by Air Force Staff Sgt. Robert Barnett
JBER Public Affairs
12/19/2014 - JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska -- The
flight was announced, and then delayed; announced, and then delayed.
Families on Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson, waited anxiously for their
loved ones, members of the 2d Engineer Brigade Headquarters, to return
home from a nine-month deployment.
About 70 Soldiers from the final U.S. Army Alaska unit serving in
Afghanistan returned to reunite with their friends and families at JBER
Sunday.
"It feels amazing," said Army Maj. Kelli Hooke, 2d Engineer Brigade
judge advocate general. "It was a long flight; we had delays, but we got
to watch the [northern lights] and I was just excited to get home."
The families cheered when they arrived. Some were new to deployments;
many had been caring for a child while their spouse was away.
"I'm really glad, it's finally here," said Samantha Graziosi, wife of
Spc. Charles Graziosi. "It gives me peace, lots of peace knowing he's
back in the country."
While the couple has been married for nearly three years and had been
through a deployment before, this was the first for their son, Titus, 23
months old.
"It's more emotional this time with Titus," she said. "He's ready to see
his dad. This one's actually a little better because the first one was a
year. It's only been nine months, but it's been nine months too long."
Specialist Graziosi has been in the military for nearly six years, she
said. They married after he joined. Her grandfather served in the
Vietnam War, but otherwise she wasn't very familiar with the military,
she said.
"I got a rude awakening," Samantha said. "It didn't work out at first,
not too well. But I got used to it. I accepted what it is for what it
is. If I'm going to be with him, then I've got to be a part of this.
"The emotional toll it took before [my husband] left was really
significant. This time, the only thing we've really done is the waiting
game. Just sitting and waiting, and hoping that he would come home. Now
there's lots of happiness; there's going to be a lot of tears shed."
The military spouse said there's been a "first time" moment they've been putting off until after the family is together again.
"We had planned to get [Titus'] hair cut," she said. "His hair's long.
My husband made me promise not to get his hair cut because he wants to
be there for the first haircut. Hopefully this weekend, we'll be getting
it cut."
The 2d Engineer Brigade Headquarters served as the theater engineer
brigade headquarters, overseeing much of the transformative action as
the U.S. military transitioned from Operation Enduring Freedom to
Operation Resolute Support - the Department of Defense name for the new
advising mission of coalition troops in Afghanistan.
The Arctic Trailblazers managed a process the military calls "descoping"
- essentially the demolition of any building considered temporary to
ensure the remaining coalition bases are "right-sized" for the smaller
troop numbers and that the buildings turned over to Afghan forces are
safe and maintainable. For those bases not kept or handed over to the
Afghans, descoping was part of the effort to return the land to what it
looked like before coalition troops arrived.
At Bagram Airfield, officials identified 2,385 buildings for destruction
in 2014, out of about 6,000 total structures. The Arctic Trailblazers
managed crews that demolished 92 percent of those marked buildings by
Dec. 1. The wood and other supplies from the buildings was taken away
and resold by Afghan companies as the military emphasized recycling
materials back into the local economies.
"The 2d Engineer Brigade was the planner while we were deployed to
Afghanistan," said Army Maj. Calvin Kroeger, brigade plan officer during
the deployment. "I left May 3, before the brigade left - I was part of
the advanced party. The purpose of the mission was to work all the
theater engineer requirements and the mission command oversight for all
the subordinate units that we had. We worked the deconstruction of a lot
of our combat outposts, the forward operating bases, and also managing
the train, advise and assist mission with the national engineer brigade
in Afghanistan. Those were the Afghan engineers that were out there.
They also conducted an in-depth partnership with the national engineer
brigade leadership."
Their job was ultimately to downsize U.S. involvement and build up the Afghan capability, he said.
"They worked a culminating training exercise that really showed Afghan
engineers' ability to go out, build a bridge, cross that gap, and also
establish a self-sustaining camp and work on the specialty skill of
building the bridge," he said. "This was all Afghan-led. It showed their
ability to sustain themselves and continue to set the standard for
everybody there."
Now that loved ones are back and families are reunited, reintegration can begin.
For Jeremiah Hooke, stay-at-home father of three children ages three,
six and 11, this is part of the routine as his wife returned from
another deployment. The family has been in the military for about 15
years. He and Kelli met when she was in ROTC as a cadet and he was in
the Army Reserve. They served two deployments before having children,
and two deployments with children.
"I don't think you ever really get used to [deployments]," he said. "She
was gone for five months before this deployment, for [professional
development]. Then she was back for a month before going to Afghanistan.
There's the emotional and then the physical [connection] that you miss,
and then there's the helping out with the kids and spending time with
them, tag-teaming."
He kept the family busy while his wife was away.
"We did lots of camping and that kind of stuff," he said. "We like the
outdoors. She missed that. She missed last winter at the [course]; it
was a pretty decent winter. She's not missing anything yet this year, it
hasn't really started yet. When it eventually does snow, we'll be
taking advantage of it. I figured she'll take it easy when she gets
home; tell us what she'd like to do. She has a personality where she
doesn't like to sit still very often. I like to let her do what she
wants to do while we keep our routine, and when she wants to reintegrate
back, she will. We'll just leave it open for her to find where she
wants to be. "
For Judylyn Moncayo, an employee at a restaurant on base, deployments
are routine after 14 years in the military, but that doesn't mean she's
any less excited for her loved one's return.
"He's deployed three times - twice in Iraq," she said. "I knew what I
signed up for. We're kind of used to it. We've been a lot of places:
Oklahoma, Fort Hood and Fort Bliss in Texas, and here. I cooked Filipino
dishes that he likes. We're having a small party. We've been waiting,
and now finally, we're excited. I'm glad they're all safe, no problems
happened."
Friday, December 19, 2014
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