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THE CAMPAIGN FOR THE ACCOUNTABILITY OF AMERICAN BASES (CAAB) |
![]() Kent Harris / S&S A Minnesota National Guardsman, wearing an armband to show his affiliation with the Air Force, checks out a motorist passing through the gate at Aviano Air Base in Italy. The part-time soldiers are spending the next six months on active duty in Europe, guarding gates at bases in the United Kingdom, Belgium, Germany, Italy and Turkey. |
New countries. New languages. New duties. You might get the picture that Task Force Minnesota has a lot of
adjustments to make for its six-month mission in Europe. “This is really foreign to us in several ways,” said Staff Sgt. Steven
Wegleitner, a member of the 151st Field Artillery Regiment’s Battery F,
which is assigned to Aviano Air Base in Italy. The task force, composed mainly of elements of the Minnesota National
Guard’s 1st Battalion, 125th Field Artillery Regiment, is now providing
security at bases in the United Kingdom, Belgium, Germany, Italy and Turkey.
As strange as it is for some of the guardsmen to be on active duty for more
than half a year, many are performing duties at Air Force bases, adding
another difference. Well, maybe not that different. Capt. Jim Helwig, who commands the battery at Aviano, spent a dozen years
as a military policeman. Any differences between an MP and an Air Force
security forces officer? “Not a lot,” he says with a smile. “They’re fairly similar.” But most of Helwig’s unit is a bit newer to the security business. Lt.
Col. Bruce Jensen, the battalion commander, said his task force is full of
quick learners, though. “It’s a change of pace for us,” he said in a telephone interview from
his headquarters in Germany. “We have good soldiers. They’re really
excited about being over here.” And while providing security at gates is different from firing heavy
artillery pieces, soldiers are soldiers, he said. The task force underwent
specialized security training at Fort McCoy, Wis., before heading to Europe to
replace a similar unit from Puerto Rico. And they’ve been training ever since. “As soon as we hit the ground, we were in training,” says Helwig. About 220 soldiers from the task force are in England, guarding RAF
Lakenheath and RAF Mildenhall, the Air Force’s largest bases in the U.K. The
unit’s soldiers also are helping out at RAF Alconbury and RAF Croughton. “I think we all felt lucky, that we drew a pretty good card,” said Sgt.
Shawn Kor of Battery A, at the gates at RAF Lakenheath, home of the 48th
Fighter Wing. He said he had heard Bosnia and Kosovo were possible destinations for the
34th (Red Bull) Infantry Division. Various units of the division are assigned
in the Balkans and Southwest Asia. Staff Sgt. Travis Kuehl said the rumors had the unit going various places. “We were always kind of under the impression that Korea was where we’d
be sent,” he said. “Or Kosovo. That was the rumor.” For Kuehl, 29, an electrician from Sioux Falls, S.D., the mission prevented
him from leaving the guard, which he joined 12 years ago. His day of departure
was Aug. 4, but the order came on July 5. Providing security is all right, he said, but artillerymen like to fire the
big guns. “I’d rather be in the field,” he said. “[Security] is a nice change
of pace, but it’d be nice to be doing what we’ve trained to do.”