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    Texas National Guardsmen share best practices with Ugandan airmen and children

    Texas National Guardsmen share best practices with Ugandan airmen, children

    Photo By Malcolm McClendon | U.S. Army Sgt. Enrique Icedo (right) and 1st Lt. Victor Lauersdorf, Task Force Raptor,...... read more read more

    SINGO, Uganda – The road the four U.S. soldiers took to the Singo Training Center each day of their deployment opened an opportunity that they won’t soon forget.

    “Every morning, I remember passing a school at the entrance of the Singo Center,” said U.S. Army 1st Lt. Victor Lauersdorf, security officer, Task Force Raptor, 3rd Squadron, 124th Cavalry Regiment, Texas Army National Guard. “It was unique, because the same field the children used for their recess, the Ugandan People's Defense Forces used for their military training.”

    Lauersdorf, along with U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Jason Smith, Sgt. Enrique Icedo and Spc. James Andrew, exchanged best practices with Uganda Air Force airmen in a RAVEN unmanned aircraft system operational skills course held here March 19 – April 7.

    “The RAVEN is a small, unmanned reconnaissance and surveillance aircraft,” said Smith, a squad leader with Task Force Raptor. “It is flown in support of ground troops, giving commanders an eye in the sky on what may lie ahead.”

    The RAVEN is a new addition to the UPDF. Ugandan airmen new to the unit took the training very seriously, Smith recalled.

    “It’s a lot of information for a technology that most of these guys have never seen, but these guys were up to the challenge,” said Smith. “We’d give them tasks and homework and the next day they had everything memorized and completed. These men are well prepared for what challenges may lay ahead.”

    Like their U.S. counterparts, the Ugandan airmen constantly train for possible deployment and to defend their country. They also share the likelihood of being away from family and friends back home.

    “The children of the airmen we trained with attended the school we passed every day,” Lauersdorf said. “As a father of two children, I empathized with the Ugandan servicemen who could at any time leave their families behind.”

    Remembering how they felt when they themselves left home for deployments, the guardsmen decided to take the opportunity and pay the Ugandan children a visit.

    “We all pitched in a few dollars of our own money and bought some school supplies and soccer balls for the children to use,” Smith said. “When we showed up with the supplies, the smiles on the children were priceless. We spent a couple of hours with them playing, shaking hands and taking pictures with them. It was a special experience.”

    The Ugandan servicemen were also touched by the act of kindness, said Lauersdorf.

    “When we asked the leadership if it was OK to visit the school, they said yes and let us know that they were very appreciative of the gesture,” Lauersdorf said. “They said they couldn’t believe that not only did we come to train with them, but now we are helping out their children as well.”

    The Texas National Guardsmen recall their trip as not only a military mission, but one of making connections with men and women just like them.

    “When my children ask me why I’m so far away, I let them know it’s to help out our Ugandan brothers and sisters,” Lauersdorf said.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 04.11.2012
    Date Posted: 04.21.2012 00:36
    Story ID: 87108
    Location: SINGO, UG

    Web Views: 477
    Downloads: 1

    PUBLIC DOMAIN