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thedrifter
07-25-08, 05:51 AM
Hejlik passes flag to Robeson
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July 25, 2008 - 12:45AM
JENNIFER HLAD
DAILY NEWS STAFF

Two years and five months to the day after Maj. Gen. Dennis Hejlik became the first commander of Marine Corps Forces Special Operations Command, the man who helped shape the unit passed the flag to his friend of 33 years, Maj. Gen. Mastin Robeson.

MarSOC started in late 2005 with just four people in a trailer in Quantico, Hejlik told a crowd gathered in front of the II Marine Expeditionary Force headquarters building Thursday morning. The command was activated Feb. 24, 2006, during a ceremony at Camp Lejeune, officially entering the Marines into the U.S. Special Operations Forces. Now, MarSOC is nearly 2,000 strong and is slated to reach 2,500 Marines and sailors by Oct. 1.

Adm. Eric Olson, commander of U.S. Special Operations Command, said MarSOC has conducted 51 operational deployments in 16 different countries - including 32 deployments so far this year. The unit is scheduled to be fully operations capable Oct. 1.

"Organizations, like people, need time to mature," Olson told the crowd.

The first two years were "not without challenge, not without mishap, not without mistake," Olson said, but Hejlik and the Marines and sailors of MarSOC should be proud of their work.

"You have served your first commanding general well, as you have been served well by him," Olson told the Marines and sailors.

When the unit was formed, some in the military and special operations community opposed the idea of having a Marine Corps special operations force. But that culture has shifted, Hejlik said in an interview after the ceremony.

"I don't hear that anymore," he said, but if he does run into a skeptic, he explains why MarSOC is necessary.

"I say, listen, the world has changed. It's an asymmetric world, like it or not. It's unconventional warfare. The enemy doesn't fight fair," Hejlik said.

The command's first company-level deployment, of Marine Special Operations Company-F, ended early when the company was ordered by Army commanders to leave Afghanistan after two incidents in early March 2007. Witnesses at a court of inquiry into those incidents testified there was friction between the Marine unit and other special operations groups, and that the company did not have adequate support.

Thursday, Hejlik called the perception of friction between MarSOC and U.S. Special Operations Command "bunk."

"There just is not (friction)," he said. "Cooperation and coordination ... has never been better."

MarSOC also has grown and changed during Hejlik's time at the helm, including reorganization from nine special operations companies to eight, while adding more support jobs. He called the process "adventure learning."

"Nobody's really done this before," he said. "We've adjusted as we've gone along."

Recruitment has also changed. The first year, Hejlik and now-retired Sgt. Maj. Matthew Ingram, then the sergeant major of MarSOC, spent a lot of time on the road recruiting, Hejlik said. Now the command has a recruiting team, and the process is going extremely well, he said.

But Hejlik reiterated a theme that has dominated his presentations about MarSOC - that the Marines and sailors of MarSOC are Marines or sailors first and foremost. Operators return to "mother Marine Corps" after five years in the special operations realm, while support and maintenance personnel, as well as field-grade officers, return after a three-year tour.

"If you like to deploy a lot, then come on to MarSOC," Hejlik said.

Robeson, who met Hejlik when the two were second lieutenants in the mid-1970s, said his friend has "set the standard" at MarSOC.

"There's not a job in the Marine Corps I would rather have today," Robeson said.

Contact interactive content editor Jennifer Hlad at jhlad@freedomenc.com or 910-219-8467. Visit www.jdnews.com to comment on this report.

Ellie

thedrifter
07-25-08, 08:07 AM
Senior general at Camp Lejeune moving on


Posted: Today at 4:01 a.m.

CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. — The senior general at Camp Lejeune is handing over his command as he prepares to move to Hawaii to command Marines in the Pacific region.

Lt. Gen. Keith Stalder will hand over command of the Lejeune-based II Marine Expeditionary Force on Friday to Lt. Gen. Dennis J. Hejlik. Stalder has been the MEF commander at Lejeune for two years and will become commander of Marine Forces Pacific, headquartered at Camp Smith, Hawaii.

Hejlik stepped down Thursday as commander of the Marine Corps Force Special Operations Command. He will have overall authority over the 2nd Marine Division, the 2nd Marine Airwing.

Ellie

thedrifter
07-26-08, 06:14 AM
Hejlik takes helm of II MEF
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Stalder leaving the unit for Marine Forces Pacific
July 26, 2008 - 12:20AM
JENNIFER HLAD
DAILY NEWS STAFF

One day after relinquishing command of Marine Forces Special Operations Command, Dennis Hejlik was promoted to lieutenant general and took the helm of II Marine Expeditionary Force, ceremonially accepting the flag from outgoing commander Lt. Gen. Keith Stalder.

"Denny, the MEF couldn't be in better hands," Stalder said.

Stalder, who served for two years as commander of II MEF, credited his commanders and staff with the successes the force achieved at home and abroad.

The staff "solved unsolvable problems," he said, and the Marines and sailors of II MEF have "done an absolutely magnificent job around the world."

He also lauded the relationship the community has with the base and the military, calling it "the best relationship (with the community) I know of in the Marine Corps."

Marine Commandant Gen. James Conway praised Stalder's performance in a letter read during Friday's ceremony.

"Keith, guided by your steady hand, the performance of the second Marine Expeditionary Force has been magnificent," Conway wrote. "On your watch, the MEF has deployed thousands of highly trained and well-equipped Marines and sailors to serve in support of operations Iraqi Freedom and Enduring Freedom. These efforts serve as a sterling example of American presence and resolve; they have had a positive and lasting effect on our nation's security."

Hejlik also praised Stalder and his wife, Susan.

"You couldn't have asked for a better team to lead II MEF," Hejlik said.

In an interview with The Daily News earlier this month, Stalder called his time at II MEF "the greatest assignment of my career," but said he is looking forward his next assignment in Hawaii as commander of Marine Forces Pacific.

Stalder said it was an honor to lead II MEF, at least in part because it gave him the ability "to do things that change the institution in ways that will help Marines that are yet to come."

Hejlik takes the reigns of II MEF fresh from his post at the Lejeune-based MarSOC, where he served as the first commander of the special operations unit.

In a letter read aloud during Friday's ceremony, Conway wrote he has the "utmost confidence" in Hejlik.

"Your vast operational experience will be critical to maintaining the MEF's tradition of warfighting excellence," Conway wrote.

Hejlik, who previously traded the flag of 1st Marine Expeditionary Brigade with Stalder in Iraq, said the transition to II MEF has gone smoothly so far.

"I'm thrilled and honored to be here," he said.

Contact interactive content editor Jennifer Hlad at jhlad@freedomenc.com or 910-219-8467.

Ellie