Army Command Sgt. Maj. Brian Webb, senior enlisted advisor, Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 6oth Troop Command, North Carolina National Guard, is notionally decontaminated during a chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear training scenario during Exercise Arctic Eagle 22 at the Anchorage Fire Department, Anchorage, Alaska, March 1, 2022. Joint Exercise Arctic Eagle-Patriot 2022 increases the National Guard’s capacity to operate in austere, extreme cold-weather environments across Alaska and the Arctic region. AEP22 enhances the ability of military and civilian inter-agency pa
Army Command Sgt. Maj. Brian Webb, senior enlisted advisor, Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 6oth Troop Command, North Carolina National Guard, is notionally decontaminated during a chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear training scenario during Exercise Arctic Eagle 22 at the Anchorage Fire Department, Anchorage, Alaska, March 1, 2022. Joint Exercise Arctic Eagle-Patriot 2022 increases the National Guard’s capacity to operate in austere, extreme cold-weather environments across Alaska and the Arctic region. AEP22 enhances the ability of military and civilian inter-agency partners to respond to a variety of emergency and homeland security missions across Alaska and the Arctic. Army photo by Sgt. 1st Class Craig Norton
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Keywords: aep22, arctic, arcticeaglepatriot22, arcticready, jointtraining, nationalguard