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American
Soldiers Stay on the Beaten Path at Heavily-Mined Bagram Air Base
BAGRAM, Afghanistan, 22 mar 02 (AP)-- By Paul Haven
Just off the airstrip and main roads traveled by American soldiers
and vehicles lie tens of thousands of silent killers waiting for a
single misstep.
The U.S. base at Bagram, just north of Kabul, is home to some 6,000
coalition soldiers, who eat, work and sleep in the muddy fields around
the runway and bombed out hangars. It is also one of the most heavily
mined areas in the world.
Nearly a quarter-century of fighting has left Bagram littered with
mines and unexploded ordnance, from the tiny, flesh-shredding toe-popper
land mines to rusting 500-pound Soviet bombs sticking out of the fields
just beyond the runway.
"Every inch of this ground is a potentially hazardous area," said
Marine reservist Maj. Charles C. Lozano, the officer in charge of
mine clearing operations. "It's not just mines, it's also the unexploded
bombs, missiles, mortars, hand grenades, and all of it has to be dealt
with. All of it poses a danger."
Two minesweepers -- an American and a Briton -- and an Afghan guard
have been injured and two Afghans killed by mines since the U.S. Army's
10th Mountain Division took over Bagram in November, said Dr. Gerard
P. Curran, an army emergency medicine specialist from Kings Park,
N.Y.
Other cases have probably gone unreported because Afghan civilians
usually are treated off the base, Lozano said.
"I wouldn't go off the roads, I'll say that," said Curran of the 261st
Medical Support Battalion, 44th Medical Brigade out of Fort Bragg,
N.C. "The whole place is extremely dangerous ... I'm not going to
be bringing my family back here with the kids to vacation at Bagram."
Lozano, a barrel-chested 42-year-old who is a corporate lawyer from
St. Louis, has been in the Marines for 20 years and a mine clearing
expert for six. He estimated the number of mines and unexploded ordnance
on base in the tens of thousands.
In some areas, his teams have found two to three mines per square
yard, and Lozano said it would take two years to clear the entire
base, though the Army has no plans to even attempt that.
Lozano and his men concentrate on clearing the areas that American
and coalition forces need to operate.
"We would never put our soldiers in a situation that would intentionally
be dangerous," he said. "Because of that, nothing gets done on this
base until we have reduced the mine threat."
Specially trained American, Norwegian, Bosnian and Polish soldiers
and civilians are clearing the mines, but no amount of training can
make the work routine.
"My friends think I'm crazy," said Pvt. Ole, a Norwegian mine clearer
who spoke on condition his last name not be used. "But I think with
experience you get a different perspective. You know it is dangerous,
but you know how to handle it."
The mines at Bagram and in the surrounding countryside were decades
in the making. The Soviets left acres of mines around the base when
they withdrew from the country in 1989. And the base was on the front
lines of fighting between the northern alliance and Taliban, with
each side laying their own mines.
More recently, the area was heavily bombed by the Americans targeting
Taliban and al-Qaida fighters. Unexploded cluster bombs litter many
of the fields.
"This is the most challenging thing I've ever done because this is
the real deal, and if we don't do our job out here people will die,"
said Lozano, stepping confidently through a cleared field. "Failure
is not an option."
He said the first step is intelligence. He spends many of his days
talking to Afghan commanders to learn which areas are most heavily
mined.
But the information is not always reliable.
"We have found mines even in the living areas in places we were told
were not mined," Lozano said.
There's more than one way to clear a minefield, he said, but often
the first pass is made by the Norwegian soldiers. They gingerly examine
the area wearing weight dispersion boots -- giant rectangular air
shoes that theoretically won't set off a mine.
When the Norwegians find particularly volatile explosives, they take
them out using high-caliber guns or with a small robot.
Next, an armored bulldozer flails the ground with metal chains to
detonate any remaining mines. Finally, bomb-sniffing dogs go over
the turf.
"The dogs are my most accurate means of proofing a mine field," Lozano
said. "They provide an incredible capability because they can do what
humans and machines can't. They can smell explosives."
The mine clearers also help educate soldiers.
"It's always on my mind," said Lance Cpl. Jeremy Johnson, 19, from
Springfield, Ill., a member of the 13th Marine Expeditionary Unit.
"Everywhere you walk, I mean, you never know. Anything can jump out
and get you."
Lozano says he likes hearing that kind of talk, because it means the
soldiers are paying attention.
"If I can keep one less kid from blowing off a leg or dying than I
feel great," he said.
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