3rd Battalion, 7th Marines

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3rd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment
3rd Battalion, 7th Marines modern insignia, current 2018-present.
3rd Battalion, 7th Marines modern insignia, current 2018-present.
Active1 January 1941 – present
Country United States of America
Branch United States Marine Corps
TypeInfantry
Size1,200
Part of7th Marine Regiment
1st Marine Division
Garrison/HQMarine Corps Air Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms
Nickname(s)The Cutting Edge
Motto(s)"Si vis pacem, para bellum" / "No Shit!"
EngagementsWorld War II

Korean War

Vietnam War

Operation Desert Storm
Operation United Shield
War on Terror

Commanders
Commanding OfficerLieutenant Colonel Matthew Hawkins
Senior EnlistedSergeant Major Leonel Cuellar Jr.
Notable
commanders
Edward H. Hurst

The 3rd Battalion 7th Marine Regiment (3/7) is an infantry battalion of the United States Marine Corps. They are based at the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms and consist of approximately 800 Marines. The battalion falls under the command of the 7th Marine Regiment and the 1st Marine Division. The battalion has seen combat in World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Gulf War and was a part of the main effort during the initial invasion of Iraq in 2003. During the Global War on Terror, the battalion saw eleven sequential combat deployments; five in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom, three in support of Operation Enduring Freedom, and three in support Operation Inherent Resolve. The unit has a long, decorated history with countless achievements. Its members were described as "true professionals" by embedded reporters during the 2003 invasion of Iraq.

Subordinate units[edit]

  • Headquarters and Service Company
  • Company I (India Company)
  • Company K (Kilo Company)
  • Company L (Lima Company)
  • Weapons Company

Historical Contingency Company:

  • Company M (Mike Company)[1]

History[edit]

World War II[edit]

3rd Battalion 7th Marines was activated 1 January 1941 at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba and was assigned to the 1st Marine Brigade. In February 1941 they were reassigned to the 1st Marine Division.

Due to the situation in the Pacific, the 7th Marines were detached from the 1st Marine Division and sent to American Samoa with the Third Battalion being the first to arrive on 28 April 1942.[2] Companies I and M landed at Wallis Island on 27 March 1942[3] along with Free French forces to deny the Island to Vichy France.

3/7 participated in the following World War II campaigns:

After the war 3/7 participated in Operation Beleaguer in northern China from September 1945 to April 1946 and then deactivated 15 April 1946.

Korean War[edit]

The battalion was reactivated 11 September 1950 at Kobe, Japan and assigned to the 1st Marine Division. They deployed in September 1950 to the South Korea and participated in the Inchon-Seoul. Following the recapture of Seoul, the 1st Marine Division was pulled out of northwest Korea and sailed to the east coast where they landed at Wonsan in late October and began to march north towards the Yalu River.

The battalion was in Yudam-ni on the evening of 27–28 November 1950 when the Battle of Chosin Reservoir began. On the first evening, the Marines of "How Company" were overwhelmed on Hill 1403 by waves of Chinese attackers and were eventually ordered to pull back by the commanding officer (CO), Lieutenant Colonel William Harris[4] The battalion continued to fight on the hills around Yudam-ni for the next few days until 1 December[5] when the 5th Marines and 7th Marines were ordered to fight their way back to the 1st Marine Division's main perimeter at Hagaru-ri. The 300+ remaining members of 3/7[6] provided the rearguard for the two regiments as they broke out to Hagaru-ri and were the last Marines to leave the perimeter at Yudam-ni as it was being overrun by Chinese forces[7] 3/7 consolidated with the rest of the division at Hagaru-ri and took part in the fighting breakout towards Koto-ri where, on 7 December, all of the 1st Marine Division's regiments were together for the first time since the landing at Wonsan in October[8] Of note during the battle, on the morning before their arrival at the Koto-ri perimeter, the battalion's CO, who during the battle was described as "coming apart"[9] and having an "emotional breakdown and collapse",[10] disappeared and was never seen again.[11] After the withdrawal from Chosin the 1st Marine Division was evacuated from Hungnam.

During the rest of the war 3/7 took part in the fighting on the East Central Front and then the Western Front of the Jamestown Line. In October 1951 it performed the first battalion sized combat helicopter air assault in history in Operation Bumblebee.[12] After the war the battalion participated in the defense of the Korean Demilitarized Zone, July 1953 to March 1955.

Vietnam War[edit]

The 3rd Battalion, along with the rest of the 7th Marines, was deployed to Vietnam from Camp Pendleton in late May 1965. The 3/7, under the command of LTC Charles H. Bodley, embarked on the amphibious ships USS Iwo Jima, USS Talladega, and USS Point Defiance at Okinawa on 24–26 June and landed near the city of Qui Nhon on 1 July 1965.[13]

On 18 August 1965, the 3/7 took part in Operation Starlite, the first regimental size operation by US forces since the Korean War. The 3/7, along with the 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marines, and the 2nd Battalion, 4th Marines, made a combined amphibious-helicopter assault on fortified enemy positions on the Van Tuong Peninsula. The Marines landed behind enemy lines and, after seven days of fighting, drove the Viet Cong (VC) 1st Regiment into the sea.[14]

In January 1966, the 3/7 took part in Operation Mallard along with the 3rd Battalion, 3rd Marines. It was a sweep of the area 20 miles southwest of Da Nang, in the area later known as the Arizona Territory. While the VC did not engage in major confrontations with the Marines during Operation Mallard, the area would later be a significant battleground for the 3/7 and other Marine battalions in the years to come.[15]

In March 1966 the battalion took part in Operation Texas. On 18 March 1966 an Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) outpost on Hill 141 west of Quang Ngai City was overrun by the People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN) 36th Regiment. A reaction/relief force was promptly put together consisting of elements from 4 Marine battalions including 3/7 and an ARVN battalion. The allied forces were inserted by ground and air on 20 and 21 March and began closing around the PAVN forces. Over the next four days, Operation Texas claimed a total of 623 known PAVN dead, but at least 57 US Marines and sailors were killed in a series of bitter fights.

Along with the 1/7, 2/7 and elements of the 26th Marines and 51st ARVN regiment, the 3/7th also took part in Operation Oklahoma Hills from March through May 1969, an operation to clear PAVN base camps and infiltration routes out of the hills and valleys southwest of Da Nang, South Vietnam's second most important city and a major base for US operations at the time.[16]

For "conspicuous gallantry and intrepity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty" and "in the face of vicious enemy fire" during a search and destroy mission in the Que Son-Hiep Duc Valley on 28 August 1969, in which he destroyed several of the enemy and silenced anti-aircraft guns and machinegunist, Lance Corporal Jose F. Jimenez of Kilo Company, 3/7, was posthumously awarded the Medal of Honor.[14]

Persian Gulf War[edit]

Blade Marines as part of Task Force Grizzly raising Old Glory on their Humvee during combat operations.

During the 1990–91 Persian Gulf War, 3/7 took part in Operation Desert Storm. The battalion arrived in Jubail, Saudi Arabia, in mid-January 1991, with the mission to be a foot-mobile infiltration force. For a month from mid-February onwards, 3/7—as part of Task Force Grizzly, which mainly consisted of 3/7 and 2nd Battalion 7th Marines—took up position along a berm near the Saudi–Kuwaiti border. There, 3/7 became the lead element of all U.S. forces in the region. The battalion moved out of Saudi Arabia and into Kuwait three days before the ground offensive began on 24 February, and then became the first allied infantry force to enter Kuwait. After breaching two enemy minefields, 3/7 took over Ahmad al-Jaber Air Base, which was believed to be the main command post for all enemy forces in Kuwait. The battalion departed Saudi Arabia in early March.[17]

Somali Civil War[edit]

A Scout-Sniper Team from the 3rd Bn, 7th Marines, attached to the 13th MEU (BLT 3/1) prepares to depart Mogadishu, Somalia during Operation UNITED SHIELD in 1995. Photo: CWO-5/Marine Gunner Christian P. Wade USMC (Ret.), second from left..

From January to March 1995, elements of the battalion—namely Kilo Company, augmented with elements from India Company, Lima Company, and Weapons Company—participated in Peacetime Enforcement Operation, Operation United Shield in Somalia. The operation was the closing chapter of United Nations Operation in Somalia II (UNOSOM II). A Combined Task Force (CTF), commanded by the United States, including two ships of the Pakistan Navy, two ships of the Italian Navy and six ships of the United States Navy evacuated all UN Peacekeeping Forces from Somalia.

On 27 February 1995, minutes before midnight, the Blade executed an amphibious assault on the city of Mogadishu, part of a mechanized force consisting of about 1,800 US Marines and 350 Italian Marines. Aboard LCUs LAVs, AAVs, and LCACs the joint task force secured Mogadishu International Airport and New Port. The entire amphibious landing was complete by 0430 on the morning of 28 February, and evacuation procedures immediately commenced.[18][19]

By 3 March 1995, 73 hours after the beginning of the amphibious landing, all 2,422 United Nations troops, approximately 3,800 CTF troops and over a hundred combat vehicles had withdrawn without any loss of life among any of the coalition forces.

Global War on Terror (GWOT)[edit]

Operation Iraqi Freedom[edit]

2003 - 1st Tour
Marines from 3/7 establish firing position inside an Iraqi army camp near An Numaniyah.

3/7 was part of the main effort, and took a major role in the 2003 invasion of Iraq. The premier infantry combat unit in the world, they originally deployed in January 2003, moved north in March and reached Baghdad by April – securing several cities, military bases, terrorist training facilities, and various other objectives along the way. They then moved south for a five-month security assignment doing stabilizing operations in Karbala until September 2003. During the assignment, India Company, 3rd Battalion 7th Marines operated in Mahmudiyah, Iraq in support of Task Force Scorpion during July and August 2003. Lima Company, 3rd Battalion 7th Marines were tasked out with the training of the Iraqi Police force, intelligence gathering, disruption and dismantling of the black market weapons trade, and both daytime and clandestine operations in coalition with CIA, Delta Force, and various other units in support to carry out special assignments. Lima Company's 3rd platoon, 2nd squad, is responsible for capturing and detaining some of the highest ranking Ba'ath Party members to date during covert operations south of Baghdad. India Company's training in the Kuwaiti desert and the subsequent invasion was covered in the TV documentary Virgin Soldiers which often airs on Discovery Times and Military Channel.

2004 - 2nd Tour

After returning to the United States in September 2003, the battalion re-deployed in February 2004 to Al Qaim—in western Al Anbar Province, abutting the Syrian border. Their area of responsibility included Husaybah, the primary border-crossing point between Syria and Iraq. Increased military presence resulted in continuous fighting, including large-scale operations to retake the city of Husaybah from insurgents and local fighters in April. The Medal of Honor was posthumously awarded to Kilo Company squad leader Jason Dunham for actions in the city of Karabilah. They returned from that deployment in September 2004.

2005 - 2006 - 3rd Tour
AR RAMADI, Iraq (December 8, 2005) - Marines with 4th Platoon, Company I, 3rd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, search a store for hidden illegal weapons during Operation Skinner Dec. 8. Photo by Cpl. Shane Suzuki

From September 2005 to March 2006 3/7 was stationed in Ar Ramadi and made FOB Hurricane Point (HP) and Camp Ramadi their main base of operations; however most infantry units operated out of firm bases and outposts within the city. 3/7 oversaw and provided security for elections at multiple locations in Ramadi near the end of the deployment, which proved highly successful and resulted in little conflict. Elements of the battalion were engaged in firefights and rocket, mortar, and IED attacks daily throughout the entire deployment.

2007 - 4th Tour

From May 2007 to November 2007 3/7 was once again stationed in Ar Ramadi and made FOB Hurricane Point (HP) and Camp Ramadi their main base of operations. They dispersed throughout the city to increase contact with the local residents. Since the prevalence of the Anbar Awakening, 3/7 Marines began conducting counter-insurgency (COIN) missions rather than the more "kinetic" operations on previous tours.

2008 - 2009 - 5th Tour

3/7 re-deployed in support of OIF again in August 2008, once again to the Al Qaim area—in western Al Anbar Province, abutting the Syrian border. Their area of responsibility was much larger than any other time, including Husaybah to the west, all the way east to Hit. Due to status of forces agreements with the Iraqi government, operations were very limited and the battalion served in an "operational overwatch" role for the Iraqi forces. They returned from that deployment in March 2009.

Operation Enduring Freedom[edit]

2010 - 6th Tour
Lance Cpl. Derek Hopkins, a mortarman with Company K, 3rd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, carries a mortar tube while walking through a flooded field during a patrol, Aug. 3. Marines with Company K carry their mortar systems

3/7 deployed to Helmand province, Afghanistan from March 2010 to October 2010. During this deployment, the Marines of 3/7 faced daily attacks and operated in various locations including Musa Qaleh, Marjah, and Sangin. In Sangin, 3/7 relieved the 40 Commando of the British Royal Marines and began clearing operations in some of the most dangerous areas of Afghanistan. The Marines of 3/7 encountered heavy resistance and are reported to have experienced some of the highest amounts of enemy contact during the Global War on Terrorism.

2011 - 2012 - 7th Tour
S. Marine Corps Cpl. Gabriel Flaa with Weapons Company, 3rd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 6 scans the horizon during a security patrol in Sangin, Helmand province

In September and October 2011, 3/7 relieved 1/5 and elements of 1/6 in both the "green" and "brown" zones of the Sangin District for a second tour in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. The battalion conducted daily security patrols along with several clearing operations in an environment heavily laced with IED's. The battalion took 9 KIA and returned home in April 2012.

2013 - 2014 - 8th Tour
U.S. Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Diamond Aranda, a Rifleman with India Co., 3rd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment provides security during a downed vehicle recovery in Now Zad district, Helmand province, Afghanistan, supporting Afghan forces 16 Feb. 2014.(U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Sean Searfus/ Released)

In September 2013, 3/7 returned to Northern Helmand province and relieved 3rd Battalion, 4th Marines, in Afghanistan for a third tour in support of Operation Enduring Freedom. The Battalion conducted distributed operations providing support to the Afghan Security Forces with companies located in Musa Q'ala, Sangin, Kajaki and FOB Shukvani in the Southern Musa Q'ala Wadi. This deployment was much different than the two previous as the Battalion was focused on supporting the Afghan Security Forces and conducting retrograde operations by transferring the Combat Outposts to the Afghan National Army. India Co, as well as Kilo Co, tactically enabled by British SAS and Afghan Special Forces, conducted various offensive operations in 5 districts within Afghanistan.

Operation Inherent Resolve / SPMAGTF-CR-CC[edit]

2015 - 9th Tour
OIR 15.2 - Security Force Marines from the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment executing Combat Marskmanship Program Short Range Table 5.

The Blade's inaugural Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force – Crisis Response – Central Command (SPMAGTF-CR-CC) GWOT deployment from March through October 2015.

Consisted of supporting U.S. interests throughout the United States Central Command and Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve; serving in joint, disaggregated crisis response and contingency options across the 20 countries in the Area of Operations, including but not limited to Iraq, Jordan, and Kuwait. SPMAGTF-CR-CC was commanded by both 5th Marines and 7th Marines during this tenure.

A key event of this rotation involved a task force from 3/7, Task Force-"TQ" (comprising Kilo, Lima, Weapons, and H&S Marines), establishing a new US presence in al-Taqaddum, Iraq, in order to deny access and movement to ISIL holdings in Anbar province. This was discussed in American society as a sign of going back down the path to US combat "boots on the ground" in Iraq once again.[20]

Task Force "Al-Asad" (composed largely of Kilo, Weapons, and H&S Company Marines), built partner capacity, trained, and assisted the Joint Task Force and Iraqi forces in their fight against the Islamic State in Anbar, deepening the U.S. role in efforts to halt the recent momentum of the extremists.[21]

Battalion Operations solidified the entire Training Exercise and Employment Plan (TEEP) for 17.1, while on 15.2; returning home in October 2015.

2016 - 2017 - 10th Tour
3/7 Marines operating a light-skinned, non-standard tactical vehicle convoy within the AOR.

Continuing preparation for their second bout with SPMAGTF-CR-CC, the battalion immediately executed a comprehensive pre-deployment training regimen aboard the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center and special-purpose non-standard schools across the United States, further capitalizing on the organic skillsets of the Marine Corps infantry battalion and lessons learned.

Deploying in October 2016, this diligent preparation effectively and directly prepared The Blade to excel across the AOR, supporting combat operations in Mosul, Iraq alongside joint and Iraqi Security Forces securing and liberating the besieged city in dense, urban street fighting against ISIL,[22] supporting State Department and US Department of Defense initiatives in Syria fighting to disrupt ISIL and protect Internally Displaced Person (IDP) refugees around the Jordanian border,[22] and sustained missions throughout the AOR.

The battalion returned home in April, 2017, ready for another round.

2018 - 11th Tour
U.S. Marines with 3rd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division attached to Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force, Crisis Response-Central Command (SPMAGTF-CR-CC) drive a Utility Task Vehicle around security positions at Fire Base Um Jorais (FB UJ) 4 July 2018. (Cpl. Carlos Lopez/Marine Corps)

From March 2018 to October 2018 the battalion once again deployed in support of Operation Inherent Resolve, 3/7 was spread across the Middle East including areas in Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan, Kuwait, and Jordan doing mainly anti–ISIL operations. A handful of men served on all three SPMAGTF-CR-CC rotations.

Medal of Honor recipients[edit]

World War II
Korean War
Vietnam War
Iraq War

Unit awards[edit]

A unit citation or commendation is an award bestowed upon an organization for the action cited. Members of the unit who participated in said actions are allowed to wear on their uniforms the awarded unit citation. 3rd Battalion, 7th Marines has been presented with the following awards:

Streamer Award Year(s) Additional Info
Presidential Unit Citation Streamer with one Silver and four Bronze Stars 1942, 1944, 1945, 1950, 1950, 1951, 1965–1966, 1966–1967, 1967–1968, 2003 Guadalcanal, Peleliu-Ngesebus, Okinawa, Korea, Vietnam, Iraq
Navy Unit Commendation Streamer with two Bronze Stars 1952–1953, 1965, 1990–1991, 2004,2010 Korea, Vietnam, Southwest Asia, Iraq, Afghanistan (Sangin)
Meritorious Unit Commendation Streamer 1968, 1968, 1969, 1990, 2015 Vietnam, Philippines, Central Command AOR
Armed Forces Expeditionary Medal Streamer

American Defense Service Streamer with one Bronze Star 1941 World War II
Asiatic-Pacific Campaign Streamer with one Silver Star
Guadalcanal, Eastern New Guinea, New Britain, Peleliu, Okinawa
World War II Victory Streamer 1941–1945 Pacific War
Navy Occupation Service Streamer with "ASIA" 1945–1946 Northern China
China Service Streamer with one Bronze Star September 1946 – June 1947 North China
National Defense Service Streamer with three Bronze Stars 1950–1954, 1961–1974, 1990–1995, 2001–present Korean War, Vietnam War, Gulf War, War on Terrorism
Korean Service Streamer with one Silver and two Bronze Stars
Korean War
Vietnam Service Streamer with two Silver and three Bronze Stars July 1965 – April 1971, April – December 1975
Southwest Asia Service Streamer with two Bronze Stars September 1990 – February 1991 Desert Shield, Desert Storm
Iraq Campaign Streamer 2003–present
Global War on Terrorism Expeditionary Streamer
March – May 2003
Global War on Terrorism Service Streamer 2001–present
Korea Presidential Unit Citation Streamer

Vietnam Gallantry Cross with Palm Streamer

Vietnam Meritorious Unit Citation Civil Actions Streamer

Notable former members[edit]

  • Ed Bearss, Civil War Historian.
  • Rob Jones, served in Kilo Company during the War in Afghanistan
  • Chuck Robb, governor of Virginia and US Senator

In popular culture[edit]

The 1968 documentary A Face of War showed 3rd Battalion operations in Quảng Ngãi Province of Vietnam. Half the company and members of the camera crew were wounded during the filming, which took place in 1966 as U.S. commitments in Vietnam rapidly escalated.

In the 1999 film The Sixth Sense, Haley Joel Osment's character asks Bruce Willis' character, "Do you want to be a Lance Corporal in Company M, Third Battalion, Seventh Marines?" while offering him a toy soldier.

See also[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ "Mike 3/7 Vietnam Association". Mike 3/7 Vietnam Association.
  2. ^ p. 7 http://www.marines.mil/Portals/59/Publications/A%20Brief%20History%20of%20the%207th%20Marines%20%20PCN%2019000308200_1.pdf
  3. ^ "The Wallis Island Landing". Archived from the original on 9 March 2018. Retrieved 9 March 2018.
  4. ^ Russ (1999), pp.115–121
  5. ^ Russ (1999), p. 305
  6. ^ Russ (1999), p. 324
  7. ^ Russ (1999), p. 326
  8. ^ Russ (1999), p. 394.
  9. ^ Russ (1999), p. 121
  10. ^ Russ (1999), p.168
  11. ^ Russ (1999), p. 371.
  12. ^ Parker, Gary W. (1978). A History of Marine Medium Helicopter Squadron 161 (PDF). Washington, D.C.: United States Marine Corps History and Museums Division. p. 6. Retrieved 25 June 2010.
  13. ^ Victor J. Villinois, A Brief History of the 7th Marines, 1965–1970, http://www.marzone.com/7thMarines/Hst0001.htm, accessed 22 July 2012.
  14. ^ a b Villinois, A Brief History of the 7th Marines.
  15. ^ Villinois, A Brief History of the 7th Marines
  16. ^ Charles Richard Smith, U.S. Marines in Vietnam: High Mobility and Standdown, 1969 (Washington, DC: History and Museums Division, Headquarters U. S. Marines, 1988), pp. 103–116.
  17. ^ Pomykal, Andrew D. (28 January 2001). "Marines remember the 100-hour war known as Desert Storm". Lejeune Marines. Retrieved 30 January 2014.
  18. ^ DefenseLink, U.S. Department of Defense: UNITED SHIELD Press briefing, 28 February 1995
  19. ^ "U.S. Marine Corps Records Search & Veteran Locator | TWS".
  20. ^ "Obama's new plan to send more troops to Iraq, explained". 10 June 2015.
  21. ^ "Pentagon sending up to 450 more troops to help Iraq fight the Islamic State".
  22. ^ a b "OPERATION INHERENT RESOLVE REPORT TO THE UNITED STATES CONGRESS" (PDF).
  23. ^ Gidget Fuentes (10 November 2006). "Medal of Honor is first for a Marine since Vietnam". Marine Corps Times.

http://valor.militarytimes.com/recipient.php?recipientid=23294

References[edit]

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Marine Corps.
  • Russ, Martin (1999). Breakout – The Chosin Reservoir Campaign, Korea 1950. Penguin Books. ISBN 0-14-029259-4.
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