
Warrior Course Trains Veterans Army Way By Spc. Alfredo Jimenez
Army News Service
November 23, 2004
FORT KNOX, KY - All Tyrone Givens
wanted was a chance to restart a career in the military.
He got that chance Nov. 4 as he and 101 other former military men and
women graduated from the second class of the Warrior Transition Course,
which allows former Airmen, Sailors and Marines to bring their valued
skills into the Army.
Givens served in the Navy for many years before deciding to separate
and search for another job. He said everything was going according to
his plan until the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and the nation beginning
its war against terrorism.
Instinctively, Givens wanted back in the military to do his part and
help others in the fight, so he said he was elated when the Army
announced it was beginning the Warrior Transition Course.
“I chose to participate in the course and become a second-time
volunteer because my country is at war,” said the native of Cincinnati,
Ohio. “I couldn’t stand idly by and watch others share the burden.”
While not exactly basic training, the course did offer up challenges
aplenty to the Soldiers-in-training, said Pfc. Richard Batts, a
classmate of Givens.
“I am a former Marine, therefore, I am already accustomed to the ways
of military infantry,” said the native of Lafayette, La. “I do expect,
however, to refresh my skills as an infantryman and adapt to the ways
of the Army. Believe it or not, the two branches are completely
different and it will be difficult to overcome some aspects of my old
training.”
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For 28 days, the new Soldiers learned everything essential in the Army,
from standing at parade rest when talking to a drill instructor to
learning the different rank structure. They also spent long periods of
time in the field firing heavy machine guns, learning urban warfare
tactics, and pulling convoy and checkpoint security details, Givens
said.
“In the Navy, I never had to sleep in the middle of the woods or meet a
time requirement for assembling my weapon,” he said. “The customs and
courtesies are also different.”
Warrior Transition Course officials intend to train 3,200 Soldiers with
prior military service in the next year. The program is lauded by Army
commanders because it gives them the opportunity to develop leaders who
are already seasoned as veterans in their respective former branches of
service, said Capt. Tom Oakley, commander of Company C, 1st Battalion,
46th Infantry Division, one of the units conducting the training.
“The folks we get here are just what the Army is looking for because
they are second-time volunteers, and that says a lot about them,”
Oakley said. “These individuals are motivated, brave and very
patriotic. They will serve the Army well by meshing right in with our
younger troops.”
The captain added that this is important because more than half of the
Soldiers who come through the course will deploy to combat areas within
30 days of completing their advanced individual training.
But that thought does nothing to deter these new Soldiers with their
determined and patriotic will to excel in the program and beyond, said
Pfc. William Smith, a graduate of the second course.
“This course is preparing me for success and I hope to use this
opportunity to get promoted quicker,” said Smith, a native of
Greenville, S.C. “I also want to go to Warrant Officer School before I
am deployed overseas.”
No matter what their motivations are for signing up in the Army after a
hitch with a different service, all of the new Soldiers realize this is
just the beginning of bigger and better things, Batts said.
“I honestly believe that all military training better prepares you for
anything,” he said. “The military isn’t meant for everyone. It takes
a special breed to do what we do. I came back because I love the
military and everything it offers, and I want to protect and defend my
country from all enemies no matter where they are.”
(Editor’s note: Spc. Jimenez writes for the Army and Air Force Hometown
News Service.)
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