The joint Afghan National Army – U.S.
forces counter improvised explosive device team of seven soldiers walked down
the dusty rural road in Shamulzai District, Afghanistan, ahead of their convoy;
scanning the route with their eyes for subtle clues that might help them
visually identify an improvised explosive device, or IED, hidden on the road.
When they see nothing, they verify as
much by sweeping the same area with their VMR-2
Minehound and VMC-1 Gizmo metal
detectors in a slow precise manner before walking ahead.
“We walked a good four and a half
(kilometers) in front of the whole convoy because we had just recently been hit
with an IED on the route back (to Forward Operating Base Sweeney),” said Staff
Sgt. Antonio Barajas, 3rd Platoon, 5th Battalion, 20th Infantry Regiment, Task
Force 1st Squadron, 14th Cavalry Regiment, out of Joint Base Lewis-McChord,
Wash. “All seven of us had Gizmos and Minehounds (and were) out there clearing
the whole road so the rest of the convoy could make it back to FOB Sweeney
safely.”
“The Gizmo is just an easy (to use)
metal detector used to identify metal or you can switch it to minerals,”
explained Barajas when asked to describe the two devices used that day.
“It’s a lot like the metal detectors you
see men on the beach with, but on steroids,” said Pfc. Niko Williams, also from
3rd Platoon, 5-20 Infantry, Task Force 1-14 Cavalry.
The use of such gadgetry has been a
blessing to both ANA and International Security Assistance Forces in
Afghanistan.
For Barajas and his team, the
MineHound’s ground penetrating radar enabled them to discover a secondary IED
earlier in the day, prior to the IED strike on their convoy. That IED was only
a hundred meters forward of the one that hit them.
Without
the MineHound, there stood a chance Barajas’ team may have missed that roadside
bomb.
The Minehound and Gizmo metal detectors
are “the current state-of-the-art technology dual sensor detectors capable of
detecting command wires, non-metallic and low-metallic signature IEDs using
ground penetrating radar,” according their product description online. “In
addition to GPR, the Minehound uses Vallon’s advanced metal detector sensor,
which is the same sensor used in Vallon’s VMC-1 Gizmo detector to find both
metallic and non-metallic threats.”
The Vallon Company claims to have more
than 2,000 Minehound detectors currently in use in Afghanistan. They, along
with the Gizmo, have become an invaluable item in finding IEDs and weapons
caches before they can be used against ANA or ISAF forces.
The use of the Minehound and Gizmo
detectors started with combat engineers and explosive ordnance disposal
personnel, but they are now issued to non-EOD units such as Battle Company,
5-20 Infantry, to aid in the discovery of IEDs and weapons caches.
Since the onset of the Afghan War in
2001, homemade bombs have increasingly become the insurgent’s weapon of choice
in Afghanistan and certainly their most effective weapon. Almost 60 percent of all coalition forces
wounded or killed in Afghanistan since the start of the war in 2001 have been
due to IEDs, according to a May 2011 report from the Joint Improvised Explosive
Device Defeat Organization, a U.S. Department of Defense organization located
in Washington D.C.
To complicate matters, insurgents in
Afghanistan have been increasingly constructing IEDs to circumvent simple metal
detectors. Some IEDs contain rudimentary materials such as wooden boards, foam
rubber, and plastic containers. The finished product contains very little metal
making it difficult for a traditional metal detector to pick up, but not for
the Minehound with its ground penetrating radar.
Increasingly compact, collapsible,
light-weight metal detectors, such as the MineHound and Gizmo, are finding IEDs
with more frequency than ever before, all of which has reduced the number of
injuries or deaths to Afghan civilians, ANA and ISAF troops. In the hands of an
infantry platoon, or similar-type unit, they are also being used to find
weapons caches which often provide the insurgency with ample arms to fight for
weeks or months.
“In the orchards (the Minehound and
Gizmo are) good because that’s where they often hide the caches,” said Barajas.
“So far we’ve found two caches with the Gizmo and Minehounds, and also with the
ANA helping us out with their resources.”
Without
doubt, improved technological devices such as the VMR-2 Minehound and VMC-1
Gizmo metal detectors are helping coalition troops across Afghanistan.
“It helps a lot when we’re in the
orchards or going through the towns when we use the Gizmos and Minehounds
because it also allows if something does get missed by sight it will pick it
up,” said Williams. “That’s what makes the Gizmo and Mine Hound so important,”
said Williams. “It helps make sure people are not being taken out of the fight
… (that) you’re keeping them in,” said Williams.
By Sgt. Christopher McCullough
From www.army.mil
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