PERRY, Ga. – Marines with search and extraction platoon, Chemical Biological Incident Response Force, CBIRF, practice with one of the many stretchers used during search and recue procedures during 48-hour operations as part of Exercise Scarlet Response 2016 at Guardian Centers, Perry, Ga., Aug. 25, 2016. This exercise is the unit’s capstone event, testing the levels of each individual CBIRF capability with lane training and culminating with a 36-hour simulated response to a nuclear detonation. CBIRF is an active duty Marine Corps unit that, when directed, forward-deploys and/or responds with m


PERRY, Ga. – Marines with search and extraction platoon, Chemical Biological Incident Response Force, CBIRF, practice with one of the many stretchers used during search and recue procedures during 48-hour operations as part of Exercise Scarlet Response 2016 at Guardian Centers, Perry, Ga., Aug. 25, 2016. This exercise is the unit’s capstone event, testing the levels of each individual CBIRF capability with lane training and culminating with a 36-hour simulated response to a nuclear detonation. CBIRF is an active duty Marine Corps unit that, when directed, forward-deploys and/or responds with minimal warning to a chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear or high-yield explosive (CBRNE) threat or event in order to assist local, state, or federal agencies and the geographic combatant commanders in the conduct of CBRNE response or consequence management operations, providing capabilities for command and control; agent detection and identification; search, rescue, and decontamination; and emergency medical care for contaminated personnel. (Official Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Maverick S. Mejia/RELEASED)


Size: 3840px × 2560px
Photo credit: © AB Forces News Collection / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: cbirf, cbrne, centers, force, guardian, readiness, sr16, thinkcbirf