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Why US and Spanish Marines just teamed up to storm the beaches of Ibiza

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US Marines Spain Ibiza

  • US and Spanish Marines conducted exercises in the Balearic Islands of Mallorca, Menorca, Ibiza, and Formentera in November.
  • The operations were part of a larger exercise called BALEAREX, which had US Marines train and operate side-by-side with their Spanish counterparts.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

On a sunny day in early November, a platoon of US Marines alongside a battalion of Spanish Infanteria de Marina launched from a Spanish amphibious ship and stormed a beach at Ibiza, Spain, while local schoolchildren and other spectators watched.

"It wasn't very tactical," 1st Lt. Conner Kline, a platoon commander with Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force-Crisis Response-Africa, told Marine Corps Times in a phone interview after the exercise. "We hit the beach. We got out of the back. Guys took a knee and it was essentially a photo-op from that point. It was actually really cool."

While the beach assault on the famous resort island may have been fun for the Marines involved, the operation was part of a larger exercise called BALEAREX, which had American Marines train and operate side-by-side with their Spanish counterparts.

It was a test of the amphibious maritime basing and interoperability concept the Marine Corps is developing to improve its ability to work with US allies and create a force more flexible than what each individual military is capable of on its own.

US Marines Spain Ibiza

"It's about being more deliberate about our engagement with our allies and partners in the maritime environment," Maj. Adam Drexler a regional planner with Marine Forces Europe and Africa, told Marine Corps Times in a phone interview.

The operation took place from November 6 to November 17, and had American Marines board the Spanish amphibious assault ship-aircraft carrier Juan Carlos I to conduct training missions around the Spanish Balearic Islands of Mallorca, Menorca, Ibiza and Formentera.

Drexler said the concept builds from the one-off events like BALEAREX to eventually provide the US and its allies the ability to deploy a mutlinational force designed similarly to an Amphibious Ready Group-Marine Expeditionary Unit, or ARGMEU.

Exercises like BALEAREX are a "building block" used to increase familiarity working with US allies and working out whatever kinks the plan may have before being tested in actual combat, Drexler said.

US Marines Spain Ibiza

Kline said his experience working with the Spanish military was almost universally problem-free, with the language barrier being the only issue he encountered.

But, even that, he said easily was overcome as most of the officers spoke at least some English, and Spanish interpreters were not hard to come by.

"Sometimes things get lost in translation and it did kind of make things a little more inefficient and time consuming," Kline said. But, he added, "we had some Spanish speakers within my platoon so they can act as translators, and the other thing too is the Spanish are very impressive in their ability to speak English."

Maj. Charles Jordan, a V-22 Osprey pilot with SPMAGTF-CR-AR who participated in BALEAREX, said language is not really an issue on the air side, as English is the standard aviation language.

However, the layers of communication and planning required to operate on a foreign Navy's ship can take months to complete, Jordan said.

"If we're going to operate on a foreign ship, there is communication that has to go on at the Department of State level, then for detail planning it gets handed over to the Department of Defense," Jordan said. "At our organizational level that usually involves doing face-to-face meetings with planners, usually several months in advance."

US Marines Spain Ibiza Osprey

The planners had to ensure the Spanish vessel had compatible tie downs, a large enough landing spot and the firefighting capabilities required for the Osprey, he said.

Jordan said most of the capabilities are standard across NATO, and in his experience working with the Spanish, French, British, Japanese and Australian navies the checks are just a "formality."

Kline said while the exercise increased his comfort in working with the Spanish military, it also allowed him to leave the bubble Marines often train in, confirming what tactics and techniques work, while learning of potentially better ways to accomplish a mission.

"By being with units that have a different uniform on and speak differently and seeing that the things we do actually work," Kline said, it gave him and his Marines the "confidence that okay maybe what we do it's not just Marine Corps gospel, no, this stuff actually does work."

US Marines Spain Ibiza Osprey

Kline said he took 24 American Marines and 12 Spanish Marines from the unit's recon element to conduct a simulated raid on a notional terrorist compound comprised of a series of tunnels on the island of Mallorca.

The Marines took off from the ship on Spanish helicopters because American Ospreys based at Moron Air Base, Spain, originally scheduled to insert the Marines were unexpectedly grounded.

"The original plan was to use Ospreys for the duration of the operation," Kline said. But "at the beginning of the day, the weather was not good ... so we had to flex and we were able to use the helicopters organic to the Spanish Navy."

During the raid, the American Marines went into the compound with bilingual radio operators provided by the Spanish to quickly relay changing information.

After Spanish and American Marines successfully cleared the tunnels, they were taken off the island by the Ospreys that became available after the weather cleared.

SEE ALSO: The 2nd Marine Division is doing its largest unscripted training in decades, and it's going up against British marines

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NOW WATCH: Step aboard the USS Kearsarge, the US Navy workhorse that takes Marines to war


How Marine recruits train inside a tear gas chamber at boot camp

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  • We got an inside look at how United States Marine Corps recruits are exposed to tear gas during basic training.
  • Senior video correspondent Graham Flanagan spent five days at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in Parris Island, SC, where he observed various stages of training.
  • Recruits are exposed to CS gas, more commonly known as tear gas. Side effects include burning on the skin and in the eyes, and profuse discharge of mucus.
  • While wearing a gas mask, the recruits spend approximately five minutes inside a gas chamber where CS tablets are burned to create the gas. 
  • Recruits break the seals of their masks in order to feel the effects of the gas and to understand how their masks work during exposure. 
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Following is a transcript of the video.

Instructor: Gas, gas, gas!

Narrator: These Marine recruits are being exposed to CS gas, more commonly known as tear gas, to experience its effects and to know how to properly use a gas mask.

SSgt Antonio Garay: Gas chamber's important because it builds confidence. Confidence in the gear, confidence in the drill instructors, and then confidence in themselves.

Narrator: Here at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in Parris Island, South Carolina, this gas chamber is used to train recruits in CBRN defense. CBRN stands for chemical, biological, radioactive, or nuclear.

Instructor: Gas, gas, gas!

Narrator: Before entering the chamber, recruits are briefed on the components of the gas mask, how to properly put it on, and how to clear it.

Instructor: Get shoulder-to-shoulder!

Narrator: We were not allowed to film inside the gas chamber.

Instructor: Say something to me now!

Narrator: But the Recruit Depot provided this footage of what it's really like inside. Once inside, the instructor burns CS tablets, which creates the gas. Its effects are quickly felt. Recruits use their fingers to break the seal of the mask, letting the gas seep in.

Recruit: You feel like the air's attacking you but if you know how to just kind of take yourself into that moment, relax, and apply everything that the instructors have been telling you, it's not too bad.

Narrator: The recruits do a variety of physical exercises to get a better feel for how the mask works during exposure. After around five minutes, the recruits run out of the gas chamber. But the painful effects of the gas can last for 10 to 20 more minutes. The effects can include intense burning felt in the eyes, throat, and on the skin...

Instructor: Get it off!

Narrator: As well as a profuse discharge of mucus.

Recruit: Definitely, you thank God for fresh air. It's really nice to be able to breathe in and not feel an instant burning sensation.

Narrator: The recruits then wash their masks in barrels of water.

Instructor: Faster!

Recruit: Feels like those few minutes felt like an hour. You come outside, you feel that fresh breeze and you're like, "Wow." You just kind of recollect on what you just went through and you're just trying to catch your breath for the most part.

Garay: It really forces them to start building confidence in themselves and in the gear and in everything that they've been instructed to do while being in the gas chamber. You can definitely see the type of confidence that they have after that.

SEE ALSO: How Marine recruits are trained to fight with bayonets at boot camp

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How Marine recruits battle their fear of heights on a 47-foot-tall tower at boot camp

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  • We got an inside look at how United States Marine Corps recruits are trained to rappel down a 47-foot-tall tower.
  • Senior video correspondent Graham Flanagan spent five days at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in Parris Island, SC, where he observed various stages of training.
  • Recruits learn two different types of rappelling techniques: fast-roping and static rappel. 
  • According to the depot, the training is designed to instill confidence, and introduce recruits to environments they may encounter while serving in the Corps.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Following is a transcript of the video.

Recruit: I'm slipping. Please! Please help! I don't want to do this.

Instructor: You're fine. Recruit: No, I'm not. Please!

Instructor: We're trying to help you, son.

Recruit: I don't want to go down!

Narrator: These Marine recruits are training on the rappel tower at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot in Parris Island, South Carolina. According to the depot, the rappel tower is a training event designed to instill confidence and introduce recruits to environments they may encounter while serving in the Corps. Rappel tower happens on day 25 of boot camp, a particularly busy day where recruits also train in the dreaded gas chamber.

Instructor: Run!

Narrator: Hundreds of recruits wait their turn to scale the stairs of Holberton Tower, which stands around 47 feet tall.

Instructor: You're gonna go from the front to the back.

Narrator: First, instructors brief the recruits on their safety equipment, which consists of a helmet, gloves, and a safety harness. Recruits learn two different types of rappelling techniques, the first of which is known as fast-roping, where the recruit quickly descends using a thick rope.

John Ovalle: As Marines, we use fast-roping techniques to get as many troops into the fight off of a helicopter as fast as possible.

Narrator: The second technique is known as static rappel, where recruits utilize the tower's wooden face to perform a controlled descent.

Ovalle: For static rappel, you'll utilize the rappelling on cliffsides to get into a building in the most expeditious manner.

Instructor: Grab ahold of my right hand with your right hand. That is your brake hand. Put it on the lower center of your back.

Narrator: Recruits learn how to use their hands to perform different functions while rappelling. The left hand holds the rope in front and is known as the guide hand. The right hand is known as the brake hand.

Instructor: Shoot your arm out and go down the tower!

Recruit: Aye, aye, sir!

Narrator: When the recruit is told to shoot out their brake hand, gravity quickly takes effect.

Recruit: For me, the rappel tower was hard 'cause I sorta had a fear of heights. You have to trust the rope, and, I mean, all the gear here on the island is 100% safe, so there's nothing to be worried about. You'll be safe all the time.

Narrator: Since safety is so important, the line can move slowly...

Instructor: Series!

Recruits: Aye, aye, sir!

Narrator: Resulting in a long wait for recruits on the ground level.

Instructor: Golf Company!

Recruits: Aye, aye, sir!

Instructor: Golf Company!

Recruits: Aye, aye, sir!

Narrator: But the drill instructors find ways to keep them occupied.

Instructor: E-5!

Recruits: Sir! E-5 in the Marine Corps is sergeant!

Narrator: Including testing them on basic recruit knowledge.

Instructor: Series!

Recruit: This recruit, please help!

Narrator: But for some recruits, the long wait creates anxiety.

Recruit: I'm slipping! Please! Please help! I don't want to do this.

Instructor: You're fine.

Recruit: No, I'm not. Please! I don't want to go down!

Narrator: At Parris Island, fear is not an option. And those with a fear of heights have no choice but to conquer it.

SEE ALSO: How Marine recruits train inside a tear gas chamber at boot camp

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The Marine Corps' off-the-shelf utility vehicles are getting some big upgrades

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Marine Corps Marines Utility Task Vehicle

  • The Marine Corps' Program Executive Officer Land Systems started fielding the Utility Task Vehicle to Marines in 2017.
  • The UTV was bought as an off-the-shelf solution, and after two years of Marines beating them up, the vehicles are getting some upgrades so they can run better and more safely.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

MARINE CORPS BASE QUANTICO, Virginia — The Marine Corps' Utility Task Vehicles are undergoing several upgrades designed to improve the safety and performance of the vehicle.

Using critical feedback from Marines and taking inspiration spanning the automotive industry to desert racing, engineers and logisticians from the Light Tactical Vehicle program office at Program Executive Officer Land Systems have been working diligently to research, test, procure and implement changes to the UTV.

These changes include high clearance control arms, new run-flat tires, floorboard protection, a road march kit, a clutch improvement kit and an environmental protection cover.

"We bought the vehicle as a [commercial-off-the-shelf] solution, so it's not going to have everything we want right from the factory," said Jason Engstrom, lead systems engineer for the UTV at PEO Land Systems.

Since PEO Land Systems started fielding the UTV in 2017, Marines have consistently pushed the limits of their vehicles, said Engstrom, in many ways beyond what is expected or imagined with a typical off-the-shelf solution.

"Even though we're in the operations, maintenance and sustainment phases with the vehicle, it's such a new vehicle and we're seeing Marines constantly push the limits of the truck," said Engstrom. "Every day we're seeing Marines come up with new ideas on how to use the truck."

SEE ALSO: Marines in California are getting introduced to the Humvee's replacement

High Clearance Control Arms

The first of these upgrades involves installing high clearance control arms on the vehicle — a crucial component of the vehicle's suspension system.

"With the different types of terrain Marines cover in these vehicles, we noticed the [original] control arms were frequently getting bent," said Engstrom. "Rocks were probably the biggest hazard, and that's primarily where the Marines were driving."

A bent or damaged control arm can disable a vehicle, said UTV logistician Rodney Smith.

To address this issue, the team looked to industry and ultimately settled on a control arm comprised of material about twice as strong as the original control arms and that provided an extra 2.5 inches of clearance.

With this upgrade, Marines are better equipped to drive off the beaten path while minimizing their risk of damaging the control arms on their vehicles.



Clutch Improvement Kit

The UTV team is also outfitting the vehicle with a clutch improvement kit. The UTV's clutch is an important component of the vehicle's transmission system, which is essential in making the vehicle run.

"One of the things that came right from the factory was a belt-driven [transmission] system," said Engstrom. "Just like with the control arms, a broken belt takes the whole vehicle out of action."

The upgraded clutch kit reconfigures the clutch system, enabling it to better engage the belt to keep it from breaking, said Engstrom.



Floorboard Protection

The team has also began upgrading the vehicle's floorboard, which showed evidence of damage after a recent deployment.

"When Marines deployed the vehicles to Australia, they found that high-density sticks and branches on the ground have the potential to pop up and puncture the plastic floorboard, which is a safety hazard," said Engstrom.

Upon receiving this feedback from Marines, the UTV team researched and tested various potential materials to use in protecting the floorboard.

"We wanted to find a solution that kept the weight down because putting too much weight in the design of the vehicle — like a reinforced floorboard — impacts the amount of cargo Marines can carry on it," said Smith. "Every pound counts."



Tires

For the UTV's tire upgrades, the team turned to a novel source for inspiration: the Baja off-road racing industry.

"There's a new approach to run-flat technology — called 'Tireballs,'" said Engstrom. "Inside each tire are 16 inflatable cells, so if any one cell pops from running over a spike or nail, you'd still have 15 other cells full of air to continue driving on."

This, said Engstrom, significantly enhances the UTV's operational readiness for Marines, allowing them to go farther for longer in the UTV. Along with the Tireballs, the team selected an upgraded tire from BF Goodrich that is more durable than the previous, exceeding performance requirements in various environments that mimic the challenging terrains Marines face.

"The Baja racers are using these tires now while completing 1000-mile races out in the desert," said Engstrom. "We decided it would be a good upgrade for Marines."



Environmental Protection Cover

The Environmental Protection Cover, another upgrade to the UTV, provides Marines with protection from the elements while they're out in the field.

"Have you ever been in a convertible on a hot, sunny day and put the roof up? That's exactly what this is," said UTV engineer Christopher Swift. "It's necessary after being out in the field 8-12 hours a day in the hot sun, especially if it's the only shelter available."



Road March Kit

The team started fielding the UTV's Road March Kit — comprising turn signals, a horn, and a rearview mirror — last March. Marines from III Marine Expeditionary Force requested these features be added for safety, especially when transitioning between training areas on roads also used by civilian motorists.

The Road March Kit upgrade, along with the other vehicle upgrades, underscores the importance Marines' user feedback is to the acquisition professionals tasked with delivering products to the warfighter.

"We try to meet customer needs within the requirement [determined by Marine Corps Combat Development and Integration]," said UTV Team Lead Lorrie Owens. "If we can meet the customers' need to make it more reliable and durable, we will certainly do so within the realm of the requirement."

The UTV team is taking advantage of the vehicle's general maintenance schedule to implement the upgrades, which will be done alongside regular maintenance and services.



Marines' obsession with pull-ups may be hurting the Corps

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Marine Corps Marines pull-ups

  • The emphasis Marines put on doing pull-ups risks overshadowing other important qualities the Corps needs to accomplish its mission.
  • A study done by the Corps also found that pull-ups contribute to the divide between male and female Marines, with male Marines thinking "women have an unfair advantage in how their PFT is scored."
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Marines are putting an "extreme emphasis" on the number of pull-ups leathernecks can do, a recently published internal study found. And that, some fear, could result in other important qualities that are vital to the Corps' mission being overlooked.

Participants in a study on Marine Corps culture were often focused on pull-ups as a best measure of a person's value and worth, researchers found. Marines' ability to lift their own body weight on a pull-up bar was "routinely what Marines referenced when discussing physical standards, a Marine's value, and physical readiness," the report's authors wrote.

One officer interviewed for the study recalled seeing a bunch of cyberwarfare Marines — a specialty the service struggles to retain — leave the Marine Corps because they "ran 26-minute three miles and only did five pull-ups."

"So we told them they were bad Marines," the captain said. "But now they make six figures for Microsoft ... and we don't have any of them for our future cyber fight."

Much of the discussion in the report centered around differing pull-ups requirements for men and women taking the annual physical fitness test. The study, which was initiated after a scandal in which hundreds of male Marines and veterans were found to have shared nude photos of their female colleagues online without permission, was led by the Marine Corps Center for Advanced Operational Culture Learning.

The center interviewed hundreds during the monthslong investigation. Task & Purpose first reported on the study, which found indications that "mistreatment of women is pervasive and becoming normalized" in the Marine Corps.

Pull-ups are contributing to the divide between male and female Marines, the report found. Male Marines "thought that women have an unfair advantage in how their PFT is scored," the study states.

Men need to complete between 18 and 23 pull-ups on their PFT, depending on their age, to get full marks. Women need between four and 12 pull-ups on their PFT, also depending on age, to get the full 100 points on that event.

Marine Corps Marines pull-ups

Researchers noted that there are arguably more important metrics that show a Marine's preparedness for combat, including the ability to shoot or performance on the combat fitness test, which requires Marines to show they can carry a colleague to safety. But Marines repeatedly cited pull-ups as a top indicator of a leatherneck's warfighting abilities, the study found.

The findings aren't leading to any training changes that would deemphasize the importance of pull-ups though, Col. Stephen Armes, director of the Marine Corps' Force Fitness Division within Training and Education Command, said.

"The pull-up is an evidence-based field test of dynamic upper body strength and endurance which incentivizes beneficial training behaviors," he told Military.com "Additionally, performance on the pull-up has strong correlation to MOS-specific physical demands."

Armes added that all events on both the physical and combat fitness tests are important in assessing the "variety of physical attributes necessary to sustain general health and fitness."

One East Coast sergeant told the study's authors he had no problem with women serving in combat "if she can pull her weight." That means doing the same number of pull-ups, regardless of gender, he added.

"She'd better be able to pull the same amount of weight that I can pull and she'd better be able to meet every standard that I've had to meet," the NCO said. "To get a first-class PFT I have to do 23 pull-ups. She has to do nine. There is a gap there ... that's inequality."

Until a few years ago, women did not have to complete any pull-ups to pass the Marine Corps' physical fitness test. Men were required to perform the exercise, but women were allowed to do what was known as a flexed-arm hang, which required them to hang with chin above the pull-up bar, but did not include dynamic motion.

That was set to change in 2014 until service leaders found most female recruits at boot camp weren't able to do pull-ups. The flexed-arm hang wasn't eliminated from the Marines' fitness test until 2017. At that point, men and women were also given the option to swap pull-ups for easier push-ups, though they face a points penalty for doing so.

Years later, the differing standards are contributing to a gender divide, the study found. The idea that female Marines can do fewer pull-ups than their male counterparts and get an equal score "did not sit well" with men, researchers wrote.

"Are [women] required to meet equal physical standards? No, it doesn't take a scientist to study that," one gunnery sergeant said. "They need to do this many pull-ups, and I need to do this many. Is that equal? No. Four and four is equal. 20 and 20 is equal. That's equal. So either we're equal, or we're not."

Armes pointed out that the Marine Corps has gender- and age-neutral MOS-specific standards, which would require men and women in those jobs to perform the same number of pull-ups. Those don't appear to have been discussed in the report, he added.

In some cases, the researchers noted, male Marines began to express anger over the differing standards. That, they added, can be "detrimental to the Marine Corps."

"This kind of attitude can contribute to creating and perpetuating the hostile environments that many of the female Marines discussed," the study states.

— Gina Harkins can be reached at gina.harkins@military.com. Follow her on Twitter @ginaaharkins.

SEE ALSO: A woman has passed the grueling SEAL officer test for the first time, but she won't join their ranks

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NOW WATCH: An exercise scientist demonstrates how to perform the perfect pull-up – and the moves that will make it easier

The Corps is offering up to $40,000 in extra cash to Marines willing to do psychological operations

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Marines standing in formation

  • The Marine Corps wants to fill its 200 jobs in its new psychological operations military occupational specialty by 2025.
  • The job field has 65 Marines in it now, and to entice more to join the Corps is offering up to $40,000 in bonus money for Marines who make a lateral career move into the field.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

As the Corps continues to build its new psychological operations community, it's offering big bonuses to Marines willing to make the career switch.

The Marine Corps is calling for qualified lance corporals, corporals or sergeants who can help influence foreign actors' emotions, motives and behavior to consider a career in psychological operations.

The service first announced last year that it would be creating the new 0521 psychological operations military occupational specialty, and leaders are working to fill about 200 jobs by 2025, Maj. Sharon Hyland Sisbarro, a spokeswoman for the deputy commandant for information, said.

"The Marine Corps' ability to influence foreign target audiences is a critical function for conducting Operations in the Information Environment," she said.

There are currently 65 Marines in the MOS now, and there are 20 spots available for Marines to move into the field in 2020, Sisbarro said.

Lance corporals, corporals and sergeants could be eligible for a bonus of up to $35,000 if they make a lateral career move into the field. And those who agree to a 72-month contract could qualify for an extra $40,000 as part of a lateral-move initiative, said Maj. Craig Thomas, a spokesman for Manpower and Reserve Affairs.

PsyOp Marines conduct Military Information Support Operations, or MISO, provide civil authorities information support, and support military deception, Sisbarro said. They convey certain information to foreign organizations, groups or individuals to get them to act "in a manner favorable to the Commander's objectives," a Marine administrative message states.

Military deception "targets enemy decisionmakers by targeting their intelligence collection, analysis, and dissemination systems," a Marine Corps information operations memo states. Marines need a thorough knowledge of adversaries and their decision-making processes to pull off the efforts, which are designed not simply to mislead, but to achieve a specific outcome.

"The goal," the memo states, "is to cause the adversary to fail to employ combat or support units to their best advantage."

Marines interested in making the switch to psychological operations must meet a host of requirements to qualify for the MOS. They must be worldwide deployable and need to complete all physical and academic requirements before attending a four-day screening assessment.

In addition to completing the standard physical and combat fitness tests, PsyOp Marines must also complete a 5-mile run in less than 45 minutes and maintain a 15-minute per mile pace during a ruck march of 8 miles or less. During the ruck march, Marines will have to carry at least 35 pounds — water not included.

Marines also must also show their ability to communicate clearly and think critically during academic events.

Screenings for the new MOS start in Virginia, California and North Carolina in early 2020. Additional screenings will be held in Hawaii and Japan starting in April.

Those interested in making the switch should contact their career planners to be sure they meet the requirements for the lateral move, Marine administrative message 690/19 states.

— Gina Harkins can be reached at gina.harkins@military.com. Follow her on Twitter @ginaaharkins.

SEE ALSO: Marines' obsession with pull-ups may be hurting the Corps

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Step aboard the USS Kearsarge, the US Navy workhorse that takes Marines to war

Marines in California took the Corps' new Amphibious Combat Vehicle out for a nighttime test in the ocean

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Marine Corps Marines Amphibious Combat Vehicle Pendleton

  • Marines at Camp Pendleton in California took the Corps' new Amphibious Combat Vehicle out for low-light and nighttime testing this month.
  • The Amphibious Combat Vehicle will replace the Amphibious Assault Vehicle, which has been in service since 1972, starting in late 2020.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The world is constantly advancing around us. As the most feared fighting force in the world, it is imperative Marines advance their capabilities along with it. The Corps' new Amphibious Combat Vehicle is here to improve Marines' amphibious capabilities.

Marines with the Amphibious Vehicle Test Branch, Marine Corps Tactical Systems Support Activity, tested the ACV's maneuverability and performance during low-light and night operations on Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton's beaches, December 16-18.

The Marines spent hours driving ACVs the Southern California surf and in the open ocean to assess how well they could interface with the vehicle and conduct operations in low light.

"AVTB has been on Camp Pendleton since 1943," said David Sandvold, the director of operations for AVTB. "We are the only branch in the military who uses our warfighters to test equipment that is in development."

SEE ALSO: The Marine Corps' off-the-shelf utility vehicles are getting some big upgrades

The ACV will be replacing the Amphibious Assault Vehicle starting in late 2020. The AAV has been in service since 1972, serving in countries around the world.



The AAV has been the go-to vehicle to carry Marines and gear from ship to shore, but with adversaries around the world growing more powerful, the ACV was created to enhance the capabilities of ship-to-shore missions and amphibious assaults.



The ACV will come in four different variants derived from the armored personnel carrier base. There's a recovery variant, a command-and-control variant, and an up-armed variant to engage enemy armored vehicles. Each ACV comes equipped with eight wheels instead of the tracks originally on the AAV.



"It's a huge difference on how the ACV and the AAV drive and handle," said Marine Sgt. Fernando Alvarez, an AAV operator with AVTB. "The main difference (with wheels) is that it's a lot faster on land. But instead of pivoting like the AAV, we have to make three-point turns now, which is not a problem."



The ACV powers through high surf, traverses over trenches and trucks over sloped terrain.



The ACV's significant protective assets make it resilient to direct attacks and allow it to operate with degraded mobility in an ever-changing battle environment. The vehicle possesses sufficient lethality to deliver accurate fire support to infantry, whether stationary or on the move.



"Technology is modernizing," explained Sandvold. "As we learn about the ACV, we see everything it has to offer."



The ACV also has a unique V-shape underbelly to deflect the blast of improvised explosive devices. Since IED's were the most lethal weapons used against AAVs, the new ACV was designed to take a blast from an IED, continue the mission and bring Marines home safely.



"I am loyal to tracks, but the more I learn about these vehicles, the more impressed I get with all its features and how it will improve our warfighting capabilities," said Sandvold.



The US is sending roughly 100 more Marines to defend the embassy in Baghdad after violent protesters stormed the gate

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Protesters and militia fighters set on fire a security building of the U.S. Embassy, as people gather to condemn air strikes on bases belonging to Hashd al-Shaabi (paramilitary forces), in Baghdad, Iraq December 31, 2019.

  • Secretary of Defense Mark Esper announced on Tuesday that the US was "sending additional forces to support our personnel" at the US Embassy in Baghdad after violent protesters stormed the gate.
  • US Central Command told Insider that "around 100" additional Marines would be sent to provide security for the diplomatic outpost.
  • The protests on Tuesday followed US airstrikes targeting an Iran-backed militia, a response to a rocket attack last Friday that killed a US civilian contractor and injured several American service members.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The Pentagon announced on Tuesday that the US would send in additional forces to defend the US Embassy in Baghdad after violent protesters stormed the gates earlier in the day.

The protests followed US airstrikes targeting an Iran-backed Iraqi militia, carried out in retaliation for a rocket attack on a local base on Friday that killed a US civilian contractor and wounded several others.

"We have taken appropriate force protection actions to ensure the safety of American citizens, military personnel and diplomats in country, and to ensure our right of self-defense," Secretary of Defense Mark Esper announced in a statement on Tuesday. "We are sending additional forces to support our personnel at the Embassy."

Esper added that the US continued to "rely on the host nation forces to assist in the protection of our personnel."

In a tweet earlier Tuesday, President Donald Trump blamed Iran for the attack on the embassy and urged Iraq to defend US personnel in the country.

Esper did not say how many additional troops would be sent to protect the embassy. US Central Command officials, however, told Insider that "around 100" more Marines would be sent to provide additional security for the diplomatic outpost.

The Marines are assigned to the Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force — Crisis Response — Central Command and will deploy from Kuwait, CENTCOM said, adding that this force is "designed to move with speed and precision to support operations throughout the Middle East."

U.S. Marines assigned to Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force-Crisis Response-Central Command (SPMAFTF-CR-CC) 19.2, prepare to deploy from Kuwait in support of a crisis response mission, Dec. 31, 2019.

These Marines are, according to Military.com, part of a special crisis-response unit — one of several created after the 2012 attack on a US outpost in Benghazi, Libya — and trained to deal with a variety of emergency situations.

In addition to the decision to send in more troops for added security, the US flew Apache helicopters over the embassy as a show of force.

The situation at the embassy follows a series of clashes between US personnel and local militias.

Last Friday, a US civilian contractor was killed and several American service members were wounded in a rocket attack on an Iraqi base in Kirkuk that the US believes was carried out by an Iran-backed militia called Kataib Hezbollah. On Sunday, the US conducted five airstrikes targeting Kataib Hezbollah positions, killing more than two dozen fighters.

The retaliatory strikes sparked violent protests on Tuesday, when demonstrators stormed the main gate of the US Embassy in Baghdad and torched a security post.

State Department officials said on Tuesday there the embassy compound had not been breached and that all personnel were safe. They advised Americans to stay away from the embassy.

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A special Marines force created after Benghazi just hit the ground in Iraq as swarms of protesters besiege the US Embassy in Baghdad

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A U.S. Marine assigned to Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force-Crisis Response-Central Command (SPMAFTF-CR-CC) 19.2, checks gear prior to deploying from Kuwait in support of a crisis response mission, Dec. 31, 2019.

  • About 100 US Marines assigned to a special crisis-response unit are on the ground in Iraq to reinforce the US Embassy in Baghdad.
  • The diplomatic outpost in the Iraqi capital has been besieged by violent protesters, in an apparent response to US airstrikes over the weekend targeting an Iran-backed Iraqi militia following a rocket attack that killed and wounded US personnel in Iraq.
  • The Marines are assigned to the Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force — Crisis Response —Central Command, a special unit created after the deadly Benghazi attack in 2012 to quickly respond to regional contingencies.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Roughly 100 US Marines assigned to a special crisis-response unit are on the ground in Iraq to reinforce the US Embassy in Baghdad after swarms of protesters stormed the gate on Tuesday.

U.S. Marines assigned to Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force-Crisis Response-Central Command (SPMAFTF-CR-CC) 19.2, prepare to deploy from Kuwait in support of a crisis response mission, Dec. 31, 2019.

The Marines, members of 2nd Battalion, 7th Infantry Regiment, are assigned to the Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force — Crisis Response — Central Command. They deployed from Kuwait to Baghdad following an announcement by Secretary of Defense Mark Esper.

"We are sending additional forces to support our personnel at the Embassy," Esper said.

He added: "We have taken appropriate force protection actions to ensure the safety of American citizens, military personnel and diplomats in country, and to ensure our right of self-defense."

The troops were apparently transported into Iraq aboard MV-22 Ospreys, tilt-rotor aircraft designed to carry Marines and supplies quickly into crisis zones.

An MV-22 involved in the movement of Marines from Kuwait to Iraq

The Department of Defense released video footage of the Marines gearing up for their move into Iraq. The video opens with a shot of troops loading the magazines for their service weapons.

This Marines force is "designed to move with speed and precision to support operations throughout the Middle East,"US Central Command said.

It "conducts crisis response, contingency operations, theater security cooperation, enabling operations and all other missions as may be directed throughout the CENTCOM area of operations,"according to the Marines.

The unit was created after the deadly 2012 attack on US posts in Benghazi, Libya, where four American diplomatic and intelligence personnel were killed, including a US ambassador.

In addition to embassy reinforcement, these Marines are also trained to carry out evacuations, disaster-relief operations, personnel and equipment recovery, and humanitarian assistance missions.

A Marine Corps spokesman and former member of this unit told Insider that this is probably the first time the US has had to send in these troops in this capacity.

In the past, the US has reinforced with about a platoon's worth of Marines when protests bled into the so-called Green Zone. "This is certainly a much larger presence than that," he said. There are over 40 Marines in a rifle platoon.

Protesters and militia fighters attack a reception room of the U.S. Embassy, during a protest to condemn air strikes on bases belonging to Hashd al-Shaabi (paramilitary forces), in Baghdad, Iraq December 31, 2019.

The decision to send in roughly 100 Marines to reinforce the embassy came after protesters stormed its gates in an effort to breach the compound. It appeared to be a response to US airstrikes over the weekend targeting the Iran-backed Iraqi militia group believed to have carried out a rocket attack that killed and wounded US personnel days earlier.

Though protesters were able to breach the main gate and set fire to a security post, according to Reuters, embassy personnel were secure and the compound had not been breached, the State Department said on Tuesday.

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NOW WATCH: We can thank the US military for the smelliest weapon in the world

A Marine's cellphone selfie got his whole unit 'killed' during training in California

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Marine Corps cell phone

  • During a recent major exercise in the Mojave Desert, a bored Marine took a photo of himself with his cellphone.
  • The photo could be used for geolocation, and because of that, it compromised his whole unit, Corps leaders said.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

A junior Marine got his artillery unit into a serious bind after snapping a photo during a massive force-on-force training exercise in California's Mojave Desert.

Ten thousand troops recently descended on Marine Corps Air-Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms for the biggest training event of its kind in decades. The Marines, sailors and NATO forces faced drone attacks, cyber breaches and other high-tech challenges during the free-play exercise.

But one team was taken out by a different kind of threat, Lt. Gen. Lori Reynolds, the Marine Corps' deputy commandant of information, told reporters at the Pentagon.

"A Marine in that exercise took a selfie of him being bored," she said. "It showed in that selfie it was an artillery unit. You could go geo-locate him, and you could see what unit it was.

"They were like, 'OK, you guys are dead.'"

It's a tough lesson for a young Marine to learn, Reynolds said.

"And I'm sure that lance corporal was not happy," she said. "But it's OK to learn those things in Twentynine Palms — we don't want to learn those elsewhere."

Last week, the Army barred about 100 paratroopers with the 82nd Airborne Division from deploying with cellphones and other personal electronic devices, CNN reported. The North Carolina-based soldiers were sent to the Middle East amid rising tensions with Iran after the US killed one of the country's prominent military leaders in an airstrike in Iraq.

The Iranians have sophisticated cyber capabilities.

Military leaders have for years been warning troops that their cellphones and other personal devices could give away their positions overseas.

Now-retired Marine Commandant Gen. Robert Neller said in 2017 he wanted to end leathernecks' technology addiction. Cellphones, he said, were creating vulnerabilities.

"You're going to dig a hole, you're going to camouflage, you're going to turn off all your stuff," he said. "... Because if you can be seen, you can be attacked."

In 2018, troops' fitness trackers were also found to have shared sensitive information location data from military bases around the world.

Reynolds is leading some of the Marine Corps' biggest cultural shifts in decades as the service tries to prepare for sophisticated new threats in the information space that can take down networks, locate troops and remove battlespace awareness.

Maj. Gen. William Mullen, head of the Marine Corps' Training and Education Command, said Marines must rethink the way they fight.

"We saw this out there at Twentynine Palms in an electronic warfare-type environment," Mullen said. "You can't do the normal command and control we're used to from Iraq and Afghanistan ... where you pick up the radio, everything's clear and you can always check on things."

Every time Marines do that, he said, they risk being targeted or jammed.

— Gina Harkins can be reached at gina.harkins@military.com. Follow her on Twitter @ginaaharkins.

SEE ALSO: The Corps is offering up to $40,000 in extra cash to Marines willing to do psychological operations

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NOW WATCH: Step aboard the USS Kearsarge, the US Navy workhorse that takes Marines to war

The US Navy wants to know who secretly uploaded videos of sailors to Porn Hub

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US Navy Sailors

  • The US Navy is investigating after videos of dozens of service members were found on Porn Hub.
  • The Navy believes the videos, which were secretly filmed, were taken through a peephole in a bathroom.
  • Some of the sailors and marines in the videos could be identified by name patches on their uniforms. 
  • The videos have been removed from the porn website.
  • Visit Insider's homepage for more stories.

The US Navy is trying to find out who secretly filmed dozens of service members in a bathroom and shared the videos on the porn website Porn Hub, US military officials told NBC news. 

An agent from the Naval Criminal Investigative Service found the videos on Porn Hub earlier this month. Some of the videos showed sailors and marines in uniform with visible name patches, NBC reported. The individuals didn't know they were being recorded and officials were not aware of any sexual acts in the videos.

"We received a removal request from the Naval Criminal Investigative Service to remove the material in question and we did. We are currently working alongside them to assist them with their investigation,"Blake White, Vice President of Pornhub, said in a statement to Insider and other outlets. "Here at Pornhub, we immediately remove any content that violates our terms of use as soon as we are made aware of it."

The clips, which have since been removed, also included civilians. 

The officials believe the videos were taken through a peephole in a bathroom, according to NBC.

Some of the individuals in the videos were assigned to the USS Emory S. Land, a vessel that supplies submarines and is assigned to a port in Guam, the officials told NBC. 

A message left by Insider for a Navy spokesperson was not immediately returned.

In the statement, White said that PornHub employs a team to scan for and remove content that violates their terms of service. 

The company also uses "Vobile, a state of the art third party fingerpringing software," to make sure new uploads don't match videos that have already been removed from the site, White said. 

This isn't the first time that US service members have been targeted by voyeurs looking to share nude photos of them online. 

In a 2017 scandal, the US Marine Corp. opened an investigation after hundreds of nude photos of female service members from every military branch had been posted to an image-sharing message board.

The discovery of the photos and investigation resulted in a change in US Marine and Navy laws banning revenge porn.

Violators who are found to have shared an "intimate image" of a colleague without their consent can face consequences ranging from administrative punishments to criminal actions.

 

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NOW WATCH: We can thank the US military for the smelliest weapon in the world

Two-dozen US Marines were discharged after an investigation over their alleged involvement in drug crimes and a human trafficking operation along the border

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Camp Pendleton

  • Two-dozen Marines received less-than-honorable discharges from the US Marines following their reported involvement in human trafficking and drug-related crimes, Military.com reported.
  • One person will face 18 months in the brig, though most others avoided military court prosecution after chargers were dropped over issues with their arrest. 
  • The case first came to light when two Marines were arrested with three non-US citizens in their vehicle about seven miles away from the US/Mexico border, according to the report. 
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Two-dozen US Marines have been discharged and at least one has been sentenced to time in prison following an investigation into their involvement in human smuggling and drug-related issues, a spokesperson for the Marines told Military.com

The Marines, all from California's first 1st Marine Division, faced varying levels of punishment from administrative to judicial action, the spokesperson told Military.com

One Marine has been sentenced to 18 months in a military prison, and one other currently awaits a general court-martial trial, the most serious type of military trial, Military.com reported. Nine Marines who faced a courts-martial trial pleaded guilty to the charges and were discharged.

None of the 24 members dismissed were honorably discharged, and at least two of them were discharged with bad-conduct discharges, a spokesperson for the Marines told Military.com 

The investigation into the battalion members began last year when border patrol agents arrested Lance Cpls. Byron Darnell Law II and David Javier Salazar-Quintero about seven miles from the US/Mexico border, according to the report. The officers determined that the Marines were transporting three undocumented immigrants.

The initial arrests reportedly led officers to learn of the other various drug-related and human trafficking crimes the 24 Marines would eventually be accused of, according to the report.

Police also arrested Francisco Saul Rojas-Hernandez after several of the Marines told authorities the man, who was arrested in San Diego, California, had orchestrated the human smuggling and paid the Marines to traffick the humans into the US. 

According to a report from the San Diego Union-Tribune on February 5, federal prosecutors filed conspiracy charges against Rojas-Hernandez, claiming he conspired to recruit members of the Marines and other US citizens to transport people who had just unlawfully crossed the US/Medico border around San Diego. 

Per the Union-Tribune, seven other US citizens who were arrested for transporting people who had illegally entered the country had named "Rojas" as the person who had organized the operation. 

As Military.com had previously reported, prosecutors had dropped most of the drug and human trafficking charges against the two-dozen Marines who have since been discharged days after a military court ruled that their arrest outside of their Camp Pendleton, which the San Diego Union-Tribune said occured in front of their 800-person battalion, was unlawful. The majority of those accused and discharged faced administrative action outside the Military court system. 

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The Navy says it wants to shrink the Marine Corps by more than 2,000 Marines

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Marines and sailors with Kilo Company, Battalion Landing Team 3rd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit, conduct a live fire range during a pre-deployment training exercise at MAGTF Training Command/Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center at 29 Palms, California, Nov. 11, 2018.

  • The Department of the Navy wants to reduce the size of the Marine Corps by 2,300 troops, it revealed on Monday in its fiscal year 2021 budget request.
  • The department said that the move is part of efforts to free up resources to "reinvest in modernization and increasing lethality."
  • The FY2021 active-duty end strength for the Marine Corps is pinned at 184,100 in the latest budget request.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The Department of the Navy revealed in its latest budget request that it wants to reduce the overall active-duty end strength of the Marine Corps by 2,300 Marines.

The fiscal year 2021 budget request "funds an active duty end strength of 184,100" for the Marine Corps, the Department of the Navy said in an overview of its planned budget for the coming fiscal year released Monday.

The department said that the current plan for the "reduction of active duty Marine Corps end strength is part of larger reform initiatives aimed at internally generating resources through divestitures, policy reforms, and business process improvements to reinvest in modernization and increasing lethality."

The reduction is expected to apply to less critical aspects of the Corps, such as those that "do not have a defined requirement in the National Defense Strategy."

In the FY 2020 budget request, the Navy projected a steady increase in the active-duty end strength of the Marine Corps, but that no longer appears to be the case.

Last summer, Marine Corps Lt. Gen. David Berger, now the commandant of the Marine Corps, told the Senate Armed Services Committee that a smaller Corps might be necessary should resources be constrained.

"Among the most significant challenges I will face as the Commandant if confirmed will be to sustain readiness at high levels for our operating forces while concurrently modernizing the force under constrained resource limits," he said, USNI News reported.

"We will need to conduct a deliberate redesign of the force to meet the needs of the future operating environment," Berger told lawmakers.

"We will also need to divest of our legacy equipment and legacy programs and also consider potential end strength reductions in order to invest in equipment modernization and necessary training upgrades," he added.

The Department of the Navy reduced its overall budget by $3 billion compared to last year's budget.

Overall, the US military will increase in size by roughly 5,600 troops, the Department of Defense budget request revealed, according to Military Times.

SEE ALSO: The US Navy wants a $4 billion cut to shipbuilding, but lawmakers say the plan is 'dead on arrival'

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US government agencies are banning TikTok, the social media app teens are obsessed with, over cybersecurity fears — here's the full list

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tiktok us

  • TSA is the latest US government agency to ban TikTok on government devices.
  • TikTok is a short-form video app especially popular among Gen Z, and it has amassed 1.5 billion downloads. Its parent is the Chinese developer ByteDance.
  • US lawmakers have expressed concern over possible national security issues, and TikTok has faced accusations of censorship at the request of the Chinese government.
  • The Pentagon also issued a warning in December that military personnel should delete TikTok from all devices due to "potential security risks associated with its use."
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The Transportation Security Administration became the latest federal agency to ban short-form video app TikTok, which is owned by Chinese company ByteDance. 

ByteDance is the highest-valued privately-held company in the world, worth an estimated $75 billion, and has been called "China's Facebook" for its size and ownership of popular social networking apps.

It launched the Chinese version of TikTok, Douyin, in 2016, and the international version in 2017. Since then, it has been downloaded 1.5 billion times, and might even be gaining on Instagram and Snapchat in numbers of active users. 

The video platform has recently been criticized for censoring content that might offend governments in markets where it operates. In September, The Guardian saw internal documents that instructed moderators to censor content that could anger the Chinese government, including mentions of Tiananmen Square or Tibetan Independence. In a statement, TikTok said that these policies were no longer in use as of May.

US lawmakers have also been critical of TikTok as a potential security risk. In October, Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida asked the Trump administration to investigate the app based on what he called "ample and growing evidence" of censorship at the request of China, while Sens. Chuck Schumer and Tom Cotton wrote a letter to the head of national security asking for an investigation into the app as a counterintelligence risk.

In November, the US Senate held a hearing on technology and data security and invited representatives from major technology companies, including TikTok. TikTok declined to send a representative. Zhu said he planned to meet with lawmakers about their concerns over TikTok but then canceled the meetings.

"While we think the concerns are unfounded, we understand them and are continuing to further strengthen our safeguards while increasing our dialogue with lawmakers to help explain our policies. We recently reached out to several members of Congress to express an interest in meeting in the near future," a TikTok spokesperson told Business Insider.

The Pentagon has some history of banning devices from government phones, notably Pokemon Go in 2016. Since then, several agencies and branches of the military have banned TikTok. 

SEE ALSO: With a new LA office and a forthcoming creator studio, TikTok is poised to take on Instagram and YouTube

1. The Navy banned TikTok from government devices.

On December 16, the Pentagon sent a "Cyber Awareness Message" that "identifies the potential risk associated with using the TikTok app and directs appropriate action for employees to take in order to safeguard their personal information,"The Guardian reported. The message also advised military personnel to "uninstall TikTok to circumvent any exposure of personal information."

The following week, the Navy banned TikTok from government-owned devices. A Navy bulletin said that members with TikTok accounts who didn't remove the app from devices would be blocked from the Navy intranet. A Navy spokesperson told The Guardian that generally, Navy personnel are allowed to use social media apps, although sometimes specific apps thought to be security risks are banned. 



2. The Army had been advising members against using TikTok since mid-December.

TikTok was a tool used by the Army for reaching and recruiting Gen Z, until it was banned from government-owned devices in late September, Military.com reported.

An Army spokesperson told Military.com that TikTok "is considered a cyber threat," and that while the Army cannot ban members from using it on personal devices, it does recommend caution. 

 



3. The Air Force banned TikTok, along with other branches, in early January.

"The threats posed by social media are not unique to TikTok (though they may certainly be greater on that platform)," an Air Force spokesperson told The Wall Street Journal.

Videos of jet stunts and troops jumping out of planes tend to go viral on the app, and may also pose an additional risk, the Journal reports.



4. The Coast Guard gave similar reasons for a ban.

A Coast Guard spokesperson told The New York Times in January:"TikTok is not an application currently used on any official Coast Guard device."

He also said that Coast Guard members go through an annual cyber awareness training.  



5. The Marine Corps expressed similar reasoning for a ban in January.

"This decision is consistent with our efforts to proactively address existing and emerging threats as we secure and defend our network. This block only applies to government-issued mobile devices," a spokesperson told The New York Times.



6. According to a letter from Sen. Chuck Schumer, the Department of Homeland Security has also banned TikTok from its devices.

On February 22, Schumer sent a letter to TSA Administrator David Pekoske about the agency allowing TikTok use, and he cited a policy from the Department of Homeland Security the prohibits TikTok on devices, the Associated Press reported. TSA is an agency within DHS.



7. This week, TSA became the latest agency to specifically ban the app.

On February 23, the TSA released a statement saying a "small number of TSA employees have previously used TikTok on their personal devices to create videos for use in TSA's social media outreach, but that practice has since been discontinued," the Associated Press reported.



The TSA said it never used TikTok out of national security concerns, but videos on official agency accounts and from TSA officials appear to contradict that

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TSA

  • The TSA says it has stopped allowing employees to use Chinese-owned video app TikTok.
  • TSA also told the Associated Press that it didn't publish content directly to TikTok or publish content directly to the platform. 
  • However, videos from TikTok are still available on TSA's Instagram account, and on official accounts for agency spokespeople.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The Transportation Security Administration has become the latest government agency to ban TikTok after national security concerns, but the agency's statement on how it used the Chinese-owned app appears to contradict its own actions.

On February 23, the Associated Press reported that the TSA would no longer allow employees to post on TikTok after a letter from Sen. Chuck Schumer, Democrat of New York, warned about a potential cybersecurity risk. In a statement, the TSA said that a  "small number of TSA employees have previously used TikTok on their personal devices to create videos for use in TSA's social media outreach, but that practice has since been discontinued." It also told the AP that it never directed followers to TikTok or published directly on the platform.

But the TSA's own Instagram account seems to dispute the agency's statement. As of writing this, at least 12 different videos, shown from the TikTok accounts "@TSA_gov" and "@TSA" are viewable on the TSA's official Instagram account. The TikTok videos are saved under a highlighted story titled "Videos" on the account.

TSA Instagram

The TikTok videos reposted to the TSA Instagram account also prominently feature TSA public affairs spokesperson Lisa Farbstein. Farbstein, a TSA official, has also shared TikTok videos from the account @TSA on her Twitter as recently as February 11. The official TSA Twitter account frequently retweeted her posts. The TSA referenced its social media strategy in response to Schumer's letter and is also currently competing for a Shorty social media award.

Neither the @TSA nor @TSA_gov TikTok accounts still exists, though the reposted videos are still viewable on Twitter and Instagram. TikTok did not respond to requests for comment.

It appears the TSA did not link to the app, although the distinction might not mean much. To share videos on Twitter and Instagram, users commonly download the videos from TikTok and reupload them. But the prominent TikTok logo on the videos, plus the names of the accounts that created them, may direct interested viewers to TikTok. 

One thing is clear: Videos initially posted to TikTok under TSA branding prominently feature agency representatives and have been shared by agency officials and official agency accounts — even though it said it never published on the platform nor directed followers to it.

TikTok has been downloaded more than 1.5 billion times. The video platform, which is owned by Chinese company ByteDance, has faced concerns of censorship. In September, The Guardian saw internal documents that instructed moderators to censor content that could anger the Chinese government, including mentions of Tiananmen Square or Tibetan Independence. In a statement, TikTok said that these policies were no longer in use as of last May. Senators Marco Rubio, Chuck Schumer and Tom Cotton have been critical of TikTok and asked for investigations into potential cybersecurity risks. The US military had previously banned the app after a warning from the Pentagon.

The TSA did not respond to a request for comment.

SEE ALSO: US government agencies are banning TikTok, the social media app teens are obsessed with, over cybersecurity fears — here's the full list

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NOW WATCH: Apple just revealed its AirPods Pro for $249, which feature noise cancellation. Here's everything that was wrong with the $159 pair of the wireless headphones.


42 of the best photos from around the US military in honor of Armed Forces Day

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US Navy pipe-patching drills

  • Happy Armed Forces Day! It's celebrated on the third Saturday in May.
  • Established in 1949 by President Harry S. Truman, Armed Forces Day celebrates and gives thanks to the military for their service.
  • In honor of the holiday, we rounded up 43 of the best pictures taken by military photographers.
  • Visit INSIDER's homepage for more stories

On any given day, plenty of military photographers are capturing the grit and glory of American troops in the field — and in war zones — around the world. 

From leaping out of airplanes to detonating obstacles, even their training can be dangerous.

To celebrate Armed Forces Day, here are 43 captivating images of US troops in action, taken by military photographers.

A US Navy Blue Angels flyover at the end of an Independence Day celebration in front of the Lincoln Memorial, July 4, 2019, in Washington, D.C.



Cadets in face masks pose for a picture after their graduation ceremony at the US Air Force Academy, at Air Force Academy, Colorado.



New US Army recruits who have been in quarantine for 2 weeks meet their drill sergeants.



An F/A-18F Super Hornet assigned conducts flight operations.



President Donald Trump awards US Army Staff Sgt. David Bellavia the Medal of Honor at the White House in Washington, June 25, 2019.



US Marines detonate obstacle-breaching Bangalore torpedoes during an exercise at Twentynine Palms, California.



A US Marine drinks cobra blood during a jungle survival exercise with the Thai Navy.



US Air Force basic training recruits arrive and practice social distancing at the Pfingston Reception Center at Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland, Texas.



US Navy sailors assigned to the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt (CVN 71) depart the ship to move to off-ship berthing in Guam.



New recruits receive a briefing at the Marine Corps Recruit Depot, San Diego, California.



Senior Airman Daniel Lasal performs a post-flight inspection on an F-16 Fighting Falcon on Nov. 15, 2016, at Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan.



US Army Soldiers, assigned to 1st Brigade, 101st Airborne Division, conduct mortar training in Arta, Djibouti, on Jan. 5, 2017.



Ray Chavez, 104, the oldest living Pearl Harbor survivor, rings the Freedom Bell during the Freedom Bell Opening Ceremony and Bell Ringing at the USS Bowfin Submarine Museum & Park on Pearl Harbor, Hawaii on April 8, 2016.



Petty Officer 3rd Class Alexis Rey conducts pre-flight checks on an EA-18G Growler on the flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS Dwight D. Eisenhower on Dec. 11, 2016.



A US Army soldier provides security using his M240B machine gun during a unit reconnaissance patrol in Hohenfels, Germany on Jan. 21, 2016.



11th Marine Expeditionary Unit Commanding Officer Col. Clay C. Tipton speaks to his Marines on the flight deck of the USS Somerset on Dec. 3, 2016.



Comedian Jon Stewart poses for a photo with the Air Force team during the 2016 Department of Defense Warrior Games in West Point, N.Y., on June 15, 2016.



Senior Airman Daniel San Miguel, an aerospace propulsion journeyman, oversees an F110-GE-129 engine being tested during its afterburner phase on Feb. 4, 2016.



Aircrew aboard a C-130 Hercules assigned to the 36th Airlift Squadron circle a Micronesian Island on Dec. 5, 2016.



The US Air Force Honor Guard Drill Team performs a rifle demonstration in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 22, 2016.



An F-35 Lightning II flies around the airspace of Davis-Monthan Air Force Base on March 5, 2016.



Marines with the Maritime Raid Force, 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit, conduct military free-fall training over Marine Corps Training Area Bellows, Oahu, Hawaii on Oct. 18, 2016.



Cpl. Zachery Personett, an infantryman with 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit, gives a thumbs up to a Royal Army of Oman soldier after he cleared a weapons malfunction during a combat marksmanship range as part of Exercise Sea Soldier on Feb. 19, 2017.



A Crew Chief assigned to Marine Light Attack Helicopter Squadron 167 observes the landing zone from a UH-1Y Huey during a training operation at Marine Corps Auxiliary Landing Field Bogue, North Carolina, on March 9, 2017.



Sgt. Johnathan Stamets looks through his M8541A optic attached to the M-110 Semi-Automatic Sniper System rifle aboard the USS Somerset Ombudsman on Jan. 12, 2017.



U.S. Army and French Soldiers bed down during a field training exercise in Arta, Djibouti, on March 16, 2016.



Marines with 2nd Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment and 2nd Combat Engineer Battalion take cover while conducting urban demolition breach training in Yuma, Arizona, on March 30, 2017.



Tech. Sgt. Benjamin Jonas jumps out of a C-130 Hercules while flying over Yokota Air Base, Japan, on March 2, 2016.



US Army Lt. Col. (Ret.) Charles Kettles is awarded the Medal of Honor at the White House on July 18, 2016, for actions during a battle near South Vietnam in 1967.



Marines, assigned to the 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit, depart the well deck of the amphibious transport dock ship USS Green Bay in a combat rubber raiding craft on Aug. 29, 2016.



Seaman Kennedy Prescott performs a deadlift during a power lifting competition aboard the amphibious dock landing ship USS Whidbey Island on Sept. 18, 2016.



Senior Airman Tariq Russell, a 21st Security Forces Squadron military working dog handler, shakes the paw of his partner, Paul, at Peterson Air Force Base, Colo., on June 14, 2016.



US Army Soldiers, assigned to 101st Airborne Brigade, fire a Javelin Anti-Tank Missile system during a large-scale platoon live-fire exercise at Fort Campbell, Ky., on July 29, 2016.



A member of the 380th Air Expeditionary Wing security forces stands on a flightline near a guard tower at an undisclosed location in Southwest Asia on Nov. 14, 2016. Behind the Airman a rare supermoon rises in the sky.



Master Sgt. Israel Del Toro throws a shotput during the 2016 Invictus Games in Orlando, Fla., on May 10, 2016. He earned a gold medal in the men’s shot put in his disability category.



Special Tactics Training Squadron students swim the length of the pool with their hands and feet bound during a pre-scuba class at Hurlburt Field, Fla., on June 29, 2016.



The U.S. Marine Corps Silent Drill Platoon performs during the Battle Color Ceremony at Marine Corps Air Station Yuma, Arizona, on March 2, 2017.



Electrician's Mate Fireman Desiree Mason and Damage Controlman Fireman Edgar Rotundo practice pipe-patching drills during a Damage Control Training Team exercise on the flight deck of Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Barry in the waters south of Japan on March 5, 2017.



Explosive Ordnance Disposal Mobile Unit 8 and the Norwegian Army Explosive Ordnance Disposal team participate in a cold-weather endurance ruck march in Ramsund, Norway.



The amphibious assault ship USS Makin Island transits the Arabian Sea on March 3, 2017.



Construction Mechanic Constructionman Matt Adams traverses a mud-filled pit while participating in the endurance course at the Jungle Warfare Training Center in Okinawa, Japan on Feb. 17, 2017.



The Patriots Jet Team performs aerial acrobatics as pyrotechnics provided by the Tora Bomb Squad of the Commemorative Air Force explode, forming a "Wall Of Fire" during an air show on March 18, 2017.

Editor's note: Daniel Brown wrote an earlier version of this post.



How the US military came up with its salute

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  • We are all familiar with the most common form of the US military salute, a respective gesture from a military personnel raising her right hand to eye level.
  • But many may not know where it comes from. In fact, the origins of the US military salute isn't a clear-cut case.
  • Editor of Army Officer's Guide and Acting Secretary of the American Battle Monuments Commission, Robert J. Dalessandro, shares his insight about the complicated history of the military salute. 
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Following is a transcript of the video.

Robert J. Dalessandro: The origin of the military salute that we use in all the armed services of the United States is really shrouded in mystery. We really don't get a good look at what the quote, unquote customs, and traditions are until the Army spells them out around World War I.

In the Army, we say that the tradition certainly goes back to Roman times. If you've ever seen any of the Roman movies, the Romans would sometimes slap their chest and put their arm up in the air as a matter of salute. And they say that that salute had an origin to show allegiance from your heart and then to show that you didn't have a weapon in your fighting hand — that your hand was open and that you're a friend. That's one of the very early origin stories.

There's a second one. One is that in the times of the knight. A knight who saw a friendly knight or to pay tribute to a king would raise the visor of his helmet, to let that person see their face. And then, show an open hand, again that they didn't have a sword in their hand.

If you think about the act of grabbing the visor of your helmet and lifting it up to show your face, and you think about today's salute where the right arm is taken up and touches the brim of your headgear, helmet, or soft hat, that is very similar to this medieval era days of knights.

I would say those are the two most common origin stories of the salute. We know that all of these legends and myths that have been passed down to us on how the salute started — they have in common the idea of showing that you are not hostile to the person you're approaching, that you don't have a weapon in your hand, and that you are in fact a person that wants to speak with, and perhaps honor the person you are approaching.

EDITOR'S NOTE: This video was originally published in December 2017.

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The Marine Corps is preparing for a redesign, and some Marines will have to find new jobs

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Marine Corps Abrams tank fuel Finland Arrow 19

  • The Marine Corps is planning to make cuts and shed manpower in order to save money for high-tech equipment it needs for a fight with a major adversary.
  • Those cuts mean some Marines will need to move into new job fields, or even move to other branches of the military.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

Marines in several jobs will need to move into new fields — or even other branches of the military — as the service begins its first phase of ending or curbing long-standing missions in a force-wide reorganization to take on new threats.

The Marine Corps has released instructions to the more than 1,300 enlisted personnel and officers whose military occupational specialties will be affected by Force Design 2030, a sweeping review leaders say was needed to prep the service for future fights.

Four MOSs will be cut as part of the plan: 1812, armor Marine; 1869, senior armor staff noncommissioned officer; 2146, main battle tank repairer/technician; and 1802, tank officer. Three others — 5803, military police officer; 2110, ordnance vehicle maintenance officer; and 5805, criminal investigation officer — will see their billets reduced as part of the changes.

That comes as tank battalions, infantry units, bridging companies, law enforcement missions and some aircraft squadrons see their missions cut or reduced.

For now, the seven MOSs are the only ones that require "active force-shaping measures," an administrative message states. More guidance will be released if future phases of the Force Design require similar action, it adds.

US Marine Corps tank name Fort Hood

The Marine Corps is pledging to manage the reductions in a "measured and responsible way," said Maj. Craig Thomas, a spokesman for Manpower and Reserve Affairs in Quantico, Virginia. That includes relying on some Marines choosing to leave the service, as well as voluntary force-shaping authorities, he said.

"The Marine Corps will remain faithful to our Marines and their families by maximizing opportunities for continued service for those in a military occupation slated for divestment," Thomas said.

Of the seven MOSs facing cuts, the most highly populated include armor Marines, main battle tank repairer/technicians and military police officers. There are currently 421 armor Marines; 341 MBT repairer/technicians; and 308 military police officers.

Commandant Gen. David Berger first announced in March that the Marine Corps will eventually stop operating tanks, cut three infantry battalions, and shed about 7% of its overall force over the next decade. The cost savings will be used to pay for high-tech equipment leaders say Marines will need to counter China, Russia, Iran and others.

Lt. Gen. Eric Smith, the head of Marine Corps Combat Development Command, said the decision to cut or reduce some missions doesn't mean leathernecks who serve in those fields aren't important.

"We're not saying that a tank or bridging company isn't of value," Smith told Military.com. "Tanks were a massive value in the past. I used them in and around Ramadi and in and around Fallujah [in Iraq]. They paid their dues in blood, right? These are Marine warriors from the Korean War to now."

But the Marine Corps must reorganize to remain relevant, he added.

"It's just that for the future fight, [those MOSs] are of less value than the things that we need most, such as long-range precision fire," Smith said.

abrams tank marine corps

Marine administrative message 302/20 lays out several options for the personnel whose MOSs are closing or cutting billets, including lateral moves, early retirement options or interservice transfers to other military branches.

"The use of involuntary tools may also be used, as necessary," the message states.

Berger said last month no one would be forced out because of the changes. Force Design 2030, he said, "is intentionally drawn out over time so we can make the right decisions."

Thomas said manpower officials have briefed commanders across the fleet on the MOS closures and cuts. Monitors and occupational field sponsors are working with impacted units, he said, "to ensure Marines have all the information necessary to help them make informed decisions about their future."

"The Marine Corps desires to retain its finest warriors, regardless of their current MOS," Thomas added. "We will work with Marines on a case-by-case basis to find the best solution that meets the needs of the Marine Corps and the individual desires of each Marine."

— Gina Harkins can be reached at gina.harkins@military.com. Follow her on Twitter @ginaaharkins.

SEE ALSO: 5 things the Navy and Marine Corps say they want from a new Light Amphibious Warship

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'It's an awesome gun': US snipers are pumped to get the new rifle soldiers, Marines, and special operators all want

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A student of the Special Forces Sniper Course at the John F. Kennedy Special Warfare Center and School moves quietly while avoiding detection during a stalking exercise at Fort Bragg, NC, on January 27, 2011

  • In the past year, the US Army, Marine Corps, and Special Operations Command have all shown interest in the same bolt-action rifle for their snipers — the Barrett Multi-Role Adaptive Design (MRAD) rifle able to fire three different rounds.
  • "We're excited about it because it's going to improve capabilities, it's going to improve our ability to conduct operations, and it is going to allow for a more flexible sniper element," a veteran Army sniper told Insider.
  • The multi-caliber rifle known by a few different names can be chambered in 7.62X51 mm NATO, .300 Norma Magnum, and .338 Norma Magnum, meaning snipers no longer have to choose between weapons systems capable of firing different rounds for different missions and targets.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

The Army, the Marine Corps, and the special operations community all want the same bolt-action rifle for their snipers, and US sharpshooters are excited to get their hands on it.

"It's an awesome gun," 1st Sgt. Kevin Sipes, a seasoned Army sniper, told Insider, referring to the Barrett Multi-Role Adaptive Design (MRAD) rifle, known as the Precision Sniper Rifle (PSR) in the Army and the Advanced Sniper Rifle (ASR) by Special Operations Command and the Marines.

Barrett Firearms Multi-Role Adaptive Design (MRAD) bolt-action sniper rifle

The PSR, which the Army also calls the Mk 22, is a "good gun coming at a good time that is going to increase efficiency and capabilities," Sipes, who oversees the sniper course at Fort Benning, Ga., said.

"We're excited about it because it's going to improve capabilities, it's going to improve our ability to conduct operations, and it is going to allow for a more flexible sniper element," he said, explaining that the new rifle essentially lets US snipers employ three separate weapon systems in a single platform.

Instead of making US military snipers choose between weapons capable of firing different rounds for different missions and targets, the multi-caliber rifle can be chambered in 7.62X51 mm NATO, .300 Norma Magnum, and .338 Norma Magnum.

"It gives more flexibility to the sniper as to what configuration to put it in and what targets they are going after," Lt. Col. Chris Kennedy, lethality branch chief of the Maneuver Center of Excellence's Capabilities Development and Integration Directorate soldier division, previously told Insider.

The weapon is expected to replace the Army's M2010 and M107 sniper rifles, which Sipes said have "served the Army extremely well."

Sipes and his team were tapped to provide feedback on the PSR program. Speaking for a team of snipers, he told Insider that "there hasn't been any negative feedback. We are all excited to get that weapon system."

"I can tell you I never saw anything on that gun that I didn't like," he said. "It shoots phenomenally well. What it does, as far as barrel changes and things like that go, is pretty exceptional."

Special Operations Command awarded Barrett a $49.9 million contract in March 2019 for the MRAD rifle for its ASR program.

In the Department of the Navy's fiscal year 2021 budget proposal, the Marine Corps put in a $4 million request for 250 ASRs. The aim is for the ASRs to "replace all current bolt-action sniper rifles in the Marine Corps."

US snipers use two types of rifles in combat. They use semi-automatic rifles for increased maneuverability and rapid target engagement and bolt-action rifles for increased accuracy.

The Marine Corps request stressed that the new rifle offers "extended range, greater lethality, and a wider variety of special purpose ammunition."

In its FY 2021 request, the Army put in a $10 million request for 536 PSRs, noting that the rifle "increases stand-off distances ensuring overmatch against enemy counter sniper engagements and increases sniper capability," something increasingly important as the US shifts its focus from counterterrorism to great power competition.

Fielding is still a little ways out, but Sipes said that "we are looking forward to moving that into the future."

He explained, though, that the rifle is not what makes a sniper. "The equipment is just a bridge, an extension of you, not the other way around."

Sipes previously told Insider that "there are a million things that go into being a sniper, and you have to be good at all of them."

A single long-range shot, for instance, requires considerations of more than a dozen different variables, and concealment and camouflage, critical skills that allow a sniper to stealthily operate and avoid detection in dangerous areas, are no different.

Becoming a good sniper requires more than just good equipment, Sipes said. It requires constant training to become proficient.

SEE ALSO: America's deadliest sharpshooters reveal how they disappear in plain sight

SEE ALSO: US Army sharpshooters reveal how they hunt enemy snipers in a deadly 'game of cat and mouse'

SEE ALSO: This Marine Corps sniper put a bullet in a target nearly 8,000 feet away — here's how he took one of the toughest shots of his life

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The battle of Saipan ended 76 years ago — here's how one Marine there convinced 1,500 Japanese to surrender

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US Marines Marine Corps Saipan Japan invasion beach World War II WWII

  • Born into a Mexican family in California, Guy Gabaldon went to live with a Japanese family several years before WWII forced them into an internment camp.
  • On his own, Gabaldon eventually joined the US Marines, where he used what he learned with his adopted family on the battlefield.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

If you've read the book "Saipan: Suicide Island," watched the movie "Hell to Eternity," or you're a World War II buff, then you may have heard of the heroic actions of Corporal Guy Gabaldon.

However, there are many who don't know about the remarkable, true story of Corporal Gabaldon, a US Marine who earned the Navy Cross after single-handedly capturing around 1,500 Japanese soldiers during the Battles of Saipan and Tinian.

Here is his full story:

US Marines Marine Corps Japan Saipan World War II WWII grenade

Born in Los Angeles, California to a Mexican family, Gabaldon was one of seven children. At the age of 10, he helped his family by shining shoes and also got involved in a local, multi-cultural gang known as the "Moe Gang."

At the age of 12, he moved to live with the Nakanos, a Japanese-American family he considered an extension of his own. He couldn't have known at the time, but the experience of growing up in a Japanese household would later serve him well during his time as a US Marine.

While he lived with the Nakano family, he learned about Japanese language and culture, gaining knowledge that would later give him a unique advantage in war.

Unfortunately, the Nakanos were relocated to the Heart Mountain Relocation Center in Wyoming at the outbreak of World War II, forcing Gabaldon to move to Alaska and work in a cannery until his 17th birthday, when he joined the Marine Corps.

In 1943, Gabaldon signed up to fight in the Pacific and was assigned to Headquarters and Service Company, 2nd Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division to be a scout and observer and when the United States began their invasion of Saipan. Gabaldon would soon prove that Marines are badasses, even without weapons.

US Marines Marine Corps Saipan Japan World War II WWII

On his first night on Saipan, Gabaldon put what he had learned from the Nakono family to use. First, he went out on his own and convinced two Japanese soldiers to surrender and return to camp with him.

Despite capturing two prisoners without firing a shot, he was reprimanded and threatened with court-martial for abandoning his post. That didn't stop him from going back out that night and doing it again.

This time, he found a cave where the Japanese were hiding. Gabaldon killed one of the guards and yelled into the cave (speaking Japanese), convincing the others to surrender peacefully. He returned with 50 prisoners the next morning.

Now, instead of being chewed out by his superiors, they decided to authorize him to capture more soldiers, operating as a "lone wolf." He then captured two more guards, sending one back to his hiding spot to convince others to surrender as well.

Soon enough, a Japanese officer showed up to talk with Gabaldon. They would negotiate for a time before agreeing to terms of surrender, taking more than 800 soldiers and civilians out of the fight against the Americans.

US Army World War II WWII Japan Saipan invasion beach

He didn't stop there.

During the battle for the Tinian Islands, Gabaldon continued to persuade Japanese soldiers to surrender. Eventually, his negotiations resulted in the surrender of approximately 1,500 soldiers and civilians across both Saipan and the Tinian Islands.

For his actions, he was recommended for a Medal of Honor. This request was denied, and he was instead awarded a Silver Star, which was elevated to a Navy Cross in 1960.

In 2005, the Pentagon honored Gabaldon and other Hispanic Americans who fought in World War II. In 2006, he passed after a battle with heart disease.

Currently, the Department of Defense is reviewing his case to see if his Navy Cross is to be upgraded to a Medal of Honor.

NOW READ: 76 years after 'the toughest battle in Marine Corps history,' the fallen are still returning home

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