Wisconsin National Guard senior leaders visit Soldiers of the 32nd “Red Arrow” Infantry Brigade Combat Team Headquarters completing the demobilization process at Fort Hood following their return from deployment in Ukraine. The Unit made up part of Joint Multinational Training Group – Ukraine, serving as the headquarters element for the training group at the International Peacekeeping and Security Center. Wisconsin National Guard photo by Sgt. Alex Baum
Approximately 100 Wisconsin Army National Guard Soldiers who made up part of Joint Multinational Training Group – Ukraine, returned safely to U.S. soil August 3 after a 10-month mobilization to Ukraine.
More than 40 from the same unit had previously returned to the U.S. in late July.
Wisconsin National Guard senior leaders visit Soldiers of the 32nd “Red Arrow” Infantry Brigade Combat Team Headquarters completing the demobilization process at Fort Hood following their return from deployment in Ukraine. The Unit made up part of Joint Multinational Training Group – Ukraine, serving as the headquarters element for the training group at the International Peacekeeping and Security Center. Wisconsin National Guard photo by Sgt. Alex Baum
The returning Soldiers represent the last of more than 150 Soldiers from the 32nd “Red Arrow” Infantry Brigade Combat Team Headquarters who deployed to Ukraine’s Combat Training Center – Yavoriv last November where they served as the headquarters element for the training group at the International Peacekeeping and Security Center.
The troops landed at Fort Bliss, Texas, where senior Wisconsin National Guard leaders met them to welcome them home. The unit will spend several weeks completing demobilization requirements at Fort Bliss before returning home to Wisconsin.
Maj. Gen. Paul Knapp, Wisconsin’s adjutant general, addresses Soldiers from the 32nd “Red Arrow” Infantry Brigade Combat Team Headquarters during an Aug. 4 leadership visit to Fort Bliss, Texas. The Unit made up part of Joint Multinational Training Group – Ukraine, serving as the headquarters element for the training group at the International Peacekeeping and Security Center. Wisconsin National Guard photo by Sgt. Alex Baum
The Wisconsin National Guard continues to maintain a high operations tempo in support of both its federal and state missions. Approximately 200 fellow Red Arrow Soldiers from the 1st Battalion, 128th Infantry returned to the U.S. last week from Afghanistan after supporting the Army’s 3rd Security Force Assistance Brigade. Approximately 200 additional troops returned from that mission returned earlier this year.
Another 150 Soldiers with the 829th Engineer Company continue operations across the Middle East and Afghanistan. The 924th Engineer Facilities Detachment and the 1967th Contracting Team also continue operations in Kuwait and the Horn of Africa respectively.
1st Sgt. Melissa Franz converses with Maj. Gen. Paul Knapp, Wisconsin’s adjutant general, about challenges presented by the COVID-19 global pandemic at home and overseas during an Aug. 4 senior leadership visit to Fort Bliss, Texas. The Unit made up part of Joint Multinational Training Group – Ukraine, serving as the headquarters element for the training group at the International Peacekeeping and Security Center. Wisconsin National Guard photo by Sgt. Alex Baum
These mobilizations in support of the Wisconsin National Guard’s federal mission continue amidst the organization’s largest sustained domestic mobilization in history. More than 1,000 Wisconsin National Guard Citizen Soldiers and Airmen are on duty across Wisconsin conducting mobile testing for COVID-19, staffing a state call center for COVID-19 results, and providing logistics support. More than 2,400 Citizen Soldiers and Airmen also staffed polling locations during Wisconsin’s April 7 election, and another 160 assisted during a special election in the 7th Congressional District May 12. In late May and early June, more than 1,200 Wisconsin National Guard troops mobilized to state active duty to assist civil authorities in preserving public safety in five Wisconsin cities amidst civil unrest. Additional troops responded to Madison, Wisconsin in June in the wake of more civil unrest.