By Daniel
E. Sims
GySgt, USMC (Ret.)
Ask a Marine what's so special about the Marines and the answer
would be "esprit de corps", an unhelpful French phrase that means
exactly what it looks like - the spirit of the Corps. But what is
that spirit, and where does it come from?
The Marine Corps is the only branch of the U.S. armed forces that
recruits people specifically to fight. The Army emphasizes personal
development (an army of one), the Navy promises fun (let the journey
begin), and the Air Force offers security (it's a great way of
life). Missing from all of these advertisements is the hard fact
that it is a soldier's lot to suffer and perhaps to die for his
people, and to take lives at the risk of his own. Even the thematic
music of the services reflects this evasion. The Army's Caisson Song
describes a pleasant country outing over hill and dale, lacking only
a picnic basket. Anchors Aweigh, the Navy's celebration of the joys
of sailing, could have been penned by Jimmy Buffet. The Air Force
song is a lyric poem of blue skies and engine thrust. All is joyful
and invigorating, and safe. There are no landmines in the dales nor
snipers behind the hills, no submarines or cruise missiles threaten
the ocean jaunt, no bandits are lurking in the wild blue yonder.
The
Marines’ Hymn, by contrast, is all combat. We fight our country's
battles, first to fight for right and freedom, we have fought in
every clime and place where we could take a gun, in many a strife
we've fought for life.
The choice is made clear. You may join the Army to go to adventure
training, or join the Navy to go to Bangkok, or join the Air Force
to go to computer school. You join the Marines to go to war.
But the mere act of signing the enlistment contract confers no
status in the Corps. The Army recruit is told from his first minute
in uniform that "you're in the Army now, soldier". Navy and Air
Force enlistees are sailors or airmen as soon as they get off the
bus at the training center. The new arrival at Marine Corps boot
camp is called recruit, or private, or worse (much worse), but not
Marine. Not yet; maybe not ever. He or she must earn the right to
claim the title, and failure returns you to civilian life without
hesitation or ceremony.
My recruit platoon, Platoon 2210 at San Diego, California, trained
from October through December of 1968. In Vietnam the Marines were
taking two hundred casualties a week, and the major rainy season
operation, Meade River, had not even begun. Yet our drill
instructors had no qualms about winnowing out almost a quarter of
their 112 recruits, graduating eighty-one. Note that this was post-
enlistment attrition; every one of those who were dropped had been
passed by the recruiters as fit for service. But they failed the
test of boot camp, not necessarily for physical reasons (at least
two were outstanding high-school athletes for whom the calisthenics
and running were child's play). The cause of their failure was not
in the biceps nor the legs, but in the spirit. They had lacked the
will to endure the mental and emotional strain, so they would not be
Marines. Heavy commitments and high casualties notwithstanding, the
Corps reserves the right to pick and choose.
But the war had touched boot camp in one way. The normal twelve-week
course of training was shortened to eight weeks. Deprived of a third
of their training time, our drill instructors hurried over, or
dropped completely, those classes without direct relevance to
Vietnam. Chemical warfare training was abandoned. Swimming classes
shrank to a single familiarization session. Even hand-to-hand combat
was skimped. Three things only remained inviolate: close order
drill, the ultimate discipline builder; marksmanship training, the
heart of combat effectiveness; and classes on the history, customs
and traditions of the Corps.
History classes in boot camp? Stop a soldier on the street and ask
him to name a battle of World War One. Pick a sailor at random to
describe the epic fight of the Bon Homme Richard. Everyone has heard
of McGuire Air Force Base, so ask any airman who Major Thomas B.
McGuire was, and why he is so commemorated. I am not carping, and
there is no sneer in this criticism. All of the services have
glorious traditions, but no one teaches the young soldier, sailor or
airman what his uniform means and why he should be proud to wear it.
But ask a Marine about World War One, and you will hear of the wheat
field at Belleau Wood and the courage of the Fourth Marine Brigade.
Faced with an enemy of superior numbers entrenched in tangled forest
undergrowth, the Marines received an order to attack that even the
charitable cannot call ill-advised. It was insane. Artillery support
was absent and air support hadn't been invented yet, so the Brigade
charged German machine guns with only bayonets, grenades and
indomitable fighting spirit. A bandy-legged little barrel of a
gunnery sergeant, Daniel J. Daly, rallied his company with a shout.
"Come on, you sons a bitches! Do you want to live forever?" He took
out three of those machine guns himself, and they would have given
him the Medal of Honor except for a technicality. He already had two
of them. French liaison officers, hardened though they were by four
years of trench bound slaughter, were shocked as the Marines charged
across the open wheat field under a blazing sun and directly into
enemy fire. Their action was so anachronistic on a twentieth-century
battlefield that they might as well have been swinging cutlasses.
But the enemy was only human; they couldn't stand up to this. So the
Marines took Belleau Wood.
Every Marine knows this story, and dozens more. We are taught them
in boot camp as a regular part of the curriculum. Every Marine will
always be taught them. You can learn to don a gas mask anytime, even
on the plane en route to the war zone, but before you can wear the
emblem and claim the title you must know of the Marines who made
that emblem and title meaningful. So long as you can march and shoot
and revere the legacy of the Corps, you can take your place in the
line.
And that line is unified in spirit as in purpose. A soldier wears
branch of service insignia on his collar, and metal shoulder pins
and cloth sleeve patches to identify his unit. Sailors wear a rating
badge that identifies what they do for the Navy. Marines wear only
the eagle, globe and anchor, together with personal ribbons and
their cherished marksmanship badges. There is nothing on a Marine's
uniform to indicate what he or she does, nor (except for the 5th and
6th Regiments who wear a French fourragere for Belleau Wood) what
unit the Marine belongs to. You cannot tell by looking at a Marine
whether you are seeing a truck driver, a computer programmer, or a
machine gunner. The Corps explains this as a security measure to
conceal the identity and location of units, but the Marines penchant
for publicity makes that the least likely of explanations. No, the
Marine is amorphous, even anonymous (we finally agreed to wear
nametags only in 1992), by conscious design. Every Marine is a
rifleman first and foremost, a Marine first, last and always. You
may serve a four-year enlistment or even a twenty-year career
without seeing action, but if the word is given you'll charge across
that wheat field. Whether a Marine has been schooled in automated
supply, or automotive mechanics, or aviation electronics, is
immaterial. Those things are secondary - the Corps does them because
it must. The modern battle requires the technical appliances, and
since the enemy has them, so do we. But no Marine boasts mastery of
them. Our pride is in our marksmanship, our discipline, and our
membership in a fraternity of courage and sacrifice.
"For the honor of the fallen, for the glory of the dead", Edgar
Guest wrote of Belleau Wood, "the living line of courage kept the
faith and moved ahead." They are all gone now, those Marines who
made a French farmer's little wheat field into one of the most
enduring of Marine Corps legends. Many of them did not survive the
day, and eight long decades have claimed the rest. But their action
has made them immortal. The Corps remembers them and honors what
they did, and so they live forever. Dan Daly's shouted challenge
takes on its true meaning - if you hide in the trenches you may
survive for now, but someday you will die and no one will care. If
you charge the guns you may die in the next two minutes, but you
will be one of the immortals. All Marines die, in the red flash of
battle or the white cold of the nursing home. In the vigor of youth
or the infirmity of age all will eventually die, but the Marine
Corps lives on. Every Marine who ever lived is living still, in the
Marines who claim the title today. It is that sense of belonging to
something that will outlive your own mortality that gives people a
light to live by and a flame to mark their passing.
Marines call it esprit de corps.