World Watch
August 20, 2010 5:26 PM

Bomb Disposal Expert's Cheat Sheet Tattooed on His Arm

By
Terry McCarthy
Topics
Afghanistan

Sergeant Matthew Jackson, a bomb disposal expert from the 1st EOD (Explosive Ordinance Disposal) Company, has the length of his left arm tattooed with the the molecular structures of different types of explosives.

As part of our continuing coverage of "Afghanistan: the Road Ahead," - CBS News correspondent Terry McCarthy follows the Third Battalion, First Marines at home, and abroad in Afghanistan.

Sergeant Matthew Jackson, a bomb disposal expert from the 1st EOD Company, likes to quote Charles Manson in relation to his job - "total paranoia is total awareness."  It helps to keep his mind focused when he and his explosive ordinance disposal (EOD) team are working on one of the countless IEDs they have come across during their deployment in southern Afghanistan.

Jackson, on first meeting, looks just a tad eccentric. An English major at college, he is a big Hemingway fan. He wears thick black-rimmed glasses, and along the length of his left arm are a series of tattoos of the molecular structures of different types of explosives. Some call it his crib sheet, but he regards it as a portrait gallery of close friends, whom he refers to fondly as he lists their explosive properties and relative levels of oxygen content. In the center of his forearm is TNT - "the base of all explosives," by his wrist are blasting cap explosives, nitroglycerin is further up his arm, but his personal favorite, he says with the enthusiasm of a professional collector, is RDX - the main component of C4 - "it's just neat, it's sensitive, it's powerful..."

Sgt. Matthew Jackson of the 1st EOD Company.

But on the job, the semi-humorous bravura is replaced by meticulous attention to detail - and a mindset that is always looking for the worst. "My motto is where there is one there is three and where there is three there are more, and each individual is a complete and different problem." He starts from the perspective of the Taliban bomb-emplacer: "How would I get me?' is my first thought on these guys - you got to put your mind into 'how would they want me to come," and not come that way - you know, come at a different angle..."

Ideally he works remotely - with robots, ropes, long poles, whatever he can find that keeps him at some distance from a potential bomb. Ask him about the "Hurt Locker," and like most EOD techs he says that, as a movie, it was entertaining, but in terms of what EOD techs actually do, it bore no relation to reality. In following Jackson and his colleagues for a week nobody every put on a bomb suit - although they have them. But IEDs did blow up two robots, two mechanical arms attached to armored vehicles, one bulldozer with a mine rake on the front and one mine roller.

On day seven, an IED caught three of his colleagues, Cpl. Daniel Greer, a combat engineer, and Sgt. Johnny Jones and Staff Sgt. Eric Chir, both IED techs - it killed Greer and injured Jones and Chir. Jackson was sent in to do the post-blast analysis - a pressure plate hidden under a small pile of garbage at the back of a building, next to a path that had been used already a number of times by the Marines.

"There was just something they didn't see," he says. "You know it's nobody's fault, you know, that's just how it happens..."

Jackson says that after the blast he will only go even more carefully - "I am going to be even more cautious than I am now - you know I have been as cautious as I can be at this point, but I can't let it shake me because all the rest of these guys, when it comes to the devices, rely on me, honestly."

Watching the EOD techs at work makes one wonder why anyone would volunteer for such a job.  Jackson, a Marine since 2003, has been an EOD tech since 2005, and did two tours in Iraq before coming to Afghanistan. Jackson has a simple answer.

"Everyone has their own reason in this job - mostly it is the guys next to you.... I do it for the guy next to me, I do it for the guys who are walking that ground - my main overlying goal is to get every single person home that I can."

More of Terry McCarthy's "Thundering Third" Blogs:

The Most Dangerous Job in Afghanistan

In Afghanistan, a Beautiful Desert Goes Boom

A Day in the Life: Wardak, Afghanistan

Preaching to the Corps



Add a Comment
by lilbear925 August 21, 2010 9:19 AM EDT
These EOD specialists are not cowboys! They take their craft seriously and are willing to hang it all on the line to save others. Finally, a truthful and accurate report about what American soldiers really do in their jobs as combat soldiers. My hat's off to this Marine, since I turned down the opportunity to train in EOD when I served in the Army many years ago. It is an important function for the safety of everyone in the combat field and is as delicate and precise as any job in the world. Thanks, guys!
Reply to this comment
by barcar55 August 21, 2010 6:47 AM EDT
Best story I have read in awhile. Real American hero in my book!
Reply to this comment
by pizzanick2 August 21, 2010 12:43 AM EDT
He's a hero in my book. Anyone who would do this work day in and day out to look out for the lives of his fellow soldiers. May God watch over you Seargant Jackson!
Reply to this comment
by alancontact August 20, 2010 9:39 PM EDT
Amazing story. As I was reading it, I kept thinking... what kind of person would do this job? At the end, I got my answer.
Reply to this comment
by Cassarit August 20, 2010 5:48 PM EDT
Imagine the guy was a gynocologist!
Reply to this comment
by alancontact August 20, 2010 9:42 PM EDT
Stupid juvenile comment. You took a great story and turn it into a silly joke.
.

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