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File: 110796_aacad_09.txt
Lesson's Learned
-Take a First Sergeant or suitable substitute - We had major
problems with personnel adapting to the harsh environment and
dealing with homesickness, short tempers, personality conflicts,
fear, and overall stress. It took alot to adapt to the
environment there and a first sgt was a must...we did not have
one and needed one full time, we shared CES's for a few months
but he definitely looked out for his own people and slacked on
ours, we tried our own several times but circumstances occurred
such as departures, conflict, and not having a capable individual
trained or willing to try to take on the responsibility and it
hurt. The younger troops really needed a shoulder they could lean
on and the commander and myself were not appropriate yet tried to
comfort in a limited capacity...A full time individual with no
other duties is absolutely called for.
- Order Equipment Needed ASAP - Time was not on our side. The
beauracracy still existed even in war on the big money items like
the ones mentioned before for the dining ball. Funding was no
problem for anything, but it took a month for our list to get
approved and at least two months after that for the arrival.
Order immediately.
- Limit Dining Hall Hours - We started out slowly by having two
hour meal periods but eventually with increased shifts and
changes we expanded hours but never served midnight, it would
have been difficult with our resources.
F. Mortuary Affairs really only came into play twice for us at
KKMC. The first was an F-16 crash in the middle of the desert
north of Hafer Al Baten, or about 100 KM from tent city-it was
remote. I was briefed in the middle of the night by Col Vanmeter
and we were on the road by 0400. We searched for hours driving
through the desert in two Jeep Cherokees, I brought another
individual for HR recovery , a fire dept. guy, two EOD folks and a
medic. We finally found the site at about 0930 to find it
surrounded by 4 MPs with about a 800 yard radius. A medical team
of 5 personnel was there from King Fahd, the home unit of the
Hill aircraft, they arrived by helicopter. We all performed a
Search and Recovery and recovered approx 40 lbs that day. I sent
the FOD guys back to KKMC and told them to send a SR team but the
team was lost in the sandstorm and never made it to the sight. I
returned the next day and day after that to recover what was
left. The remains were placed in a refer at our morgue,
inventoried by the flight surgeon from King Fahd who signed the
death certificate, and the remains were transferred to Daharan
via the Bateen Star. The other aircraft accident fatality we
had involved an A-10 at our airfield upon his return from
hostilities. Major problems resulted in this Search and Recovery
involving our airfield neighbors the Army medical group. They
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