The Intellectual Grunt – Part One

By Gene E. Blanton, who is currently embedded with the Multi-National Forces West Training Center in Habbaniyah. Support for Gene’s reporting was provided by Public Multimedia Inc.

Counterinsurgency is not just thinking man’s warfare-it is the graduate level of war.

Special Forces Officer in Iraq, 2005

COUNTERINSURGENCY

Marine Corps Warfighting Publication 3-33.5

CAMP HABBANIYAH, AL ANBAR PROVINCE, IRAQ: According to Mr. Webster – the guy that wrote the dictionary – an intellectual is one who is “engaged in activity requiring the creative use of the intellect.” From the Commanding Officer to the newest Marine fresh out of the School of Infantry, today’s fight demands each Marine in the unit be an “intellectual grunt” who can think on his feet. Nothing could better describe the job of the infantrymen of 3rd Battalion 6th Marines (3/6) in Al Anbar Province.

The normal mission of a United States Marine Corps infantry unit is “to locate, close with, and destroy the enemy by fire and maneuver, or repel the enemy’s assault by fire and close combat.” Make no mistake the Marines of 3/6 know how to do just that.

The 3/6 earned the title “Teufelhunden” from their German opponents in the Argonne Forest during World War I, thus paving the way for all future generations of Marines to carry the “devil dog” moniker.

From the battlefields of World War I to bloody fights of the Pacific in such places as Tarawa and Okinawa and previous deployments to Afghanistan and Iraq, these “devil dogs” are professionals at locating, closing with and destroying the enemy.

You don’t earn the title “devil dog” by winning hearts and minds.

Now the Marines of 3/6 are in a different fight. Rather than regular warfare against state sponsored forces like the one fought on the initial march up to Baghdad, the Marines are fighting a counterinsurgency, also know as COIN. COIN is not a new phenomenon to Marines.

Recently, I had the privilege to spend two days with Lieutenant Colonel James M. McGrath, Commanding Officer of 3rd Battalion 6th Marines and the men of his Jump Platoon has he visited the combat outposts in his battle space between Fallujah and Ramadi.

LtCol. McGrath took an unusual route into the Corps having first served in the Navy’s submarine force as an enlisted guy. He was then appointed to the Naval Academy where he earned a degree in mathematics.

According to LtCol. McGrath, the insurgency in Al Anbar is fought in four distinctive elements:

Disruption. Recent operations such as Operation North Forge and Operation River Walk, the Marines of 3/6, “denied the enemy this terrain and disrupted his ability to plan and equip to target both the Coalition Forces and the Iraqi Security Forces in and around the city of Fallujah,” said LtCol. McGrath. “Disruption is only until you get sufficient combat power.”

Permanent Persistent Presence. “When you get sufficient combat power, you go for permanent persistent presence,” LtCol. McGrath noted. “Then you start your patrol base ops. You stake out your piece of the ground and say, ‘Hi, I’m your new neighbor and I’m staying.'”

Transition. “That starts to develop the security situation pretty significantly to a point where you can think transition to the ISF (Iraqi Security Forces) be it the IA (Iraqi Army) or the IP (Iraqi Police),” said LtCol. McGrath. The transition element involves joint operations and training with the ISF.

Handover. As we toured the battle space, I saw areas totally controlled by the Iraqi Army and the Iraqi Police. In areas where there were no police forces, the Marines have helped stand up “neighborhood watch” units, “indigenous forces” made up of the locals who know who the bad guys are.

There are nuances unique to each area, village and neighborhood, however the Marines have developed a model that they believe can be franchised throughout the country.

In the coming dispatches, we will take a look at the challenges faced and how these “intellectual grunts” are working tirelessly toward the ultimate goal – handover.

Gene Blanton is a Marine veteran and the author of the soon to be released book, “Semper Fidelis Leadership: From The Corps To The Corporation.”

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6 Comments

  • BenM says:

    It sounds like pretty fsncy thinking, but when the Marines pull-out, the Enemy kills the feeble good-guys and destroy whatever good was accomplished. Sustainability is nice. Without it, what’s the point?

  • Leonard Krank says:

    Withdrawel from Iraq will not be enough according to Al Queda.
    http://www.breitbart.com/article.php?id=D8PEL9O00&show_article=1&cat=0
    BenM, what is your suggestion? Surrender, withdraw support for Israel? Convert to Islam? Cower under a rock?

  • danni says:

    BenM: “feeble good guys”? I think you might have mistaken in calling the IP or the IA “feeble” good guys. They have been trained by these Marines and operate in the same manner the Marines have been for years in those areas.
    That is the whole point of the mission of transition – to train and ready these Iraqi forces (police and military) to take over and maintain control of these areas, which is being done and has already been done in many Anbar cities.

  • David M says:

    Trackbacked by The Thunder Run – Web Reconnaissance for 05/30/2007
    A short recon of what’s out there that might draw your attention.

  • Badger 6 says:

    The Iraqi Police and Iraqi Army in the 3/6 Marines area are not “feeble good guys.” They are a professional disciplined force that grows everyday. I have seen them in action.

  • RHYNO says:

    good strategy, establishing a presence and staying, meeting with community leaders, etc. the 1 thing that troubles me is how many are A.Q. or other insurgent “plants”? this is reality. the Marines of 3/6 are doing an outstanding job. counter-insurgency skills should be mandatory for ALL ground pounders, Army and Marines.

Iraq

Islamic state

Syria

Aqap

Al shabaab

Boko Haram

Isis