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Where you are:  News...more Army MWR News

Army to test Warrior Adventure Quest this week with three BCTs
Date Posted: 9/10/2008

By William Bradner
FMWRC Public Affairs

Earlier this year, a Fort Rucker, Ala., Soldier died when he lost control of his brand new sport motorcycle in a curve, hit the culvert, was ejected off the bike, and slammed into a light pole. He was wearing a helmet, but had not attended the motorcycle safety course, and did not have a motorcycle endorsement on his license.

Ten minutes prior to his accident, he had been pulled over by a local police officer for traveling 84 in a 55 mph zone.

While no one can definitively say why the Soldier refused to slow down even after being warned by law enforcement, Army officials believe this accident and hundreds of similar accidents have a common link. Soldiers returning to garrison life after extended combat deployments are having difficulty adjusting, and are seeking the adrenaline rush they’ve grown accustomed to in combat environments.

As of October, 2007, 186 Soldiers have died in accidents within one year of returning from combat; 168 of them within the first six months of their redeployment. Sixty percent of the accident fatalities are sergeants or below. The overwhelming majority of the accidents involve high speed, alcohol, or both.

This weekend, the Army is testing a new program designed to help these Soldiers make the adjustment from the high-paced, high-adrenaline combat environment to garrison or “home” life.

Warrior Adventure Quest (WAQ) combines existing high adventure outdoor recreation activities such as skydiving, paintball, ropes courses, rock climbing, mountain biking, stock car racing, skiing, and others, with Battlemind training to help Soldiers make the adjustment back to a calmer paced lifestyle.

News Photo

Warrior Adventure Quest combines high-adrenaline sports such as rock climbing with Battlemind training to help Soldiers adjust to the return to garrison life from the combat environment.
The high adventure outdoor recreation activities are a hook to entice Soldiers to participate as well as a release mechanism to give them the adrenaline boost they’re craving in a safe, controlled environment.

Battlemind is the Army’s psychological resiliency building program which helps Soldiers recognize and respond to fear during combat, then mitigate the cumulative effects of a sustained combat environment and become mentally prepared to reintegrate during the redeployment, post-deployment and reset portions of the deployment cycle.

WAQ is centrally funded through the Family and Morale, Welfare & Recreation Command with oversight from the Installation Management Command and regional MWR recreation managers. The three pilot programs taking place this week are in Vicenza, Italy, Fort Lewis, Wash., and Leesburg, Va., and involve two active duty and one National Guard brigade combat teams (BCTs).

News Photo

Warrior Adventure Quest combines high-adrenaline sports such as whitewater rafting with Battlemind training to help Soldiers adjust to the return to garrison life from the combat environment.
Planning is under way to bring the program to an additional 24 Army garrisons over the next year, and the long-term goal is to have every BCT participate in WAQ within 90 days of their redeployment from a combat environment.

A number of survey and assessment tools will be used to evaluate the effectiveness of the program, including statistics from the Combat Readiness/Safety Center, the Reintegration Unit Risk Inventory, the Unit Behavioral Health Needs Assessment, and a new online survey, the Warrior Adventure Quest User Survey.

According to the Training and Doctrine Command, it costs the Army $54,700 to train a basic combat arms Soldier, and as much as $67,000 for other military occupational specialties (depending on the length of their advanced individual training).

Since there’s no way to put a dollar value on a Soldier’s life, determining a return on investment for this project is difficult. However, the average cost per person to participate in WAQ is only $86-- less than it costs to fill the fuel tank of a Humvee.

The Army plans to cycle nearly 80,000 Soldiers through WAQ over the next year at a cost of just under $7 million. If it cuts the fatality rate in half, it will have paid for itself.

If it saves just one Soldier’s life it will be worth the effort.



Send comments or questions to mwrpublicaffairs@conus.army.mil
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