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    Crazy 98 spends Christmas in Afghanistan

    Crazy 98 spends Christmas in Afghanistan

    Photo By Chief Petty Officer David Votroubek | Army Maj. Trent Darling watches distant combat operations from Forward Operating Base...... read more read more

    By Petty Officer 1st Class David M. Votroubek
    Combined Security Transition Command-Afghanistan Public Affairs

    FORWARD OPERATING BASE, Afghanistan – A small, blinking Christmas tree sits in the dining facility. Aside from a few other lights, it is the only symbol of Christmas on Forward Operating Base Wolverine.

    The FOB is home to a group of soldiers formally called the 4-2 Embedded Training Team, but known informally as the "Crazy 98s." The 15-man team trained together at Ft. Riley, Kan., and deployed to Afghanistan as mentors for the Afghan national army. Now they're coming to the end of their tour.

    Three days before Christmas, Army Capt. Douglas Solan sat in the gravel at FOB Wolverine, unpacking a new motorcycle for the ANA. The combat engineer chuckled while assembling the bright green bike.

    "Nothing ever changes," he said. "I'm 7,000 miles from home, and I'm still putting somebody else's toys together."

    But Solan knows that the Soldiers he trains will use the motorcycle to guide convoys down

    Christmas in Afghanistan 2-2-2

    Since they arrived in February, his team has dealt with 50 improvised explosive devices planted by the Taliban.

    The next day the team made a humanitarian assistance visit to a nearby village; but again the intent was serious. As if they were Santa Claus, they handed out candy, clothes and tools, while the ETT mentors and Afghan soldiers were quietly gathering intelligence about local insurgents. This information could be well worth the price of a wheelbarrow or a pocketful of candy bars. A tip about a Taliban leader came in the following day.

    Later they posed for one last group picture during a rare occasion that the whole team was together. Intact teams are rare for ETTs. Although they'd been attacked almost a dozen times and had suffered injuries, the Crazy 98 Soldiers never had a fatality.

    On Christmas morning, Solan prepared a holiday meal for the team. Others watched TV, read or called home. Each member of the team was permitted 30 minutes to make calls via satellite phone.

    One of those Soldiers was Sergeant 1st Class Jeremy Dose, who had served a previous combat tour in Iraq. He woke up at 5 a.m. to call his wife and son during their Christmas Eve celebration.

    "Technology has definitely made these tours better than they used to be," he remarked.

    Christmas is quiet on the FOB. The radios are still manned in case of an attack, but that danger will soon be behind them. For now, the Crazy 98 Soldiers are happy to celebrate the holiday and end of their tour together. They have each other, and it's enough.

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 12.25.2007
    Date Posted: 12.26.2007 15:44
    Story ID: 15012
    Location: AF

    Web Views: 471
    Downloads: 414

    PUBLIC DOMAIN