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File: aacep_45.txt
45
for dismantling and repacking the tents and related equipment.
CENIAF/LG directed the personnel at the bases to pack like items in
the shipping containers. The contractors at the preposltioninq
alter would sort it out later. Base level personnel were often
told they could go home as soon as they packed up their camp. The
result was a concerted effort to dismantle and pack the Harvest
Falcon assets as quickly as possible. They assumed that the tents
and other items would be cleaned and repacked by contractors before
being reused. Engineers were also responsible for the
environmental aspect of the cleanup. Because they had been
oncerned throughout the deployment, there was little that had to
be done at that point. good products were often left for the host
nation or the local population to use. Most of the paving projects
remained in place as additions to the host base.
The redeployment of people followed the basic guideline of
"first in' first out." At many of the sites' the personnel who had
arrived in August and September returned home in March and left the
people who had arrived in the Phase II buildup during December and
January to complete the cleanup. A problem arose when the original
Prime BEEF team redeployed and took their team kit and tools with
them. The augmenting teams did not always bring their team kit and
were sometimes left in a bind. Additional personnel continued to
arrive in March and April. Air Reserve and Air National Guard
Paine BEEF teams deployed to Al Kbacj and King Fahd respectively to
help close down the sites.
RED HORSE personnel redeployed using opportune airlift in mid-
Macch. A sixty-person port crew remained behind to prepare the
equipment for shipment by sea back to the home bases. The
equipment was convoyed from Eskan Village to the port of Ad Dammam
in April. By ~ May' the equipment for both the 82Oth and 823d
squadrons was loaded on a ship bound for Jacksonville' Florida"
The ship applied on 10 June and the equipment was back at the
respective units by the end of the month.~5
The CENTAF Mortuary Assistance Team closed down operations at
Dhahran in late March. One of Maior Howell#s final acts in theater
was the acceptance of fourteen (eight British, six American)
missing-in-action remains from Iraq. The International Red Cross
had transported the remains from Baghdad to Dhahran on l] March.
After processing at Dhahran' the Americans were then flown to
Dove.
Aftermath of the Mar"
Air Force engineers were busy in the days before the formal
cease fire was signed. Prime BEEF personnel moved into Kuwait to
assist in the restoration of Kuwaltl facllitles. In early March'
a team from Masirah AB spent a week helping a MAC Airlift Control
Element improve their living and working conditions at Kuwalt Clty
International Al~port. In addition to provldlng electclelty,
~bowers, and latclnes at the altport faculty' the team visited a
local orphanage to pass out candy and American flags. In May' a
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