Engineers return from yearlong deployment

  • Published
  • By Army 1st Lt. Alex Veiga
  • 6th Engineer Battalion (Airborne)
The 6th Engineer Battalion (Airborne), 3rd Maneuver Enhancement Brigade, along with family and friends, gathered early Saturday morning to welcome the 23rd Engineer Company (Sapper) in a homecoming ceremony at Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson's Buckner Physical Fitness Center.

The company completed a yearlong deployment to Afghanistan's Kandahar province, where its primary mission was to clear roads of explosive hazards for both Afghan nationals and coalition forces in the area.

Despite the harsh operating environment, 100-degree temperatures, and enemy threats, the sappers sustained only relatively minor injuries, with four Soldiers redeploying early.
After a brief ceremony, families and friends rushed to the gym floor to greet their Soldiers.

"My son was 1 month old when his father left," Debra Aguilar, wife of Spc. Juan Aguilar said. "I am so happy that he is finally home."

"It feels good being home with my family," Pfc. Dereis Richardson said, as he wrapped his hands around his wife and son.

In addition to their assigned mission, the engineers formed part of a quick reaction force and built improvements on their combat outpost.

"The 23rd performed superbly under very demanding combat conditions," said Army Lt. Col. Marc Hoffmeister, 6th Engineer Battalion (Airborne), commander.

"They met every mission and without question, the dangerous work they conducted to keep IEDs clear of the roads saved many lives, both U.S. and Afghan. We are in awe of what this company achieved over the last year," he said.

The battalion commander told the story of the company's accomplishments to spouses and children gathered to welcome the sappers home.

The Soldiers transformed their base, Combat Outpost Jelawur, from a bare patch of ground where they slept on top of trucks, to a facility complete with showers, gyms, tents and a covered motor pool where Soldiers could get some shade and a well-deserved break from the heat, while maintaining mission ready vehicles, Hoffmeister said.

Each day for five months, the 23rd provided all site security and entry control point operations, guarding the gates at COP Jelawur and searching hundreds of entering Afghan delivery trucks, he continued.

The airborne engineers participated in numerous support missions during their deployment.

In one such mission, the company cleared every village in the Arghendab River Valley in order to push the enemy out of an area that they had been using for 10 years, Hoffmeister said.

"We are incredibly proud of our Sappers and happy to have them home," Hoffmeister said. "This marks the first time in 14 months that the entire battalion has been home together in 
Alaska."

(Editor's note: Sgt. Tamika Dillard, 3rd MEB PAO, also contributed to this article.)