Published
for the Fort Bliss/El Paso, Texas Community
January
6, 2005
EOD team
eliminates hazards one cache after another
Sgt. Frank Magni
17th Public Affairs Detachment
Sgt. Jerod Harding, 707th EOD Co., replaces the battery in a remote
controlled robot. The sophisticated robot enables EOD personnel to examine
hazardous items while keeping the team members out of danger.
JALALABAD, Afghanistan
– After nearly 30 years of war, Afghanistan is full of leftover
munitions from the Soviet occupation and the unrest that followed until
the coalition ousted the Taliban in October 2001.
With rockets, mortars and mines littering virtually every corner of
the country, eliminating these hazards has become a huge concern for
coalition forces and the Afghan government.
Explosive ordnance disposal teams are spread throughout the country
responding to the calls for support. These teams can be found everywhere
from main installations like Bagram Air Base to the most remote forward
operating bases.
“We are out here every day to make this country safe for military
and local citizens,” said Army Spc. Bill Fitz-patrick, 707th Explosive
Ordnance Disposal Company. Fitzpatrick, along with Sgt. Jerod Harding
and team leader Staff Sgt. Miles Cathers, operates in and around Nangahar
province in eastern Afghanistan, supporting many coalition units.
Most EOD teams consist of two people, but it reduces the strain of the
mission by having an extra person to assist with the myriad of tasks
EOD soldiers are responsible for.
Employing equipment from robots to sniper rifles, the tools each team
has to do its job are as numerous as the tasks themselves. Whether is
it is rendering unexploded ordnance “safe,” or blowing it
up in place, the first level of decision-making falls to the team leader
on the scene.
Working with unit leadership, an EOD team leader is the primary ordnance
adviser in an area. Helping leaders balance decisions and giving the
best estimates possible on the risk of detonation to personnel and equipment
make the team leader’s job demanding.
Cathers is on his third deployment to Afghanistan, and the leaders he
works with trust his advice. “Many leaders I work with go directly
off the advice I give.”
With extensive experience in EOD operations within the country, Cathers
said he relies heavily on his training and approaches each mission using
two tools: experience and a careful thought process. With the variety
of different scenarios each team can encounter, all EOD personnel are
sent into a situation with years of experience from throughout the field
of EOD personnel.
“Everything we do has precedents,” said Cathers. “We
never go into a situation without knowing how a piece of ordnance works.”
“We have to be very good problem solvers,” said Cathers.
“We aren’t just ‘John Wayneing’ it out there.
We think every problem through.”
In Afghanistan, the team’s approach is simple. “If anything
is unsecured, we take care of it right there,” said Fitzpatrick.
“If not, it could possibly come back as a roadside bomb, we destroy
the items that can be used against coalition forces first,” said
Fitzpatrick.
While the approach each soldier takes to his job remains the same, each
outlook on why each member chose EOD is different. “I need to
know that I’ve done something important at the end of the day,”
said Harding. “With EOD, I feel like I’m doing something
good every day.”
Others on the team feel they were born to do EOD. “I was always
the kid who would take something apart and put it back together again,”
said Fitzpatrick. “I think this job is a perfect fit for me.”
One theme that remains constant in Canter’s team is a feeling
of brotherhood. “We are really close,” said Cather. “In
many ways, I’m trusting my life with a team member. In a way,
they feel like brothers to me.”
Cathers says, “I just take it one mission at a time, each time
I have left Afghanistan, it has felt like I made the country at least
a little bit safer. This time will be no exception.”