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    Army Specialists Overcome Challenges at Combat Outposts

    PUZA-I-ESAN, AFGHANISTAN, AFGHANISTAN

    05.18.2010

    Courtesy Story

    IJC Public Affairs Advisory Team- Regional Command North

    Living at a remote Afghan national army outpost in northern Afghanistan, two U.S. Army soldiers operate autonomously to ensure construction projects for ANA and coalition soldiers are completed correctly and on time.

    Spcs. Daniel Booles, contracting officer representative, and Joseph Wagner, COR assistant, who are attached to the Regional Support Team-North at Camp Mike Spann, are responsible for overseeing mission-essential construction endeavors at combat outposts across northern Afghanistan that support the Afghan national security forces in their efforts to defeat the insurgents and secure the population.

    Establishing these combat outposts is critical to the success of the ANSF as they provide the military with the ability to sustain a presence in a region and are an integral part of the counterinsurgency initiative that supports the ANSF mission to clear an area, hold with security forces, and then build support and protect the population.

    Contracts to build and expand ANA combat outposts are regularly monitored by COR team members to ensure that supplies used to sustain forces are received and correct construction materials are delivered on time. The pair serves as the RST's eyes and ears on the ground, a critical task that comes fully equipped with its fair share of unique obstacles and challenges.

    "Being dropped off at a Forward Operating Base without a vehicle, interpreter, and limited supplies definitely made our mission a challenge," said Spc. Daniel Booles, a Fort Worth, Texas, native assigned to the 10th Mountain 1st Brigade 2-22 Infantry Delta Company from Fort Drum, N.Y. "Making sure equipment and supplies made it to the right locations by the contractors was an interesting experience."

    Ensuring the timely delivery of materials by local contractors sometimes requires eliciting the assistance of international partners in the region while they dually work to organize logistical support from other U.S. units operating in the area.

    "We had to coordinate with the Germans as well as the ANA to ensure delivery to Bashir Khan," said Spc. Joseph Wagner, a Crittenden, Ky., native also assigned to 10th Mountain 1st Brigade 2-22 Infantry Delta Company from Fort Drum, N.Y. "I'm glad we were able to get everything done and I am ready for the next mission."

    Despite the remote location and austere conditions, the modest pair managed to ensure the completion of the combat outpost at Puza-i-esan, a critical project that directly contributed to bringing stability to an area that once served as a safe haven for insurgents.

    "I liked the autonomy, it was nice to get out here and put our training to work," Booles said.

    Completing the complex project together brought the duo closer during their embedded experience with the ANA soldiers, where they were often the only familiar face each other had.

    "I can't ask for a better partner," Booles said of his cohort. "We definitely formed a big brother – little brother relationship."

    Upon returning to their home base at Camp Mike Spann, the two-man team will move on to their next assignment; a 30-day project to oversee the expansion of living space for incoming troops at a 209th Corps combat operating post in Khilagay, Afghanistan.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 05.18.2010
    Date Posted: 05.18.2010 02:02
    Story ID: 49848
    Location: PUZA-I-ESAN, AFGHANISTAN, AF

    Web Views: 772
    Downloads: 322

    PUBLIC DOMAIN