2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team of 4th US Inf Div gets Javelin antitank missile CROWS and CROWS-J RWS


The WarHorse Brigade at Fort Carson, Colorado, began fielding and training on the Common Remotely Operated Weapon Station-Javelin, and the Common Remotely Operated Weapon Station mounted on their Stryker ICVs on February 7.
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A line of Strykers awaits upgrades of Common Remotely Operated Weapon Station-Javelin and the Common Remotely Operated Weapon Station on February 8, 2022, at Fort Carson, Colorado. (Picture source; U.S. Army/Sgt. Gabrielle Pena)


The fielding of the new system, which replaces the Remote Weapon Station, is part of a larger effort to give Strykers more lethal capabilities. “This modernization enhances our soldiers’ ability to detect, identify and destroy targets and achieve overmatch against peer threats,” said Col. Andrew Kiser, commander of 2nd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division.

The CROWS and CROWS-J system also allows for soldiers to engage threats from inside the Stryker, providing a more lethal approach to eliminating threats from a distance. “It improves crew safety and survivability,” said Sgt. Joshua Carroll, an infantryman with Headquarters and Headquarters Company, 2SBCT, 4th Inf. Div. “We can engage farther than a dismounted javelin. It makes us the most lethal Stryker brigade in the Army”.

The systems include improved visual capabilities, increasing Stryker’s lethality. “Including both optics and control of the primary vehicular weapon system, they allow operators to engage targets from inside the vehicle at an extreme distance with an increased resolution in the camera feed,” Kiser said.

The WarHorse Brigade began its transition from a light infantry brigade to a Stryker brigade in the summer of 2020 and became fully mission-capable as a Stryker brigade in late 2021. These latest upgrades to the brigade’s fleet make it the most modernized in the U.S. Army.