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Thursday, January 14, 2010
U.S. Coast Guard cutters sit offshore near Haiti
Two 270-foot U.S. Coast Guard cutters sit offshore near Haiti Jan, 13, 2010, in preparation to provide humanitarian aid to the earthquake-ravaged country. Coast Guard personnel have been mobilized to provide support to Haiti following a 7.0 magnitude earthquake. (DoD photo courtesy of the U.S. Coast Guard/Released)
Guided-Missile Destroyer
U.S. Navy Cmdr. Mike McCartney, the commanding officer of the guided-missile destroyer USS Chung-Hoon (DDG 93), gives a tour of the forecastle of the ship to Japanese Minister for Foreign Affairs Katsuya Okada Jan. 11, 2010, in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. While in Hawaii, Okada met with Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton to discuss the movement of Marine Corps Air Station Futenma, the expansion of the Japanese and U.S. security alliance, the war in Afghanistan and North Korea’s nuclear programs. (DoD photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Mark Logico, U.S. Navy)
Engineers Wire Up New Living Areas in Iraq
By Army Staff Sgt. April Mota Special to American Forces Press Service BAGHDAD : Soldiers from 317th Engineer Company and 808th Engineer Company are providing electricity to the future living spaces of U.S. forces as they prepare to hand off their current housing to the Iraqi army.
The engineers are busy digging ditches, upgrading electrical boxes, burying cables and connecting boxes to generators that provide housing units with electricity. The new housing units will allow the U.S. soldiers to vacate the space their Iraqi counterparts plan to use as they continue toward independent operations. Army Sgt. 1st Class Theodore Blanford of 1434th Engineer Company, who is responsible for some of the work done by the soldiers of 317th Engineer Company, said he was impressed with the soldiers' hard work. The most time-consuming part of the project was digging the ditches to bury the wires leading from the generator to the electrical boxes. The soldiers dug more than 60 feet of trenches by hand to conceal the cable. Wiring the electrical boxes correctly is paramount in ensuring the quarters are safe, said Army Spc. Josue Delgado of San Antonio, who serves with 808th Engineer Company. "We had to make sure the boxes didn't piggyback off each other," he explained. "They all have their own electric supply, [and] they are all routed and grounded properly, which is important. This makes sure there are no fire hazards." Another challenging aspect of the project, Delgado said, was salvaging electrical boxes. "The electrical boxes we used came from the [scrap yard]," he said. "We had to pick through, find proper boxes, then drill holes in the bottoms of the boxes to feed the wire through." Creating housing to relocate the 10th Mountain Division soldiers is a vital part of U.S. forces handing responsibility to the Iraqi army at Carver, Delgado said. (Army Staff Sgt. April Mota serves in U.S. Division Center with 101st Engineer Battalion, 16th Engineer Brigade.) | ||||
Related Sites: U.S. Forces Iraq | ||||
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