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CAMP FALLUJAH, Iraq, May 24, 2006 — There are no pencil-pushers at 3rd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment. There are only extra trigger-pullers.
"It doesn’t matter what technical skill they have, this battalion focuses on ensuring that all Marines are trained properly prior to deployment. So it doesn’t matter if I take a guy who does my legal work or one from the ‘comm’ shop and stick him in security, because they’re all briefed and ready to go."
U.S. Marine Corps 1st Sgt. Scott Boyer
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Darkhorse Battalion, assigned to Regimental Combat Team 5 in Fallujah, is making it a point that no one gets a free ride. Everyone earns their campaign ribbons. Administration clerks are pulling convoy security. Legal assistants are truck drivers. Everyone gets outside the wire and everyone earns their combat pay. Some Marines never thought they’d see the field, even before arriving at their first duty stations. Lance Cpl. David Reister was told at his military occupational specialty school that he could look forward to a job in an office. He’s a legal clerk with the battalion. “They said I’d be sitting behind a desk the whole time, and if I went to Iraq, I’d be sitting behind a desk here,” said Reister, a 19-year-old from Sacramento, Calif. “Now I spend probably half my time with the grunts. I get to see what it’s like through their eyes and get out and see the city, see the people.” For that reason, Camp Pendleton-based 3rd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, puts Marines from every occupation - from cooks to communication Marines - through rigorous field training packages during the months between deployments. “It doesn’t matter what technical skill they have, this battalion focuses on ensuring that all Marines are trained properly prior to deployment,” said 1st Sgt. Scott Boyer, Headquarters and Support Company’s senior enlisted Marine. “So it doesn’t matter if I take a guy who does my legal work or one from the ‘comm’ shop and stick him in security, because they’re all briefed and ready to go.” Lance Cpl. Stephen D. Hinkle worked as a legal administration clerk with the battalion’s administration section for four months before he was attached to the battalion’s civil affairs team. He’s part of the team’s security for convoys through the city. “It was looking pretty bleak, that I wasn’t going to get out there,” said the 22-year-old from Philadelphia. “I felt like I was pretty much going to be stuck on the base the whole time.” Now, Hinkle’s trouble is balancing the time from duties inside and outside the wire. Boyer, a 38-year-old from Reading, Pa., said Headquarters and Support Company’s goal is to take care of the warfighters on the ground, whether through logistical support, legal work, or with an extra rifle. He said sending support Marines out helps them better understand their role back on base.
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