North Carolina native deploys, supports counterinsurgency, stability operations in Afghanistan

United States Air Forces Central
Story by Tech. Sgt. Beth Del Vecchio

Date: 06.16.2012
Posted: 06.16.2012 06:06
News ID: 90104

KAPISA PROVINCE, Afghanistan -- Air Force Staff Sgt. Daniel Maness, a Charlotte, N.C., native, is serving in Afghanistan with a Provincial Reconstruction Team in Kapisa province.

Maness, deployed from the Air Force ISR Agency at Lackland Air Force Base, Texas, will complete a six-month tour with the PRT.

The Kapisa PRT covers an area of approximately 1,840 square kilometers of mountainous terrain, home to nearly 365,000 Afghans. Located just North of Kabul, Kapisa is the smallest province in the country, but has the one of the highest populations per capita spread throughout seven districts.

The PRT has been conducting counterinsurgency and stability operations in the province for more than six years, but this team will be the last.

Mentors on the team have been working with leaders of Kapisa, at the provincial and district level, to bolster the capacity and credibility of the Government of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, or GIRoA.

With the help of an Army security force, PRT Kapisa traverses not only its own province but also the surrounding provinces of Parwan and Kabul participating in key leader engagements, scouting areas for new projects and performing quality checks and site visits on existing projects. They work closely with the Afghans, mentoring them on how GIRoA can work for them.

Maness is one of four communications specialists for the PRT. They are responsible for all communication equipment for the 65-member PRT. They also control the radio communications at the Tactical Operations Center while the PRT is outside the wire on missions.

“I’m a computer programmer by trade and my tasking to come here was short-notice, so we got a lot of our training here,” he said.

Maness said he’s happy to be part of such an important mission.

“If the team doesn’t have effective communications equipment, the mission doesn’t go on,” he said. “It’s great to see the effect we have on the mission everyday.”

Maness and his team keep the PRT in constant contact with each other and the base, so they can continue on their mission safely to prepare Kapisa for transition to Afghan control. Only time will reflect the success of the PRT in Kapisa, but one thing that is for sure is the current successful operations in Kapisa reflect the hard work that has been done by Maness now and the PRT throughout the years.