Vol. III No. 3 The official newsletter of 1st Marine Division February 24, 2011

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B The l u e d a m o n d Vol. III No. 3 The official newsletter of 1st Marine Division MARINE CORPS AIR GROUND COMBAT CENTER TWENTYNINE PALMS, Calif. Machine gunners with Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, provide suppressive fire for Marines entering Range 220 Military Operations in Urban Terrain town, at Marine Corps Air-Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms, Calif., Jan. 25. The training evaluated the Marines in dismounted movements in an urban environment. Alpha Co. conducted the range as part of their Enhanced Mojave Viper pre-deployment training package. 1/5 clears, holds, builds during Enhanced Mojave Viper MARINE CORPS AIR GROUND COMBAT CENTER TWENTY- NINE PALMS, Calif. Cpl. Mario Ramirez, a squad leader for 3rd Platoon, Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, directs a gun team to firing position after a mechanized dismount on the edge of the Range 220 Military Operations in Urban Terrain town, at Marine Corps Air-Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms, Calif., Jan. 25. Ramirez was responsible for giving his Marines targets and placing them to provide effective fires on the enemy positions. conducted the range as part of their Enhanced Mojave Viper pre-deployment training package. Ramirez, 24, is from Frederick, Okla. Story and photos by Lance Cpl. Benjamin Crilly MARINE CORPS AIR GROUND COMBAT CENTER TWENTYNINE PALMS, Calif. Go! Go! Go! resounded, as boots slammed down the ramp of the amphibious assault vehicles. Marines and sailors with Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, participating in a clear/hold/build exercise during Enhanced Mojave Viper conducted the Clear phase at Range 220, Jan 25. The training evaluated the Marines dismounted movements in an urban environment during the 21-day training exercise. The exercise began with the Marines piling into the AAVs, which transported them to the edge of the Range 220 Military Operations in Urban Terrain town. From there, Marines provided suppressive fire, allowing them to enter and gain a foothold in the town. The Marines sprinted from the berm, two at a time, to begin clearing operations 1 throughout the town. The squads maneuvered through the buildings, eliminating the enemy role players and securing objectives. This training gets us ready for deployment and gets us as close to reality as we can get by getting off the tracks, clearing the rooms and setting everything up, said Lance Cpl. Sean M. O Conner, a squad automatic weapon gunner for Alpha Co., 1/5. It gets the Marine used to the whole mindset and aggressiveness you need to be effective on deployment. Elements of 1st Tank Battalion and 2nd Amphibious Assault Battalion provide suppressive fires for the Marines sweeping the open areas within the town for improvised explosive devices. The MOUT town lane is not something that will necessarily happen, since in Afghanistan it s mostly counterinsurgency operations. However, if we have to do a push then we have to be prepared for that, said Staff Sgt. Rick J. Meyers, platoon sergeant (MOUT, page 5)

Camp Pendleton hosts Armed Services Blood Program Story and photos by Lance Cpl. Alfred Lopez MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP PENDLE- TON, Calif. Headquarters Battalion, 1st Marine Division hosted an Armed Services Blood Program sponsored blood drive and health fair at the 33 Area Fitness Center, Feb. 14. Marines and volunteers sacrificed their time to donate blood needed by doctors and corpsmen for the wounded and ill of Operation Enduring Freedom. All of the blood we collect here stays within the military, said Caesar Fontanilla, administrative supporter of the Armed Services Blood Program. The first shipment of blood goes out to Afghanistan, and the rest trickles down to surrounding military hospitals in the area. ASBP mission is to provide quality blood products for Service members and their families, during both peace and wartime. The program has provided over 50 years of service to military members and their families. The program has supported the Army, Navy, and Air Force in major conflicts, including World War II, the Korean War and Vietnam War. The mission itself is self-fulfilling, said Fontanilla. A majority of our crew are civilians and a lot of them are family members. It s a great feeling for them knowing not only is their partner or spouse out there serving the country, but also knowing they themselves are supporting their loved ones by what they re doing. I m very proud of this. I m glad to help out, said Sgt. Eric Justus, the blood drive and health fair coordinator. I believe very strongly that if you can be there directly to help out the fight, then you should do everything in your power to help those service members. We all have a part. Representatives from Marine Family Team Building and Semper Fit Counseling Services also came out to support the health fair. It s extremely important for us to come MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. Blood donors like Cpl. Ismael Gomez, a supply clerk with Supply Company, 1st Reconnaissance Battalion, 1st Marine Division, squeeze a stress ball to maintain continuous blood pressure while their blood is drawn during an Armed Services Blood Program sponsored blood drive and health fair at the 33 Area Fitness Center, Feb. 14. Representatives from Marine Family Team Building and Semper Fit counseling services supported the health fair by promoting better health and better quality of life. out and promote a healthier lifestyle for the Marines, said Cristina McDonough, a Semper Fit health promotion coordinator. Marines are paid athletes. They have to keep their body fat down, they have to be prepared for any unit obligations, whether it s deployment, combat readiness or anything that has to do with going out in the field. Marines, donors and volunteers continued their day with a sense of fulfillment, and also a better sense and understanding of their health and nutrition. Everybody should do it, its effortless and only takes a little bit of your time, said Cpl. Huy Huynh, a blood donor and technical network specialist with Communications Company, Headquarters Battalion. I ve been donating for the past few years, and I usually donate every two months. It s just another way for me to give back. Division honors Career Planner of the Year MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP PENDLE- TON, Calif. Maj. Gen. Micheal R. Regner, Commanding General of 1st Marine Division, presents 1st Marine Division s Fiscal Year 2010 Career Retention Specialist of the Year Award to Staff Sgt. Howard A. Seals during the division s Annual Career Planner Awards Luncheon at the South Mesa Staff Non-Commissioned Officer s Club, Feb. 10. The award is presented to the planner who demonstrated professionalism, integrity, and personal dedication, and enabled Marines to make sound decisions about their careers. Seals, battalion career planner with 5th battalion, 11th Marines, won the award with a division-best 150 percent of his first term alignment plan mission and 130 percent of his subsequent term alignment plan mission. MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. Cpl. Eric Sears, a supply clerk with Supply Company, 1st Reconnaissance Battalion, 1st Marine Division, squeezes a stress ball to maintain a continuous blood pressure while donating blood during an Armed Services Blood Program sponsored blood drive and health fair at the 33 Area Fitness Center, Feb. 14. 2

Marines, ANSF find weapons caches, secure southern river valley Story and photos by Cpl. Ned Johnson COMBAT OUTPOST PAYNE, Afghanistan The Jungle is one of the many Taliban strongholds in the Southern Helmand River Valley. The Jungle is what the Marines call the area due to its dense foliage and brush along the river s edge. The Taliban have been using heavy brush, to conceal their movement and to hide weapons and bombmaking materials, at least up until now. Marines with 3rd Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion, 1st Marine Division (Forward) partnered with two companies of Afghan Border Police and a company of Afghan Uniformed Police to clear The Jungle and the villages in the river valley of Taliban activity during a five-day operation called Big Valley. The insurgents are intimidating the people of Khan-Neshin District, and they are using the river valley as a facilitation zone for other parts of Helmand province, said Capt. Austin Murmane, the assistant operations officer with 3rd LAR Bn. We want to disrupt their transit routes and lines of communication. Operation Big Valley, which put the Afghan National Security Forces in the driver s seat, was a success, said Lt. Col. Ken Kassner, battalion commander of 3rd LAR Bn. We have found several weapons and ammo caches. We also found multiple improvised explosive device making materials and drugs. This mission, however, would not have been possible without the hard work of the previous months according to Kassner, who said a lot of intelligence came from local people telling the Marines what they have seen. This operation continues to capitalize on the prior successes in the area, and helps reinforce the relationships we have established with the locals, said the 43-year-old native of Coupland, Texas. Afghan forces were also one of the most important parts of the operation. The Afghan police weren t just there with us, they were involved, Kassner said. They were heavily involved in the planning and rehearsals, but they also took a large leading role on the missions. An Afghan leading role is COMBAT OUTPOST PAYNE, Afghanistan Marines with 3rd Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion, 1st Marine Division (Forward), search local farmers during Operation Big Valley, Feb. 1. The 3rd LAR Marines, who call themselves the Wolf pack, went on a five-day operation along with their Afghan partners to clear areas where the Taliban was believed to store weapons and bomb-making materials. (JUNGLE, page 5) COMBAT OUTPOST PAYNE, Afghanistan Cpl. Erik Moody, an infantryman with 3rd Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion, 1st Marine Division (Forward), looks across the Helmand River during a patrol to clear the areas close to the river during Operation Big Valley, Feb. 1. The Taliban is believed to hide and travel through the dense brush in the river valley known as The Jungle, so Marines partnered with the Afghan police to clear the areas. 3

A glimpse of 2/1 Marines at Patrol Base Gorgak Photos by Sgt. Jesse Stence HELMAND PROVINCE, Afghanistan Staff Sgt. George Saggeth, a team chief with 3rd Civil Affairs Group, patrols to Belush, in Garmsir District, Helmand province, Afghanistan, with Redemption II, Weapons Company, 2nd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, Feb. 13. Saggeth and the Marines of Redemption II headed there to survey damage from flooding the night before. Redemption II and Weapons Company live at Patrol Base Gorgak in Garmsir District. GARMSIR DISTRICT, Helmand Province, Afghanistan Lance Cpl. Arturo Valtierra, a mortarman with Redemption II, Weapons Company, 2nd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, scans for IEDs during a foot patrol to a local Afghan National Police station near Patrol Base Gorgak in Garmsir District, Feb. 13. PATROL BASE GORGAK, Helmand province, Afghanistan Cpl. Herb Hartfield, a team leader with Redemption II, Weapons Company, 2nd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, snuggles with Susie, one of Redemption II s bomb detection dogs, before heading out on a patrol of Belush, a village in Garmsir District, Helmand province, Afghanistan, Feb. 13. Weapons Company s headquarters in Patrol Base Gorgak in Garmsir District. PATROL BASE GORGAK, Helmand province, Afghanistan With a little bit of creativity and supplies from military supporters at home, the cooks at Patrol Base Gorgak, home of Weapons Company, 2nd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, scrounge up ingredients to grill a pizza, Feb. 11. PATROL BASE GORGAK, Helmand province, Afghanistan Cooks at Patrol Base Gorgak, home of Weapons Company, 2nd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, prepare pizza for the Marines, Feb. 11. 4

MOUT (cont. from page 1) for 3rd Plt., Alpha Co., 1/5. We have to hit everything and make sure Marines are ready and have that training they could need. Every exercise in EMV is a stepping stone. The clear lane allows the squads to become proficient within their small-unit leadership and at fundamental maneuver exercises before moving on to platoon attacks. On the individual level the training allowed Marines to practice the tactics, techniques and procedures they will use in Afghanistan. Today s exercise taught me how to operate in a MOUT environment with an IED threat, and reinforced the basic infantry principles I will use throughout EMV and on deployment, said O Conner, 21, from Douglas, Wyo. Upon securing the town, the Marines of 3rd Platoon transitioned to their final exercise, the Range 220 kill house. The Marines patrolled to a house that JUNGLE (cont. from page 3) good for the locals as well. When they see us working with their national forces, they realize the Marines are here to help and it bolsters their confidence, Kassner said. Seeing their own forces increases their feelings of security because literally, Seeing is believing. More than just taking the lead, the Afghans are beginning to take pride in what they do. They are performing quite well, Kassner said. Most notably is their motivation. I patrolled with several policemen who personally told me, It is a great honor to serve my country. Big Valley, which increased security in the area, was good for the Marines as well. When my Marines see more and more of the Afghan forces and that we Brought to you by: 1st Marine Division Public Affairs Office To contact - Please call (760) 725-8766 1st MAR DIV HQBN, H&S Co.,PAO Box 555381 Blg. 1138, Mainside Camp Pendleton, California 92055 MARINE CORPS AIR GROUND COMBAT CENTER TWEN- TYNINE PALMS, Calif. Seaman Michael C. Winberry, a corpsman with Alpha Company, 1st Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, provides medical attention to a role player in the Range 220 kill house, at Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms, Calif., Jan. 25. Real amputees with prosthetic simulating combat injuries served as role players for the kill house. The Marines and sailors are forced to work under pressure from the corpsmen running the house and the role players intensity. Alpha Co. conducted the range as part of their Enhanced Mojave Viper pre-deployment training package. are finding contraband items, it lets them know that what we are doing here is important and it matters, Kassner added. The Marines, who call themselves the Wolf pack, are not finished yet, though. Our next step is to continue actively engaging with the local population and we will continue to aggressively patrol the area, Kassner said. We will keep the elders informed and work closely with the district government. Unless security and governance are working together, we will not achieve the perfect security environment. The Marines will also continue to help their Afghan partners for the betterment of Afghanistan. We are here to help professionalize the Afghan forces, Kassner said. We will continue to lead by example and continue to see more of the improvements that will make them a fully-capable, self-sufficient force. This tabloid, The Blue Diamond, is an authorized publication for members of the U.S. Marine Corps. Contents are not necessarily the official views of, or endorsed by, the U.S. government, the Department of Defense, or the U.S. Marine Corps. The editorial content of this publication is the responsibility of the 1st Marine Division Public Affairs office. had been notionally hit by indirect fire. Reacting to the attack, Marines posted security as their aid and liter team entered the building to begin treating the role-player casualties. Real amputees with prosthetic simulating combat injuries served as role players for the kill house. The Marines and sailors are forced to work under pressure from the corpsmen running the house and the role players intensity. The kill house is as accurate as they could get it, and they had some very good actors here, said Meyers, 27, from Riverbank, Calif. It s designed to put Marines in that situation and conditions them if one of their buddies goes down. Alpha Company will use these experiences and lessons learned from Range 220 to enable them to effectively complete EMV in preparation for an upcoming Afghanistan deployment. Having this MOUT training will enable the Marines of 1/5 to be effective in combat and counterinsurgency operations the next time they hear the resounding command Go! Go! Go! COMBAT OUTPOST PAYNE, Afghanistan Lance Cpl. Jonathan Ricky Medrano, an infantryman with 3rd Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion, 1st Marine Division (Forward), crosses an irrigation canal during a patrol, to clear an area near the Helmand River during Operation Big Valley, Feb. 1. Medrano, a 21-year-old native of Lansing, Mich., and fellow Marines partnered with Afghan National Security Forces to clear areas that locals said the Taliban use to travel and hide weapons and bomb-making materials. 1st MAR DIV Commanding General Maj. Gen. Michael R. Regner 1 MAR DIV Sergeant Major Sgt. Maj. Anthony Sammartino 1st MAR DIV Public Affairs Officer 1st. Lt. Joseph Reney Public Affairs Chief Staff Sgt. Luis Agostini 5

From the everyday stressors of life to the stressors related to combat, stress can affect even the strongest Marine. The DSTRESS line was developed by the Marine Corps to provide professional, anonymous counseling for Marines, their families and loved ones when it s needed most. For any stress related issues including work, personal, relationship, financial and family Available 24 hours a day, seven days a week Anonymous conseling provided by trained professionals exclusively for Marines, their families and loved ones. For more photos and news from around the 1st Marine Division, visit our facebook site at: http://www.facebook.com/1stmarinedivision. Like us today to get the updates as more is posted to the site! Follow the 1st Marine Division on twitter for historical events, current happenings and links to stories from the different units in our division. Tweet us at: http://twitter.com/#!/1stmardivision 6