 Marines on the battlefield rely on each other to survive, and on the flight line, it's no different. That's why the aircraft rescue and firefighters aboard Marine Corps Air Station Miramar have a strong bond. They count on each other every time they move closer to flame and smoke. You know, it's a really tight friendship, and we're here more than we're with our family, so it is like an actual other than another family, you know. I know they say, you know, brothers in arms, but I mean it really has an impact here, because we're all we have, you know. Aircraft rescue Marines often work 24-hour shifts. The hardest part of having a job here at Crasherwood is knowing full well that it's one of your friends or somebody that you're actually pulling out of that aircraft, saving, or not saving, but having to pick up the remains. From Miramar, California, I'm Lance Corporal John Tucker.