The document summarizes activities of the 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division stationed at Camp Buehring, Kuwait in February 2014. It describes squad gunnery training exercises, a mass casualty response exercise involving various medical units, and profiles the love story of a married couple on their second deployment together.
1. Serving the Soldiers, Civilians and Families of 2nd ABCT, 4th Inf. Div.
Vol. 2, Issue 4 February 14, 2014
Table IX gunnery
Photos by Sgt. Marcus Fichtl
2nd ABCT PAO, 4th Inf. Div.
Two Soldiers from “Beast” Co., 2nd Bn., 8th Inf. Reg., spring between cover during a squad dismount gunnery at Udairi range complex, Camp Buehring, Kuwait, Feb. 10.
Bradley Fighting Vehicles from Co. B, 2nd Bn., 8th Inf. Reg., race across the sand
during a squad dismount gunnery at Udairi range complex, Camp Buehring,
Kuwait, Feb. 10.
Soldiers from Co. B, 2nd Bn., 8th Inf. Reg., set up inside a building during a squad
dismount gunnery at Udairi range complex, Camp Buehring, Kuwait, Feb. 10.
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Vol. 2, Issue 4 February 14, 2014
Spc. Alexandria Perez , health care specialist, Co. C, 204th BSB, reaches out toward her husband Sgt. Eduardo Perez , behavioral health specialist, Co. C, 204th BSB, as they ride to their
living quarters after a day of work on Camp Buehring, Kuwait, Feb. 11.
A deployed love affair
Story and photos by Sgt. Marcus Fichtl
2nd ABCT PAO, 4th Inf. Div.
C
AMP BUEHRING, KUWAIT – It’s a love story like any other,
boy meets girl, they fall in love, they grow old together in a
combat zone.
Spc. Alexandria Perez, a health care specialist, and Sgt. Eduardo
Perez, a behavioral health specialist, met six years ago at “Charlie
Med,” Company C of the 204th Brigade Support Battalion, 2nd
Armored Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, two privates
as new to each other as they were to the Army.
One from Los Angeles the other from Laredo, Texas, one a lover
of Tejano music the other joining the Army straight out of fashion
school, culturally, two people as different as you could find anywhere.
But in the Army, both hundreds a miles from home, they found a
family in their unit and with each other.
“We connected on paper,” said Alexandria. We didn’t have much
in common, but both coming from big Mexican families we shared
values of faith and family.”
And seemingly, Eduardo’s Texan chivalry meshed with
Alexandria’s Californian openness.
“He was always saving me and keeping me out of trouble,” said
Alexandria. “He would help me with my ruck or always have a spare
of whatever I forgot to formation.”
“We grew on each other,” said Eduardo. If I needed to someone
to talk to or vent, I went to her, she would understand me.”
A few months into their stay on Fort Carson, they received the
word that they were deploying to Iraq.
“When we deployed to Iraq we were here on Camp Buehring,
the list came out for the two different locations we were deploying
to,” said Eduardo. “She went to (Forward Operating Base) Kalsu; I
went to Camp Echo, and the moment we were away from each other
that’s when it hit me, that’s when I realized I was falling in love.”
The couple exchanged emails and phone calls while apart, but
a couple of close calls on Camp Echo and a non-combat related
medical evacuation for Eduardo pressed him to action.
“I realized how real everything was and how precious our time
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here was,” said Eduardo.
New Years 2009, during their rest and recuperation, surrounded
by Alexandria’s family, Eduardo’s knee hit the ground as the clock
struck twelve.
“I said, yes, oh my God, get up, get up, what are you doing, you just
met my family,” laughed Alexandria.
Lost in the sea of commotion, Alexandria’s family didn’t even
notice. They wouldn’t learn about the engagement until after Eduardo
returned to Iraq the next day.
A year later they married at the Colorado Springs courthouse, and
four years after that, they’ve found each other once again on Camp
Buehring, their second deployment together.
“We’ve definitely grown as a couple,” laughed Alexandria.
“He eats sushi, now.”
“I finally converted her to be Dallas Cowboys fan,” said
Eduardo.
But while their competitive spirit and culture clash still
defines their relationship through games of chess and heated dinner
conversations at the dining facility. Their thoughts focus on their two
children Sebastian, 3, and Eduardo Jr., 2.
“Our friends here think we’re funny, the way we banter back and
forth,” said Alexandria. “We still get real passionate about everything
we talk about. But what we’ve really missed this deployment is our
children.”
The long emails and late night phone calls to each other in
between the IEDs and mortar attacks of 2008 have been replaced
with video chat sessions with their children, who are just beginning
to understand what their parents do.
“Deployment’s still tough,” said Eduardo. “Being away from our
family for so long, it makes it tough for a dual-military family like
Vol. 2, Issue 4 February 14, 2014
Spc. Alexandria Perez, left, health care specialist, Co. C, 204thBSB, and her husband Sgt.
Eduardo Perez, behavioral health specialist, Co. C, 204th BSB, play a game of chess after a
day of work on Camp Buehring, Kuwait, Feb. 11.
ours. We try to video chat with our kids two or three times a week.
“They tell everyone we’re doing work,” said Alexandria.
A love forged in Iraq and now refined in Kuwait, the Perez’s are
proud of what they’ve made together.
“I hope our kids will see our service as something to be proud of
when they get older that our family, just like everyone who has served
after 9/11 is a small part of history,” said Eduardo.
The two plan to watch a movie for Valentines Day, which they
will undoubtedly argue about, but also a video chat date with their
children that they will cherish.
Spc. Alexandria Perez, Co. C, 204thBSB, and her husband Sgt. Eduardo Perez, behavioral health specialist, Co. C, 204th BSB, play chess after a day of work on Camp Buehring, Kuwait, Feb.
11, 2014. This is the pair’s second deployment together.
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Vol. 2, Issue 4 February 14, 2014
Sfc. Terris Kolmorgan, infantryman, HHT, 2STB, , receives simulated medical care from Soldiers assigned to the Camp Buehring Troop Medical Center during a camp-wide mass casualty
joint training exercise on Camp Buehring, Kuwait, Feb. 13.
Planning for the worst
Story and photos by Staff Sgt. Andrew Porch
2nd ABCT PAO, 4th Inf. Div.
C
AMP BUEHRING, Kuwait – “Exercise, Exercise, Exercise,
All medical personnel report to your stations,” echoed over
the loudspeakers setting the conditions for a camp-wide mass
casualty joint training exercise on Camp Buehring, Kuwait, Feb. 13.
Soldiers of 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry
Division, worked in cooperation with military police, emergency
medical services, firemen and medical personal to test standard
operating procedures and validate response teams.
“The goal was to make sure we exercise communication,” said
Capt. Antony Hensel, brigade medical operations officer-in-charge,
Headquarters and Headquarters Troop, 2nd Special Troops Battalion,
2nd ABCT. “We want people to know where to be in the quickest time
possible.”
As first responders arrived to the scene, bodies, blood and calls for
help greeted them.
“In the beginning, it was a little unorganized,” said Spc. Zachary
Carmen, an infantryman and a native of Las Vegas, assigned to HHT,
2nd STB. “But towards the end, when the actual Soldiers got involved,
it started to figure itself out. Each level of care got increasingly more
Soldiers of HHT, 2STB, play the part of casualties at a collection point during a camp-wide
mass casualty joint training exercise on Camp Buehring, Kuwait, Feb. 13.
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Vol. 2, Issue 4 February 14, 2014
Sgt. Anthony Augon, infantryman, HHT, 2STB, lies lifeless through a reflection during a camp-wide mass casualty joint training exercise on Camp Buehring, Kuwait, Feb. 13, 2014.
professional and capable.”
The leaders observing the training noticed one key element that
would improve everyone participating.
“We identified the need to do cross training,” said Hensel. “The
EMS folks may not be too familiar with our tactical vehicles. They have
to know how to load them up just like our medics need to be able to
load up patients in the civilian vehicles.”
Hensel watched the medics from 204th Brigade Support Battalion,
2nd ABCT access the situation, take charge and work well with their
counterparts.
“They reacted really quickly and were also able to take guidance
from the folks that were already on the scene,” said Hensel. “Our team
did very well.”
One of the medics explained what it is like to be in that situation.
“I love doing my job, said Spc. Adela Murphy, a health care specialist
and native of Katy, Texas, assigned Company C, 204th BSB. “We are
usually the mediator between life and death. If we don’t do our jobs,
it is possible (a patient) could bleed out or stop breathing. We have to
sustain them to the TMC.”
For a younger Soldier, the experience was eye opening.
“I definitely see there are a lot more moving parts than what I
actually thought,” said Carmen, who acted as one of 15 simulated
casualties. “Now I see how much it takes to get from point A to point
B.”
This was the first time the “Warhorse” Brigade participated in a
camp wide MASCAL exercise, but it will not be the last with a more
in-depth training exercise set for March.
“I think overall so far, the system works,” said Hensel. “We have to
sit down and crank out all the numbers and the details but what we
planned for was well executed and will help us in future events.”
Spc. Adela Murphy, a health care specialist , Co. C, 204th BSB, applies aid to Sfc. Terris
Kolmorgan, infantryman,HHT, 2nd STB, during a camp-wide mass casualty joint training
exercise on Camp Buehring, Kuwait, Feb. 12.
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Vol. 2, Issue 4 February 14, 2014
HHT, Change of Responsibility
Photos by Staff Sgt. Andrew Porch
2nd ABCT PAO, 4th Inf. Div.
1st Sgt., Michael Oliver, outoging senior enlisted leader HHT, 2nd STB, passes the
guidon to Cpt. Maria Rinaldi, commander, HHT, 2STB, durring the HHT’s change
of responsibility ceremony on Camp Buehring, Kuwait, Feb. 7.
1st Sgt. Michael Oliver, outgoing senior enlisted leader, HHT, 2nd STB, speaks to his
company one last time during the company’s change of responsibility ceremony on
Camp Buehring, Kuwait, Feb. 7.
Company C, 1-67 Armor Reg. Recognition
Photo by Staff Sgt. Andrew Porch
2nd ABCT PAO, 4th Inf. Div.
Staff Sgt. Eric Armes, master gunner, HHC, 2nd Bn., 8th Inf. Reg. surveys the
gunnery range during Company A’s night fire at Udairi range complex, Camp
Buehring, Kuwait, Jan. 26.
Crew members inside a Bradley Fighting Vehicle from Company A, 2nd Bn., 8th
Inf. Reg., fires its 25mm cannon during a night fire at Udairi range complex, Camp
Buehring, Kuwait, Jan. 26.
Col. Omar Jones IV, commander, 2nd ABCT, recognizes the Soldiers of Co. C, 1st Bn., 67th Armor Reg., for their support during an exercise in the CENTCOM region, at Camp Buehring,
Kuwait, Feb. 11.
Warhorse Pride
Col. Omar Jones IV......................2nd ABCT Commander
Command Sgt. Maj. Robert Lehtonen 2nd ABCT CSM
Maj. Chris Maestas.................................................PAO OIC
Staff Sgt. Andrew Porch..................................PAO NCOIC
Sgt. Marcus Fichtl...............................Layout and Design
Staff Sgt. Andrew Porch............................................Editor
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Soldiers of the 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team,
4th Infantry Division. The Warhorse Pide is an Armyfunded news-letter authorized under provision of AR
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