'First Round' outs fires, returns home

By Sgt. 1st Class Andrew PorchSeptember 14, 2015

'First Round' outs fires, returns home
1 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Spc. Kenneth Aquinde, a Soldier assigned to Task Force First Round poses with his wife, Andrea; son, Ezekiel, 8, and daughter, Bella, 3, after arriving back to Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash., Sept. 13, 2015. Aquinde, along with an additional 250 plu... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
'First Round' outs fires, returns home
2 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Tom Kruth, right, chief of wildland fire and aviation, Alaskan Division of Forestry, high fives Soldiers assigned to Task Force First Round, out of Joint Base Lewis McChord, Wash., following a recognition ceremony at the Kalispel Indian Resevation, W... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
'First Round' outs fires, returns home
3 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Lt. Col. James Dunwoody, commander, Task Force First Round, out of Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash., holds up a plaque during a recognition ceremony at the Kalispel Indian Reservation, Sept. 13, 2015. Dunwoody accepted the plaque from the U.S. Forest ... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
'First Round' outs fires, returns home
4 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Chris Scott, center, military crew advisor, Task Force First Round presents Soldiers with task round ceremonial patches during a recognition ceremony at Kalispel Indian Reservation, Wash., Sept. 13, 2015. The military crew advisors and Soldiers worke... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
'First Round' outs fires, returns home
5 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Lt. Col. James Dunwoody, left, commander, Task Force First Round, out of Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash., and Rod Blooms, military liaison officer, National Interagency Fire Center, pose for a photo during a recognition ceremony at the Kalispel India... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
'First Round' outs fires, returns home
6 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Soldiers assigned to Task Force First Round, out of Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash., turn in their wildland firefighting gear at their base camp located on the Kalispel Indian Reservation, Wash., Sept. 12, 2015. When the Soldiers arrived to the area,... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL
'First Round' outs fires, returns home
7 / 7 Show Caption + Hide Caption – Solders and military crew advisors assigned to Task Force First Round, out of Joint Base Lewis-McChord, Wash., stand in formation prior to conducting a team building event in the Colville National Forest, Wash., Sept. 12, 2015. After conducting wild... (Photo Credit: U.S. Army) VIEW ORIGINAL

KALISPEL INDIAN RESERVATION, Wash. - For a field artillery brigade, the word fire is something heard often, but for the Soldiers that make up Task Force First Round, out of Joint Base Lewis-McChord, the word will forever have a new meaning after being deployed to help suppress wildfires burning throughout Northeastern Washington.

The task force, comprised of more than 250 Soldiers assigned to the 17th Field Artillery Brigade, 7th Infantry Division, deployed to the Colville National Forest Aug. 22, and recently conducted their last day of direct operations Sept. 11.

"The Soldiers are remarkable," said Lt. Col. James Dunwoody, commander, Task Force First Round. "It's hard to even express the pride in the formation. We are relatively young as far as redeployment. We have gone through redeployment, reset, reintegration and right into this mission. Truly this is the first opportunity I have had to see the Soldiers interact in this level of capacity that they have. The teamwork has been phenomenal; leadership can't ask for more."

The redeployment Dunwoody mentions was a nine-month tour his battalion served in the United Arab Emirates in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. With the quick turn around of missions, the unit had to zero in on learning wildland firefighting quickly.

"The success in transition from Soldier to firefighter is largely based on the Soldiers' desire and willingness to accomplish the task at hand," said Dunwoody. "Soldiers are quick to pick up on tasks, quick to pick up on techniques, tactics, procedures; the things that allow them to rapidly accomplish any objective."

The obligation of the Soldiers while supporting wildland firefighting operations; work together, contain the fire and meet objectives set by their Military Crew Advisors.

"The incident or complex had a set of objectives and to meet those objectives, you needed that crew capability to go out and do various work assignments," said Rod Bloom, military liaison officer, National Interagency Fire Center. "You want that advisor to be able to share their knowledge and experience. MCADs, all the way through this leadership on the NIFC side, have all learned something."

With the Soldiers helping contain the wildfires at 79 percent, conducting structure protection to local homes and interacting with the community, leadership can say with full confidence the work done here has long-reaching effects.

"Having the support of 200 Soldiers in the bigger picture, it was able to free up, in the Pacific Northwest and Nationally, some of the more advanced crews that are self-sufficient," said Blooms, a native of Bosie, Idaho. "They were able to put those on priority fires or sections of fires that needed their capabilities. Having 200 Soldiers, ten crews, provided that surge capability or supplemental capability nationwide."

For the Soldiers, this mission might have come to a close, but the next mission is right around the corner, as the main element of the task force will be heading into multiple training events.

"All I can hope is they take the lessons learned here, leadership and from a followership perspective, and apply it equally upon redeployment back to our military task," said Dunwoody.

As the Soldiers look back on this deployment, they will be able to hold their heads high in support of their nation and say what they did was important and effective.

"The mission was a success simply because it was joint, it was interagency, it was multinational," said Dunwoody. "Everybody was here for a common cause, understood a common end state and worked together through a process to achieve that end state. It was strength in numbers and there were no individuals across the entirety of the 700-man spectrum."