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thedrifter
12-12-07, 07:34 AM
1/1 Weapons Marines flip COIN on insurgents

By Cpl. Bryce Muhlenberg, Regimental Combat Team 6

HABBANIYAH, Iraq (Dec. 12, 2007) -- Sgt. John E. Mejia was walking between two mud and brick houses here when he explained the key to counterinsurgency operations in Iraq.

“You’ve got to be face-to-face with these people to see if a difference has been made,” said the 37-year-old Monterey Park, Calif., native and section leader with Weapons Company, 1st Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 6.

The bulk of day-to-day work for the Marines of Weapons Company consists of counterinsurgency operations here. This includes operations that bring medical and educational assistance to the locals as well as presence patrols and plain old neighborly conversation.

“Today we are conducting COIN operations by way of presence patrols in the local area,” said Mejia. “We are going out and reassuring the people they can depend on the Iraqi Police now in the area and they can still depend on us.”

Mejia, and the other Marines of the platoon, made their way across an open dirt patch toward a dingy looking house right on the outskirts of a nearby neighborhood. Climbing up a small embankment and toward the front entrance of the house, Mejia explained that the Weapons Marines have recently moved out of Combat Outpost Red, approximately two weeks ago, due to the increasing reliability of the Iraqi Security Forces and the stability they have brought to the area. But, this move was only possible after the patrol bases in the area were built and the Marines had established their face-to-face relationship in the community.

As he explained this, the Marines were surrounded by small children and women. A Marine began speaking to the lead wife of the household, who was watching over the estate while her husband was out in the fields tending to the sheep. She held a small boy, no more than two years old, who she hummed to, trying to calm him.

“Is your child feeling well?” asked Petty Officer 3rd Class, Charles L. Scott, a Navy Corpsmen with Weapons Company, while an interpreter translated.

The women spoke to the interpreter, explaining that her child was teething and was in a great deal of pain. Scott produced a small bag of pain medicine, which he gave to the mother, along with verbal instruction.

This sight isn’t uncommon for the Marines, said Mejia.

“We spent a lot of time with our neighbors,” he said, talking about his time at “red” While there, the Marines lived and worked right next door to the people and in the community itself, similar to the way Iraqi Police do now.

“We ask them how they are doing with food, water and electricity,” said Mejia. “Do the kids go to school, does anybody need medical attention? Providing medical attention was big and our corpsman does a really good job of helping out. We obviously don’t have a drugstore, but ‘doc’ tries to provide relief. Stuff like this really displayed our concern for them. Now we encourage our Iraqi counterparts to do the same things.”

Scott, known as “doc” to his brothers-in-arms, said that this is an important step that has been taken by the Iraqi Security Forces in his area.

“The overall goal is to transition responsibility from coalition forces to the Iraqis, so they can handle their own problems,” said the 22-year-old. “By us performing the constant COIN operations here in this area, we have provided a steady platform for them. It’s important for these men to handle their own country.”

To the Salem, Ore., native and 2003 North Salem High School graduate, this process, although sometimes monotonous, he said, is going well and makes sense for the long term goal.

Scott is part of a team who has accomplished something greater than themselves, and as the battalion is soon approaching the later portion of their deployment, it is something they will remember, said Mejia.

“Of course we are excited to be heading home soon…this is my fourth time over here and away from home,” Mejia admitted. “To be honest, I’m also going to miss some of the Iraqi friends I’ve made out here with the locals and the Iraqi Police, but we are going to be able to go home on a positive note, with the Iraqis on their feet. We will know that we have done our part to significantly improve the lives of these people.”

Ellie