| Los Angeles Times -- March 6, 2003
The Marines: Always Faithful To Their History
More so than any other military branch, the corps never lets its members
forget the heroism of those who fought before them.
By Tony Perry, Times Staff Writer
CAMP GRIZZLY, Kuwait --Marine Lance Cpl. William Figlesthaler of Naples,
Fla., is a member of the Old Breed. He's 19. Figlesthaler and other
members of the Camp Pendleton-based 1st Marine Division, the oldest,
largest and most decorated division in the Marine Corps, are poised
in
dozens of locations in the Kuwaiti desert eagerly awaiting the order
to
"kick in the door" to Iraq.
Twelve years ago, the division, a.k.a. the Old Breed, was the first
coalition force to fight through the Iraqi army encirclement of Kuwait
City. The Iraqi line soon collapsed and the ground war came to a quick
end. Although he was only 7 when the Persian Gulf War happened,
Figlesthaler grew up fascinated by stories in the media and from his
friends' older brothers about the Marines, past and present. It's what
attracted him to the corps rather than the Army, Navy or Air Force.
"The Marines have got the best history," he said. "Now I've got a chance
to carry on that tradition -- it's awesome." While each branch of the
military teaches its recruits about its history and heroes, none does
so
as thoroughly as the Marine Corps.
The emphasis on history starts with recruiting, which stresses the
legacy of the corps. In boot camp, drill instructors deliver history
lessons; in the final physical challenge, a 72-hour outdoor ordeal
called "the crucible," recruits are ordered to discuss the heroism
of
Medal of Honor recipients.
Officers and senior enlisted members pick up the task once new Marines
report to their first duty stations. The result is that the Marines
may
outpace any institution in America -- military or civilian -- in
teaching its history to its members.
Chief Warrant Officer John Johnson, 40, of Detroit occasionally has
young Marines assigned to his command read the commendations detailing
the bravery of Marines awarded the Medal of Honor. "I want them to
understand the organization that they've joined," he said. "There is
something special about remembering those who preceded you."
Last weekend, even as Camp Pendleton was consumed with preparing Marines
and their gear to deploy to Kuwait, the base held a memorial service
and
banquet to honor the 58th anniversary of the amphibious assault at
Iwo
Jima by the 3rd, 4th and 5th Marine divisions.
"It's one of the differences between us and the Army," said 2nd Lt.
Richard Wilkerson, 27, of Knoxville, Tenn. "Ask someone in the Army
when
the Army's birthday is, and you'll get a strange look. Ask any Marines
about the birthday and they'll tell you: 'Nov. 10, 1775.' "
It was on that date that the Continental Congress, meeting in
Philadelphia, ordered that "two battalions of Marines be raised" to
serve as landing forces with the Navy. In a phrase that would serve
as
an advertising slogan two centuries later, the congress declared that
"a
few good men" be recruited.
With fewer forces and less heavy artillery than the Army, the Marine
Corps prides itself on moving and striking quickly, seizing territory
and establishing a beachhead for the forces arriving later. As
they
wait for the order to go north for "trigger time," Marines in Kuwait
spend off-hours reading books about their history. The corps has an
official reading list, with different books recommended for different
ranks. At the top of the list are "the commandant's favorites."
Wilkerson is reading "With the Old Breed" by E.B. Sledge, the story
of
Marines at Peleliu and Okinawa. Richard H. Kohn, military history
professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, said
the
Marines attract young men and women who want both a physical challenge
and to "define their identity with what has become almost a legendary
institution in American life."
All of the services, Kohn said, seem to "produce a special elan,
attitude and belief." But the Marine Corps, he said, "because of its
history and training seems to articulate and exhibit [it] more
noticeably than the other services."
The Marine force arrayed in the desert here includes veterans who served
during the liberation of Kuwait in 1991 and recruits a few months out
of
high school. Almost uniformly, the younger members say they are eager
to
see if they measure up to the heroes they've read about.
"Most of them have not been scared yet by combat," said Maj. Gen. Jan
Huly, top general at the Marines Corps recruit depot in San Diego.
"They're 20 feet tall and invincible. That's why the company commanders
have to keep telling them to wear their flak jackets, helmets and gas
masks. Most of them are itching to go out and fight someone."
Part of the Marines' fidelity to their history is a kind of enlightened
self-interest. As the smallest of the services, the Marines live with
an
institutional insecurity, a fear that unless the public keeps being
reminded of what the Marines have done for America, some politician
will
decide to fold the corps into the Army.
Comments allegedly made by President Truman, a World War I Army veteran,
about disbanding the Marines are repeated as if they were made
yesterday. "President Truman didn't like us," said one Marine here.
On
the other hand, Marines delight in telling how Marine Gen. Holland
"Howling Mad" Smith, put in charge of all U.S. ground forces at a
decisive World War II battle, Immediately fired the top Army general.
If their history makes the Marines feel special, it may also give some
the feeling of being a group apart, even estranged, from the American
public they serve. "In civilian life, we'd be castaways," said Sgt.
David Anderson, 30, of Hammond, La. "But in the Marine Corps, we all
click and come together. We're a brotherhood, just like the history
books say."
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