American servicemembers help Afghans make strides

  • Published
  • By Tech. Sgt. Renni Thornton
  • 451st Air Expeditionary Wing Public Affairs
Some Provincial Reconstruction Team Zabul military members will soon prepare to travel back to their duty stations after assisting their Afghan partners with improvements in Zabul province communities.

Over the course of 10 months, the collective staff completed more than 65 projects, totaling more than $40 million throughout Zabul province.

PRTs in Afghanistan use relatively small joint civil-military units developed to achieve three objectives: improve security, extend the authority of the Afghan central government and facilitate reconstruction.

Of those projects, most addressed medical education and awareness, road reconstruction and quality-of-life initiatives.

The ones most notable and most significant are hard to select because each brought with it huge milestones and progress, said Lt. Col. Andy Veres, the PRT Zabul commander.

"We focused on the three most populous districts along Highway 1, not only because of the commander (Army Gen. Stanley McChrystal), International Security Assistance Force's stated population centric approach, but also freedom of movement between Afghanistan's two principle cities (Kabul and Kandahar) was Regional Command South's No. 1 priority."

"We nested our goals within this guidance and focused principally on education and health care," he said. "The former because Zabul's 11 percent literacy rate is its most crushing and debilitating stumbling block to progress and development, and health care, because it is consistently one of the most valued government services that the population expects from the government of the Islamic republic of Afghanistan. This geographic region and these focus areas accounted for 75 percent of the PRT's accomplishments in the last nine months."
 
To that end, the team installed more than 600 culvert covers worth $1 million to protect the highway from insurgents placing improvised explosive devices, mechanisms that all too often destroy the roads, property and lives.

In addition, they worked with the contractors to properly install 29 permanent bridge bypasses contracted at $3.84 million and the installation of more than $422,000 worth of solar lights to provide better bridge and culvert security and visibility.

They also instituted emergency repair projects for bridges, culverts and roadways, resulting in the timely repair and construction of over 13 sites damaged by IED explosions.

In response to the commander's emergency response program in RC-South, 450 quality assurance/quality control missions were conducted in Zabul province. The PRT showcased their construction expertise through project inspections and mentoring of local contractors on better building techniques to provide stronger and longer lasting facilities.

Their efforts were instrumental for the success of 40 CERP projects worth more than $14 million.

The PRT developed, designed and managed nine school projects in five districts, benefiting more than 10,000 Afghan children. Among them was the construction and opening of both a girl's school and a boy's school and dormitory. This will improve Zabul's provincial literacy rate by providing more opportunities for students, both boys and girls, to learn to read and write, Colonel Veres said.

Under the team's watch, construction began on two basic health clinics in the cities of Qalat and Surri.

PRT Zabul is the only American-led PRT in RC-South.