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Processing center at Anaconda keeps thousands of U.S. troops moving

Oct-24-2004 » Filed Under: General Military

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By Juliana Gittler, Stars and Stripes

LSA ANACONDA, Iraq — Last month, 20,000 people passed through the Personnel Processing Center at LSA Anaconda and Balad Air Field.

The travelers included servicemembers and civilians, in units or on their own, heading home, into theater, to rest and recuperation trips or on some kind of emergency leave.

“Essentially, it’s like an airport,” said Army Capt. Kevin McPherson, commander of the 21st Replacement Company, 13th Corps Support Command Special Troops Battalion, which operates the processing center.

As one of the major entry points into the theater, flights from around the world and across the region come to Balad.[...]

While the deployment briefings help units process their personnel, many soldiers wish they could just go home and take care of administrative duties later.

“I think they should give you a plane ticket and let you go home,” said Sgt. 1st Class Sean Moore, with the 12th Battalion, 104th Division from Fort Lewis, Wash.

While they wait, transient personnel are housed in a network of tents near the center if they will be leaving soon, and across the base at a tent city annex if they have more than a day or two to wait.

For units, the center alleviates much of the stress of moving troops.

“For redeployment, they’ll be in charge of the whole process,” said 1st Lt. Gladys Aglibot, the liaison officer between the center and the 1st Infantry Division.

Without the center, she said, “more of the unit would be resourced.”

The system is effective but there are plenty of kinks to work out, she adds. She would also like the transient housing consolidated to help keep track of soldiers.

“There are miscommunications and overflows,” she said. “But it has improved somewhat over the last few months.”

Despite a few obstacles, the center continually develops new ways of managing the huge flow of people.

For those in charge, the challenges never end.

“We moved the equivalent of a town last month,” McPherson said. “All I know is I sure don’t want to be an airport manager.”


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