The Marine Corps has been
renowned for being a tough fighting force with certain skill sets that make it
unique. Individual Marines have
traditionally been considered tougher, more formidable fighters than Army
soldiers – at least, if you ask a Marine.
The Corps has mastered (and now forgotten) skills such as amphibious
assaults that the Army can’t perform.
However, times have changed. The
effects of social experimentation (women in service), technological emphasis (digital
and electronic capabilities over close combat), and doctrinal changes (aviation
combat emphasis and tactical mobility have trumped brute force combat) have
significantly altered the characteristics of the “ideal” individual Marine or,
at least, the perceived requirements.
Similarly, the Corps as a whole has changed.
For example, in WWII, women
could not have passed the Marine Corps training program and, even if they
could, would have been an absolute detriment in the field being unable to
perform the basic activities such as climbing over the side of an attack
transport in full gear, humping a battlefield load of equipment, carrying
injured comrades to safety, etc. Now,
though, with the “gentling” of the Marine training program, gender norming, and
the previously mentioned trends, women are deemed capable of serving, including
front line combat. This is not a post
about women in service/combat. I’m
merely illustrating one of the ways in which the Corps has changed over time. The Marines are no longer the Few, the Proud,
the Marines. They are now an equal
opportunity, social organization that is the farthest thing from exclusive or
unique.
As a whole, the Corps has
moved away from the concept of frontal beach assaults in favor of inland,
airborne assaults. That’s fine (well, no
it isn’t – a word or two on that, below) except for the fact that we have
another group that does that and, at the moment, does it better – the Army. In fact, the Army is aggressively moving to
conduct operations from Navy ships and is aligning their future platform
acquisitions with naval requirements.
The Corps is also moving
away from the heavy end of the combat spectrum with recent announcements that
tanks and artillery will be cut along with personnel.
The Corps lacks a modern,
effective amphibious battle vehicle and has spent many years dithering over the
AAV replacement. They’re no closer to an
answer now than they were when they began the ill-fated EFV program.
We’re left with a Marine
Corps that is currently only capable of short duration, small, light infantry
operations. The entire aviation assault
concept that the Corps seems to be moving towards has some potentially serious
weak points such as the survivability of the MV-22 and helos in an inland,
opposed scenario and the questionable ability to adequately resupply an inland
assault.
Further, the Corps’ apparent
movement towards an expeditionary air force role is logistically and tactically
suspect, at best. They seem to want to
take part in the high end, aerial combat, distributed lethality type of war
that so many of our professional warriors seem to believe, incorrectly, will be
the future of combat. The problem with
this, aside from the incorrect nature of the very concept, is that that is not
the Corps’ fight. That is not their job.
That is not their war. We have a very high tech Air Force whose job
it is to do that. We have a Navy whose
job, partially, is to do that. The
Marines have another job, though they seem to have forgotten what it is.
Finally, the Marine’s main
unique attribute, their ability to execute an amphibious assault is highly
suspect, now, from both a doctrinal and strategic point of view.
Doctrinally, the Marines
cannot execute an amphibious assault.
They lack the landing craft to transport troops from 25-50 miles
offshore to the beach in fighting condition.
They lack the ability to put heavy firepower ashore with the initial
wave, when it is most needed. In short,
the Marines have no ability to execute an opposed landing against a peer. They have no ability to execute their own
doctrine.
Strategically, the need for
amphibious assaults against foreseeable enemies over the foreseeable future is
highly suspect. Consider the likely
cases:
The overall strategic
likelihood of amphibious assaults is very low for the foreseeable future. Combined with the inability to actually
conduct an assault, I see very little need for such a capability.
So, given the preceding, what
is it that the Marines bring to the table that the Army and Air Force don’t
already have? The unfortunate answer is
less and less, bordering on nothing.
Having posed the question
and acknowledged the disappointing answer, let’s turn our attention to what the
answer ought to be.
The Marines have two primary
missions:
- Conduct short duration, high intensity, inland
actions (raids, rescues, diversions, disruptions, first response, etc.).
- Seize entry points into enemy territory for
follow on forces. This includes
port seizure and landing points (beach or near-shore airfields).
It’s that simple. It’s that simple and yet the Marine’s have
lost their focus. It’s that simple and
yet the Marines are floundering.
Everything the Marines do
and buy should be run through the filter of “will it support or enhance the
primary missions”? If so, do it. If not, don’t. It’s that simple.
Now let’s look a bit closer
at the primary missions and what’s needed to accomplish them.
First response, almost by definition, will be a crisis that was unanticipated to some
extent and likely be a situation where we are overmatched locally. Responding to such a situation will require
the Marines to fight above their weight.
They’ll have to hit hard and be able to survive on a battlefield that is
not ideal and probably under unfriendly skies.
What will a Marine force need to accomplish this? They’ll need as much transportable heavy firepower
as possible (an M! Abrams provides firepower and survivability but currently
presents a transport challenge). A
medium weight, heavy gun vehicle may be needed.
Possibly something along the lines of the M551 Sheridan or M50
Ontos. Of course, the preferred solution
would be to figure out how to transport M1 Abrams tanks! In addition to tanks of whatever sort,
they’ll need artillery and as much of it as they can get along with mortars of
all sizes, including, ideally, vehicle mounted, heavy mortars (there’s that
transport issue again).
Hand in hand with firepower
is survivability. It does no good to
show up on the battlefield and be wiped out in short order. Survivability requires armor and self-defense
weapons. The current fascination with,
and trend towards, light “jeeps” for mobility is a surefire recipe for defeat
especially if one has to fight under unfriendly skies.
Fighting under unfriendly
skies requires a robust anti-air (AAW) capability which the Marines (and Army,
to be fair) have all but abandoned under the decades long belief that the US would always rule the skies. We desperately need mobile AAW platforms,
both missile and gun (along the lines of the ubiquitous Soviet ZSU).
Entry point seizure is the other key Marine mission.
The Marines have one unique feature that mobile Army units lack and that
is ships – large, amphibious ships loaded with many tons of heavy equipment,
munitions, and general supplies. The
amphibious ships represent the kind of equipment supply and reserves that Army
airborne units just can’t match. The
ships are also mobile and are capable of bringing those supplies to the point
of action. The ships allow the Marines
to operate aviation assets in close proximity to the point of battle unlike Air
Force assets that must return to distant bases between missions thus drastically
reducing sortie rates.
Thus, the distinguishing
feature of the Marines is the ability to bring large amounts of heavy equipment
to bear on far distant battlefields via ship based transport.
The ability to bring large
amounts of tanks, combat engineer vehicles, artillery, and other heavy
equipment to a battle from nearby ships gives the Marines a decisive, hard-hitting
capability that the Army-Air Force combination can’t match. Unfortunately, that advantage is being
squandered by ill-advised changes in direction and doctrine (expeditionary air
force, for example, or divestiture of tanks and artillery) and failure to
develop and procure the requisite supporting equipment (armored, heavy
transport connectors, for example, or LSTs, or armored combat/amphibious
vehicles).
Port seizure is a special skill set that will be urgently required and has been utterly neglected. It is quite likely impossible to sustain an invasion without access to a port facility for unloading, especially given our lack of large connectors and the elimination of LSTs. Port seizure will be critical. However, the doctrine, operations, and tactics required for port seizure and defense are radically different from a beach assault. Port seizure will require heavy C-RAM defenses, in-port AAW defenses, new means to actually get ashore (an AAV can't climb a pier, for example), new tactics for port defense since most ports are integrated with large urban cities (urban warfare raises its ugly head), among other unique challenges and needs. Only the Marines can do this.
Port seizure is a special skill set that will be urgently required and has been utterly neglected. It is quite likely impossible to sustain an invasion without access to a port facility for unloading, especially given our lack of large connectors and the elimination of LSTs. Port seizure will be critical. However, the doctrine, operations, and tactics required for port seizure and defense are radically different from a beach assault. Port seizure will require heavy C-RAM defenses, in-port AAW defenses, new means to actually get ashore (an AAV can't climb a pier, for example), new tactics for port defense since most ports are integrated with large urban cities (urban warfare raises its ugly head), among other unique challenges and needs. Only the Marines can do this.
The Corps needs to take a
step back, refocus on its core missions, re-acknowledge its strengths, and
redirect its development, training, doctrine, and procurement efforts towards
those strengths.
Unfortunately, the Marines
have all but officially abandoned one of their core missons, entry point
seizure, and have seriously jeopardized their other core mission, first
response, by downgrading their hitting power from their traditional middle
weight status to light weight. This is
not just my opinion. Here’s what Lt.
Gen. Gary Thomas, deputy commandant for programs and resources, had to say to a
Congressional panel.
“We are a light general purpose force. One of the
things that gives the Marine Corps an advantage on the battlefield is its
mobility and its fires. Much of that comes from aviation.”
Well, there it is. I’ve been saying for years that the Marines
have abandoned their core and now top Marine leadership is confirming that, on
the record, to Congress.
A light general purpose
force is fine for peacekeeping and low end skirmishes but utterly useless for
executing the Marine’s core missions. A
light general purpose force, by definition, is not specialized for anything
and, therefore, not highly capable at any given task. This is utterly wrong. They are supposed to be medium weight,
striving to be as heavy as they can be given transport constraints, specialists
in first response and entry point seizure.
They should not be flitting around the battlefield in ultra lightweight
jeeps (what is an airburst munition going to do to the troops packed on an open
jeep?) or soaring over the battlefield in $150M aircraft that have a 50%
readiness rate on a good day and require exquisite maintenance and care from
highly trained factory technicians dressed in surgical garb.
In summary, what do the
Marines bring to the table that we don’t already have? Little or nothing.
I know the Corps has a
strong Congressional lobby but if they don’t wake up soon, the Army is going to
push them right out of a job.
The Marines need to get back
to being the toughest, nastiest fighting force on the planet (yes, that means completely
dumping women from the Corps and getting rid of the guys who don’t even
outweigh their packs). A Marine carries
his rifle in one hand and fires a mortar in the other without bothering to set
it on the ground like some Army puke.
The Marines need to focus on
their two core missions. The days of Hollywood practice landings for the sake of public relations photo ops need to
disappear. The Marines need to focus on
brutal raids, desperate defenses, and entry point seizure. If Marines aren’t getting hurt during
exercises then they aren’t training the right way.
The Marines need to bring
something unique and valuable to the table or fold up and go away. There is no middle ground. Hey, Marine Corps, that sound you hear behind
you is the Army sniffing at your butt.
Time to wake up!
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(1)USNI News website, “Lawmaker
Worries Marine Corps Investing Too Heavily In Aviation Over Ground Vehicles”,
Megan Eckstein, 10-Mar-2017 ,