The New Zealand Herald

Soldiers brave wet Tekapo weather for war games

- Kurt Bayer

With New Zealand’s tallest peak looming somewhere behind the thick cloud, camouflage­d soldiers crawl and clamber quietly towards their target.

Radios crackle, calling in the “enemy’s” position tucked into the tussock and scrub, as fingers are poised on triggers.

This is Exercise Black Sabre — the biggest training mission for soldiers from the New Zealand Defence Force 1st (NZ) Brigade since 2017.

Lieutenant Colonel Samuel Smith said about 300 soldiers were taking part in platoon live field firing.

An advancing infantry rifle company doing “quick attacks” and various assaults were given fire support by a crew using 81mm mortars while signals and communicat­ion personnel operated out of a command post to give Smith “command and control for the battlefiel­d”.

It was the first time since the Covid-19 global pandemic that they have managed such a large-scale exercise, Smith said.

“It’s incredibly important to get out here and train.

“If we don’t get out and train in harsh conditions — it’s been raining pretty consistent­ly for the last 48 hours — and put people in places where they have to display resilience, we’re not doing our job.

“And so getting out here, getting after our skillsets, returning to wolf fighting and getting combat-focused is a real reason why we’re down here and doing this with the conditions that we have.”

While there were some 300 soldiers involved across the 1st (NZ) Brigade, Smith said they each have their own roles and “part in the system”. “There’s a whole bunch of people . . . coming together to train what they do and prepare for combat and warfightin­g, which is really what the 1st (NZ) Brigade is all about,” Smith said.

And for some, it was their first time in the field using the Network Enabled Army (NEA) system which sees frontline troops with radios and gear that connects them back to headquarte­rs. A public notice issued by the New Zealand Army said the exercise would see soldiers with weapons operating to the east of Lake Alexandrin­a and near the

If we don’t get out and train in harsh conditions . . . we’re not doing our job.

Lieutenant Colonel Samuel Smith

Tekapo township. “Blank rounds and pyrotechni­cs will be used within the Tekapo military training area, near the western bank of Lake Alexandrin­a, by day and night,” the notice said. “The New Zealand Army takes fire risk seriously and will ensure fire mitigation is present.”

 ?? Photo / George Heard ?? The biggest army exercise since 2017 was held at Tekapo.
Photo / George Heard The biggest army exercise since 2017 was held at Tekapo.

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