Marine heavy equipment operator finds critical role on task force in Afghanistan

II Marine Expeditionary Force
Story by Cpl. Brian Adam Jones

Date: 11.02.2011
Posted: 11.02.2011 12:26
News ID: 79433
Marine heavy equipment operator finds critical role on task force in Afghanistan

PATROL BASE ALCATRAZ, Afghanistan - Cpl. Christopher Cane, a heavy equipment operator with Marine Wing Support Squadron 371, has been all over the world.

The Olympia, Wash., native recently completed a tour on Marine Security Guard duty, serving in Saudi Arabia, Estonia and Barbados.

Cane now finds himself in the Helmand River Valley in southwestern Afghanistan as part of a roughly 20-man team dubbed “Task Force Nomad.”

Operating out of Patrol Base Alcatraz, an outpost on the valley’s rim, for the next several weeks, Cane will be instrumental in an effort to construct helicopter landing zones in the region.

The task force completed its first mission, Oct. 21, constructing a landing zone for a special operations unit in the valley.

Cane operated the armored bulldozer that moved the gravel for the landing zone.

“It’s always a challenge coming into a situation and not knowing what you’re going to find,” Cane said. “Luckily we can move the earth beneath us.”

The other Marines on the team credited Cane with the success of the mission.

“He ran the show,” said Sgt. Eric Zauner, the senior motor vehicle operator on the task force. “We were out there with the success and speed that we enjoyed because of him.”

“A lot of things hinge on heavy equipment,” Cane said, “whether I’m moving equipment around or moving the earth.”