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Soldiers in urban operations training battle to dominate

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Soldiers of the Royal Bermuda Regiment join others getting put through their paces at Island Warrior 24 (Photograph supplied)

A purpose-built village was the scene of a building-clearance training task that tested skills developed by troops on exercise Island Warrior 24.

In the scenario, members of the Royal Bermuda Regiment and three other British Overseas Territories took on armed enemy forces played by US Marines — and a battle unfolded as each side fought to dominate the area.

The urban operations instruction was led by the RBR’s Lieutenant LeeAnn Tucker and Corporal Melissa Brangman as the battalion boosts its broad range of capabilities on a two-week deployment at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, in North Carolina.

Soldiers of the Royal Bermuda Regiment join others getting put through their paces at Island Warrior 24 (Photograph supplied)

Ms Tucker said: “Because Bermuda doesn’t have the training facilities for us to utilise, we go overseas to different bases to train and get the experience that we wouldn’t necessarily get back on the island.

Soldiers of the Royal Bermuda Regiment join others getting put through their paces at Island Warrior 24 (Photograph supplied)

“We get the fundamentals and theory back at home, and we can do so much with what we have, then when we get overseas we enhance it and practise more.”

Soldiers of the Royal Bermuda Regiment join others getting put through their paces at Island Warrior 24 (Photograph supplied)

She said that many of the troops were excited to learn new skills.

Soldiers of the Royal Bermuda Regiment join others getting put through their paces at Island Warrior 24 (Photograph supplied)

Ms Tucker added: “When you’re in the heat of the moment, it can get stressful and people don’t always know what to do.

“But overall it was a good effort and I was happy to see progression over two days of training.”

Soldiers of the Royal Bermuda Regiment join others getting put through their paces at Island Warrior 24 (Photograph supplied)

Activities in the first week of the exercise also included a group-effort endurance run with obstacles, bayonet training and rappelling down a 50ft wall.

Soldiers of the Royal Bermuda Regiment join others getting put through their paces at Island Warrior 24 (Photograph supplied)

Private Keshun Arorash-Butterfield, 24, said: “I enjoyed the run and the team-bonding aspect of it. You can’t just leave your team behind.

Soldiers of the Royal Bermuda Regiment join others getting put through their paces at Island Warrior 24 (Photograph supplied)

“The rappelling was new to me. It was very nerve-racking but also very exciting and after I did it, I wanted to go again.”

Soldiers of the Royal Bermuda Regiment join others getting put through their paces at Island Warrior 24 (Photograph supplied)

The electrician and Bermuda College student, from Pembroke, has been in the regiment since 2021 and described it as “exciting”.

Soldiers of the Royal Bermuda Regiment join others getting put through their paces at Island Warrior 24 (Photograph supplied)

He added: “It gives you good practice in leadership and gets you out of your shell if you’re a nervous person.

Soldiers of the Royal Bermuda Regiment join others getting put through their paces at Island Warrior 24 (Photograph supplied)

“I appreciate that the regiment pushes us to get out of our comfort zones.”

Soldiers of the Royal Bermuda Regiment join others getting put through their paces at Island Warrior 24 (Photograph supplied)

Marine Kendria Cox, a 34-year-old member of the Turks and Caicos Islands Regiment, thoroughly enjoyed the urban operations training.

Soldiers of the Royal Bermuda Regiment join others getting put through their paces at Island Warrior 24 (Photograph supplied)

“We have done something similar before,” she explained. “But we didn’t have all the action, it was really good.”

The mother of three highlighted how troops from the TCI Regiment, which was formed only in 2020, were picking up ideas to further develop training in their own country.

Soldiers of the Royal Bermuda Regiment join others getting put through their paces at Island Warrior 24 (Photograph supplied)

Private Roniesha Trott, of the RBR, found the bayonet training “fun”.

Soldiers were urged to switch on aggression as a means of intimidation before calming themselves down again.

Soldiers of the Royal Bermuda Regiment join others getting put through their paces at Island Warrior 24 (Photograph supplied)

Ms Trott, 21, from Pembroke, is a barista in civilian life. She said: “It was intense, there was a thrill and it gave us a feel of what we should present to our enemies when we attack.”

• For more information or to join the Royal Bermuda Regiment, visit rbr.bm or call 238-1045.

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Published April 21, 2024 at 8:56 pm (Updated April 22, 2024 at 7:53 am)

Soldiers in urban operations training battle to dominate

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