minton, commander of D Company, 2nd Battalion, 58th Infantry Regiment, said his recruits learn how to fill out a seven-line report when they spot a drone and send the information to higher headquarters by radio.

Trainees also learn how to hide from an enemy drone and disperse to avoid heavy casualties from drone-directed field artillery.

"Our enemies have drones now," Minton said. "And we don't always own the air."

Instructors teach Raven and Puma fixed-wing remote-controlled drones and a variety of helicopters, including the tiny InstantEye copter, which flies as quietly as a humming bird, according to the release.

The students who attend the SUAS course are typically infantry soldiers and cavalry scouts who go back to their units to be brigade or battalion-level master trainers, Dominguez said.

Having trained and certified experts from the course builds trust among company and troop-level commanders so they worry less about losing drones because they distrust their drone pilots' skills, Dominguez said.

Staff Sgt. Arturo Saucedo teaches precision flying at the course. He tells his students to think of the small helicopters as a way to chase down armed enemy soldiers.

"Instead of chasing him through a booby hole, you just track him," he said. "Now you have a grid of his location, and you can do what you need to do."

The new drone schoolhouse was created inside a former convenience store.

"This building represents an incredible new opportunity to the small unmanned aerial system course," said Lt. Col. Jeffrey Barta, 3-16 commander, during the SUAS building opening event.

"For several years now it was operating in small, cramped classrooms insufficient to meet program instruction requirements. Thanks to the work many on the squadron staff, the 316th Brigade S4 shop, and the garrison Directorate of Public Works and Network Enterprise Center, we were able to turn the vacant structure into a vibrant classroom, training leaders to make the Army better."

-- Matthew Cox can be reached at matthew.cox@military.com.

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