Gates: Time has come to re-examine future of Marine Corps By Kevin Baron
Stars and Stripes
Published: August 12, 2010
SAN FRANCISCO — After nearly a decade of constant warfare and with a new commandant arriving shortly, the time has come once again to redefine the purpose and size of the Marine Corps, Defense Secretary Robert Gates said on Thursday.
“After the surge ends in Afghanistan, they’re probably going to reduce some,” Gates during a visit to California. “They’ve gotten too big.”
Earlier Thursday in San Diego, Gates told the crew of the destroyer USS Higgins that while the Navy would not likely continue to downsize its personnel, the Marine Corps is on its way to a reduction. The Marines have grown to 202,000 people from 175,000, he noted. Marine Corps leaders have said they want a smaller force.
The secretary said he has asked the Navy secretary and Marine leadership to focus this year’s Force Structure Review, which all services undertake, “to determine what an ‘expeditionary-force-in-readiness’ should look like in the 21st century.”
For Marines, the legacy of Iraq and Afghanistan will be forged from their memories of fighting door-to-door down urban streets, in desert wadis and through mountain passes — in other words, far from the shorelines that the historically amphibious and expeditionary servicemembers are trained to invade.