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technical escort การใช้

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  • TEU _ Technical Escort Units ( of the Army)
  • "Certainly, the Army's Technical Escort Unit brings a great deal to the table.
  • Members of the Technical Escort Unit train with real chemical weapons in Canada, and the JSLIST suits do their job well in that environment, unit members said.
  • The Army Biological Laboratory tested each agent and the Army's Technical Escort Unit was responsible for transport of all chemical, biological, radiological ( nuclear ) materials.
  • A host of federal, state and local agencies would be mobilized for the remediation effort, including the U . S . Army's Technical Escort Unit ( TEU ).
  • In September 2007, the final major organizational piece was completed when the 48th Chemical Brigade was activated and assumed command of three Chemical Battalions and the two Chemical Technical Escort Battalions.
  • Assigned to the new headquarters were the 52d EOD Group and its five EOD battalions, and the 22d Chemical Battalion ( Technical Escort ), formerly known as the Technical Escort Unit.
  • Assigned to the new headquarters were the 52d EOD Group and its five EOD battalions, and the 22d Chemical Battalion ( Technical Escort ), formerly known as the Technical Escort Unit.
  • The Army's Technical Escort Unit's duties range from escorting the movement of hazardous material _ the initial assignment when it was created in 1943 _ to rapid sampling, decontamination and disposal.
  • Key Pentagon response units include the 500-member Army Chemical / Biological Quick Response Force at Aberdeen, Md .; the Marine Corps Chemical / Biological Incident Response Force, a 370-member unit based at Camp LeJeune, N . C .; the Army Technical Escort Units ( including one based at Dugway Proving Grounds, Utah ); and three National Medical Response Teams ( based in Los Angeles, Denver and Winston-Salem, N . C . ) managed by the U . S . Public Health Service.
  • Units include the Energy Department Nuclear Emergency Search Team, which can draw among several thousand nuclear weapon design experts to locate and identify nuclear weapons or warhead materials; the Navy's Explosive Ordnance Disposal teams, who work with other military units to deactivate munitions, including nuclear weapons; the Army Technical Escort Unit, with experts in the identification and neutralization of chemical agents; the Marine Corps Chemical, Biological Incident Response Force, a 300-member unit configured for rapid response to chemical or biological incidents; and FBI Hostage Response Team, a commando unit empowered to respond to terrorist incidents within the United States.