An armed escort chopper trails a Black Hawk medevac helicopter flying to pick up an injured Afghan soldier in Oruzgan province. Patients are flown to a U.S. military clinic at the base in Tarin Kowt, or farther south to a hospital in Kandahar. Armed escorts are necessary to fend of Taliban attacks. A medevac helicopter was shot down June 9 in neighboring Helmand province. (Rick Loomis / Los Angeles Times)
When possible, medevac crews flight to the aid of Afghan civilians, as part of a strategy to win hearts and minds.
Suffering from chest pains, village elder Shabarat Sageed, center, is escorted onto a medevac helicopter in southern Afghanistan by a crew with the 101st Combat Aviation Brigade. (Rick Loomis / Los Angeles Times)
A medic tends to Shabarat Sageed, center, who is suffering from chest pains. He was flown to the U.S. military base in Tarin Kowt for treatment. During a recent two-day span, the platoon received half-a-dozen “nine lines,” the emergency radio calls that list nine critical nuggets of information location, severity of injury, type of patient, and so on. (Rick Loomis / Los Angeles Times)
Shabarat Sageed, probably flying for the first time, grips the window of the medevac helicopter as he is flown to a military clinic for treatment. With no conventional combat troops at the base, the medevac unit has been helping civilians, with about 70% of its units 130 missions treating Afghan civilians or security forces. (Rick Loomis / Los Angeles Times)