Guest Post: U.S. Marines, the Forever Tribe by Stan Coerr
[by Mark Safranski, a.k.a. “zen“]

We at ZP would like to thank Colonel Stan Coerr for his permission to reprint this essay, written on the eve of his retirement last July, after a quarter century of of military service in the Marine Corps Reserve and on active duty.
Stan Coerr is the author of Rubicon: the Poetry of War and is a retired Colonel in the Marine Corps Reserve and works in the federal civil service. He holds degrees from Duke, Harvard and the Naval War College, has been a fellow at MIT and Stanford, and was recently accepted to begin work on a doctorate at Oxford. He is finishing a book on his time in Iraq, and his next book will be on the life and work of Dr. Bernard Fall.
The U.S. Marines, America’s Forever Tribe
by Stan Coerr
Today is my last day in the uniform of the United States Marines.
I write this not as a farewell. Rather, this is a reflection on this tribe of which I am a part, and which is inside me forever.
What I remember of twenty- five years inside this brotherhood are vignettes: stories that indicate who we are and why we devote our lives to an organization such as this.
Some happened to me; others I read or saw. All describe who we are as Marines.
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What everyone looking in from the outside must realize is that Marines are instant brothers, no matter the situation, no matter whether they have met before that moment.
The Marines are a tribe.
We have our own language, culture, mores and idiomatic shorthand communication.
We have our own distinctive clothing. We cut our hair in a distinctive way.
We paint our bodies with unique tribal markings.
We undergo rites of passage to turn boys into men, the men we need to further the greater good of us all.
We hand down legends of those who went before, who fell in battle, who did great and heroic things.
We sing songs to celebrate them; we memorize what they did.
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We listen to the wisdom of the tribal elders, and we turn to them for decisions and guidance.
Ken Schwenke and Mike Dossett are 180 degrees out from one another in style, but those of us fortunate enough to be Marine Options at NROTC Duke, a team forty strong in the mid to late 1980s, to this day benefit from the nurturing and guidance and demanding perfection of those two men.
Bob Dobson was an exceptional battalion commander, a very deep thinker and a man who knew how to train Marines.
I was fortunate to work beneath the finest general officers the Marine Corps can produce. I worked for George Trautman when he was both a Lieutenant Colonel and a Lieutenant General, and his relentless, driving intellect and fearsome demand for detail, analysis and good decisions sharpened me in ways I am still discovering.
I was lucky enough to serve beneath Generals Mattis, Conway and Dunford, in both peace and war, and from when they were Colonels to their positions as four-star generals.
The nation is fortunate that men such as these have set us on the course we follow today.
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The Marine Corps is people, and it is stories.
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I am marching a platoon down the streets of New Orleans during the Mardi Gras parades in 1989, as leader of the drill team.
I was to the side of the team as they marched, so I was right next to the screaming crowds. Tens of thousands of people lined the streets, screaming and shrieking and cheering.
Marine options in college wear navy uniforms but Marine Corps eagle, globe and anchor insignia.
As we marched through the throngs, one man in the crowd, right next to me, saw my EGA and said simply, in a conversational voice and just to me:
“Get it, Marines.”
Never saw him, never spoke to him.
A brother.
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I check in to Bob Dobson’s rifle battalion in Twentynine Palms, California in 1994.
Then-Colonel Jim Mattis, the Seventh Marines regimental commander, called for me to come see him. I was not only just a brand-new Captain, but I was an aviator in an infantry regiment: I was not a key player.
Colonel Mattis took his phone off the hook, closed his office door and spent over an hour, just with me, telling me his warfighting philosophy, vision, goals and expectations. He told me how he saw us fighting – and where – and how he was getting us ready to do just that.
America knows him as the caricature: Mad Dog Mattis. Those of us who served with him know that he is a gifted, caring, warfighting general, and the finest of tribal elders.
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