10 October 2014

101st Airborne to deploy



WarriorScout.com has an article about the Ebola crisis:
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel has authorized seven hundred soldiers for deployment to Liberia, as that nation struggles with an outbreak of the Ebola virus, Pentagon Press Secretary Navy Rear Admiral John Kirby announced recently. The soldiers will deploy in late October of 2014, Kirby told reporters during a briefing, and they will become the headquarter staff for the joint forces command, led by Army Major General Gary J. Volesky. “General Volesky and his staff will assume overall command of the effort, and with his arrival, Army Major General Darryl A. Williams will be able to return to his normal duties as the Army component commander for Africa Command,” Kirby said.
The Army will deploy another seven hundred soldiers from engineering units throughout the United States to supervise the construction of Ebola treatment units, conduct site surveys and provide engineering expertise, the admiral said, in an area with a range of infrastructure repair needs.
Last week, fifteen construction-specialty sailors, or Seabees, from the Naval Mobile Construction Batallion-133, Task Group 68.7 arrived in Monrovia, Liberia to provide engineering support to Operation United Assistance, conducting site surveys for future hospitals, supply storage and training facilities for health care workers fighting the Ebola outbreak.
The deployments are part of a whole-of-government response to the Ebola outbreak, said Kirby, noting that the military is contributing its unique capabilities in support of the lead agency— the Agency for International Development— and other interagency partners.
“This will not be an overnight process but we are already making significant progress,” the admiral said.
About two hundred Defense Department personnel are now on the ground in West Africa and over the weekend the equipment for a 25-bed hospital for health care workers and two mobile labs arrived in Monrovia.
“We expect the hospital to be operational about the middle of October of 2014,” Kirby said, adding that military personnel are not and will not be providing direct care to Ebola patients. Kirby said all troops deploying to Liberia are being trained on personal protective equipment and about Ebola. “Secretary Hagel has no higher priority than force protection,” the admiral said. “The threat down there is the disease, so, just like any other threat, we take it very, very seriously, and we'll make sure they've got the protection they need.”
Also yesterday, General Martin E. Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, released a statement on the military response to the Ebola outbreak: "Today we have about a hundred and fifty men and women from the Department of Defense in West Africa responding to the Ebola outbreak. They are the advance elements of our military force that will total roughly three thousand Americans confronting a health crisis that has significant humanitarian, economic, political and security dimensions,” he said.
Dempsey said DoD is supporting other government and international relief efforts by leveraging unique US military capabilities; specifically, establishing command-and-control nodes, logistics hubs, training for health care workers, and providing engineering support. “The protection of our men and women is my priority as we seek to help those in Africa and work together to stem the tide of this crisis,” Dempsey said, adding, as Hagel did, that all deploying personnel receive training on the use of protective equipment and training on Ebola and malaria prevention and other critical procedures. “I am proud of the dedication and skills of these men and women,” the chairman said in his statement, “and confident in their ability to make a difference.”
Rico says it's funny how they hate us until they need us...

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