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Gazette Archive Articles

Humanity On Humanitarian Operations: How Much Violence Is Enough?

By LtCol John. R. Allen - Originally published February 1995

The recent commitment of Marines to duty at the migrant camps in Guantanamo-although classified as an operation other than war-placed a special premium on the warrior spirit and the mental preparation for conflict. This section discusses these essential attributes and how they can best be acquired and strengthened.

Lessons learned at Guantanamo by Marine security forces demonstrated the applicability of Marine training to operations other than war and the importance of knowing the 'enemy.'

The Capture Of Munda

By Capt Charles Mathieu, Jr. - Originally Published November 1943

Almost a year-to the day-after U. S. Marines captured Henderson Field on Guadalcanal, American forces seized Japanese-built Munda airfield on New Georgia. Actually the enemy had no chance to use Henderson Field as perfect timing took it away from them just a few days before it was scheduled to be completed. Once captured, the field remained in our control.

The Ethical Warrior and the Combat Mindset

By Jack E. Hoban & Joseph Shusko - Originally Published May 2012

Working through some of the tough questions

The Marine Corps Martial Arts Program (MCMAP) is a combatives system comprised of three synergistic disciplines: physical, mental, and character. The end state of the program is to make an ethical Marine warrior, committed to protect the life of self and others - all others, killing only when necessary to protect life. 

The Road to Hell: Training Management Skills Versus Policy

By Maj. Gregory A. Thiele

Originally published in the November 2010 Marine Corps Gazette

As an instructor at the Marine Corps’ Expeditionary Warfare School, I have heard numerous senior officers express their concern to the students that Marine leaders at every level have either lost or never acquired training management skills. 

Developing The Ethical Marine Warrior

By Jack E. Hoban - Originally Published June 2010

What exactly are we talking about?

The Marine Corps Martial Arts Program (MCMAP) is often described as having three synergistìc aspects - physical, mental, and moral. The Director, retired Marine LtCoi Joseph C. Shusko, remains adamant, however, that the primary end state of the training is an ethical Marine warrior.

 

John A. Lejeune: True Soldier

THE BOMBARDMENT BEGAN AT 0100, 12 SEPTEMBER 1918. For nine days soldiers and Marines of the 2nd Division of American regulars had hidden in French woods to shiver in icy rain and curse the mud and slime and stench of war on the western front.

Now their hour was at hand. As thousands of cannon threw lethal surprise at the entrenched enemy, the American units formed into long columns and with 12 other divisions-some 300,000 men-began the march forward into the black night.

The Ethical Marine Warrior

By Jack E. Hoban - Originally Published September 2007

Achieving a higher standard

With the publication of Field Manual 3-24, Counterinsurgency (COIN), the U.S. military is addressing the need for broader and more formal tactics and strategies to address irregular threats. At the grassroots level, new methodologies are being developed to prepare individual Marines to perform COIN operations...

The Battle Of Fonte Hill, Guam, 25-26 July 1944

By Capt Mark A Kiehle - 0riginally published July 2003

By 1944 the tide of war had turned firmly against the Japanese. The U.S. and Allied forces steadily pushed the Japanese military back at all points across the Pacific. To counter this onslaught the Japanese high command reinforced Japanese held islands to create a defensive ring around the Japanese home islands. To continue reading, please click here.

Training And Education: Combined Arms Applied To Marine Scout/Snipers

By Scott E. Ukeiley - Originally Published Feb. 2002

Our very center of gravity during peacetime is training and education. If our peacetime priority ever shifts to anything other than the training and education of our Marines, then we, the current leadership, have failed our Nation's special trust and confidence to train to fight on a moment's notice and win our Nation's battles...

Decisive Engagement In Scout Versus Sniper... Finally

By Scott E. Ukeiley - Originally Published Aug. 2002

The Marine scout/sniper program has undergone a complete overhaul in recent years. The introduction of the military occupational specialty 0203 ground intelligence officer, rewriting of programs of instruction (POIs) for officer and enlisted courses, and development of new weapons and optics has resulted in an infantry battalion scout/sniper platoon (SSP) that is fundamentally different than what it was even 5 years ago...