Marines split on women joining combat units

Sgt. Michelle Stephens is a salty, hard-charging Marine who has hauled 75-pound packs with infantrymen at mountain warfare training, qualified as a rifle sharpshooter while using iron sights and worked off-duty as a bouncer in a bar.

Despite all that, the seven-year Marine will never serve in a combat unit because of something else: she’s a woman. The 5-foot-10, 170-pound administrative specialist is taller and stronger than some Marines, but the U.S. doesn’t allow women in combat arms jobs. read more

Iwo Jima Statistics and more

 

There are some interesting statistics here resulting from the Battle for Iwo Jima. All that enjoy a bit of Military History should be amazed at some of these facts.

              
       IWO JIMA:
       
       
       On March 26th,1945, Iwo Jima was declared “secured”.  The Marines handed the island over to the Army so the Army Air Corps could use the air fields. Then many of the Marines sailed off to another party on Okinawa.
       
       February 19th was the start of the invasion of Iwo.  That seems so long ago. But for the Marines and sailors who assaulted Iwo, every one of the 36 continuous days of that battle seemed nearly that long.
       
       About 77,000 US Marines from the 3rd, 4th, and 5th Marine Divisions converged on tiny Iwo Jima in late February.  LtGen Tadamichi Kuribayashi had fortified Iwo for a full year before the invasion, and had an estimated 22,000 troops dug in under the island.  US forces began bombing Iwo in June 1944, 8 full months before the invasion.  Naval bombardments then shelled the island mercilessly around the clock for four consecutive days prior to the invasion.
       
       Iwo set a number of “firsts”:
       
       It was the longest concentrated bombardment of any target in the history of mankind up to that date.
       
       It was the largest total tonnage of bombs and artillery ever delivered on a single target to that date.
       
       It was the largest armada of ships ever assembled for an invasion up to that date (about 700 ships).
       
       It was the largest number of invaders to ever invade any island up to that date (each of those new records was broken by the invasion of Okinawa in April 1945).
       
       It was the first (and last) time Seabees accompanied Marines in the first waves of a beach invasion (they swore they'd never do THAT again!).
       
       It was the first and last time any Marine unit landed on D-Day and served an entire campaign without being relieved by another unit.
       
       And it was the only time in Marine Corps history when the number of invading casualties exceeded the number of defending casualties.  More than 19,000 Marines were wounded on Iwo, and 6,821 died there.  As such, it remains the costliest battle in Marine Corps history.
       
       Now get this: one-third of all marines killed during WWII, died on Iwo Jima.
       
       Let me repeat that: ONE THIRD of all US Marines killed during WWII, died on Iwo Jima.
       
       All but about 200 Japanese defenders died on Iwo.
       
       Marine LtGen Harry Schmidt and LtGen H. M. Smith led Task Force 56. It made up V Corps, composed of the 3rd MarDiv (MGen Erskine), 4th MarDiv (MGen Clifton Cates) and 5th MarDiv (MGen Rockey).  The 5th Division had been formed expressly for the battle of Iwo Jima.  It was disbanded following the battle.
       
       Among the participants were names of distinction:
       
�         Son of the sitting Commandant LtCol AA Vandergriff Jr (3/24)
       ï¿½         Future Commandant 1stLt Robert E Cushman, Jr (2/9)
       ï¿½         Future Commandant Clifton Cates (CG 4thMarDiv)
       ï¿½         Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal
       ï¿½         LtGen “Howlin' Mad” Smith
       ï¿½         And the first enlisted Marine Medal of Honor recipient of WWII, “Manila John” Basilone. Basilone had received his MOH from Chesty Puller, for action on Guadalcanal. He was KIA on Iwo on D-Day.
       
       The invasion planners felt confident the battle would take 7-10 days.  It took 36.  LtGen Kuribayashi's body has never been found.
       
       The final two Japanese defenders surrendered 4 years after the battle.  In January of 1949 two Japanese soldiers surrendered themselves to the occupying US Army garrison on Iwo. They had hidden in the 11 miles of tunnels and bunkers under Iwo, successfully raiding the Army supplies for food and water at night.   read more

Actions that make heroes

Medford man returns rare handgun to Medal of Honor winner    

A historic Colt .45-caliber, semi-automatic pistol stolen more than 30 years ago from a Medal of Honor winner in South Carolina has been returned to its rightful owner.

The gun and owner were reunited after a history buff in Medford, who bought the old handgun in an online auction last month, tracked down the retired Marine whose name is engraved on it. read more

Sgt Grit Newsletter August 24, 2011

 

Old Corps

Hi Sarge,
I’d like to comment and agree with GySgt. Edwin Tate’s letter concerning the House Mouse. In our Boot Camp we had no House Mouse either and the only time we smoked was when the “smoking lamp is lit”. Also we had to destroy the cigarette butts and spread the tobacco into the sand. We had two weeks at Camp Mathews, for rifle qualification, and our Platoon 609 had top qualification and marched into the chow hall first while the other platoons stood at attention. read more

American troops in Afghanistan through the eyes of a French OMLT infantryman

The US often hears echoes of worldwide hostility against the application of its foreign policy, but seldom are they reached by the voices of those who experience first hand how close we are to the USA. In spite of contextual political differences and conflicting interests that generate friction, we do share the same fundamental values – and when push comes to shove that is what really counts. Through the eyes of that French OMLT (Operational Mentoring Liaison Teams) infantryman you can see how strong the bond is on the ground. In contrast with the Americans, the French soldiers don’t seem to write much online – or maybe the proportion is the same but we just have less people deployed. Whatever the reason, this is a rare and moving testimony which is why I decided to translate it into English, so that American people can catch a glimpse of the way European soldiers see them. Not much high philosophy here, just the first hand impressions of a soldier in contact – but that only makes it more authentic. read more