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Engineers Rebuild Border Police Checkpoint, Quarters
By Army Staff Sgt. Brandon Aird Special to American Forces Press Service
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NURISTAN PROVINCE, Afghanistan, June 2, 2008 – Coalition engineer and
cavalry soldiers worked together in April and May to build living
quarters and a security checkpoint for Afghan border police at the
Gowardesh Bridge during Operation Mountain Highway II in the eastern
portion of Afghanistan’s Nuristan province.
 U.S.
Army Spc. Ben Kavanagh, Charlie Company, 62nd Engineer Battalion, marks
a spot on a four-by-four while building an Afghan Border Police check
point April 26 at the Gowardesh Bridge during Operation Mountain
Highway II in eastern Nuristan Province, Afghanistan. U.S. Army photo
by Staff Sgt. Brandon Aird (Click photo for screen-resolution image);high-resolution image available. |
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Army Spc. Jason Marlowe, a Wisconsin native, and Army Spc. Ben
Kavanagh, from Iowa, built the living quarters, bunkers and fighting
positions next to the Gowardesh Bridge and Landay River.
“We’re
building bunkers and their home so they can stay here to protect the
bridge and the immediate area,” explained Kavanagh, who said their
previous living quarters were destroyed by insurgents late last summer.
Afghan National Army soldiers provided overwatch security for
two weeks while the engineers worked around the clock to complete the
checkpoint and living quarters.
“Were trying to get this built
as soon as possible so the ABP can move in here,” explained Marlowe.
“Right now, everyone is sleeping outside on the ground.”
The
Afghan border police checkpoint and living quarters were the main
efforts of Operation Mountain Highway II. While Marlowe and Kavanagh
built the border police station, hundreds of soldiers provided
overwatch security in seven observation posts around the valley.
“It
takes an enormous amount of overwatch to safely come up here, due to
the terrain,” explained Capt. John Williams, Headquarters Troop, 1st
Squadron, 91st Cavalry Regiment commander.
Construction on the
checkpoint and living quarters was completed in mid-May. The new
checkpoint will improve security and open up the way for government-
and development-related projects in the region.
“Now that we have security in this area, we can restart construction on the road,” Williams said.
A $40 million road project was halted in the fall when insurgents killed four workers.
“Two
of the observation posts [allow sight for] miles down the road,”
Williams said. “Once the road is built, it will open up the area to new
projects, which weren’t feasible before.”
(Army Staff Sgt. Brandon Aird serves in the 173rd Airborne Brigade Combat Team Public Affairs Office.) |
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