United States Army Chemical School
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The United States Army CBRN School, located at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri is the recognized world leader in training for military Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear(CBRN) Defense. In accordance with U.S. Federal Law, Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri is designated the central location for all of the Department of Defense's CBRN Operations Training. The Army CBRN School provides numerous courses for officers, Noncommissioned Officers and Initial Entry Soldiers, ranging from highly technical to the more general in nature. Numerous international officers also send students to train at the CBRN School. Additionally, the US Air Force, US Navy, and US Marine Corps all also maintain training elements at Fort Leonard Wood who, in partnerships with the Army CBRN School, train their personnel in CBRN operations. Fort Leonard Wood and the Army CBRN School have world-class facilities in which to conduct training. Perhaps the most famous is the Chemical Defense Training Facility (or CDTF) where military students from across the globe train and become familiar with actual nerve agents in realistic scenarios, and also conduct training with radiological isotopes and inert biological agents. The Edwin R. Bradley Radiological Teaching Laboratories is one of the very few radiological teaching laboratories licensed by the NRC in the Department of Defense. It provides a variety of training in radiological and nuclear defense under the supervision of credentialed scientists. The newest facility at the CBRN School to be opened is the Lieutenant Joseph Terry CBRN Training Facility. Opening in June 2007, this facility provides unmatched training opportunities in the fields of CBRN Consequence Management and Sensitive Site Assessment and Exploitation. In addition to training, the CBRN School also develops doctrine for Operations, researches and develops materiel requirements, and conducts joint service experimentation as the Joint Combat Developer for the Department of Defense's Chemical and Biological Defense Program.
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[edit] Official Name Change
On January, 11th 2008, The U.S. Army Chemical School was re-named as The U.S. Army Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear School (USACBRNS.) The reason for the name change was to encompass, in the title of the school, the wide range of training and expertise maintained by the U.S. Army Chemical Corps.
[edit] Command
The U.S. Army CBRN School is currently commanded by Brigadier General Thomas Spoehr. CSM Patrick Alston is the regimental Command Sergeant Major.
[edit] Organization
[edit] External links
- U.S. Army CBRN School official website.
- Fort Leonard Wood Army Training Center official website.