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History of the Corps
History of the Corps courtesy
GlobalSecurity.org
On November 10, 1775, the Continental Congress passed a resolution
stating that "two battalions of Marines be raised" for service as
landing forces with the fleet. This established the Continental Marines
and marked the birth of the United States Marine Corps. Serving on land
and at sea, early Marines distinguished themselves in a number of
important operations, including their first amphibious raid on foreign
soil in the Bahamas in March 1776, under the command of the
Corps’ first commandant, Capt. Samuel Nicholas. The 1783 Treaty of
Paris ended the Revolutionary War and as the last of the Navy’s ships
were sold, the Continental Navy and Marines disbanded.
Following the formal re-establishment of the Marine Corps on
July 11, 1798, Marines fought in conflicts with France, landed in Santo
Domingo and conducted operations against the Barbary pirates along the
"Shores of Tripoli."
Marines participated in numerous operations during the War of
1812, including the defense of Washington at Bladensburg, Md. They also
fought alongside Andrew Jackson in the defeat of the British at New
Orleans. Following the War of 1812, Marines protected American
interests around the world in areas like the Caribbean, the Falkland
Islands, Sumatra and off the coast of West Africa, and close to home in
operations against the Seminole Indians in Florida.
During the Mexican War, Marines seized enemy seaports on both
the Gulf and Pacific coasts. While landing parties of Marines and
Sailors were seizing enemy ports, a battalion of Marines joined General
Winfield Scott’s army at Pueblo and marched and fought all the way to
the "Halls of Montezuma," Mexico City.
Although most Marine Corps service during the Civil War was
with the Navy, a battalion fought at Bull Run, and other units saw
action with blockading squadrons at Cape Hatteras, New Orleans,
Charleston and Fort Fisher. During the last third of the 19th century,
Marines made numerous landings around the world, especially in the
orient and the Caribbean.
Following the Spanish-American War in 1898, Marines fought
during the Philippine Insurrection, the Boxer Rebellion in China, in
Nicaragua, Panama, The Dominican Republic, Cuba, Mexico and Haiti.
In World War I, Marines distinguished themselves on the
battlefields of France, as the 4th Marine Brigade earned the title of
"Devil Dogs" for actions at Belleau Wood, Soissons, St. Michiel, Blanc
Mont and the final Muesse-Argonne offensive. Marine aviation, which
began in 1912, was used for the first time in a close-air support role
during WWI. More than 309,000 Marines served in France and more than a
third were killed or wounded in six months of intense fighting.
Marine "Devil Dogs" at Belleau Wood, France
During the two decades before World War II, the Marine Corps
began to more completely develop its doctrine and organization for
amphibious warfare. The success of this effort was proven at
Guadalcanal, Bougainville, Tarawa, New Britain, Kwajalein, Eniwetok,
Saipan, Guam, Tinian, Peleliu, Iwo Jima and Okinawa. By the war’s end
in 1945, the Corps had grown to include six divisions, five air wings
and supporting troops, about 485,000 Marines. Nearly 87,000 Marines
were killed or wounded during WWII and 82 earned the Medal of Honor.
As the Marine Corps attempted to modify the Fleet Marine Force
(FMF) for operations in the nuclear age, the Corps began a decade long
struggle to save the FMF and, in affect, its own existence. The Marine
Corps had peaked in strength in 1945 at nearly half a million men in
six divisions and five aircraft wings. The postwar Corps shrank to fit
federal budgets rather than adjust realistically to fit the contingency
needs of the Cold War era. Available manpower fell to 83,000 men in
1948 and dropped to just over 74,000 by the spring of 1950. About
50,000 men were assigned to the operating forces, but the FMF had only
about 30,000 men in the two skeletal divisions and aircraft wings. Fewer
than 12,000 Marines comprised FMFPac which included the 1st Division at
Camp Pendleton and the 1st Marine Aircraft Wing (MAW) at El Toro,
California. On the East Coast, the 2d Division at Camp Lejeune and the
2d MAW at Cherry Point, making up FMFLant, numbered just under 16,000
Marines. At the outbreak of the Korean War, no Marine unit of any size
was based or deployed in the Far East.
The Corps’ supporting establishment was so small and its tasks
for maintaining Marine Corps bases so extensive that many FMF troops
spent more time housekeeping than training.
The Marine Corps share of the federal budget was simply not enough to
buy adequate manpower, training, or new equipment. The main threat to
the nation was seen in inflation and unbalanced budgets rather than in
the Soviet armed forces. On the eve of the Korean War, the FMF seemed
doomed to fall to six battalion landing teams and twelve squadrons in
1950.
While Marine units were taking part in the post-war occupation
of Japan and North China, studies at Quantico, Va., concentrated on
attaining a "vertical envelopment" capability for the Corps through the
use of helicopters. Landing at Inchon, Korea, in September 1950,
Marines proved that the doctrine of amphibious assault was still viable
and necessary. After the recapture of Seoul, the Marines advanced to
the Chosin Reservoir only to see the Chinese Communists enter the war.
In March, 1955, after five years of hard fighting, the last Marine
ground forces were withdrawn. More than 25,000 Marines were killed or
wounded during the Korean War.
The realities of the Korean War brought major changes in the
basing and deployment of Marine Corps forces. The Corps strength
ballooned to 192,000 men in June 1951, to 232,000 a year later and
nearly 250,000 by June 1953. More than half the troops actually served
in the operating forces, and the 1st Marine Division and 1st MAW,
operationally employed in Korea, were kept up to strength. In the
meantime, the 2d Marine Division and 2d MAW reached full strength for
their European contingencies. In June 1951 Headquarters activated the
3d Marine Brigade, built around the 3d Marines at Camp Pendleton. In
1952 the brigade expanded to become the 3d Marine Division, and the
same year the 3d MAW formed and occupied a new base in Miami. In
another important reorganization, Headquarters in 1951 formed an
organization known as Force Troops in order to provide the heavy
artillery and other combat support and combat service support units
necessary to sustain a Marine division in a land war.
The three-division/three-wing force structure decreed by the
June 1952 passage of the Douglas-Mansfield Act, gave legislative
support to the stated roles and missions of the Corps. The defense
assumptions and programs of the Eisenhower Administration, however,
left the Marine Corps role, and the corresponding basing and deployment
strategy, less clearly defined. The emphasis on strategic forces over
conventional forces, coupled with domestic economic implications of
high defense costs and unbalanced federal budgets, challenged Marine
Corps leaders of this period.
During the years 1953 to 1955, significant changes in the basing and
deployment of Marine forces were realized. The 3d Marine Division
deployed from Camp Pendleton to the Far East in the summer of 1953.
Based in Japan, the Division followed regimental landings in Japan and
Okinawa with a full-dress division landing exercise on Iwo Jima in
March 1954. Significantly, the division began redeploying from Japan to
Okinawa in 1955 and by February 1956 the Headquarters of the 3d Marine
Division was moved to Okinawa where its remains today. Teamed with the
3d Division, the bulk of the 1st Marine Aircraft Wing, in Japan with
headquarters at Atsugi, provided the air portion of a ready U.S.
expeditionary force in the Far East.
The 1st Marine Division, meanwhile, which had been in Korea
since the summer of 1950, was returned to Camp Pendleton in 1955. The
3d MAW during the same period moved from the East to the West Coast to
support Pacific deployments.
In 1954, the 1st Provisional Marine Air-Ground Task Force,
built around a reinforced infantry regiment and a reinforced air group,
was established at Hawaii in response to strategic requirements in the
Pacific Theater. One reinforced regiment of the 3d Marine Division,
together with elements of the 1st Marine Aircraft Wing were shifted
from the Far East to Oahu to build the task force, later called the 1st
Marine Brigade, to desired strength.
On the other side of the world, the commitment of a Marine
battalion landing team to the Sixth Fleet in the Mediterranean, which
began in 1948, continued except for brief periods in 1950-51 and 1955.
During the Korean War, this practice was briefly interrupted due to
wartime needs and during 1955 a reduction in amphibious shipping forced
the termination of the rotating assignment for nearly a year. The
deployment to the Sixth Fleet was designed to give the fleet commander
a ready landing force in an area left unstable in the aftermath of World War II.
Events in the Far East from 1955 on likewise pointed out the
need for a ready battalion of Marines afloat with the fleet, and from
1960 on, the 3d Marine Division maintained such a floating battalion
under Commander Seventh Fleet.
In July 1958, a brigade-size force landed in Lebanon to restore
order. During the Cuban Missile Crisis in October 1962, a large
amphibious force was assembled, but not landed. In April 1965, a
brigade of Marines landed in the Dominican Republic to protect
Americans and evacuate those who wished to leave.
The period from 1956-1960 witnessed the Corps’ continuing
development of a permanent base structure to support its force in
readiness mission as well as the procurement of supplies and equipment
for a wide range of contingencies. Bases were developed stateside for
cold-weather training at Pickel Meadows, and for desert warfare and
supporting arms training at Twentynine Palms, both in California.
Budget cuts and resulting reduced end strengths, however, became
formidable obstacles to meeting desired manning levels for FMF units.
The reductions resulted in all three divisions being placed on reduced
manning levels in 1957 and total Marine Corps strength fell below
200,000. Commandant of the Marine Corps Annual Reports for the years
1957 through 1960 reflect the reduced manning levels throughout the
FMF, stating of the Divisions and Wings, “their capability for
sustained combat has been seriously diminished.” Reserve training also
suffered during this period due to lack of funding.
By 1960, Marine Corps strength had fallen to 170,000 – down
30,000 in just three years. Over the same period the Marine Corps
“green dollar” budget dropped from an already austere $942 million in
FY1958 to $902 million in FY1961. Certain elements of the FMF had to be
placed in cadre status. Perhaps just as damaging to the Corps’
readiness posture was the low priority given in the “blue dollar”
budget to the construction of amphibious shipping and particularly
helicopter-carrying ships, which threatened the development of the
vertical assault mission.
To improve readiness in the Pacific, a system was implemented
to rotate infantry battalions between the 3d and 1st Divisions.
Beginning in 1959, the “transplacement” program had battalions forming
and training in the 1st Division, then deploying to Okinawa for fifteen
months’ service as a cohesive unit. The 2d Division began a similar
program in 1960 which aided personnel stability and continuity, but as
in the Pacific, it meant that several battalions could not be easily
deployed in a crisis.
Nevertheless, in 1960 the Marine Corps began a five-year surge in
its readiness that brought it to its highest level of peacetime
effectiveness by the eve of the Vietnam War.
The results of the Presidential election of 1960, coupled with internal
redirection in the Corps, combined to form the highly favorable
conditions for the Marine Corps to consolidate its amphibious force in
readiness mission. The “Flexible Response” strategy of the new
administration was ideally suited to the Marine Corps -- stressing
conventional force improvements in manpower, equipment modernization,
and strategic mobility. Marine Corps budgets grew, as did the strength
ceilings, and just as significantly, improvements were realized in
obtaining amphibious shipping. During this period, as well,
Headquarters enhanced the readiness of the Reserve with the formation
of the 4th Marine Division and 4th Marine Aircraft Wing in the Marine
Corps Organized Reserve.
The combination of increased amphibious exercises and
contingency deployments kept the tactical units of the FMF busy during
the early 1960s. The size of the possible Marine role in Europe grew as
Headquarters aimed at a larger role in NATO.
In 1964 II MEF conducted Operation Steel Pike I, an amphibious exercise
in Spanish waters that exceeded all earlier exercises in both the size
of the Marine force deployed and the distance covered. An amphibious
force of 60 ships carried 22,000 Marines and over 5,000 vehicles to the
amphibious objective area.
While FMF Atlantic forces were being exercized in Europe, the
Caribbean, and Africa, FMF Pacific units trained throughout the Far
East, Hawaii, and California. In 1964 there were 45 landing exercises
worldwide, and by the beginning of the major U.S. involvement in
Vietnam, in 1965, the FMF, both regular and Reserve, was as effective a
force as the Corps had ever fielded in peacetime.
The landing of the 9th Marine Expeditionary Brigade at Da Nang
in 1965 marked the beginning of a large-scale Marine involvement in
Vietnam. By the summer of 1968, after the enemy’s Tet Offensive, Marine
Corps strength in Vietnam rose to about 85,000. The Marine withdrawal
began in 1969 as the South Vietnamese began to assume a larger role in
the fighting. The last ground forces left Vietnam by June 1971. The
Vietnam War, the longest in the history of the Marine Corps, exacted a
high cost, with more than 13,000 Marines killed and 88,000 wounded.
The Vietnam War proved to be the ultimate test of the Corps’
basing and deployment decisions of the 1950s and early 1960s. From the
March 1965 landing of Marine ground troops as Da Nang until the
departure of the last large Marine units in June 1971, the war impacted
drastically on all Marine forces within and outside the III Marine
Amphibious Force. Peak Marine strength in Vietnam was reached in 1968
when more than 85,000 Marines were in Vietnam out of a Marine Corps
numbering just over 300,000.
By 1972 the Marine Corps was once again down to 200,000 men and
post-Vietnam redeployments had returned the Corps to the same basing
and deployment patterns that had been in effect from 1960 to 1965. The
3d Marine Division was back on Okinawa and the 1st Marine Brigade had
been reconstituted in Hawaii. The 1st Marine Division was back in Camp
Pendleton and the 3d MAW remained at El Toro. On the East Coast, the 2d
Marine Division and 2d MAW remained in North Carolina.
In July 1974, Marines evacuated U.S. citizens and foreign nationals during the unrest in Cyprus.
During the 1970s, the Marine Corps assumed an increasingly
significant role in defending NATO’s northern flank as amphibious units
of the 2nd Marine Division participated in exercises throughout
northern Europe.
As it moved into the 1970s, the Marine Corps once again faced
close scrutiny of its missions, force structure, and personnel
policies. The Marine Corps continued to emphasize global strategic
flexibility and reemphasized the Corps’ amphibious mission, developing
the concept of “sea-basing,” which aimed at greatly increasing
sea-borne logistic support. At the same time, FMF Atlantic launched its
first time NATO exercise outside the Mediterranean when a Marine
Amphibious Unit (MAU) conducted maneuvers in Norway and northern
Germany in 1975. These exercises, which became annual and expanded to
brigade size, and their underlying mission of preparing to assist in
the defense of NATO’s Northern flank, represented the Marine Corps
single most significant change in deployment patterns until the end of
the decade.
The revolution in Iran, the seizure of the U.S. Embassy and hostages
there, and the Soviet intervention in Afghanistan in 1979 gave impetus
to a Department of Defense plan to improve U.S. non-NATO military
capability. The Rapid Deployment Force was created in response to the
realization of the range of contingencies short of general war that
faced the United States. In particular, the CONUS-based joint task
force, with designated forces from all four services, was created
with responsibility for operational planning, training, and exercises
for designated rapid deployment forces worldwide with the initial
focus on Southwest Asia and the Indian Ocean. The new force widened
the FMF’s force in readiness role without compromising its amphibious
mission.
The Corps played a key role in the development of the Rapid
Deployment Force, a multi-service organization created to ensure a
flexible, timely military response around the world. The Maritime
Pre-Positioning Ships (MPS) Program was instituted in late 1979 with
the goal of providing three Marine amphibious brigades ready for
airlift to potential crisis areas where they would unite previously
positioned ships carrying their equipment and supplies. The MPS concept
gave the Marine Corps and the U.S. a significant new dimension in
mobility, sustainability, and the global response.
An increasing number of terrorist attacks on U.S. embassies
around the world took place in the 1980s. In August 1982, Marines
landed at Beirut, Lebanon, as part of a multinational peacekeeping
force. For the next 19 months these units faced the hazards of their
mission with courage and professionalism. In October 1983, Marines took
part in the highly successful, short-notice intervention in Grenada.
In December 1989, Marines responded to instability in Central
America during Operation Just Cause in Panama to protect American lives
and restore democracy.
The Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in August 1990 led to the largest
movement of Marine forces since World War II. Between August 1990 and
January 1991, 24 infantry battalions, 40 squadrons (more than 92,000
Marines) deployed to the Persian Gulf as part of Operation Desert
Shield. The air campaign of Operation Desert Storm began Jan. 16, 1991,
followed by the main overland attack Feb. 24 when the 1st and 2nd Marine
Divisions breached the Iraqi defense lines and stormed into occupied
Kuwait. Meanwhile, the threat from the sea in the form of Marine
Expeditionary Brigades held 50,000 Iraqis in check along the Kuwait
coast. By the morning of Feb. 28, 100 hours after the ground war
began, the Iraqi army was no longer a threat.
In December 1992, Marines landed in Somalia marking the beginning of a
two-year humanitarian relief operation there. In another part of the
world, land-and carrier-based Marine Corps fighter-attack squadrons
and electronic warfare aircraft supported Operation Deny Flight in
the no-fly zone over Bosnia-Herzegovina. During April 1994, Marines
once again demonstrated their ability to protect American citizens in
remote parts of the world when a Marine task force evacuated 142
U.S. citizens from Rwanda in response to civil unrest in that country.
Closer to home, Marines went ashore in September 1994 at Cape
Haitian, Haiti, as part of the U.S. force participating in the
restoration of democracy in that country. At the same time, Marines
were actively engaged in providing assistance to America’s counter-drug
effort, battling wildfires in the western United States, and aiding in
flood and hurricane relief operations.
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Copyright © 2015 Cpl. Joshua J. Ware Detachment #1403 - All rights reserved.
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