~ The school at Eglin Air Force Base trains members of all services for one of the military's most high-demand jobs.
EGLIN AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. -- The sprawling outdoor range where U.S. military bomb technicians learn their craft is oddly quiet.
Students don't practice defusing bombs with helicopters hovering, civilians screaming or snipers taking aim -- that will come later when they are working on live bombs in Iraq and Afghanistan. Battle-hardened instructors at the Kauffman Explosives Ordnance Disposal Training Complex can teach techniques, but they cannot teach the calm that comes from experience.
"This isn't Heartbreak Ridge," said Army Sgt. Ted Cheairs, an instructor, referring to a 1986 Clint Eastwood film about Marine training. "I cannot take an AK-47 and shoot at them while they are working, but if you ask any one of those students right now what their stress level is while they are working out here -- on a scale of one to 10, they'd tell you at least a seven."
The Navy-operated school at Eglin Air Force Base trains members of all services for one of the military's most high-demand jobs -- defusing deadly improvised explosive devices and other bombs. The stakes are high -- 2006 was the deadliest year for U.S. military bomb technicians since World War II and IEDs are the No. 1 killer of U.S. troops in Iraq.
The Navy says about 1,000 U.S. students and 150 foreign students graduate from the eight-month school annually, about 31 percent of those who enter.
Instructors say the Marines, Army Rangers, Navy divers and others who attend often lack the right combination of book smarts, technical savvy and calm under pressure.
At the outdoor range where groups of students practice under camouflaged netting, Army Sgt. Baylin Oswalt, 31, watches as a student tries to disarm a dummy rocket. The responsibility of the job forces young soldiers, most younger than 25 years old, to grow up fast, he said.
"These are not your typical young kids. These students, they mature as much here in three or four months as someone their age normally would in three or four years," said Oswalt, who has served as an explosives ordnance disposal technician in both Iraq and Afghanistan. He will be deployed again this fall.
Students are reminded daily how deadly the job is -- a memorial wall stands across from the school's entrance, listing all U.S. military bomb technicians killed in combat. In 2006, 15 died -- the deadliest year for bomb techs since 1945. Four more have died this year.
The school added the 2006 names to the wall last month in a ceremony attended by many of the families of the dead.
Oswalt taught one of those killed last year and served in combat with another.
"This school is about the rudimentary skills," he said. "We know that when you are in combat, you never know what could go wrong."
Detonation cords, tape, time fuses, blasting cap simulators, wrapping foil, a tape measure, calipers, a small mirror on a bent metal handle, a tiny paint brush -- these are some of the tools the students carry with them on the practice range.
They will carry the same supplies into combat.
With the mirror they look underneath a car or other object to inspect an explosive; the tiny paint brush is used to wipe dirt from a serial number or other identifying mark on an explosive; the tape measure and calipers help measure the size of the device.
Connect with the Southeast Missourian Newsroom:
For corrections to this story or other insights for the editor, click here. To submit a letter to the editor, click here. To learn about the Southeast Missourian’s AI Policy, click here.