CAMP Troy, Iraq – When an improvised explosive device is detected most people run and take cover but the Weapons Intelligence Team heads to the site to start the crime scene investigation. The WIT provides counter IED intelligence through collection, analysis and tactical exploitation in support of Multi-National Corps Iraq.
"As you may know our adversaries are out there using modified explosives and trying to find unique ways to use those weapons against Iraqis and coalition forces, so our role is to go out there and provide battlefield forensics, to better defeat them and beyond that, try to stop them from ever being on the streets," said Chief Master Sgt. Kevin Touhey, WIT superintendent.
By staying ahead of the curve, the WIT help U.S. and coalition forces prepare for future attacks by learning how the enemy is operating.
"The WIT team is important because we are going beyond a simple reactive mode. It brings a deeper level of intelligence and analysis to these devices. And we begin to understand what the enemy's tactics, techniques and procedures are resulting in better force protection," said Chief Touhey, who is deployed from the 93rd Intelligence Squadron at the Medina Annex in San Antonio, and native of Oklahoma City, Okla. "We [Explosive Ordnance Disposal - EOD/WIT] have uncovered and captured weapons caches so we have denied the enemy access to munitions, we have also taken hundreds of positive IDs of bomb makers and facilitators, enabling operations to get these individuals off the streets."
As part of the Combined Joint Task Force Troy, the WIT is comprised of Air Force, Army and Navy personnel, and according to Chief Touhey, the joint environment is what drives the mission success.
"It brings different experiences and different ways of approaching things," he said. "When you are dealing with something like the counter IED fight, you have to look at it from multiple perspectives, if you get tunnel vision and only see it from one angle you are likely to miss something, possibly a key piece of information that could break the case wide open, so having that joint flavor is key to us being able to do our job to the level we need to."
"Between the Soldiers, Sailors and Airmen we have 25 different career fields that cover the gamut from EOD technicians to various intel specialties, we have photographers, we have masters at arms, we have infantrymen, rangers and patriot battery technicians," he added.
Not only do the Airmen in the WIT work side-by-side with other services, but they also are in the process of training the Iraqis to eventually take over the WIT altogether.
"The importance of training the Iraqis is so they can complete the mission of WIT and take it to the next level so they won't have to depend on coalition," said Maj. Christopher Li, WIT commander. Major Li is deployed from Davis-Monthan Air Force Base, Ariz., and is a native of Arroyo Grande, Calif.
Chief Touhey said that the challenges the WIT have faced are the same things that have made them successful.
"If you take almost 100 people from all walks of life, from 25 different backgrounds and throw them together into the streets of Iraq to do a job that is foreign to them with just a few months of training you are going to come across a few challenges," he said. "But you know as our creed says, 'I am an American Airmen, I am a Warrior,' and that's truly what the WIT Airmen are, they're outside the wire in harm's way daily. They strap on their courage everyday and they go out there, I mean that's a challenge that they have done phenomenally well." I am extremely proud of the men and women of the WIT for what they do."
Date Taken: | 03.24.2009 |
Date Posted: | 03.24.2009 04:14 |
Story ID: | 31518 |
Location: | CAMP TROY, IQ |
Web Views: | 1,700 |
Downloads: | 783 |
This work, Weapons Intelligence Team provides battlefield forensics, by SSgt Tim Beckham, identified by DVIDS, must comply with the restrictions shown on https://www.dvidshub.net/about/copyright.