Organization of the United States Marine Corps
The United States Marine Corps is organized within the Department of the Navy, which is led by the Secretary of the Navy. The most senior Marine commissioned officer is the Commandant of the Marine Corps, responsible for organizing, recruiting, training, and equipping the Marine Corps so that it is ready for operation under the command of the unified combatant commanders. The Marine Corps is organized into four principal subdivisions: Headquarters Marine Corps, the Operating Forces, the Supporting Establishment, and the Marine Forces Reserve.
The Operating Forces are further subdivided into three categories: Marine forces assigned to Unified Combatant Commands, Marine Corps Security Forces guarding naval installations, and Marine Security Guard detachments at American embassies. Under the "Forces for Unified Commands" memo, Marine forces are assigned to each of the regional unified combatant commands at the discretion of the Secretary of Defense and with the approval of the President. Since 1991, the Marine Corps has maintained component headquarters at each of the regional unified combatant commands.
Marine Corps Forces are further divided into Marine Forces Command and Marine Forces Pacific. The commander of the former also serves as commanding general for Fleet Marine Force, Atlantic, Marine Corps Forces, Europe, Marine Corps Forces, South, Marine Corps Forces, Strategic, and Marine Corps Installations East; while the latter serves as commander of Fleet Marine Force, Pacific, Marine Forces Central Command, and Marine Corps Installations West.
The Supporting Establishment includes Combat Development Command, Recruit Depots, Marine Corps Logistics Command, Marine Bases & Air Stations, Marine Corps Recruiting Command, and the United States Marine Band.
Relationship with other uniformed services
Since the U.S. Marine Corps and the U.S. Army both believe that their combat capabilities overlap each other, they have both historically viewed the other branch as encroaching on their capabilities and have competed for money, missions, and fame. Most significantly, in the aftermath of World War II, Army efforts to restructure the American defense establishment involved the dissolution of the Marine Corps and the folding of its capabilities into the other services. Leading this movement were such prominent Army officers as General Dwight Eisenhower, who later became the President of the United States, and Army Chief of Staff George C. Marshall.The Marine Corps is a branch of the Department of the Navy along with the U.S. Navy. Both the Chief of Naval Operations and Commandant of the Marine Corps, heads of their respective services, report directly to the Secretary of the Navy. As a result, the Navy and Marine Corps have a close relationship, more so than with other branches of the United States Armed Forces. Recent whitepapers and promotional literature have commonly used the phrase "Navy-Marine Corps Team".
This relationship stems from the Navy providing transport, logistical, medical, and religious service as well as combat support to put Marine units into the fight where they are needed. Conversely, Marines are responsible for conducting land operations to support naval campaigns, including the seizure of naval and air bases. All Marine Aviation programs except for specific command and control and air defense programs are funded by the Navy. Marine Corps officers are assigned to the Office of Chief of Naval Operations Air Warfare Branch to represent Marine Aviation interests and serve as "action officers". By Congressional mandate, the OPNAV Director, Expeditionary Warfare Branch is filled by a Marine general.
The Marine Corps cooperates with the Navy on many institutional support services. The corps receives a significant portion of its officers from the United States Naval Academy and Navy Reserve Officer Training Corps, which are partially staffed by Marines. Marine Corps drill instructors contribute to training naval officers in Officer Candidate School. Marine aviators are trained in the Naval Aviation training pipeline, and utilize naval-weapons and test-pilot schools. Currently, Navy aircraft carriers deploy with a Marine Hornet squadron alongside Navy squadrons. The Navy's Blue Angels flight team includes at least one Marine pilot and is supported by a Marine C-130 Hercules aircraft and crew.
Since the Marines do not train chaplains or medical personnel, officers and enlisted sailors from the Navy fill these roles. Some of these sailors, particularly Hospital Corpsmen, generally wear Marine uniforms emblazoned with the Marine insignia but US Navy name tags in order to be distinct to compatriots but indistinguishable to enemies. The Marines also operate a network security team in conjunction with the Navy. Marines and sailors share the vast majority of branch-specific awards, with Marines earning the Navy Cross, the highest honor awarded short of the Medal of Honor, and other like medals; while an example of the few Marine-only awards is the Good Conduct Medal.
Marine Air-Ground Task Force (MAGTF)
Today, the basic framework for deployable Marine units is the Marine Air-Ground Task Force, a flexible structure that can vary in size. A MAGTF is composed of four elements: the command element, the ground combat element, the aviation combat element and the logistics combat element. A MAGTF can operate independently or as part of a larger coalition. It is a temporary organization formed for a specific mission and dissolved after completion of that mission.The MAGTF structure reflects a strong tradition in the Corps towards self-sufficiency and a commitment to combined arms, both essential assets to an expeditionary force often called upon to act independently in discrete, time-sensitive situations. The history of the Marine Corps as well has led to a wariness towards relying too much on its sister services, and towards joint operations in general.
A MAGTF varies in size from the smallest, a Marine Expeditionary Unit, based around a reinforced infantry battalion and a composite squadron, up to the largest, a Marine Expeditionary Force, which ties together a Division, an Air Wing, and a Logistics Group under a MEF Headquarters Group.
The three Marine Expeditionary Forces are:
- I Marine Expeditionary Force located at Camp Pendleton, California
- II Marine Expeditionary Force located at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina
- III Marine Expeditionary Force located at Camp Courtney, Okinawa, Japan
Marine Expeditionary Unit (MEU)
MEU Components:
- Command Element
- Aviation Combat Element
- Ground Combat Element
- Logistics Combat Element
Ground Combat Elements (GCE)
The basic organization of Marine Corps infantry units follows the "rule of threes", which places three subordinates under a commander, not counting support elements. The organization and weapons are from the Marine Corps Table of Organization and Equipment standard. Note that these are principles, but according to manpower and mission needs units can deviate from the TOE. Supporting units will have their own organization and equipment, but generally also follow the "rule of threes".- A fire team, is the basic element of the GCE. It consists of four Marines: the team leader, corporal , one rifleman, rank of Pvt/E-1, one assistant automatic rifleman, rank of PFC/E-2, and one automatic rifleman, rank of LCpl/E-3.
- A rifle squad, usually led by a sergeant, is made up of three identical fire teams.
- A rifle platoon, commanded by a 2nd or 1st lieutenant, consists of three rifle squads, and a headquarters element made up the platoon commander, a platoon sergeant, a platoon guide, and a messenger. The platoon sergeant, usually a staff sergeant, advises the commander and serves as the second-in-command. The platoon guide, usually a sergeant, serves as the assistant platoon sergeant. A rifle platoon is capable of integrating attachments from the weapons platoon and may include a two-man mortar forward observer team attached from the battalion's 81-mm mortar platoon.
- A rifle company, commanded by a captain as the commanding officer and assisted by a 1st lieutenant as the company executive officer who serves as second-in-command, consists of three rifle platoons, a weapons platoon, and a company headquarters, which, in addition to the two officers, includes the first sergeant, company gunnery sergeant, property NCO, and a messenger/driver.
- An infantry battalion, commanded by a lieutenant colonel and assisted by a major as the battalion XO, consists of three rifle companies, a weapons company, and a headquarters and service company.
- An infantry regiment, commanded by a colonel and assisted by a lieutenant colonel as the regimental XO, consists of three battalions, and a regimental headquarters company.
- A Marine division, commanded by a major general as the commanding general and assisted by a brigadier general as the assistant division commander, usually consists of three infantry regiments, an artillery regiment, several separate battalions, and a headquarters battalion.
Two unique unit designations to the Marine Corps are Marine Expeditionary Unit and Marine Expeditionary Force MAGTFs. The MEU is the smallest MAGTF and consists of approximately 2,200 personnel. Commanded by a colonel with a lieutenant colonel as XO, it consists of a battalion landing team, a reinforced infantry battalion, as its GCE and a Marine Medium Tiltrotor Squadron, reinforced with detachments of helicopters, tactical fixed wing, and UAV aircraft, as well as aviation ground support, command and control, and air defense detachments, as its ACE. The MEU's LCE consists of a CLB, and its CE is a company-sized version of the MEB's battalion-sized headquarters group. The MEF is the Marine Corps's equivalent tactical command level to an army corps. The MEF has a lieutenant general as CG with a major general as deputy CG. The MEF consists of a Marine Division as its GCE, a Marine Aircraft Wing as its ACE, a Marine Logistics Group as its LCE, and a regimental-sized MEF Headquarters Group as its CE.
Battalions, and larger units commanded by a field grade officer, have an executive officer as the second-in-command and an executive staff consisting of: Manpower / Administration & Personnel, Intelligence, Operations, Plans & Training, Logistics, Civil Affairs , and Communications sections. Units commanded by a general officer have a chief of staff and a general staff in which the staff sections are designated as G-1, G-2, etc. Battalions and larger units replace the company first sergeant with a sergeant major, as the senior enlisted advisor to the unit commander.
The four Marine divisions are:
- 1st Marine Division at Camp Pendleton, California
- 2nd Marine Division at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina
- 3rd Marine Division at Camp Courtney in Okinawa, Japan
- 4th Marine Division, a reserve unit headquartered in New Orleans, Louisiana, with units scattered throughout the United States.
Aviation combat element (ACE)
The mission of Marine Corps aviation is to provide the MAGTF commander with an aviation combat element capable of conducting air operations in support of the seizure and defense of advanced naval bases, and conducting such land operations as may be directed by the Joint Force commander.The ACE supports the MAGTF by providing the six functions of Marine aviation: assault support, anti-air warfare, offensive air support, electronic warfare, control of aircraft and missiles, and aerial reconnaissance.
Aviation units are organized into:
- Squadrons of 5–27 aircraft, tactically organized into sections of 2–3 aircraft and divisions of 2–3 sections, as needed for mission requirements, commanded by a lieutenant colonel
- Groups of 4–12 squadrons and a group headquarters, commanded by a colonel
- Wings of two or more Marine aircraft groups, a Marine air control group, and Marine wing headquarters squadron, and a Marine wing headquarters, commanded by a major general as the wing CG with a brigadier general as the assistant wing commander.
- 1st Marine Aircraft Wing at Marine Corps Base Camp Smedley D. Butler, Okinawa, Japan
- 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing at Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point, North Carolina
- 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing at Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, California
- 4th Marine Aircraft Wing, a reserve unit, headquartered in New Orleans, Louisiana, with units scattered throughout the United States
Logistics Combat Element (LCE)
The four Marine logistics groups are:
- 1st Marine Logistics Group at Camp Pendleton, California
- 2nd Marine Logistics Group at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina
- 3rd Marine Logistics Group at Camp Kinser, Okinawa, Japan
- 4th Marine Logistics Group, a reserve unit, headquartered in New Orleans, Louisiana, with units scattered throughout the United States.
Marine Corps Special Operations Components
Marine Special Operations Command
The Marine Special Operations Command is the Marine Corps's special operations component that reports to United States Special Operations Command. Currently, MARSOC trains, organizes, equips and, when directed by the Commander, USSOCOM, deploys task organized, scalable, and responsive U.S. Marine Corps special operations forces worldwide in support of combatant commanders and other agencies.The MSOAG, formerly the FMTU, has been operating since 2005, before MARSOC formally existed. MARSOC was formally activated during a February 24 ceremony at Camp Lejeune, N.C., where MARSOC is now headquartered. Fox Company, 2nd Marine Special Operations Battalion, was the first of the Marine Special Operations Battalions' companies to activate in the Spring of 2006. Drawing its manpower from the core of 2nd Force Reconnaissance Co., Fox Company's creation came at the expense of 2nd Force Reconnaissance Co., which stood down upon the transfer of its platoons to both MARSOC's 2nd Marine Special Operations Battalion, and a new company of 2nd Reconnaissance Battalion.
- A fireteam is the basic element of the Marine Special Operations Regiment. Like fireteams in the infantry, MSOR fireteams consist of four Marines; a team leader/grenadier, an automatic rifleman, an assistant automatic rifleman and a rifleman.
- A Marine Special Operations Team is made up of three fireteams, in addition to a captain as a team leader, a radio operator and a Navy corpsman.
- A Marine Special Operations Company, made up of four MSOTs and commanded by a major.
- A Marine Special Operations Battalion, made up of four MSOCs and commanded by a lieutenant colonel.
- 1st Marine Special Operations Battalion at Camp Pendleton, California.
- 2nd Marine Special Operations Battalion at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina.
- 3rd Marine Special Operations Battalion at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina.