Guest Post: U.S. Marines, the Forever Tribe by Stan Coerr
I am watching a film clip from Vietnam.
Jack Laurence of CBS News, a very talented TV reporter and author of the magnificent memoir The Cat From Hue, was out in the jungle with a Marine rifle company.
Somehow a Marine from another unit was separated from his brothers, and this company had found him.
Laurence rolls tape, and approaches the company commander. This man is wearing filthy utilities. He is exhausted and thirty pounds underweight, with a cigarette hanging from the corner of his mouth. A man with things to do and the weight of hundreds of lives on his shoulders. A hard, intense man.
Laurence talks about the lost Marine, and asks: “Will you take care of this man?”
The Captain stares at Laurence as if he is insane, and says, as if it should be obvious: “He’s a Marine.”
Laurence: “What?”
Captain: “He’s a Marine. I’ll take care of him.”
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I am with Paddy Gough in a Cobra over 29 Palms in December 1992.
We are at one hundred feet, flying back from a mission. It is bitter cold on the desert floor, below freezing, and a dark, ugly cloud layer sits low on the sand.
A line of exhausted Marines below us is marching back to their camp after a week of training. They string out like ants, hundreds of them in the cold. They are bent under their equipment: heavy weapons, mortar tubes, ammunition, packs, helmets, flak jackets.
We fly in silence, watching them, until Paddy comes up on the intercom with me, and says quietly:
“This country does not know how lucky we are to have such men.”
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I am a seven-year-old boy, and my father is putting me to sleep.
I am sleeping in a Marine Corps-issue jungle hammock, which of course to a boy is the coolest thing ever.
I need something to read, so he disappears into the study and returns.
He hands me a book I read cover to cover and which I am holding right now: the 1962 Guidebook for Marines.
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I am giving a speech in El Cajon, California in July 2003.
I was one of the first people back from the invasion of Iraq, and I was therefore much in demand from local groups who wanted to hear about this campaign in Mesopotamia.
I was outdoors at a Fourth of July street festival, speaking to a crowd of several hundred people and telling them how magnificent our fighting force was, and what I had seen.
I told these people that their Marines were in the fight in the desert, winning, doing it right for the people back home, representing the best of who we are as a nation.
Standing far to the back of the crowd was a motorcycle gang. Huge, hairy guys, dozens of them, in beards and bandannas and wraparound sunglasses and leather and boots, leaning on their Harleys.
As I came off the stage, they came to me as a group. The first of them grabbed me and I now saw the EGA sewn onto his vest, right next to his Vietnam campaign patch.
He embraced me, tight, and said:
“Right on, brother. Right on.”
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Karl Marlantes was in the best position imaginable in 1967.
He was on a Rhodes Scholarship, comfortable in Oxford, immune from the Vietnam War and the vagaries of the draft. He was immersed in the world’s premier academic institution on a full ride, the goal of every serious college student.
But Marlantes had been to Marine Corps Officer Candidates School in 1964. He had been inducted into the tribe. And his brothers were at war. He says:
“I couldn’t go to a party without thinking of my Marine friends, terrified in the jungle while I was hanging onto my girlfriend’s warm body with one arm and holding a pint of bitter in the other. The one choice my conscience would not allow was to sit it out in college.
I pulled all my scholarship money from the bank…and Second Lieutenant Karl Marlantes USMCR reported for active duty. “
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Or from Phillip Caputo in 1961:
“I wanted to find in a commonplace world a chance to live heroically.
Having known nothing but security, comfort and peace, I hungered for danger, challenges and violence.
The Marine Corps was more than a branch of the armed services. It was a society unto itself, demanding total commitment to its doctrines and values. We were novitiates, and the rigorous training , administered by the high priests called drill instructors, was to be our ordeal of initiation.
At the end of the course, the DIs honored our survival by informing us that we had earned the right to be called Marines.”
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I earned that right, as did many of you. As did millions before us, and the millions to follow.
I feel no sadness about taking off the uniform for the last time. The Marine Corps does not care about me….nor should it. The organization will always be there, and it will always hone and harden the finest our country has to offer.
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