• 4* r '3 _« Nebraskan Staci McKee/DN houses and structures riddled with bullet holes was right in the path of some of the fiercest fighting of the 3-year-old civil war. The Bosnian government troops, or BiH, had a headquarters stationed here. U.S. personnel occupied what was left of it and the surrounding grounds for the night. A few days later, they were back—to stay. - There goes the neighborhood. American soldiers began knocking down mined structures and clearing off what Lt. Craig Hamilton, a combat engineer with the First Armored division, called “a commod ity.” “This is Heaven,” he said, standing on a slab of concrete. “This is where we need to be. “When you have hard stand, you have Heaven.” Where there is not concrete, there is mud. Where there is not mud, there is snow covering mud. “When you don’t have to walk through the mud to your hoop (slang term for tents) to take off your muddy boots, it’s nice,” Hamilton said. The camp, nicknamed “The Dog Pound,” after the Bravo company of the 3/4 Cavalry, called the Bravo Bulldogs, is a mad house of heavy equipment and tent building. In only a week, the destroyed headquarters went from being a shelled-out nothing to one of Task Force Eagle’s most forward posi tions. Sitting on the Bosnian side of the zone of separation, a four kilometer strip separating the BiH and the Serbs, the base will house elements of the 3/4 Armored Cavalry Regi ment combat engineers from the First Armored Division and an Artillery company. In one day, the soldiers had tents. In three days, they had hot meals. Now they are waiting for showers. Within eyesight of the camp, the ":: ian Muslim Army’s secondary defensive lines cross a large field. Soldiers at the new U.S. camp said before snow covered the field, they could see exposed mines. Capt. James Davis, an engineer with the First Armored Division, said the main threats to the base were terrorist acts and aggression from the warring parties, not mines. He said, however, they weren’t taking any chances. “This is not just a place you want to go, wandering around,” Davis said. Keeping warm A thick fog has blanketed Northeastern Bosnia on this frigid morning. Standing in the middle of a tent city that goes on for hundreds of yards, it is clear that Senior Airman Robert Remmers is from Nebraska. While other members of the Air Force’s 823rd RED HORSE, or Rapid Engineer Deployable Heavy Operational Repair Squadron Engineers, are wearing extra sets of long underwear and gloves, Remmers isn’t even wearing a hat. This is like his home in Garrison. “This is really a warm morning,” Remmers said, dismantling the awning of a tent he helf: i build just days earlier. “It’s been freezing—you can’t feel your fingers. “Cold, wet, muddy. Typical conditions, I guess.” The 823rd, based in Florida, is just now tting used to the cold weather. The unit has :n in Bosnia since the beginning of January. “We’re fixing on going home soon,” Remmers said. “It’s pretty certain that we are going.” For now, the engineers at Tuzla East pass the time and keep warm any way they can — like with inter-service snowball fights. Remmers said the “war” started when some Air Force engineers attacked some Army soldiers riding on an armored person nel carrier. Other than snowball fights and a heated mess hall, there is only one more option for warmth. “Move,” Remmers said. “Just keep working.” I _ _ _ . I Staci McKee/DN Spc. Tom Dunning and Pvt. Michael Breecher sit in a warehouse-turned barrack and watch Good Morning America on the Armed Forces Network. Staci McKee/DN Spc. Robert Remmers stands in a destroyed building on the U.S. post near the tiny village of Kalesija. Remmers, an engineer in the Air Force, helped build some of the tents that will house soldiers stationed near ' • . - .y.1 ' r ; • • * . ... - • , r • % - . - • \j‘‘*v - Staci McKee/DN Putting an American flag on his .50-caliber machine gun, Spec. Brent Hull prepares to move out with an armored cavalry caravan. No soldier could leave the base without at least four vehicles m the caravan. Stad McKm/DN Areas on U.S. bases in Tuzla that are not needed, and where it is not known if there are mines, are fenced-off and restricted.