Soldier improves his home away from home – Torkham Gate

Combined Joint Task Force 101
Story by Staff Sgt. Ryan Matson

Date: 03.05.2011
Posted: 03.10.2011 05:25
News ID: 66769
Forward Operating Base Torkham Gate

NANGARHAR PROVINCE, Afghanistan - U.S. Army Sgt. Christian Kapler is a busy man. Anywhere people walk on Forward Operating Base Torkham Gate on the Afghanistan and Pakistan border, they will see something Kapler built, repaired or improved.

“My dad would say it’s genetics,” said Kapler, a burly, soft-spoken infantryman from Oelwein, Iowa, with Company B, 1st Battalion, 133rd Infantry Regiment serving as the FOB manager. “My grandfather had a little shop and built everything he had -- his house and all. I don’t know what he actually did for a job other than build things.”

Like his grandfather, Kapler said he enjoys working with his hands.

“I was always tinkering and building things when I was a kid, going to the lumber yard and getting scrap wood and building stuff. I did handyman stuff when I was older and started going to school at a community college for architecture and contracting, but I kept getting deployed, so I never finished college. I think the unit knows building stuff is the type of thing I excel at.”

Torkham Gate has been home to Company B, part of the Iowa National Guard’s 2nd Brigade Combat Team, 34th Infantry Division, Task Force Red Bulls, since October, and the base is expanding. Kapler, who supervises 44 Afghan workers of various trades and abilities, is tasked with improving the base.

Kapler said he appreciates the work his crew does, despite what at times is a challenging process of getting supplies and proper tools. He said when his team wants to get something done, they do it quickly.

His company commander, U.S. Army Capt. Kevin Hrodey, from Pleasant Hill, Iowa, said he is impressed with Kapler’s accomplishments.

“It is amazing to look at pictures of the FOB from when we first took over operations and then walk around now and see how much it has actually changed,” said Hrodey. “It is almost like we are not even in the same place anymore. At the rate Sgt. Kapler is improving this FOB, by the time we go to leave, we’ll be leaving a small city instead of a small, remote FOB.”

According to Hrodey, people can see the products of Kapler’s efforts everywhere they look. His projects have improved all aspects of life on the FOB from base defense to quality of life to his worker’s maintenance facility.

One repair that took some innovation was Kapler’s upgrade to the FOB firing range. Before he and his crew got their hands on it, the range was a berm, surrounded by sand-basket barriers, with some old, neglected targets and a few stakes in the ground that marked the distance.

“We use the cardboard from water pallets as target backing,” Kapler said.

The older targets were fixed and Kapler’s crew installed conduit so targets could be easily replaced once they start deteriorating. He used unserviceable dining facility tables as firing benches, weapons racks, new metal distance markers, a reinforced berm and a camouflage net awning to provide shade.


A 15-year-veteran of the Iowa National Guard, Kapler deployed to Saudi Arabia, Egypt and Iraq with Company B, and now here to Afghanistan.

He worked construction in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, before becoming a union carpenter. Between deployments, Kapler married an Oelwein, Iowa, woman, and is the proud father of three children. He said he plans to start a tool-rental business when he returns to Iowa, and his wife is taking accounting classes so she can help run the administrative side of the business.

Until he returns, he’ll continue his work in Afghanistan.