OPENING MOVES: Marines Gear Up For War
by Henry I. Shaw, Jr.
The Eve of War
On 1 September 1939, German armored columns and
attack aircraft crossed the Polish border on a broad front and World War
II began. Within days, most of Europe was deeply involved in the
conflict as nations took sides for and against Germany and its leader,
Adolph Hitler, according to their history, alliances, and self-interest.
Soviet Russia, a natural enemy of Germany's eastward expansion, became a
wary partner in Poland's quick defeat and subsequent partition in order
to maintain a buffer zone against the German advance. Inevitably,
however, after German successes in the west and the fall of France,
Holland, and Belgium, in 1940, Hitler attacked Russia, in 1941.
In the United States, a week after the fighting in
Poland started, President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared a limited
national emergency, a move which, among other measures, authorized the
recall to active duty of retired Armed Forces regulars. Even before this
declaration, in keeping with the temper of the times, the President also
stated that the country would remain neutral in the new European war.
During the next two years, however, the United States increasingly
shifted from a stance of public neutrality to one of preparation for
possible war and quite open support of the beleaguered nations allied
against Germany.
America could not concentrate its attention on Europe
alone in those eventful years, for another potential enemy dominated the
Far East. In September 1940, Japan became the third member, with Germany
and Italy, of the Axis powers. Japan had pursued its own program of
expansion in China and elsewhere in the 1930s which directly challenged
America's interests. Here too, in the Pacific arena, the neutral United
States was moving toward actions, political and economic, that could
lead to a clash with Japan.
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U.S.
Marines go ashore from Navy motor-sailers in the prewar era before the
advent of Andrew Higgins' landing craft. Department of Defense Photo (USN)
58920
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MajGen John A. Lejeune, 13th Commandant of the Marine
Corps, led the Corps in the 1920s, steadfastly emphasizing the
expeditionary role of Marines. Department of Defense Photo (USMC)
308342
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In this hectic world atmosphere, America began to
build its military strength. Shortly before Germany attacked Poland, at
mid-year 1939, the number of active duty servicemen stood at 333,473:
188,839 in the Army, 125,202 in the Navy, and 19,432 in the Marine
Corps. A year later, the overall strength was 458,365 and the number of
Marines was 28,345. By early summer of 1941, the Army had 1,801,101
soldiers on active duty, many of them National Guardsmen and Reservists,
but most of them men enlisted after Congress authorized a peacetime
draft. The Navy, also augmented by the recall of Reservists, had 269,023
men on its active rolls. There were 54,359 Marines serving on 1 July
1941, all the Reservists available and a steadily increasing number of
volunteers. Neither the Navy nor the Marine Corps had need for the draft
to fill their ranks.
The Marine Corps that grew in strength during 1939-41
was a Service oriented toward amphibious operations and expeditionary
duty. It also had a strong commitment to the Navy beyond its
amphibious/expeditionary role as it provided Marine detachments to guard
naval bases and on board capital ships throughout the world. Marine
aviation squadrons all Marine pilots were naval aviators and many
were carrier qualified reinforced the Navy's air arm.
Two decades of air and ground campaigns in the
Caribbean and Central America, the era of the "banana wars," had ended
in 1934 when the last Marines withdrew from Nicaragua, having policed
the election of a new government. With their departure, enough men
became available to have meaningful fleet landing exercises (FLEXs)
which tested doctrine, troops, and equipment in partnership with the
Navy. And the doctrine tested was both new and important.
Throughout the 1920s, when Major General Commandant
John A. Lejeune led the Corps, the doughty World War I commander of,
briefly, the renowned 4th Marine Brigade, and then its parent 2d
Infantry Division, had steadfastly emphasized the expeditionary role of
Marines. Speaking to the students and faculty of the Naval War College
in 1923, Lejeune said: "The maintenance, equipping, and training of its
expeditionary force so it will be in instant readiness to support the
Fleet in the event of War, I deem to be the most important Marine Corps
duty in time of peace." But the demands of that same expeditionary duty,
with Marines deployed in the Caribbean, in Central America, in the
Philippines, and in China stretched the Corps thin.
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MajGen Wendell C. Neville, 14th Commandant of the Marine
Corps, died after serving little more than a year in office. Neville
shared Lejeune's determination that the Marine Corps have a meaningful
role as an amphibious force trained for expeditionary use by the
Navy. Department of Defense Photo (USMC) 303062
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Existing doctrine for amphibious operations, both in
assault and defense, the focal point of wartime service by Marines, was
recognized as inadequate. All sorts of deficiencies existed, in
amphibious purpose, in shipping, in landing craft, in the areas of air
and naval gunfire support, and particularly in the methodology and
logistics of the highly complicated ship-to-shore movement of troops and
their supplies once ashore. The men who succeeded Lejeune as Major
General Commandant upon his retirement after two terms in office (eight
years) at the Corps' helm, Wendell C. "Buck" Neville, also a wartime
commander of the 4th Marine Brigade, Ben M. Fuller, who commanded a
brigade in Santo Domingo during the war, and John H. Russell, Jr., a
brigade commander in Haiti who then became America's High Commissioner
in that country for eight years, all shared Lejeune's determination that
the Marine Corps would have a meaningful role as an amphibious force
trained for expeditionary use by the Navy. Each man left his own mark
upon the Corps in an era of reduced appropriations and manpower as a
result of the Depression that plagued the United States during their
tenure.
Neville, who had been awarded the Medal of Honor for
his part in the fighting at Vera Cruz in 1914, unfortunately died after
serving little more than a year (1929-1930) as Commandant, but his
successors, Fuller (1930-1934) and Russell (1934-1936), both served to
age 64, then the mandatory retirement age for senior officers. All of
these Commandants, as Lejeune, were graduates of the U.S. Naval Academy
at Annapolis and had served two years as naval cadets on board warships
after graduation and before accepting commissions as Marine second
lieutenants. As a consequence, their understanding of the Navy was
pervasive as was their conviction that the Marine Corps and the Navy
were inseparable partners in amphibious operations. In this instance,
the Annapolis tie of the Navy and Marine Corps senior leaders, for
virtually all admirals of the time were Naval Academy classmates, was
beneficial to the Corps.
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Marines bring ashore a disassembled 75mm pack howitzer.
The pack howitzer replaced the French 75, which had served Marine
artillery from World War I. Marine Corps Historical Collection
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As his term as Commandant came to a close Ben Fuller
was able to effect a far-reaching change that John Russell was to carry
further into execution. In December 1933, with the approval of the
Secretary of the Navy, Fuller redesignated the existing Marine
expeditionary forces on both coasts as the Fleet Marine Force (FMF) to
be a type command of the U.S. Fleet. Building on the infantrymen of the
5th Marines at Quantico and those of the 6th Marines at San Diego, two
brigades came into being which were the precursors of the 1st and 2d
Marine Divisions of World War II. In keeping with the times, Commandant
Russell could point out the next year that he had only 3,000 Marines
available to man the FMF, but the situation would improve as Marines
returned from overseas stations.
MajGen Ben C. Fuller, Neville's successor in 1930, found
new roles and missions for the Corps as 15th Commandant. Marine Corps Historical
Collection
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The
16th Commandant of the Marine Corps, MajGen John H. Russell, was a
graduate of the Naval Academy, as Lejeune, Neville, and Fuller before
him, and close to Navy leaders because of their mutual Academy
experiences. Marine Corps Historical Collection
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The slowly building brigades and their attendant
squadrons of Marine aircraft, the only American troops with combat and
expeditionary experience beyond the trenches and battlefields of France,
came into being in a climate of change from the "old ways" of performing
their mission. At the Marine base at Quantico, Virginia, also the home
of advanced officer training for the Corps, a profound event had taken
place in November 1933 that would alter the course of the war to
come.
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