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    1st Sustainment Brigade revolutionizes the retrograde process

    1st Sustainment Brigade revolutionizes the retrograde process

    Courtesy Photo | Sgt. John Arnold, and Spc. Jamie Jones who both serve with 2nd Heavy Equipment...... read more read more

    CAMP ARIFJAN, KUWAIT

    07.13.2010

    Courtesy Story

    U.S. Army Central   

    CAMP ARIFJAN, Kuwait – As Third Army continues to conduct the Responsible Drawdown of Iraq, one of the main tasks they are faced with is moving the leftover equipment that has been used over the last seven years to sustain military operations in Iraq back to Kuwait.

    Soldiers of the 1st Sustainment Brigade, 1st Theater Sustainment Command, Third Army, were tasked with finding a predictable and flexible way to ship the left over equipment, known as retrograde, back to Kuwait as part of the largest modern military-logistics mission since World War II, named “Nickel II.”

    With over 1.2 million pieces of equipment located on twenty-one Retrograde Property Assistance Team yards throughout Iraq, this proves to be no easy task.

    “As we looked at the Phase IV of the Responsible Drawdown of ‘Nickel II’ we determined that we needed to come up with a new concept so we could pick up all of the retrograde across Iraq,” said Col. Donnie Walker, commander, 1st Sustainment Brigade.

    By examining how the convoys were previously structured, 1st Sustainment Brigade was able to design a new way to transport the retrograde out of Iraq, thus creating the “Durable Express.”

    “The Durable Express was created collectively by my brigade staff to be the first logistics convoy designed specifically to meet retrograde cargo requirements,” said Walker. “It is unique because it is a tailorable and predictable package based off of the retrograde that needs to be moved out of Iraq to Kuwait.”

    The Durable Express is set up so the brigade can tailor a convoy with flatbed assets and heavy equipment transport based off of the needs of the movement control teams in Iraq.

    But setting up the convoy is only half of the work required to bring the equipment down.

    “We drive over 700 miles to all of the Forward Operating Bases (FOB) throughout Iraq, said Sgt. John Arnold, who serves as assistant convoy commander with 2nd Heavy Equipment Transportation Company, 164th Transportation Battalion, 1st Sustainment Brigade, 1st Theater Sustainment Command, Third Army. “When we arrive to the FOBs the retrograded equipment is quickly loaded onto the vehicles and logged to ensure all of the equipment is properly tracked.”

    Once loaded, the convoy is able to quickly move out until it reaches fifteen out of the twenty-one Retrograde Property Assistance Team yards to load and transport cargo out of Iraq. With the challenges imposed daily by the heat and long hours, this proves to be no challenge to the Soldiers of 1st Brigade.

    “My Soldiers are fully motivated, and their determination to accomplish this mission is unlike anything I have ever seen, said Arnold. “They may get tired and frustrated, but they give everything they can so that we accomplish the mission every time.”

    With the hard work of the 1st Sustainment Brigade, history is being made as all of the retrograde from Operation Iraqi Freedom is pulled out of the country at an unprecedented rate.

    “I often tell my Soldiers they may not realize it right now, but many years from now you will be part of our nation’s history,” said Walker, “and it is their grandchildren and their great-grandchildren that will read about them and what they were able to accomplish as Operation Iraqi Freedom became Operation New Dawn.”

    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 07.13.2010
    Date Posted: 07.13.2010 01:19
    Story ID: 52735
    Location: CAMP ARIFJAN, KW

    Web Views: 412
    Downloads: 226

    PUBLIC DOMAIN