U.S. Marine special operations company: Expelled

Uh oh.

WASHINGTON (Map, News) - The top American general in Afghanistan has expelled a U.S. Marine special operations company for the way the men responded to an ambush March 4, Marine sources said.

Maj. Cliff Gilmore, a spokesman for Marine Special Operations Command, confirmed to The Examiner that the company of 120 Marines is redeploying.

He said the decision followed an ambush on the company’s convoy by a vehicle-borne improvised explosive device. A second Marine source said the Marines retaliated and some civilians were killed.

The action brought an abrupt end to what promised to be a historic deployment. The unit sailed in January from Camp Lejuene, N.C., as the first Marine Corps special operations company sent overseas. The Corps joined U.S. Special Operations Command a year ago.

So the first mission of MARSOC has failed? Or is there more here than they’re telling us??

The company is now redeploying to Kuwait after just a few weeks in Afghanistan in what was supposed to be a six-month tour.

A Marine officer assigned to special operations said Lt. Gen. Karl Eikenberry, the top U.S. commander, took the extraordinary step of expelling the unit after he consulted with Afghan Prime Minister Hamid Karzai.

A spokesman for Eikenberry could not be reached today.

Gilmore said, “The unit responded to the ambush and the local population perceptions of that response have damaged the relationship between the local population and the Marine special operations company.”

You know…we shouldn’t even be reading stories about ANY special ops activity. I wonder what the motivation for this “article” really is??

3 Comments »

3 Responses to “U.S. Marine special operations company: Expelled”

  1. Michael on 25 Mar 2007 at Sun 25 March 2007 07:14:02 #

    This is Crap, This is what happens when the Army ‘an occupying force’ takes leadership of Marines ‘a reactionary force’.

  2. Raven on 25 Mar 2007 at Sun 25 March 2007 08:36:20 #

    I don’t think this stuff should have been known.

    Spec Ops OPS aren’t supposed to be well known.
    (as I blogged about it)

    LOL

  3. AirborneVet on 28 Mar 2007 at Wed 28 March 2007 16:40:47 #

    I don’t think it has anything to do with the relationship between the Army and the USMC. I think it has EVERYTHING to do with politics and the whole ‘winning hearts and minds’ concept.