EOD Airmen Detect, Disarm, Protect At Bagram Airfield
by U.S. Air Force Senior Airman Rito Smith June 7, 2019
The Joint Defense Operations Center calls about a confirmed or
suspected explosive ordnance disposal incident. Three Airmen rush
out the door, set up their truck and immediately depart for the
incident site. They head out with a security element to safely
transport them to the location. For them it is now an information
game and race against time.
“It is a constant cat and mouse
game where everyone is constantly evolving,” said Staff Sgt. Drew
Tesser, an EOD technician assigned to the 753rd Ordnance Company at
Kandahar Airfield. “We need every bit of information we can get from
long range reconnaissance before we make a hard decision to disarm
or detonate the suspected improvised explosive device.”
The
team utilizes different types of equipment from remote controlled
robots to small unmanned aerial systems to provide reconnaissance on
a potential hazard site.
“My biggest job is to try and keep
the guys in the truck and not have them get out and go to the hazard
site,” said Staff Sgt. Joshua Holbrook, the equipment manager
assigned to the 753rd Ordnance Company. “We can use our robot to
scout out the area for potential wires or pressure plates, as well
as using our unmanned aerial system to get a bird’s eye view of the
area before making the decision to go down to the site.”
U.S. Air Force Senior Airman Joshua Holbrook, an explosive ordnance disposal technician assigned to the 753rd Ordnance Company displays their capability to use robots for reconnaissance
at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan on February 3, 2019. Holbrook is one of three Airmen assigned to work with an Army EOD team to support the Train Advise Assist Command-South mission. (U.S. Air Force photo by Senior Airman Rito Smith)
|
These technicians’ jobs consist of protecting the service members
at Kandahar by doing route clearance patrols and flightline support.
They are also responsible for supporting the Train Advise Assist
Command – South mission by traveling with an advisory package to
ensure the locals are trained properly to protect their country from
potential IED hazards.
“Our job is to make sure we keep
people safe,” said Technical Sgt. Alexander Blair, team leader
assigned to the 753rd Ordnance Company. “Safety is the most
important thing; I will never put my life or the team’s lives in
danger.”
Once the call comes in, the team goes to the site
to assess the situation and detonate the hazard is in a controlled
area.
“First we try and disarm the device, then if we can
blow it up safely where it is at then we will,” said Blair. “If
there’s a risk to anybody or anything, then we will move it to a
safe location before detonating it.”
Tesser, Holbrook and
Blair also collect as much evidence from the scene as they can to
send to the ACME Lab at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan to process DNA
and fingerprints.
Military members are not the only people
affected by IEDs—the Airmen’s mission to disarm these hazards saves
lives for the local populace as well.
“Sometimes IEDs are
placed near civilians that don’t want any part of it, and we get to
go out and make things safer for them and for our guys on the
ground,” Blair said.
“Everything we do is motivated by our
goal of helping people,” he added. “For me, going into a dangerous
situation and being the solutions to saving lives is what motivates
me to be out here every day.”
The EOD Airmen operationally
report to the Army at TAAC-South, but administratively fall under
the 455th Air Expeditionary Wing at Bagram. The wing’s 955th Air
Expeditionary Squadron is responsible for ensuring hundreds of
Airmen working with joint and interagency partners across
Afghanistan receive the Air Force-specific support they need.
|
|