U.S. forces deployed over three hundred vehicles and pieces of equipment to Germany

Over three hundred vehicles and pieces of equipment arrived in Germany last week, and hundreds more are expected in coming weeks, in an effort to setup and maintain additional in-theater vehicles and equipment for us by U.S. forces in support of NATO operations and other efforts throughout the region.

That was reported by www.army.mil.

The vehicles arrived first at the Port of Antwerp, Belgium, and were then carried by barge to Mannheim, Germany where they are being further distributed to various APS sites throughout the region.

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The Army Prepositioned Stock program provides equipment and vehicles for use by rotational U.S. forces in support of operations like Atlantic Resolve, and other NATO operations as well as major NATO and multinational training events.

The concept is simple: keep equipment on hand for incoming Soldiers to ‘borrow’ and use while they are here in theater training or supporting operations.

Making that happen is far from easy, however, and takes a team of sustainers and logisticians working together to make sure the equipment ready for those rotational forces when they need it, according to Col. Rod Honeycut, commander of the 405th Army Field Support Brigade.

“Maintaining and transferring APS is a team sport,” said Honeycut. “The weight of the entire enterprise is behind this operation, no other force in the world has the reach and capacity to globally redistribute combat power in this magnitude.”

The equipment, in this case 300 vehicles brought here from Korea, is delivered to a major port, where it is trans-loaded onto barge, or sometimes rail, and delivered inland to Germany. From there it goes to various different APS sites where it is inventoried, and inspected for operational readiness.

At each APS site, the equipment is constantly checked and maintained to ensure that it will be ready at a moment’s notice when it is needed.

The Surface Deployment and Distribution Command’s 598th Transportation Brigade handles port operations, while the Army Materiel Command’s 405th Army Field Support Brigade oversees operations at the various APS sites. The 21st Theater Sustainment Command oversees the entire process and serves as a coordinator between U.S. Army Europe, rotational forces, and the team of sustainers involved in the APS program.

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