from bright star operations:
Bright Star Teams Guard with Egyptians
Bright Star is a biennial multi-national exercise that involves more than a dozen allied, coalition or partner nations in Egypt.
"For  more than 23 years, since 1983, the success of Bright Star demonstrates  to enemies around the world, as well as allies, that we can deploy a  division headquarters, deploy an Army headquarters, conduct an airborne  operation from halfway around the world, and insert an infantry company  on the ground," said Lt. Gen. R. Steven Whitcomb, commander of the Third  Army and U.S. Army Central (USARCENT), the 42nd Division's higher  headquarters for the training exercise, "and you can interface and  interact with conventional forces almost routinely."
This  year's exercise will include a large-scale battle simulation exercise,  meant to challenge senior leaders and staff in the command and control  of combat forces operating jointly.
"All of us know  that a command post exercise exerts pressure on the generals, colonels,  lieutenant colonels and majors because it is a brain exercise," Lt.  Gen. Whitcomb said to the combined American and Egyptian staff. "So  challenge each other, learn from each other."
The  computer-generated battlefield is based on fictitious nations in  conflict and a coalition of nations responding to restore security and  an internationally recognized border. The 42nd Infantry Division  commander and staff will control a fictitious force of more than 110,000  troops for the command post exercise.
"There  is no better expert on warfare in this maneuver box that we are  conducting operations in than the Egyptians. This is their territory,  they know how to fight this fight and we ought to learn from them," said  Lt. Gen. Whitcomb.
Nearly three dozen Egyptian  officers from the Egyptian 9th Armored Division will complement the 42nd  Division staff for the exercise. Joint training began almost  immediately after the division's deployment as members of the Egyptian  staff learned about the Army's military decision-making process and  techniques for the command and control of combat forces.
"We question each other and learn from each other," Lt. Gen. Whitcomb said, "and that is the real value of Bright Star."
The  training in Egypt completes nearly a year of planning, training and  coordination for the leaders and staff of the 42nd Division. Soldiers  trained with Third Army leaders and Egyptian training officers  throughout 2007, including numerous site and staff visits, hosting the  Egyptian and USARCENT leaders in New York in March.
"We came with  a plan," said 42nd Division Chief of Staff Col. Carl Pfeiffer. "We are  here to demonstrate to the Egyptians that we are willing to work,  partner and listen to them as we work through the (training) scenario."
"Our  report card here is when our Egyptian partners write a letter to Lt.  Gen. Whitcomb," Col. Pfeiffer continued, "and tell him that they enjoyed  working with the 42nd Infantry Division."
Many members of the  42nd Division deployed to Cairo are veterans of Operation Iraqi Freedom,  having served with the headquarters in Tikrit, Iraq, in 2005. Much of  the training sessions and mission planning involved applying lessons  learned from that deployment to the control of thousands of troops in  the simulated combat environment.
Part of the cooperative  training included discussion and comparison of the two unit's  capabilities and techniques for battle command. The two division  commanders, Maj. Gen. El Araby El Suray from the Egyptian 9th Armored  Division and Brig. Gen. Paul Genereux from the 42nd Infantry Division  both led discussions among the joint staff.
"I can not be more  pleased in the cooperative effort I'm seeing between our two staffs,"  Brig. Gen. Genereux said. "My goals for this mission were to safely  deploy our command post and train alongside the Egyptian 9th Armored,  achieving real unity in our two organizations for the exercise. Ninety  percent of what I wanted to achieve in  
http://www.minnesotanationalguard.or...tem=1184Bright Star, we have  already done."
"They  [the Egyptians] are taking our products to get synchronized with us,"  Col. Pfeiffer said. "That is unusual, but of all the units I've worked  with in this part of the world, this unit [the Egyptian 9th Armored  Division] is the best, by far."
"It is great to  have the 42nd Infantry back in theater again," said Lt. Gen. Whitcomb in  his remarks to the combined U.S. and Egyptian staff members.
(Lt. Col. Richard Goldenberg serves with the 42nd Infantry Division headquarters)
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