Two Marine Corps
by
William S. Lind
by William S. Lind
Since
sometime before Caesar was a lance corporal, the United States Marine
Corps’ greatest fear has been becoming "a second land army."
It has long believed that if the country perceived it had two armies,
it would require one to go away, and that one would be the Marine
Corps. It is therefore ironic that the United States now finds itself
with not one, but two Marine Corps, and the final result may be
that both disappear.
Almost
any Marine knows the two Marine Corps of which I speak. One is the
heir of the maneuver warfare movement of the 1970s and 80s, of Al
Gray and Warfighting, of free play training, officer education
focused on how to think, not what to do, of the belief that the
highest goal of all Marines is winning in combat with the smallest
possible losses. This is the Marine Corps that led the advance to
Baghdad in the first phase of the ongoing war in Iraq. It is also
the Marine Corps that recently "fought smart" in Fallujah
by not taking the city.
The
other Marine Corps’ highest goal is programs, money and bureaucratic
success "inside the Beltway." Its priorities are absurdities
such as the MV-22 "Albatross" and reviving the 1990s "Sea
Worm" project under the label "distributed operations,"
which are referred to openly at Quantico as "putting lipstick
on a pig." This Marine Corps is anti-intellectual, sees the
First Generation culture of order as sacred, believes that sufficient
rank justifies any idiot and regards politics, not combat, as the
"real world."
Regrettably,
in the war between these two Marine Corps, the second one is winning.
I recently encountered a horrifying example of its success at the
Marine Corps Command & Staff School at Quantico. At the end
of this academic year, the Command & Staff faculty simply got
rid of 250 copies of Martin van Creveld’s superb book, Fighting
Power. This book, which lays out the fundamental
difference between the Second Generation U.S. Army in World
War II and the Third Generation Wehrmacht, is one of the seven books
of "the canon," the readings that take you from the First
Generation into the Fourth. It should be required reading for every
Marine Corps and Army officer.
When
I asked someone associated with Command & Staff how such a thing
could be done, he replied that the faculty has decided it "doesn’t
like" van Creveld. This is similar to a band of Hottentots
deciding they "don’t like" Queen Victoria. Martin van
Creveld is perhaps the most perceptive military historian now writing.
But in the end, the books went; future generations of students at
Command & Staff won’t have them.
A
friend who attended the last Marine Corps General Officers’ conference
reported the same division between the two Marine Corps. The officers
from the field, he said, had completely different concerns from
those stationed in Washington. They were ships passing in the night.
But it is the interests of the Washington Marine Corps, not those
in the field, that determine Marine Corps policy. And that policy
is affected little, if at all, by the two wars in which Marines
are now fighting.
Throughout
my years as a Senate staffer, the Marine Corps’ clout on Capitol
Hill was envied by the other services. The Marine Corps then had
little money and not much interest in programs. Its message to Congress
and to the American public was, "We’re not like the other services.
We aren’t about money and stuff. We’re about war." That message
brought the Corps unrivalled public and political support.
In
the mid-1990s, the Marine Corps changed its message and, without
realizing what it was doing, abandoned its successful grand strategy
for survival. The new message became, "We are just like the
other services. We too are now about money and programs." And
that new message is what now dominates Headquarters Marine Corps
and Quantico. Thinking about war is out; money and stuff is in.
In effect, the Marine Corps has sat down at the highest-stakes poker
game in the world, American defense politics, with 25 cents in its
pocket. It simply cannot compete with the Army, Navy or Air Force
at buying Congressional and public support. But it is determined
to try.
If
the dumb (and increasingly corrupt) "Washington" Marine
Corps finally triumphs over the smart, Warfighting Marine
Corps, in the end both will disappear. And that will be a shame,
because the smart Marine Corps, Al Gray’s Marine Corps, really had
something going. It was on its way to becoming the first American
Third Generation armed service.
Maybe
Martin van Creveld’s next book should be The Rise and Decline
of the United States Marine Corps.
June
5, 2004
William
Lind [send him mail]
is Director of the Center for Cultural Conservatism at the Free
Congress Foundation.
Copyright
© 2004 William S. Lind
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