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Inside This Month's Gazette

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The ACE That Ate the Marine Corps | Article
Restore the balance to the MAGTF
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There is no doubt that aviation is a significant source of Marine Corps combat power. The aviation combat element (ACE) enhances the lethality and maneuverability of the MAGTF. In turn, scalable and ready MAGTFs provide expeditionary capabilities vital to a maritime nation with numerous global interests and responsibilities. When coupled with amphibious shipping, the MAGTF’s ability to extend a broad range of influence and control from the sea to shore creates capabilities essential to our overall naval power. The value of amphibious-enabled MAGTFs is growing as American military strategy once again reverts to an expeditionary-dependent force posture. Concurrently the importance of the world’s littorals is increasing.

From Our Archives

Marine Rotational Force-Darwin

By Maj John W. Black - Originally Published March 2013

The Marines initiative in Australia--Who wants to go to Australia and eat some shrimp off the barbie, see a 20-foot-long saltwater crocodile, snorkel or scuba dive along the Great Barrier Reef, and hang out with some cool Aussie mates and shoot the breeze over a cold Australian beer? There's good news if you want to do any of these things - more Marines are headed to Australia.

Inaugural Marine Rotational Force-Darwin

By 1stLt Gregory Jurschak - Originally Published March 2013

Reflections
We were just 5 months away from deploying to Afghanistan. Counterinsurgency, counterimprovised explosive devices, satellite patrolling, key leader engagements - we recited their tenets in our sleep. I had been out of Infantry Officer Course for all of 5 months, and was eager to lead my Marines in a conflict that I knew would inevitably define a generation of warriors. That plan came to an abrupt halt in January 2012 during Fox Company, 2d Battalion, 3d Marines' (2/3's), participation in Exercise LAVA VIPER at the memorably cold Pohakuloua Training Area on the island of Hawaii.

The Limits of Light Infantry Doctrine

By Capt Jon T. Hoffman - Originally Published September 1990

If we choose to ignore the value of line infantry-its ability to exploit gaps, break stiff resistance, and maintain long logistic lines-we risk ruining any tactical advantage that light infantry can provide at the outset of a campaign.

In the early Combined Arms Exercises (CAXs) at Twentynine Palms the scenario opened with a set piece assault on an enemy armored reconnaissance unit. As D-day dawned, planes dropped smoke and bombs, artillery fired preparation barrages, and mechanized units moved forward to kill the remaining holdouts with direct fire. At the time it occurred to me that a small infantry unit carrying Dragons could accomplish the same end by using stealth and the cover of darkness. 

The Significance of Light Infantry

By Col Michael D. Wyly - Originally Published January 1991

Building a military force in light infantry terms does not mean discarding all our heavy armor, artillery, and engineering assets--what it does entail is that each of these arms learns to decide and act on its own as if it were light infantry.

Responses in the September Gazette to the series of articles on light infantry that appeared in June aptly counseled that the next war is unlikely to be won by small bands of commandos running around behind enemy lines. Indeed, that was never the thought of those of us who have been researching and writing about light infantry and whose articles appeared in June...

Teaching Light Infantry Tactics

By Maj John F. Kelley & Capt Philip E. Smith - Originally Published in March 1991

Teaching light infantry concepts is not an easy task. In some ways, it involves teaching Marines a whole new way of thinking, of acting, of solving tactical problems. However, if the Marine Corps is expected to fully implement its new maneuver warfare doctrine, this is what needs to be accomplished.

Training effective light infantry must begin with a thorough understanding of tactical concepts. Most Marine Corps schools, however, traditionally have emphasized specific techniques and procedures and have not addressed the conceptualization issue to any large degree.

Books

This Month In History

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Khe Sanh


Everyone here has their own set of powerful memories about Khe Sanh-memories both good and bad. I'd like to begin by sharing one of my memories with you. I remember the green beauty of the plateau in June 1967 when I first saw it, and how it was eventually destroyed by artillery, airstrikes, and our fields of fire.

It has been 25 years since we fought and won the battle of Khe Sanh, and now it is time to dedicate our monument to that battle. In any war, there are a few battles that are truly decisive-fights that have strategic importance, that can end a war if lost or let it continue if won. In World War II, the Normandy invasion was such a fight; in Korea, Chosin Reservoir; for the French in Vietnam, it was Dien Bien Phu; and for us, it was the... Read the entire article

Khe Sanh


Like weary travelers who finally get to rest in the comfort of their own homes after a week of constant motion and movement, the members of "Kilo" Company, 3d Battalion, 26th Marines spread out into the foxholes and bunkers that made up the company's perimeter.

It was Christmas Eve 1967, and we had just returned from a four-day operation that took us into the rugged hills of Vietnam's Khe Sanh Plateau. Despite minimal creature comforts, it was a relief to know that we didn't have to hike those hills for a while. That by itself was a legitimate Christmas present... Read the entire article

 

Khe Sanh


The high ground dominating the Khe Sanh Combat Base was to the west, northwest, and north-northwest. At the onset of the siege-undertaken by two North Vietnamese Army (NVA) divisions-Company I, 3d Battalion, 26th Marines (3/26) and most of Company M, 3/26, were on Hill 881 South (881S) to the west; Company K, 3/26, was on Hill 861 to the northwest; and three companies and headquarters of 2d Battalion, 26th Marines (2/26) occupied Hill 558, east of Hill 861. Read the entire article

Khe Sanh


In this 'Sting of Battle' offering, excerpted from the Purple Fox web site, the author pays tribute to his Marines and the ingenuity and indomitable spirit of the Purple Foxes of Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 364 (HMM-364).

On and before 21 January 1968, helo resupply of Hill 881S was by "daisy chain" (single sequential helicopters). Loads were staged at Khe Sanh Combat Base (KSCB), loaded internally aboard birds, and brought up to the hill. Read the entire article

 

Khe Sanh


Robert Pisor, a former Detroit News correspondent in Vietnam and a Journalist, has added significantly to our understanding of the events surrounding Marine operations centered at the combat base located at Xom Cham but called Khe Sanh. What we gel is a good overview of the various decisions taken at many levels, from regimental to Presidential, and the impact of those decisions, whether intended or not, on the conduct of U.S. operations in Vietnam. Although Pisor touches on life in the trenches and on the hill outposts, he is far more concerned with the top protagonists in the overall Khe Sanh campaign-William C. Westmoreland and Vo Nguyen Giap... Read the entire article

 

Khe Sanh

In his preface to this historical monograph, LtGen R. E. Cushman says:

"As a history, this work is not intended to prove any point, but rather to record objectively the series of events which came to be called the Battle of Khe Sanh."

However, in view of the controversy and clamor that arose during the seige of Khe Sanh, one can only imagine that this book, the first written on Vietnam, was prepared to answer or rebut some of the controversy.

The Battle for Khe Sanh is written in the tradition of the excellent U.S. Marine Operations in Korea series. The author has very effectively intermixed command chronologies and personal interview to create a very lively "sea story." With a foreword by Gen Westmoreland, and a preface by LtGen Cushman, the reader is treated to a high level explanation of why.. Read the entire article

Khe Sanh


"The 26th Marines inadvertently kicked off the 'siege of Khe Sanh' on 25 January 1968 , when two companies patrolling the saddle between Hills 881-South and 881-North ran into a well-armed NVA battalion." View the entire gallery

 

Khe Sanh


"Few Marines appreciated their assigned role. It went against their grain as an offensive strike force to sit tethered to a frontier outpost [...]"--The Battle History of the U.S. Marines: A fellowship of valor

View the entire gallery

Gazette Poll

The proposed structured cuts will cut into the Marine Corps' combat capability.
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Today In History

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09 January

Eagle, Globe, and Anchor1847 - Marines participated in the Battle of La Mesa (Calif.) during the Mexican War.
Related Story: The Conquest of California
By Maj Edwin N McClellan Marine Corps Gazette (September 1923)

Recent Blog Posts

June 10, 2013:

 

Even before the Marine Corps began drawing down forces in Iraq and Afghanistan, Headquarters Marine Corps (HQMC) began planning for a post-Afghanistan future. Concerned that a decade of inland ground combat operations left the USMC vulnerable to the charge of being a “second land army,” and thus a redundant and unnecessary Department of Defense asset, HQMC leadership began to seek ways to ensure that such a charge could not stick.

May 31, 2013:

 

Even before the Marine Corps began drawing down forces in Iraq and Afghanistan, Headquarters Marine Corps (HQMC) began planning for a post-Afghanistan future. Concerned that a decade of inland ground combat operations left the USMC vulnerable to the charge of being a “second land army,” and thus a redundant and unnecessary Department of Defense asset, HQMC leadership began to seek ways to ensure that such a charge could not stick.

April 26, 2013:

 

The Marine Corps is facing a host of challenges and must contend with the current fiscal pressure on all of DoD while trying to innovate after a decade of war.  It will likely have to reduce its endstrength while adapting to a new threat environment. These challenges should force the Marine Corps to reconsider some fundamental premises today that will help it effectively adapt to the operational environment ten to twenty years from now.

April 11, 2013:

Please keep in mind that my last article about dropping tanks and other such 'heavy' things was not a recommendation that I think the Marine Corps needs to take under serious consideration. Just as today I am not suggesting we drop all of our fixed wing aircraft tomorrow. This series is more of an intellectual exercise about a hypothetical forced necessity, a modified form of the "What now Lieutenant?" question. If Congress provides a manpower cap of approximately 100,000, the new question becomes "what now General (and General staffs)?" I believe this is a useful exercise, and one that could be helpful in putting into perspective the difference between absolute necessity (infantry Marines) and nice-to-haves in the Marine Corps (tanks?).

March 26, 2013:

 

Just the other day, I was discussing sequestration with a fellow officer.  After we got into the discussion of what it means for the Marine Corps, we began to imagine about what would happen if over the next several years there were further cuts to DoD.  As something of a thought experiment, we asked ourselves, what would a Marine Corps with an end strength of 100k look like?

March 4, 2013:

 

As Sequester hits, and the current economic situation suggesting potential for further future cuts, the the US Government, and DoD in paticular, are naturally considering various cost saving measures.  One measure that should be implemented, in this author's humble opinion, is a "brevet" system of promotion. Not identical, but similar to our current method of frocking, and also not identical, but similar to the former use of  "brevet ranks" by the US Military

March 3, 2013:

 

Up until last week, in my six years of civil service with the Marine Corps, I had never attended a work-related training, education or professional-development course.  They've been offered to me every year, but I was just never interested.  A week-long course on conflict resolution in Shepherdstown, WV, sounds like a boondoggle, and when you look at the opportunity cost (a week out of the office, a $4K+ bill for the government, etc.), it just doesn't seem like a lot of value added.  For a long time, I'd been hearing a lot of great things from Marine and civilian coworkers about the Institute for Defense and Business's (IDB's) courses, and I thought I'd try one out this year.  It was a great decision.

Feb. 15, 2013:

 

Captain Brett Friedman has written on this blog several good pieces on Air-Sea Battle (ASB).  In my personal favorite, he describes how ASB falsely promises the US military a strategic victory over an enemy by using air and sea power to defeat our enemy.  He brings in historical examples of the US using air and sea forces to reduce shore-based defenses, like Operation OVERLORD, or the Battle of Iwo Jima, two battles where the shore defenses were hardly affected by the Air-Sea Battle conducted prior to amphibious landings.

Feb. 6, 2013:

 

In 1982 Argentina invaded the Falkland Islands, and South Georgia Island.  The reasons were complex.  The Argentinians since the early 1800s have claimed the islands as their own with the British consistently vehemently opposing this claim.  Furthermore, in the 80s, the Argentinian Military Regime was dealing with some serious domestic discontent, and wanted to incite some nationalistic fervor to focus the populace, and distract them from the imperfections of the regime.  They did this by doing what military regimes do best, use military action to solve their problems.  They attempted a seizure of what for hundreds of years belonged to someone else (the Brits).

Feb. 4, 2013:

Since the announcement that the exclusion policy for women in combat units will soon be lifted, the milblogosphere has been assailed by depictions of brutal ground combat conditions. When you ignore the gender issues, what is striking is the superhuman expectations we have of humans in combat. Kings of War has a good roundup and other notable additions include the New York Times At War blog and Bing West’s take at the American Interest. What most critics of the policy change share is an attempt to use the physical rigors of combat tp make their point, surely with varying degrees of embellishment.

MCA&F News and Announcements

Marine Corps Gazette Praised as Example of Professional Journal State Department Should Adopt

A thoughtful article posted in the Public Diplomacy Council website in December points out that there is much the U.S. State Department could...

See What's Happening Around Your Corps this Month

Read the latest Marines.mil newsletter, Marine Corps Connection, and get an great overview of what our Marines are up to around the globe. Feel...

CFC Pledge Deadline Extended

Less than one month to show Marines you care and make your pledge to the Combined Federal Campaign.

The Bidding is Open for MCA&F’s Annual Auction to Benefit Marines

MCA&F’s annual auction starts Dec. 5, 2013. The auction proceeds benefit the MCA&F programs that support Marines including the ...

Historic Marine Corps Gazette Covers

According to LtCol Rathvon M. Tompkins' article To War by Air the next amphibious campaigning of the Marine Corps will probably have a third dimension added to the attack. "Vertical envelopment" is not new to the Corps, but was shelved in early 1944 because the Pacific theater offered little opportunity for the employment of paramarines or airborne troops.

The blast of the Bomb and its tremendous potential made our amphibious planners take time out for another look at the "book." Those of you who are pondering, and who are planning ways and means of circumventing the effect the Bomb might have on present tactical and logistical amphibious concepts, might do well to pause a moment and take a look at Who Said Impossible? (Pg. 10, Jan. 1955 MCG).

With military aviation currently emphasizing jet-propulsion, the fighter planes of the war's beginning seem archaic by comparison. But before too condescending an attitude is developed toward such planes as the Grumman Wildcat, it would be well to look over the record. The record in this case is very vividly described in Capt DeChant's Devil Birds.

This month marks Maj Houston Stiff's debut as a Gazette cover artist as well as his first issue as editor and publisher. The double spread illustrates a small patrol operating on Choiseul. The Marines were from a parachute battalion and that explains the presence of the Johnson weapons.

Maj Houston Stiff's cover drawing depicts a small segment of the fierce action on Betio.

"Mark Fifteen!" Judging from his elated expression, the boot in the prone position seems to have black disks before his eyes. Marines from coast to coast and beyond, are wearing shooting jackets this spring; and the crack of small-arms fire becomes a familiar part of post routine. No live targets this year, but Marines are bound to burn powder, whether or not the targets shoot back.

Marines have patrolled many streets in their time, but none more fascinating than those in China. Maj Houston Stiff depicts two MPs strolling along what might be a hutung in the native quarter of any North China city. 

Back in the days before fiber helmets, master sergeants and SSNs, there was a breed in the Marine Corps known to the files as "Gunny." He was a man of dignity, this "Gunny," and had the Marine Corps Manual in his head, a ramrod down his back, and authority in his voice. He's still around, here and there, but mostly he wears bars and leaves instead of chevrons.

In June 1944, the V Amphibious Corps broke away from atoll stepping stones and made a giant stride across the Central Pacific. There was a hot welcome at the beaches there for the 2d and 4th Divisions, and final victory was 12 miles and 25 days away. Long remembered will be Saipan's cane fields and cliffs, caves and civilian suicides.

The lanky captain with the microphone is delivering a running commentary on the demonstration you see in progress in the background. What you don't see is the careful staging and rehearsing which preceded the exercises; for in the Quantico schools, the hours of preparation are far more numerous than the hours of execution.

The scene of the cover will not be familiar to Marines, since the Japanese tanks we met were mostly rather flimsy affairs. Moreover, the Japanese were fortunately somewhat less than clever in their employment of tanks, which was probably very lucky for us. But will it be the same in future wars? LtCol Arthur J. Stuart thinks not, and he's frankly a little worried. His article begins on page 18 of the October 1947 issue.

On the tenth of November, Marine gather for a family ceremony. They hear familiar words-- Article 1-55, Marine Corps Manual. And because the words are familiar, it may be that some of the significance will be lost. Familiar words: "...all that is highest in military efficiency and soldierly virtue... Marines will be found equal to every emergency in the future as they have been in the past..." This is a time when such words should have a meaning.

In the last two great wars the United States has been forced to impose her will on the continent of Europe. Now with planning done on a tri-dimensional, global scale, even this huge target is over-limited. Borrowing a page from the geopolitician's book we must learn to think in terms of heart lands and peripheries. Maj Guy Richards has done this thinking very well in his Target Eurasia and the Next War, starting on page 10 of the December 1947 issue.

It may not be warm and balmy where you are, but you can bet there are Marines in other parts of the world who are sweating out troop and drill and field problems in tropical climes. Of course the daily grind of training is always interspersed with a welcome "take 10" -- time for a smoke, a drink of water, or time to read that letter again. But hovering in the background will be that voice of authority ready with "Saddle up" when the sand runs of the glass.

Before you dash off a letter to Message Center regarding the weird looking 782 gear being carried by the Marines on the cover please check In Brief on page 40 (Mar. 1955, MCG). It will give you a resume and description of the equipment we borrowed from the Equipment Board so TSgt Stanley Dunlap could do a graphic illustration of what tomorrow's best dressed Marine will wear in combat.

The English longbow and the clothyard shaft sounded the death knell of body armor at the Battle of Crecy in 1346. The advent of gunpoweder and changes in tactics completed the coup de grace, and armor lay forgotten as a decadent relic of the age of chivalry. Six centuries later, at the Naval Medical Field Research Laboratory, Camp Lejeune, a man stood up in a vest made of plastic plates and nylon fibers--his colleague fired a .45 at him. The vest and the pioneer withstood the test, and soon after Marines were wearing the new body armor in Korea.

The pyrotechnics you see the evening of the July 4th celebration will pale in comparison with the spectacle afforded by the night firing exercise demonstrations planned for the thousands of Marine Reserves who will attend camp this summer at Marine Bases from coast to coast. Tanks of Charlie Co, 3d Tank Bn, firing on Combat Range #3 in the Fuji Maneuver Area, Japan, produced the unusual color transparency that furnished our cover this month.

The National Matches at Camp Perry, Reserves at summer camp firing the range and the regular run of Marines shooting for annual qualification--all striving to stay in the black. But for all the shooters' ills, the wart-fours and the "Maggie's drawers," there's only on panacea--hold 'em and squeeze 'em.

Although the Geneva Conference is now history, the defense of the Free World is still the paramount issue. Associated with this, therre are other problems which face us--the external threat of the rise of Russian sea power as one of the dominant factors in the alignment of world strength and, likewise, one of the greatest enigmas facing us internally--the allegiance of captured military personnel.

Through an interpretive design, TSgt D.W. Kiser compares the stalemate of positional trench warfare of WWI, the concentrated thrusts and pincer movements characteristic of the mechanized warfare in WWII and Liddell Hart's proposed concept (page 10-Oct. 1955, MCG) for the thermo-nuclear era--"an offensive fluidity of force." Today, with tactics in an evolutionary state, is the time for forward thinking and stimulating military thought. Those who have progressive ideas and encouraged to air their tactical concepts. 

Back when battleships had basket masts the Marine in the field shouldered a Krag rifle and ate his meals from a condiment can. But even then, out of the experience that stemmed from the problems of defending advanced bases in the far-flung seaways, was born the amphibious doctrine that led to victory in WWII. The doctrine proved sound and the Corps had its raison d'etre. Today the planning and testing go on--the helicopter replacing the whaleboat and new tactics replacing the old.

In a little over three decades, Marine Air has progressed from using lumbering "Jennies," Fokkers and Ford Tri-Motor aircraft to speedy jet Furys, Panthers and Banshees. Back in the days when wooden "props" pulled wire-strutted "crates" over Nicaraguan jungles, air support for the infantryman was a haphazard, hedge-hopping affai. But the men who experimented with "skivvy" shirts for air panels and "clothes line" communications' pickups, set the pattern and doctrine that has given us the precision teamwork required for our integrated close-air support today.

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