Will depend on situation. Are you in a military setting in a combat area, or in a civilian setting not in combat?
A good first step is removal of any non-involved personnel from the danger zone, restrict persons from entering the danger zone, check for persons observing that would remotely trigger a command detonated device, and be aware of, and check for the possibility of secondary devices. Once these steps have been taken, then staff that will remove the IED can enter and begin work.
Back up... Call bomb squad... Back up further...and, if possible, keep local traffic clear... Place C-4 explosive near IED via remote-controlled robotic arm or with a blast-suit encapsulated member of the bomb squad... Detonate C-4 to destroy IED...
All of the above,...Clear the area, Evacuate to a safe distance, and Keep under cover whenever possible.
Report the IED only after all personnel have safely evacuated the area.
Confirm, clear, call, cordon, control.
Confirm, clear, check, cordon, and control.
Confirm, clear, check, cordon, and control.
The 5-Cs when reacting to an IED are Confirm, Clear, Cordon, Check, and Control. Confirm involves verifying the presence of the IED. Clear refers to safely removing people from the area. Cordon involves establishing a safe perimeter. Check pertains to searching for additional threats. Control involves coordinating with emergency services and maintaining communication.
300 m
.300 meters.
C- Confirm it is an IED C- Clear the area (about 300 meters) C- Cordon off the area C- Call up the UXO report C- Control traffic from entering the area (both vehicle and pedestrian)
multifaceted IED attack
C- Confirm it is an IED C- Clear the area (about 300 meters) C- Cordon off the area C- Call up the UXO report C- Control traffic from entering the area (both vehicle and pedestrian)