But the base at Creech was one of the exceptions, until the virus hit.
However, insiders say that senior officers at Creech are being briefed daily on the virus.
But they're sure that the infection has hit both classified and unclassified machines at Creech.
In the meantime, technicians at Creech are trying to get the virus off the GCS machines.
Commanders at Creech say that if there is stress, it comes from relentless around-the-clock shift work.
But the virus has resisted multiple efforts to remove it from Creech's computers, network security specialists say.
That storage facility is linked to a person "who has a very close association" to Creech, Dolson said.
The video is streamed back in real-time to the controllers' screens at Creech.
Aimee Copeland's case was much more uncommon, in that her wound got "infected and the infection (ran) wild, " explained Creech.
Dolson said that storage facility was linked to John Creech, a man who is in jail on an unrelated drug conviction.
The bacteria are "remarkably common in the water and in the environment, " according to Dr. Buddy Creech, assistant professor of pediatric infectious diseases at Vanderbilt University.
"When it gets into those deeper tissues, it has a remarkable ability to destroy the tissues that surround it in sort of this hunt for nutrition, " Creech said.
The virus, first detected nearly two weeks ago by the military's Host-Based Security System, has not prevented pilots at Creech Air Force Base in Nevada from flying their missions overseas.
The connection between Smith and Creech remains somewhat unclear.
Those unmanned aircraft, each armed with Hellfire missiles and laser-guided bombs, are attacking more targets than ever before, while their pilots sit in the safer venue of Creech Air Force Base in Las Vegas.
The lion's share of U.S. drone missions are flown by Air Force pilots stationed at Creech, a tiny outpost in the barren Nevada desert, 20 miles north of a state prison and adjacent to a one-story casino.
Dr. Buddy Creech, an assistant professor of pediatric infectious diseases at Vanderbilt University, said that Aeromonas hydrophila -- which is "remarkably common in the water and in the environment" -- is one of many bacteria that can cause a flesh-eating process.
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