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    Cub Scouts interview ANP officer

    PANJSHIR PROVINCE, AFGHANISTAN

    01.22.2011

    Story by Senior Airman Amber Ashcraft 

    Combined Joint Task Force 101

    PANJSHIR PROVINCE, Afghanistan – With the help of social media, military members overseas are able to easily keep in touch with family and friends back home.

    Although many service members take advantage of the capability, it is a rare occurrence when video teleconferencing is used for American children to interview an Afghan National Police officer.

    “When I was deployed in 2003, we didn’t even have Internet access,” said U.S. Army Master Sgt. Todd Eipperle, senior non-commissioned officer in charge of Task Force Red Bulls Embedded Training Team in Panjshir. “Being able to have a meeting like this, face-to-face, makes the experience even better.”

    The meeting took place Jan. 22 with Cub Scout Pack 182 from Ankeny, Iowa. The Scouts took turns asking Capt. Sefat Mire, Rokha District ANP training officer, about his life in Afghanistan. They wanted to know what it is like for Mire to be a police officer, what the best part of his job is and if he is able to go home to his family every night.

    “Some days, we are very busy and travel, so I come home very late,” answered Mire, through an interpreter. “But I enjoy being a police officer.”

    Eipperle, a Marshalltown, Iowa, native and part of the Iowa Cub Scouts, helped set up the session by sending an e-mail to some of the packs back home asking if they would like to talk with an ANP member.

    “There is a ‘Language and Culture’ award Scouts can get,” Eipperle said. “Pack 182 responded they would like to get that award and participate in the meeting.”

    After speaking with the pack’s leader, U.S. Army Lt. Col. Sean Ogelsby, Eipperle found an ANP member to talk with the Scouts.

    “Captain Mire was outspoken in our train-the-trainers course and was easy to talk to,” Eipperle said. “Having four boys of his own at home, he was excited to participate.”

    For more than a half hour, the Scouts, Mire and Eipperle exchanged questions and answers through an interpreter about life as Scouts in the U.S. and as ANP in Afghanistan.

    “It was good to be able to speak to the Cub Scouts,” said Mire. “When the PRT goes on missions here and talks to our children, our children come home and tell their fathers about the good experience they had with the Americans. Afghan children are like American children, we want them to look up to us and have good experiences.”

    After teaching the Cub Scouts how to say “thank you” and “goodbye”, “tashakor” and “huda hafez” respectively, they ended their teleconference.

    “When I thanked Capt. Mire for doing this for our boys, he simply replied, ‘It’s something I will remember forever,’” Eipperle said.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 01.22.2011
    Date Posted: 01.22.2011 14:39
    Story ID: 64029
    Location: PANJSHIR PROVINCE, AF

    Web Views: 82
    Downloads: 3

    PUBLIC DOMAIN