First Robin Sage Exercise of ’22 Wraps Up

SLI Staff Report

From time to time, Seven Lakes can be a popular training ground for U.S. Army Special Forces personnel.

Just as paratroopers practice water drops in Lake Auman, Special Forces at times use parts of western Moore County for its regular Robin Sage training exercise, held within multiple North Carolina counties as the final test of their Special Forces Qualification Course training.

The first such training of the year was scheduled to wrap up Feb. 4, but several more will be scheduled throughout the year.

During this training, students participate in this exercise before graduating the course and moving on to their first assignments in the Army’s Special Forces community. Robin Sage is a two-week culmination exercise. The participants are students at the U.S. Army John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School, based out of Fort Bragg. 

The exercise’s notional country of Pineland encompasses Alamance, Anson, Bladen, Brunswick, Cabarrus, Chatham, Columbus, Cumberland, Davidson, Guilford, Harnett, Hoke, Lee, Montgomery, Moore, New Hanover, Randolph, Richmond, Robeson, Rowan, Sampson, Scotland, Stanly, Union and Wake counties in North Carolina and the South Carolina counties of Chesterfield, Dillon and Marlboro.

Throughout the exercise, military and civilian support personnel, as well as community volunteers who serve as auxiliary, participate in and/or provide support during each of these exercises. Military service members from units across Fort Bragg also support the exercise. These military members act as realistic opposing forces and guerrilla freedom fighters, also known as Pineland’s resistance movement. These troops play a critical role in the training exercise. To add realism of the exercise, civilian volunteers throughout the state act as role-players. Participation by these volunteers is crucial to the success of this training, and past trainees attest to the realism they add to the exercise.

All Robin Sage movements and events have been coordinated with public safety officials throughout and within the towns and counties hosting the training. Residents may hear blank gunfire and see occasional flares. Controls are in place to ensure there is no risk to persons or property. Residents with concerns should contact local law enforcement officials, who will immediately contact exercise control officials.

For the U.S. Army John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School, safety is always the command’s top priority during all training events. The following measures have been implemented:

• Formal written notification to the chiefs of law enforcement agencies in the affected counties, with a follow-up visit from a unit representative.

• All civilian and non-student military participants are briefed on procedures to follow if there is contact with law enforcement officials.

• Students only wear civilian clothes if the situation warrants, as determined by the instructors, and wear a distinctive brown armband during these instances.

• Training areas and vehicles used during exercises are clearly labeled. 

Robin Sage is the U.S. military’s premiere unconventional warfare exercise and the final test of over a year’s worth of training for aspiring Special Forces Soldiers. Candidates are placed in an environment of political instability characterized by armed conflict, forcing Soldiers to analyze and solve problems to meet the challenges of this “real-world” training.