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Mission Statement:
To make the broader military community, and the public at large, better aware of the ongoing role of the SEABEES as U.S. Navy combat troops and construction workers heavily involved in national defense and humanitarian aid worldwide. |
Seabees Add Depth to Joint-Service Engineer Group
By LCDR Meg Reed, 1st Marine Expeditionary Force Engineer Group Public Affairs
KUWAIT (NNS) -- U.S. Navy Seabees and the U.S. Marine Corps have a storied
history of working together in peace and in war. Now the two groups are
demonstrating new versatility and forging stronger ties in their traditional
relationship while deployed in support of Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF).
The Naval Construction Force (NCF) provides essential combat construction
services to a Marine Air-Ground Task Force (MAGTF). Here in the Arabian Gulf,
the NCF element of the MAGTF has evolved into the First Marine Expeditionary
Force Engineer Group -- the "MEG.” The MEG is made up of light, fully
integrated regimental task forces that can be sized and shaped for specific missions,
responding with great agility on the modern high-speed battlefield.
The joint-service group features active, Reserve and Guard components from
several Seabee units of the First Naval Construction Division (1NCD) and its
Marine Augment Detachment 88835; the Marine Corps 4th Combat Engineer
Battalion; and the U.S. Army 265th Engineer Group of the Georgia National Guard.
In the MEG, challenges come from adapting Marine Corps processes to the
requirements and needs of Seabees, but the process works naturally within the
traditionally successful Navy-Marine Corps relationship. Marine Corps Col. Dan
R. Mater, MEG chief of staff, said the group's interoperability improves every
day. "The MEG has become a fully integrated staff because its members are
willing to focus on the same goals. The end result is successful accomplishment
of the mission."
U.S. Army Lt. Col. William Hardy, operations officer, is grateful that his
unit's connection to the MEG gives it an opportunity to participate in OEF. He
graded his experience with the MEG as exceptional. "I've been very pleased
with the overall teamwork and camaraderie, and with the way MEG personnel have
been dedicated to bridging the gap between the services' different ways of
doing business."
The capabilities of the MEG regimental task forces take maximum advantage of
Seabee, Marine Corps and Army expertise to produce a force-multiplying
synergy. MEG capabilities include airfield construction and repair, road upgrade
and maintenance, troop bed-down projects and specialized bridging. The MEG can
also provide force protection for its own forces and augment existing
security in areas where it is assigned. These skills are tailored in real time to
dynamic mission requirements.
The MEG's joint-service elements are useful in forward-deployed operational
planning teams. Given today's sophisticated communications, for example, MEG
Seabee planners in the Gulf can interface directly with counterparts assigned
to 1NCD command operations centers in Little Creek, Va., and Pearl Harbor,
Hawaii -– and beyond. The Naval Facilities Engineering Command’s Atlantic and
Pacific Divisions are only a phone call or a few key clicks away, providing
unique engineering expertise in real-time response to tactical needs anywhere
on earth.
According to Rear Adm. Charles R. Kubic, MEG commander, integration with the
larger Marine Expeditionary Force is going well, though with a learning
curve.
"Organization and process integration have been our biggest challenges, but
full engineer integration has also led to our initial successes,” Kubic
admitted. “The decision to organize the MEG into regimental task forces has
allowed tremendous engineer agility and adaptability.
"Navy and Marine Corps doctrine has always associated Seabees with the
MAGTF," Kubic continued. "The MEG's role adds clarity and greatly advances the
concept of engineers working jointly on a fast-paced, well-synchronized
battlefield."
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OPERATION SEABEES KNOWLEDGE seabeesinfohq.org E-Mail seabees@seabeesinfohq.org |
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