Posted on 02/21/2006 10:59:03 AM PST by lizol
Polish troops lead the way in demining Bagram base
By Anita Powell, Stars and Stripes Mideast edition, Sunday, February 19, 2006
BAGRAM AIR BASE, Afghanistan Before officials expand this base to roughly twice its current size, theyll have to manually evict countless longtime tenants.
Local officials estimate it will take between three and five years to clear all of Bagram Air Base, a former Soviet base, of Soviet-sown anti-personnel mines, Afghan-laid anti-tank mines and anti-personnel mines and countless ammunition rounds, small bombs, grenades and shrapnel.
The task illustrates one of the many obstacles facing Afghanistan: The nation is the second-most mined country in the world, with anywhere from 5 million to as many as 20 million mines scattered in its rugged terrain. Much of the ordnance is found in and around former Soviet bases like Bagram and at former Northern Alliance and Taliban strongholds.
This is a pretty big mess right now, said Marine Gunnery Sgt. Mike Messina, who helps lead the Mine Action Center, which coordinates demining activities for U.S. and coalition bases around Afghanistan. There is a huge demining effort in Afghanistan right now.
At Bagram, some of the most detailed and difficult demining work is handled by the Polish army, which has a company-sized presence on base. The sappers of the 1st Engineering Brigade of Brzeg, Poland, take to the bases fields daily, spending hours kneeling in the earth, tentatively poking around with metal detectors and spades.
The work is a long-term process, said Polish army Maj. Piotr Grzegorzewski. It can be really boring.
That said, sappers say the extreme danger of the job is constantly in the back of their minds.
Only the crazy dont get scared, Warrant Officer 1 Mariusz Mazur said as he watched a kneeling colleague slowly turn dirt with a spade, as if preparing to plant a petunia.
A dinner-table-sized plot of land might take 10 hours to demine, said Messina, adding that lacing the same area with mines could take as few as 15 minutes.
The Polish are very good manual deminers, Messina said. Any project we have thats very difficult and terrain-intensive, we put them on.
The center also uses civilian deminers and members of the 391st Engineering Battalion, an Army Reserve unit based in South Carolina, to conduct demining activities on the air base. Demining machinery and dogs are also used to clear areas.
Every day theyre working, theyre finding something, said Australian army Maj. Darren Morgan, officer in charge of the Mine Action Center.
Over the last four months, the sappers have found 12 anti-personnel mines, many of them Israeli-made box mines, in a small area on the base. Almost every search yields munitions, and deminers conduct two or three controlled detonations daily.
Even after the areas are considered clear, officials say, a few stubborn tenants will remain.
Therell always be something left out there, Morgan said.

Interesting story. Very dangerous work. Kudos to our Polish allies!
I'm half Polish.
And I don't get it.
A penny?
There is nothing as unforgivable as a non-funny Polish joke.
A better solution: march the muslim-islamic-arab terrorists from GITMO through the fields, in a crossing pattern, covering every square inch. Any survivors get to live.
I love our "New Europe" allies, as Rumsfield calls them!
Out with the old, in with the new.....
BTTT!
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