Canadian Armed Forces Lt. Col Watts, the commanding officer of the 15th Field Artillery Regiment based out of Vancouver, BC, briefs Mongolian Armed Forces Col. Buyandelger, a genreal staff member, Col. Mandakhgerel, Mongolian National Emergency Management Agency, Army Brig. Gen. David Pritchett, director of joint staff, Wyoming Army National Guard, and other distinguished visitors, on Canada’s search and extraction capabilities during Exercise Arctic Eagle-Patriot 22 at the Anchorage Fire Training Center in Anchorage, Alaska, March 1, 22. Joint Exercise Arctic Eagle-Patriot 22 increas


Canadian Armed Forces Lt. Col Watts, the commanding officer of the 15th Field Artillery Regiment based out of Vancouver, BC, briefs Mongolian Armed Forces Col. Buyandelger, a genreal staff member, Col. Mandakhgerel, Mongolian National Emergency Management Agency, Army Brig. Gen. David Pritchett, director of joint staff, Wyoming Army National Guard, and other distinguished visitors, on Canada’s search and extraction capabilities during Exercise Arctic Eagle-Patriot 22 at the Anchorage Fire Training Center in Anchorage, Alaska, March 1, 22. Joint Exercise Arctic Eagle-Patriot 22 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. Joint Exercise Arctic Eagle-Patriot 22 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.


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Keywords: aep22, arctic, arcticeaglepatriot22, arcticready, jointtraining, nationalguard