After another long deployment, "1/6 HARD” is coming home.
First Battalion, 6th Marines, out of Camp Lejeune, N.C., will return to the U.S. soon, according to a Marine Corps news release published today. The Corps has been flying forces from Lejeune’s 1st Battalion, 8th Marines, to replace them in combat, the service acknowledged earlier this week.
It has been a whirlwind few years for 1/6′s Marines, some of whom
pushed through major offensive on three consecutive deployments.
In 2008, 1/6 served as ground combat element of the Lejeune’s 24th
Marine Expeditionary Unit as it kicked in the door in Afghanistan,
putting a conventional Marine battalion on the ground there for the
first time in three years. Marines 1/6 assaulted Garmser district at a
time when most of Helmand province was overrun by the Taliban.
In 2010, 1/6 served as one of the main battalions involved in the
taming of Marjah district, another Taliban stronghold in central
Helmand. It sustained heavy casualties and combat that was captured in the excellent documentary "Battle for Marjah.”
That brings us to this deployment. We’ve covered some of 1/6′s operations on this blog, particularly Operation Eastern Storm,
an assault in October aimed at taming portions of Kajaki district in
northern Helmand. That effort was led by the unit’s Bravo and Weapons
companies. Its Marines stayed in the region after the assault, facing
combat like this firefight captured on video.
The unit wasn’t just in Kajaki, however. Charlie Company 1/6 deployed
to Marjah again, reinforcing sections of the district that still had
Taliban resistance. Alpha Company deployed to volatile Sangin district,
where it supported 3rd Reconnaissance Battalion and, later, 1st Recon.
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