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Kansas Agribusiness Development Team Arrives in Afghanistan

Heh.  Not exactly the sort of headline one expects for what is to the Castle, local news.  Who knew those many years ago when first I donned the perma-press green fatigues that "Agribusiness Development Team" would find itself in a sentence with this context:  

An agribusiness development team from the Kansas National Guard unfurled its colors in Afghanistan's Laghman province

Definitely not my war, my father's wars, or my grandfather's war...  One would think this would have read;  "An agribusiness development team from the US Department of Agriculture arrived in Afghanistan's Laghman province, with security provided by the Kansas National Guard."

As I said, not my father's wars (which, of course, isn't strictly true of Vietnam, but the National Guard aspect of that is). 

It does say a lot about the flexibility of Guard soldiers.
By Army Staff Sgt. Adora Medina
Special to American Forces Press Service

JALALABAD AIRFIELD, Afghanistan, May 8, 2009 - An agribusiness development team from the Kansas National Guard unfurled its colors in Afghanistan's Laghman province May 3 and began its work of jump-starting the agricultural economy.


scr_090503-A-XXXXA-001.jpg[A ceremony to mark the arrival of the Kansas Agribusiness Development Team takes place in the Mehtar Lam district of Afghanistan's Laghman province, May 3, 2009. U.S. Army photo by Sgt. Luke Atherton]
 
 
Before the unit arrived in northeastern Afghanistan, an ADT from Missouri was the only one operating in the Nuristan, Nangarhar, Kunar and Laghman provinces, also known as the N2KL region. With additional assets, the two teams will be able to focus on specific areas of development.
"Each area of Afghanistan has a unique set of agricultural challenges and advantages that require tailored approaches to resolve," Army Col. Eric Peck, commander of the Kansas ADT, said. "The more focused we are on the strengths and challenges for a specific locality, the greater chance we have to succeed in improving the quantity, quality and safety of agricultural products for the consumers."

Guard soldiers and airmen -- all volunteers for the duty -- make up Peck's team, and they bring expertise from both military and civilian experience in infantry tactics, engineering, security operations and a variety of civilian skills. They've come from all over Kansas, Texas, and Washington to form what Peck called a truly cohesive melting pot of farmers and agribusiness professionals.

"Our team is focused on four major agribusiness infrastructure areas -- production, storage, processing and education -- and we have projects and program proposals in those areas that we are discussing with our Afghan government, provincial reconstruction team and interagency partners," Peck said.

As the soldiers and airmen settle into Afghanistan, they await the challenges ahead and look forward to paving the way for several rotations of teams to follow as they work to bolster the Afghan food market and aid in economic development.

(Army Staff Sgt. Adora Medina serves in the 1st Infantry Division's 3rd Brigade Combat Team public affairs office.) 
 

1 Comments

I had the opportunity to brief several of the ADT members including COL Peck on their AO before their deployment and I can say they appear to be very qualified and prepared for the challenges they will be facing in Laghman Province. I think it is a great use of National Guard units from states uniquelly positioned to provide this kind of team. Hopefully the team can help the Afghans move forward agricultarally to a point where commodities other than opium are of an economic value and they can be more self reliant in their own food crop production.