412TH THEATER ENGINEER COMMAND

Vicksburg, Mississippi

The blade of an Army scraper, a large machine used to transport soil and other material, cuts through the dirt of Fort Hunter Liggett, Calif. on July 19, 2017. The scraper was driven by U.S. Army Reserve Command Spc. Dylan Sugg, a horizontal engineer with the 718th Engineer Company, as his unit trained under simulated combat conditions. Nearly 5,400 service members from the U.S. Army Reserve Command, U.S. Army, Army National Guard, U.S. Navy, and Canadian Armed Forces are training at Fort Hunter Liggett as part of the 84th Training Command’s CSTX 91-17-03 and ARMEDCOM’s Global Medic; this is a unique training opportunity that allows U.S. Army Reserve units to train alongside their multi-component and joint partners as part of the America’s Army Reserve evolution into the most lethal Federal Reserve force in the history of the nation. (U.S. Army Reserve photo by Sgt. David L. Nye, 301st Public Affairs Detachment)
170719-A-FO569-007.JPG Photo By: Sgt. David Nye

FORT HUNTER LIGGETT, Calif. - The blade of an Army scraper, a large machine used to transport soil and other material, cuts through the dirt of Fort Hunter Liggett, Calif. on July 19, 2017. The scraper was driven by U.S. Army Reserve Command Spc. Dylan Sugg, a horizontal engineer with the 718th Engineer Company, as his unit trained under simulated combat conditions. Nearly 5,400 service members from the U.S. Army Reserve Command, U.S. Army, Army National Guard, U.S. Navy, and Canadian Armed Forces are training at Fort Hunter Liggett as part of the 84th Training Command’s CSTX 91-17-03 and ARMEDCOM’s Global Medic; this is a unique training opportunity that allows U.S. Army Reserve units to train alongside their multi-component and joint partners as part of the America’s Army Reserve evolution into the most lethal Federal Reserve force in the history of the nation. (U.S. Army Reserve photo by Sgt. David L. Nye, 301st Public Affairs Detachment)


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