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thedrifter
07-05-04, 06:00 AM
Newhouse News Service
July 1, 2004
Story spurs Marine probe
By David Wood

The Marine Corps, spurred by a feature story on boot camp written by a
Newhouse News Service reporter who recently enlisted, has opened an
investigation into possible violations of policy by drill instructors.


The reputation of the Marines' boot camp at Parris Island, S.C., is
legendarily tough. Nonetheless, its drill instructors, or DIs, operate
under a code of conduct that prohibits "degrading language" and abusive or
humiliating treatment of recruits. Regulations strictly govern conditions
under which drill instructors can "drop" recruits for push-ups or
physically touch them.
Bill Cahir, 35, Washington correspondent for the Times, enlisted as a
reservist last fall and completed boot camp at Parris Island, graduating
as a private first class this spring.
In a feature story written for Newhouse News Service, Cahir recounted an
instance during boot camp in which a DI pushed a rifle against his
forehead, pinning Cahir back against his bunk, and screamed profanities at
him.
But assessing the incidents, Cahir wrote of the DIs, "I admired their
toughness."
Cahir did not name any drill instructors in his story and said he declined
to name them in an interview Tuesday with an investigator.
At three points during his 13 weeks of boot camp, Cahir wrote, he signed
paperwork certifying that the DIs had not abused him verbally or
physically: "I did not believe they had. ... It was a fighting man's
world. The DIs thrived in it. They had earned their stripes, and they were
preparing us for ours."
The Marines took a different view.
"Any time there is an allegation, we have a responsibility to look at it,"
said Maj. Kenneth D. White, a Marine Corps spokesman at Parris Island.
"People enlist in the Marine Corps with a certain amount of trust and
confidence that we are going to take care of them."
The Marine Corps learned of Cahir's account when Cahir, in an effort to
obtain appropriate photographs to accompany the story, sent an unedited
early draft to the public affairs office at Parris Island.
According to the Marine Corps drill instructor's manual, any allegation of
abuse triggers an automatic investigation run under military law by an
independent officer.
White said potential sanctions range from reassignment to suspension to
prosecution under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. In early June, he
pointed out, three drill instructors were relieved of duty pending the
outcome of an investigation of an incident in which a dozen recruits were
hospitalized for dehydration and severe muscle fatigue.
According to the Marine Corps manual, recruits learn to become combat
Marines by dealing with boot camp stress "produced initially by fear of
the unknown." As the recruits are led through increasingly difficult
physical challenges and unrelenting mental pressure, stress "comes from
fear of failure," the manual says.
The training is intended to teach Marines that they can "stand up to
stress" before finding themselves in combat.
But the prohibition of profanity and other forms of abuse is "a line which
will not be crossed," the manual states.
White said a preliminary investigation of Cahir's experience, opened this
week, should take no longer than 72 hours.
"I did not intend to get any person at Parris Island in hot water," Cahir
said Wednesday. "I certainly didn't expect any negative reaction from the
Marine Corps. To this day, I harbor nothing but respect and admiration for
the non-commissioned officers who trained me. I hope they are cleared of
all wrongdoing and thanked for their service."



Ellie

thedrifter
07-05-04, 07:38 AM
Reporter trains for new job: Marine <br />
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- <br />
Editor's note: After reading this first-person account of boot camp by reporter...

thedrifter
07-05-04, 07:39 AM
To my amazement, the DI from my platoon showed up in a van and disembarked with my rifle in his hands.

"I guess that's what you've been taught! Walk off with the wrong weapon!" he shouted.

"No, sir!" I replied.

"Hey, Ca-heer!" shouted the DI who had taken me to the tower. He was waving his hands over his head as if doing jumping jacks. "This is you tonight!"

I knew I'd do a furious bout of calisthenics as punishment for my error. But the marksmanship instructor took it in stride. He had me try again with recruits taking part in the afternoon session. I shot a 199.

"You qualified, journal," the instructor said, using his nickname for journalist.

* * *

We survived physical fitness drills, obstacle and confidence courses, martial arts training, the rifle range, rappelling from a 50-foot tower, swim week, and the chamber in which we were exposed to tear gas.

Finally it was time for the Crucible, the 54-hour march and series of military challenges that marked the culmination of our training.

It was late January.

It was cold above freezing, but not much.

It rained.

We saw other recruits in 20-man teams who had completed the daytime infiltration course with bayonets fixed. They had crawled through puddles of water, slid under barbed wire and thrust their bayonets into tires mounted on wooden dummies.

We too completed the course and, panting and sore, found ourselves soaked from bellies to shins.

I had shed 18 pounds since arriving at Parris Island. I was 38 pounds lighter than when I had first started getting into shape. I knew I could take it.

We learned we would have to complete the same course again that night, in the dark.

As darkness fell, we were ordered to take off our sweatshirts and any other cold weather gear. We would wear only green cotton T-shirts and damp camouflage utility uniforms.

The DIs marched us to an abandoned airstrip. They ordered us to sit on the asphalt and wait for the opportunity to start.

Fogs of breath rose above our formations. The cold penetrated the swollen joints in our hands.

"We'll be watching," the DIs hollered. "Anyone who tries to go around the puddles will be sent back! You'll do it over!"

Ordered to advance, my team of 20 walked through the trees that constituted the first part of the course. Flares lingered overhead. Shadows made by the burning phosphorous danced through the forest. Simulated explosions and machine-gun fire blasted from our right and left.

We came to an open field and a series of sandy trails that led under barbed wire fences. We dropped to our chests and crawled into the puddles. Water soaked our shirts and trousers.

"Yeah, yeah!" shouted the DIs. "Hurry up, Ca-heer! Go through it!"

They followed us throughout the course, which was maybe 250 yards in length. I advanced through every puddle, including one at the end that might have been 12 feet long. I helped another recruit drag an ammunition can full of sand.

We finished. Another recruit looked at me and cursed. I was dirtier and wetter than anyone else. But I had stayed with my team, and we had finished together.

* * *

My entire family came to Parris Island for graduation.

All my relatives and my girlfriend had sent letters to keep up my spirits. Their best wishes had helped steel me against the insults and failures.

We walked to our cars after the ceremony. I was a Marine.

Free to take 10 days off before reporting to Camp Geiger, I heard a familiar voice.

"Good job, Ca-heer," shouted a DI.

I looked over. It wasn't one of the non-commissioned officers from my platoon. It was the one who had taunted me with the jumping-jacks motion on the rifle range. He and the marksmanship instructor had saved me when I took the wrong weapon out to shoot.

"Aye, sir," I shouted back.

Bill Cahir will be activated for duty on Wednesday and expects to deploy with his unit to Iraq later this summer.

Ellie

I think someone is looking to deeply into story that really isn't one...My opinion.;)

kentmitchell
07-05-04, 05:59 PM
Send that sucker to Iraq and put him in a mine-stomping battalion.

MillRatUSMC
07-05-04, 10:43 PM
He might be headed to the sandbox...
Bill Cahir will be activated for duty on Wednesday
and expects to deploy with his unit to Iraq later this summer...

<MARQUEE BEHAVIOR=scroll DIRECTION=left LOOP=infinite>One man with courage is a majority. ~ Thomas Jefferson ~</MARQUEE>

http://www.geocities.com/millrat_99/cmem.html
My new and improved site on the Community Veterans Memorial.

"The saddest part of the job that I have undertaken is that the armed services by their nature, represent the last resort,
when rational solutions to the country's problems have failed."
~ Lt. Cmdr. Harry Mossman US Navy ~
Remains recover in 1992 and indentified recently.

"A man or woman is measured
by the footprint,
he or she leaves behind".

"They were the best you had, America,
and you turned your back on them".
~ Joe Galloway ~ Speaking about Vietnam Veterans

Semper Fidelis/Semper Fi

cjwright90
07-06-04, 09:59 AM
You know, I bet I know thirthy some Marines that went throught the Island with me, and graduated when I did and would not say a word that they were cussed at or punched in the chest once in a while. I was more interested in getting through it all that did someone call me a name. The Mothers of America liberals club really gets my goat.