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"The Quiet Place" is gone

  • Published
  • By Staff Sgt. David Salanitri
  • Air Force Central Command Combat Correspondent
"The Quiet Place" -- that was the nickname for west Afghanistan before the presence of an air control squadron showed up.

Detachment 1, 73rd Expeditionary Air Control Squadron, from Eglin Air Force Base, Fla., is only the second unit to setup shop here.

"Before this site was here, there was no one for the planes to talk to, no command and control, and pilots would have to depend solely on their own instruments," said 1st Lt. Bryan Hoffler, officer in charge and a native of Fayetteville, N.C.

Walking around Camp Etchberger takes less than two minutes. It's located on a base where English may rank third or fourth as a primary language, but the Airmen who call Etchberger home belong to one of the Air Force's most hidden, unique, mission-critical squadrons .

"We provide command and control in the sky," said Hoffler. "If there's a 'troops in contact' going on, (our) operators can pull up the air space, locate the closest aircraft and say 'hey, we need you there.' In seconds, there's aircraft on the way there to support the troops on the ground. Our radar gives the operators that capability.

"We're similar to AWACS, but we're on the ground," said Hoffler. "We set up radar and radio sites in deployed locations, providing that long-range picture and communication."

Once that info is passed to operators at an air operations center, a clear sight picture is painted, allowing for communications between operators and pilots to be effective.

Light discipline is mandatory here at night. The only thing you may see is the light outlining the door of the "Green Monster", the nickname given to the larger green bathroom trailer, or the light coming from the end of someone's cigarette -- you feel alone.

Then you walk inside any tent and see life. The morale, welfare and readiness tent is filled with Airmen playing Xbox together, Skyping with their loved ones or huddled around the TV, trying to get the cable to work. Step inside the gym tent, which has a whole six pieces of equipment, and you'll find "Doc" (the individual medical technician) leading guys in a CrossFit session. Wake up early enough and watch the vehicle garage transform into a cardio room, as a handful of folks participate in the infamous "Insanity" workout via laptop computer and projector.

Putting on physical training gear and heading to the local base exchange for snacks or shaving cream isn't an option here. BX and mail trips include strapping on body armor, loading a rifle and convoying outside the wire to a nearby camp.

As the trucks return from a supply run, Airmen come out of the woodwork to see if they have any mail. Mail day here resembles the front row of a Justin Bieber concert. As word spreads that mail is up, what looks like every Airman in camp is now huddled around one truck.  Cheers and applause erupt as each piece of mail is claimed by its owner.  Morale reaches new highs as packages from loved ones are passed out. Envelopes are grasped firmly as if life depended on it.

During the mail process, it's evident that this is a community. Seldom would one person take an entire package for themselves. Whatever these men received was open for the taking. What's mine is yours -- that's the common theme.

Etchberger has a feeling that's reminiscent of the 1950s TV town of Mayberry. Everyone knows each other's name and can have long, detailed conversations about any individual here as the population of the Airmen can barely fill a football team roster.

The Airmen's primary mission is vital, but their non Air Force specialty code duties are just as important. The team of men do their job, keep the base running and defend their community.