Airman 1st Class Sandra Crawford watches the Bagram Airfield perimeter from Tower 59 Feb. 16, 2012, at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan. Perimeter response team members watch the Bagram Airfield perimeter for any potential threats and actively respond to all possible situations. Crawford is a PRT member with the 455th Expeditionary Security Forces Squadron. U.S. Air Force photo/Airman 1st Class Ericka Engblom |
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BAGRAM AIRFIELD, Afghanistan (AFNS - 2/26/2012) -- Simple
in focus and repetitive in duties, several missions at
Bagram Airfield are woven into the day-to-day operation of
the base in such a way that most people may see or hear of
them once and then not interact with them the rest of their
deployment. These are the missions where Airmen perform the
same one or two tasks all day, over and over, as a full-time
job and without much reprieve.
As mundane as that may seem, these warriors are critical to
enabling all missions on base by providing continual U.S. presence
in the country. These duties are critical elements in base defense.
Airman 1st Class Sandra Crawford is one of those warriors.
As a
455th Expeditionary Security Forces Squadron charlie-sector
perimeter response team member, she spends at least 12 hours a day
vigilantly scanning the Bagram Airfield perimeter for any potential
threats and actively responds to all possible situations.
"Our main priority is to defend Bagram Airfield," Crawford said. "We
make sure threats don't come on base."
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PRT members in the watch tower stand at their post and
look out for suspicious activity. Armed with weapons and
surveillance equipment, they visually assess all traffic
that passes through their sector, both inside and outside
the wire.
"We are both a reactive force and
deterrence," said Master Sgt. Benoit Wyble, the 455th ESFS
charlie sector flight chief. "We sound the alarm and slow
down the enemy the best we can to prevent them from gaining
access to the installation."
Manned 24 hours a day,
the watch tower hosts a rotation of Airmen who patiently
follow protocol in full expectation that a threat could
present itself at any time.
"You call possible threats into Control," said Crawford.
"If someone acts suspicious, you call out your mobile unit."
The mobile PRT supports the watch tower crew by
deploying to the perceived threat. In some cases it may be a
stray animal or local national who needs to be ushered away
from the gate. Occasionally, it may be an enemy looking for
vulnerabilities or a way onto the base. That is when either
nonlethal force, using specialized shotguns and sting
grenades, or lethal force may be needed to protect Bagram
Airfield inhabitants.
The watch tower team members
not only coordinate security responses for the mobile unit,
but they also walks their own patrols along the perimeter.
PRTs check the fence to make sure nobody is trying to cut
through it and to look for any discrepancies or suspicious
activity.
If it becomes necessary, they react to
anything which seems to threaten the security of the base.
"We have a method called shout, show, shove and shoot,"
said Crawford. "First you shout and warn them. Then you have
to show them that you are escalating force. If they don't
listen, you eventually have to shove. If they don't respond,
you have authorization to shoot."
By standing in the
tower or walking around the fence all day, these vigilant
warriors produce a tremendous impact on base defense.
"Our presence keeps the enemy from doing anything,"
Crawford said. "They know that we are here; they know that
we are out. Our people will walk outside on the catwalks
with their weapons to show that we are paying attention ...
that we are taking our job seriously.
Wyble said PRTs
make sure everyone else on Bagram Airfield can do their jobs
in peace. Crawford agreed.
"I am not sure if people
understand how important this job is," she said. "It may
look easy to sit in the tower ... but it is not easy to stay
vigilant. You need to know your job for any situation at any
time. You need to keep your calm if anything happens. You
routinely do exercises to be on your game all the time.
"I like the thought that I am doing something to help
protect a little part of my country that we hold within
another country," Crawford said. "I feel good about
protecting everybody that is serving on it and hope I help
make them feel safe."
By USAF Tech. Sgt. Vernon Cunningham
Air Force News Service
Copyright 2012
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