Joint Base Langley-Eustis


Joint Base Langley-Eustis

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Hometown: Fort Eustis VA US

Current Personnel:
spyglass Rick Haverinen
spyglass Tech. Sgt. Randy Redman



For more content from this unit, please contact
Khelyn Mickles | kmickles@dvidshub.net | 678-421-6773

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News Stories

Rail soldiers from 757th Transportation (Railway) Bn. help U.S. Army Transportation Museum at Fort Eustis
Army Reserve soldiers from multiple companies and locations of the 757th Transportation (Railway) Battalion invested sweat equity in July 2011 providing project completion for the U.S. Army Transportation Museum at the Fort Eustis, Va., half of Joint Base Langley-Eustis.




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Rail soldiers from 757th Transportation (Railway) Battalion help US Army Transportation Museum at Fort Eustis
Rail soldiers from 757th Transportation (Railway) Battalion help U.S. Army Transportation Museum at Fort Eustis during July heat wave by laying a railway track spur and refurbishing flat bed rail cars. Produced by Rick Haverinen.


C-IED Schoolhouse Story 1 of 5
The improvised explosive device is not new to warfare, but it has become a principal concern for U.S and partner nation forces operating in Iraq and Afghanistan. The U.S. Department of Defense has reacted to the IED in multiple ways, including the creation of the Joint IED Defeat Organization, or JIEDDO, (RHYMES WITH PIE-dough) which counters the IED threat with the creation and funding of strategies, equipment and programs such as Attack the Network, Train the Force and Defeat the Device. Rick Haverinen, (HAVE-rih-nen) a public affairs specialist at the U.S. Army Transportation School, has prepared a series of radio stories that focus on the U.S. military’s training of service members to counter the IED threat. The next story in the series visits the U.S. Army’s A-symmetric Warfare Office and the Mobile Counter-IED Interactive Trainer at Fort Bragg, N.C.


US Army Drill Sergeant of theYear 2010
U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Benjamin Brady was one of eight contenders for the title of Drill Sergeant of the Year for 2010 in a competion held June 14-18 at Fort Monroe and Fort Eustis, Va. Of the eight candidates, five competed in the Active Duty Component, and three were Army Reserve Component members. Separate titles were awarded in each component. Brady did not win the title, but he shares his thoughts about the competion, his career, and why he chose to enlist in the U.S. Army, in this story originally prepared for NPR radio station WVXU in Cincinnati. Brady and Active Duty Drill Sergeant of the Year title winner for 2010, Staff Sgt. Timothy Sarvis, of Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., are from the Cincinnati area. The Reserve Component Drill Sergeant of the Year for 2010 is Staff Sgt. Melissa Solomon of 108th Training Division.


C-IED Schoolhouse Story 1 of 5 SHORT Version 1:59
The improvised explosive device is not new to warfare, but it has become a principal concern for U.S and partner nation forces operating in Iraq and Afghanistan. The U.S. Department of Defense has reacted to the IED in multiple ways, including the creation of the Joint IED Defeat Organization, or JIEDDO, which counters the IED threat with the creation and funding of strategies, equipment and programs such as Attack the Network, Train the Force, and Defeat the Device. Rick Haverinen, a public affairs specialist at the U.S. Army Transportation School, has prepared a series of radio stories that focus on the U.S. military’s training of service members to counter the IED threat.


C-IED Schoolhouse Story 2 of 5 LONG version 3:26
The improvised explosive device is a principal concern for U.S. and partner nation forces operating in Iraq and Afghanistan. Training to counter the IED threat can range from furthering cultural awareness, and improving relationships with members of host nations where coalition service members are operating; to learning what signs to look for, when the IED threat already exists. Rick Haverinenhas the story. The next story in the series visits live situational training for officers, and simulation convoy exercises for NCO convoy commanders, at the U.S. Army Transportation School; plus we’ll see how real-life battle incidents become training simulations at the Joint Training Counter-IED Operations Integration Center.




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