HAITI: US Marines, With Little to Do, Play Cards and Train for Afghanistan

Posted on March 14, 2010

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The US Marines are under the impression that the relief effort has been “scaled back” and that there is little left for them to do.  They are spending their remaining days in Haiti playing cards and training for Afghanistan.  Here’s my short list for how they might busy themselves:  dig latrines, construct shelters, distribute food and aid, help with transport of individuals needing follow-up medical care and, maybe, a little rubble removal.

Note to “Stars and Stripes”:  Showing a picture of Marines playing cards in the middle of massive devastation is an insult to the people of Haiti. 

 

Marines in Haiti training for Afghanistan

By Seth Robson, Stars and Stripes
Mideast edition, Monday, March 15, 2010

Seth Robson / S&S
Lt. Gen. Dennis J. Hejlik, commanding general of the II Marine Expeditionary Force, visited Marines in Carrefour last week and spoke to them about their next mission: Afghanistan.

 
Seth Robson / S&S
Marine Lance Cpl. Keith Cobb of Soso, Miss., trains in Haiti on Thursday for an upcoming mission to Afghanistan.

Seth Robson / S&S
Marine Lance Cpl. Jeremy McLaughlin trains in Haiti on Thursday for an upcoming mission to Afghanistan.
Seth Robson / S&S
Marines in Carrefour kill time by playing cards, but they’ve also begun to prepare for a deployment to Afghanistan in the spring.

CARREFOUR, Haiti – Marines deployed to Haiti to render emergency aid following January’s devastating earthquake are already training for the fight in Afghanistan.

Marines from the 22nd Marine Expeditionary Unit have been in Haiti for two months providing security for aid groups and other servicemembers helping the Haitians recover from the disaster.

However, in recent weeks, as the relief effort scales back, Marines on shore have had less to do. Many spend most of their time confined to their small camp in Carrefour waiting for the order to return home.

Days and nights are devoted to guarding the camp, maintaining equipment, playing cards, throwing footballs and working out. And in recent days the Marines from 3rd Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment have been honing warfighting skills.

On Thursday, a small group of Marines stormed several small concrete buildings inside the wire at their seashore camp while their comrades played the roles of Afghan insurgents, shouting “bang” as they engaged their opponents in a mock attack.

The day before, when Lt Gen Dennis J. Hejlik, commanding general of the II Marine Expeditionary Force visited the Marines on shore, he praised their good work in Haiti and asked them, “What’s next for you when you get home?”

“Afghanistan,” came the reply.

As Huey helicopters buzzed overhead, Hejlik talked about the recent Marjah offensive, adding that there would be 20,000 Marines in Afghanistan by summer.

“You will join them next spring,” he told the Marines at Carrefour.

One of them, Sgt. Timothy Kelly, 23, of Johnston City, Ill., said members of his unit learned about the Afghan mission just before they got orders to head for Haiti.

The training that they are doing there is geared towards close-quarters battle tactics and getting Marines to understand how to carry out orders on patrol, said Kelly, who has only been outside the wire once since his unit arrived in Carrefour at the start of the month.

“Only a couple [of Marines in Kelly’s squad] have experience in Iraq or Afghanistan,” he said. “We have a lot of guys that aren’t going to be here for that Afghan deployment. The ones who are, we might as well get them in the mind-set.”

Another Marine at Carrefour, Lance Cpl. Keith Cobb, 23, of Soso, Miss., said the Afghan deployment will be his first time in a war zone.

“I want to kill the terrorists and get rid of the bad people, but I would rather be here because I know I’m going home after this,” he said.