Chemical Biological Incident Response Force

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Chemical Biological Incident Response Force
(CBIRF)
Latin: Certo Occultus Hostis
To Fight Hidden Threats
ColorsBlack, Red, Gold
Commanders
Commanding OfficerColonel Zeb B. Beasley[1]
Sergeant MajorSgtMaj Paul A. Forde

The Chemical Biological Incident Response Force (CBIRF) is a Marine Corps unit responsible for countering the effects of a

chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear, or high-yield explosive (CBRNE) incident, support counter CBRN terrorism, and urban search and rescue when CBRN incident. They were activated in April 1996 by General Charles C. Krulak, then Commandant of the Marine Corps. The unit is based at Naval Support Facility Indian Head in Indian Head, Maryland and falls under the command of the United States Marine Corps Forces Command
.

Mission

When directed, a CBIRF unit will forward-deploy and/or respond to a credible threat of a chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear, or high-yield explosive (

CBRNE
) incident in order to assist local, state, or federal agencies and Unified Combat Commanders in the conduct of consequence management operations.

CBIRF accomplishes this mission by providing capabilities for CBRN agent detection and identification, casualty search and extraction, technical rescue, personnel decontamination, and tactical emergency medical care and stabilization of contaminated victims. All CBIRF Marines and sailors are trained to perform both casualty extraction and decontamination. The lifesaving competencies required of personnel serving at CBIRF are taught during CBIRF Basic Operations Course (CBOC). By completing CBOC, all Marines and Sailors are able to support CBIRF's mission, and bolster the current response force.

History

Since its inception CBIRF has trained many local agencies. It has also had a presence at the following:

Awards

Ribbon Award
Meritorious Unit Commendation streamer with 2 bronze stars
National Defense Service streamer with 1 bronze star
Global War on Terrorism Service streamer

See also

References

  1. ^ "Chemical Biological Incident Response Force: U.S. Marine Corps Forces Command".
Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Marine Corps.

External links