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    Never leave a fallen comrade

    Never leave a fallen comrade

    Photo By Lt. Col. Angel Jackson | U.S. Soldiers assigned to the 1st Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division, carry...... read more read more

    FORT HOOD, TEXAS, UNITED STATES

    09.10.2013

    Story by Capt. Angel Jackson 

    1st Armored Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division

    FORT HOOD, Texas - Every soldier knows it. The words are woven into the very creed soldiers serve by – the Warrior Ethos.

    “Never leave a fallen comrade” is a promise that no matter how long it takes and regardless of the situation, every soldier will come home.

    Soldiers of the 1st “Ironhorse” Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division learned what it takes to keep that promise during company-level evacuation and recovery team training Aug. 23 to Sept. 6 here.

    The Ironhorse Brigade’s 115th “Muleskinner” Brigade Support Battalion trained and certified CLEAR Teams for each company across the brigade.

    Wearing blue latex gloves and slowly walking in single-arm intervals, trainees crossed a fabricated battlefield searching for remains. What they found were cardboard cutouts dressed as soldiers, fake identification cards and medical training dummies, but the training was far more realistic.

    CLEAR Team instructor Staff Sgt. Reginald Alexander, a computer/detection systems repairer and Magnolia, Ark., native assigned to the Muleskinner battalion, watched closely as students identified, categorized and collected items, demonstrating their ability to perform as a team.

    As one soldier attempted to recover cardboard remains, Alexander could be heard in the background saying, “Keep in mind that is someone’s loved one. Treat him with respect.”

    Listening to Alexander’s advice, the soldier grabbed a partner, and the two-man team secured the cardboard remains and carefully placed them into a body bag.

    After all remains and personal property were gathered and properly documented, the trainees carried all items off the makeshift battlefield.

    As they moved back to the classroom, one soldier said, “That’s one additional duty I hope I never have to do.”

    Throughout the course, Alexander stressed the importance of paying attention to detail when locating, documenting and securing personnel and their equipment to ensure safe delivery to the mortuary affairs collection point.

    “Some gave little, and some gave all,” Alexander explained. “For the ones that gave all, it’s important to try to get the remains back to the families as soon as possible, and a lot of the members in the class recognize that.”

    Without training, soldiers slated to perform CLEAR Team duties could make many mistakes.

    “I probably wouldn’t have recorded any personal effects down properly,” said San Diego native Pfc. Steven Bivins, an infantryman assigned to Company A, 2nd “Lancer” Battalion, 5th Cavalry Regiment of the Ironhorse Brigade. “I definitely wouldn’t have [written] serial numbers for the money. I would have probably loaded it up like it was cargo.”

    “I probably would have been totally overwhelmed by how much paperwork goes into the process and how detailed you have to be when recording what’s on a casualty,” said Denver native Pfc. Jacobs Delargy, an infantryman also assigned to Lancer’s Company A.

    CLEAR Team training is not just essential but a requirement for unit commanders. Each recovery team is required to have one noncommissioned officer and four soldiers.

    A recovery mission could be a simple operation or require coordination of additional resources like an engineer team or explosive ordinance disposal team.

    With training complete, the soldiers of the Ironhorse Brigade are better prepared to recover their own personnel and ensure they never leave a fallen comrade.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 09.10.2013
    Date Posted: 09.11.2013 07:48
    Story ID: 113411
    Location: FORT HOOD, TEXAS, US
    Hometown: DENVER, COLORADO, US
    Hometown: FALMOUTH, MASSACHUSETTS, US
    Hometown: MAGNOLIA, ARKANSAS, US
    Hometown: SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA, US

    Web Views: 78
    Downloads: 0

    PUBLIC DOMAIN