Category: Marine Corps

  • Two CH-53E collide; 12 Marines missing

    Two CH-53E collide; 12 Marines missing

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    Fox News reports that the Coast Guard is searching for the crews and passengers of two CH-53E “Super Stallion” helicopters that collided and went down two-and-a-half miles off the coast of the Hawaiian island of Oahu.

    The aircraft were taking part in a nighttime training mission, according to NBC News. It’s unclear what caused the crash.

    A Navy helicopter crew and local firefighters were assisting in the search, ABC News reports.

    12 Marines are missing. The Coast Guard has found an occupied life raft in the debris. A reminder that training for war is sometimes as deadly as the war itself.

  • Lance Corporal Patrick Sammon saving the world

    Lance Corporal Patrick Sammon saving the world

    Patrick Sammon

    The Marine Corps Times tells the story of Lance Corporal Patrick Sammon. The Marine was leaving a liquor store when he heard a car crash. He ran towards the sound and found that one of the drivers was unconscious. Sammon pulled him from the automobile moments before the car burst into flames. The electrician stationed at Miramar also pulled the other driver from danger.

    Sammon doesn’t see himself as a hero, though, and is a bit overwhelmed at the media attention he’s received.

    “Any civilian could have done the same thing,” he said. “I think it’s more about being a good human being.”

    Sammon returned to duty Monday to take a Humvee driving test.

  • Hunter: Mabus “a greater threat to the Marine Corps than ISIS”

    Hunter: Mabus “a greater threat to the Marine Corps than ISIS”

    I guess former Marine and now-Congressman Duncan Hunter has had enough of Navy Secretary Ray Mabus and his blind headlong plunge into social justice warrior mode calling Mabus “a greater threat to the Marine Corps than ISIS”. Mabus has been altering the culture of the Marine Corps which has been winning our country’s wars for hundreds of years just so Mabus can have a SJW legacy to point to on his Wikipedia page. According to Politico;

    Particularly, he’s taking exception to memo Mabus sent to the Marines Corps this week, instructing it integrate Marine boot camp, which has been separate for men and women, and change job titles so they’re gender neutral.

    “These are long lasting,” Hunter told POLITICO. “These changes that they’re making are not thought out, they’re not researched, they’ve not been debated. The American public has no idea what’s going on … It’s going to get people killed.”

    A spokesman for Mabus declined to comment on Hunter’s remarks.

    You might remember that the Marine Corps was the only service to try out segregated units and Mabus, the surface warfare officer whose only experience in the service was on a ship that spent most of his time aboard in the Boston shipyard going through repairs, dismissed the Marine Corps’ report on the experiment out-of-hand and presented no real reason to dispute their efforts other than the fact that it didn’t fit his view of the controversy.

    In Hunter’s opinion piece on Fox News, Hunter warns against changing the time-tested combat-oriented standards;

    What cannot happen — as many are rightly concerned will — is that the services will be forced to lower various specialty standards, in order to remain “gender neutral.” That is something the services must resist at all cost—as Congress should too.

    It’s imperative that each job maintains the highest standards and continue developing the highest quality personnel, regardless of gender, quotas or any other benchmark.

    […]

    The White House evidently picks and chooses who it listens to when it comes it comes to the military.

    […]

    {T]he Marine Corps and the special operations community…are among our fiercest fighters and it’s foolish not to take their concerns seriously.

    Well, obviously, Congressman Hunter isn’t taking into account that he’s talking to a bean counter with virtually no experience in being a leader of folks in uniform. Like Ashton Carter, Chuck Hagel and Leon Panetta, Mabus was hired because he’s a good little minion social justice warrior.

  • Mabus scurries to make his SJW mark on the Marines

    Mabus scurries to make his SJW mark on the Marines

    Mabus Navy1

    You’ve probably heard that Ray Mabus, the Secretary of the Navy, has charged the Marine Corps to focus on the integration of women into combat jobs and their priority this Winter is to change the names of some of their military occupational specialties in order to “gender integrate” job titles because that’s what’s important. Here’s his letter in that regard. Mabus addresses that in the last paragraph of the first page;

    Mabus Letter

    Mabus letter2

    So I guess “reconnaissance man” will be replaced by “reconnaissance being” or something similar. Thanks to Mick for sending us the letter.

    Meanwhile, Marine General John Kelly is focused on the important stuff. He doesn’t believe that the social justice warriors, like Mabus, will keep their promise to leave the standard for training alone, according to US News;

    “They’re saying we are not going to change any standards,” Kelly told reporters at the Pentagon. “There will be great pressure, whether it’s 12 months from now, four years from now, because the question will be asked whether we’ve let women into these other roles, why aren’t they staying in those other roles? Why aren’t they advancing as infantry people?”

    Kelly, who has been a Marine for 45 years and served three tours in Iraq, said the sole basis for change in the military should be whether the change will make units more lethal.

    “If the answer to that is no, clearly don’t do it. If the answer to that is, it shouldn’t hurt, I would suggest that we shouldn’t do it, because it might hurt,” Kelly said.

    Hey, that sounds familiar – where have I read that before? Oh, yeah, that’s hat I’ve been writing in these pages for years. the Marines, you might remember, led the other services in determining whether integration would work and they had their concerns about the whole plan. Secretary Mabus dismissed the findings of their experiments, you know, based on his years of experience (actually, he has two years of service as a “surface warfare officer” aboard the USS Little Rock while it was mostly in dry dock at Boston Naval Shipyard).

    I’ve also read about how the Marines are supposed to integrate women into basic training. The Marines are the only service that has separate training for men and women, which makes sense to me. they should be training and learning to be Marines without all of the ancillary BS that would go along with the integration process. Like the current discussion of how the “H”-shaped buildings don’t give women privacy, because, for the same reason they can’t be bothered to lower the toilet seat, they can’t pull the window-blinds closed either.

    So how does all of the social justice BS make the Marine Corps more lethal, Secretary Mabus? I’ve been waiting for an answer to that question for about five years now.

  • 3 Marines saving the world near Detroit

    3 Marines saving the world near Detroit

    Marines

    A teenage girl was surrounded by three thieves while she was shopping at the mall in Westland, Michigan last week. They took her cell phone. Marines Private First Class Blayne Edwards, Private Alex Berezansky and Private First Class Ryan Delaca were on the scene and heard the teen’s cries for help. They took off after the thugs while dressed in their blues and those useless low quarter shoes and caught up with the three. The Marines held the three in place until police arrived, according to Fox2;

    “Our core values are honor courage and commitment to do the right thing,” said Berezansky. “So when an opportunity arises to help someone, we always do that.”

    They chased the thieves through a busy intersection and all the way to Target.

    “They were fast at first but we caught up to them,” Delaca said.

    “And we asked them, do you really think you can outrun three Marines,” Edwards said.

    From USAToday;

    “I always try to do the right thing,” said Pfc. Ryan Delaca, a machine gunner with 2nd Battalion, 8th Marines. “That’s what Marines do.”

    Pvt. Alex Berezansky, who is in training to be a motor transportation operator, said he was “raised to do the right thing and help those who can’t help themselves.” He also spoke of his service’s core values: honor, courage and commitment.

    The Marines’ response was proof that they’ve been trained to react to the unknown, said Staff Sgt. Randal Nelson, who runs aviation supply by trade but has been a recruiter for the past three months.

    “We stress to these guys to be prepared for any situation, especially in a day and age when our enemy isn’t always wearing a uniform,” he said. “Whether it is a small petty theft or something on a bigger scale, we make sure their head is already on a swivel and they are prepared for any situation.”

    Thanks to Marine_7002 for the link.

  • Valkyries escort a “Viking warrior” to Valhalla

    Valkyries escort a “Viking warrior” to Valhalla

    Eden Pearl

    CB Senior sends us the sad news from MSN that Marine Gunnery Sgt. Eden Pearl, after a six-year battle with his injuries, TBI and burns over 90% of his body, has succumbed according to his family.

    “He was there to go do battle, and he acted that way, and he trained that way, and he ran our team that way,” Kinosh said. “It was definitely the most significant leadership experience I had while I was in the Marines, and I was in the Marines for 14 years. His combat leadership far surpasses anyone else I’ve ever worked with. This guy was a master at gunfighting.”

    […]

    Pearl joined the Marine Corps in July 1994 from the town of Monroe, N.Y., before turning 19. After graduating from recruit training at Parris Island, S.C., he became an infantry rifleman, and then completed virtually every difficult form of training the service had, becoming a scout sniper, reconnaissance Marine, combat diver and critical skills operator in MARSOC. His training left him capable of performing anything — from free-fall aerial dives from airplanes to close-quarters combat after breaking down a door.

  • We Remember: Lcpl David R. Devik

    We Remember: Lcpl David R. Devik

    Early this week I was asked by someone very close the me to find out what I could about a Marine killed in Vietnam named David Ralf Devik. I began my research with a minimum of factual information, and as I learned more about the man and who he was I realized his story needed to be told, not because he died but because he lived.  He is typical of so many that were involved in that awful war.

    Devik

    This is from the Seattle Times , 7 March 1968

    For David Devik, There Was No Middle Road by Marty Loken

    David Devik was as contradictory as the world in which he lived – “a queer mixture of liberal and conservative,” his father said yesterday.

    Marine Lance Cpl. David Ralf Devik – just Dave to those who knew him – was buried two weeks ago in Arlington National Cemetery. He died 10 Feb (1968) aboard a C-130 cargo plane that crashed on the Khe Sanh airstrip after being riddled by enemy ground fire.

    Corporal Devik, the David few Seattle friends knew, had taken another man’s place on the delivery run to Khe Sanh from base at Da Nang.

    That was David the marine, whose personal commitment to volunteer for every available duty, cost his life. That was the David who won two Air Medals in his first month of combat duty. the David who liked to fly night missions aboard the flare-shooting planes.

    “For some strange reason – thrust between real companionship and stark terror – Dave seemed to enjoy the experience immensely,” his father, the Rev. Rudolf Devik, archdeacon of the Episcopal Diocese of Olympia, said.

    “He and his friends bought Japanese motorcycles and cameras during leaves in Tokyo,” the archdeacon said. “Dave said the cycles were really great.”

    The Other David – Dave before he joined the service – had “great respect” for conscientious objectors and was fully prepared to become one after graduating from Newport High School in 1966.

    “He was fascinated by the whole arena of social change. He cared . . . and did not like to see people put down,” his father said

    The Devik family lived in a poor area of Des Moines IA, when Dave was a youngster, and he learned to “love people – no matter who or what they were.”

    When the Deviks moved to Bellevue, where they now live at 5617 126th Ave. S. E., David was exposed to a new, different environment. His unusual concern for the oppressed did not give way to suburban apathy – it was strengthened.

    David saw no middle ground, but he was not sure which way to step. He had an interest in sports, and was a member of Newport High’s wrestling team.

    “He never won a match, but he had more guts than anyone I’ve seen,” the archdeacon said.

    David’s contradictions abounded. He was serious about many things: started to become deeply involved with central-area organizations and church groups, and had a personal library more impressive than his father’s. But, despite his thirst for reading material and knowledge, David’s grades in school were only about average

    After high school Dave said he did not undertand how anybody – including me – could stand in the middle road and just watch what was happening in the world,” his father said.

    ” He wanted to be a conscientious objector and at the same time, he thought about signing up with the Marine Corps. His reasoning tht something had to be done and done all the way – was the same for both arguments.”

    At one point David thought he had made the decision. He bought a guitar let his hair grow and stopped shaving.

    He was prepared to refuse induction into the service and suffer the consequences when his identity search hit a brick wall. He joined the Marine Corps Reserves.

    David went to Vietnam last July, but did not share “all the details” in letters to his family.

    Like his son Archdeacon Devik is a bit paradoxical.

    After serving in the South Pacific he became a reservist chaplain in the National Guard. He spends a week-end each month with 4,500 reservists as a member of the 81st Infantry Brigade at Pier 91, but questions the validity and morality of the war.

    “It’s absurd,” he said “but no more absurd than the times we live in . . . I just hope the degree of absurdity will lessen and some degree of sanity will come into the picture.”

    The United States must become the servant of peace, not the unswaying author of peace, he said.

    Servant of peace? Author of peace?

    That, perhaps was the contradiction which haunted David Devik, the corporal who died with marines after treading the elusive line

    Could the armed forces become authors of peace? Was it morally right to serve Was it morally right not to serve?

    David seemed sure on only one thing: There was no middle ground

     

    David was the radio operator on a KC-130 call sign Basketball 813. It was hit by 50 cal fire on its approach. The bullets penetrated the skin of the aircraft and some of the fuel bladders it carried. Those fuel bladders caught fire. David stayed at his station and fed the pilots information and updates. The aircraft landed and soon after exploded.

    David was a Hero by anyone’s measure. He is still loved and missed by his family.

    His awards include a DFC, Purple Heart, 6 Air Medals as well as the other more common awards.

    All too often we get focused on the Stolen Valor and the other stupidity of a few bad apples, we forget to look around us and recognize the true privilege and honor we have to be in the company of real Hero’s.

    Learning about Lcpl Devik has been my honor.

  • US Marine Corps’ 240th anniversary

    US Marine Corps’ 240th anniversary

    240 years ago today the Naval Committee of the Continental Congress was directed to raise two battalions of Marines, and so we got the naval infantry. The first amphibious assault by the new Marine Corps occurred in the Bahamas on March 3, 1776 when the force seized Fort Montague and Fort Nassau, a British ammunition depot and naval port in New Providence.

    So Happy Birthday, Marine Corps. From the Halls of Montezuma to shores of Tripoli. From the peak of Suribachi to the alleyways of Fallujah.