After 1945
Royal Marines were involved in the Korean War. 41
(Independent) Commando was reformed in 1950, and was originally
envisaged as a raiding force for use against North Korea. It
performed this role in partnership with the United States Navy
until after the landing of United States Army X Corps at
Wonsan. It then joined the 1st Marine Division at Koto-Ri. As
Task Force Drysdale with Lt. Col. D.B. Drysdale RM in command,
41 Commando, a USMC company, a US Army company and part of the
divisional train fought their way from Koto-Ri to Hagaru after
the Chinese had blocked the road to the North. It then took
part in the famous withdrawal from Chosin Reservoir. After
that, a small amount of raiding followed, before the Marines
were withdrawn from the conflict in 1951. It received the
Presidential Unit Citation (United States) after the USMC got
the regulations modified to allow foreign units to receive the
award.
After playing a part in the long-running Malayan Emergency,
the next action came in 1956, during the Suez Crisis.
Headquarters 3 Commando Brigade, and Nos 40, 42 and 45
Commandos took part in the operation. It marked the first time
that a helicopter assault was used operationally to land troops
in an amphibious attack. British and French forces defeated the
Egyptians, but after pressure from the United States, and
French domestic pressure, they backed down.
Further action in the Far East was seen during the
Konfrontasi. Nos 40 and 42 Commando went to Borneo at various
times to help keep Indonesian forces from causing trouble in
border areas. The highest-profile incident of the campaign was
a company-strength amphibious assault by Lima Company of 42
Commando at the town of Limbang to rescue hostages.
From 1969 onwards Royal Marine units regularly deployed to
Northern Ireland during The Troubles, during the course of
which 13 were killed in action. A further eleven died in the
1989 Deal bombing of the Royal Marines School of Music.
The Falklands War provided the backdrop to the next action
of the Royal Marines. Argentina invaded the islands in April
1982. A British task force was immediately despatched to
recapture them, and given that an amphibious assault would be
necessary, the Royal Marines were heavily involved. 3 Commando
Brigade was brought to full combat strength, with not only 40,
42 and 45 Commandos, but also the 2nd and 3rd Battalions of the
Parachute Regiment attached. The troops were landed at San
Carlos Water at the western end of East Falkland, and proceeded
to "yomp" across the entire island to the capital, Stanley,
which fell on 14 June 1982. Not only was 3 Commando Brigade
deployed, but also a Royal Marines divisional headquarters,
under Major-General Jeremy Moore, who was commander of British
land forces during the war.
The main element of 3 Commando Brigade was not deployed in
the 1991 Gulf War except for 24 men from K Company 42 Commando
Royal Marines who were deployed as six man teams aboard two
Royal Navy frigates and two Royal Navy destroyers. They were
used as ship boarding parties and took part in numerous
boardings of suspect shipping. The main element of 3 Commando
Brigade was deployed to northern Iraq in the aftermath to
provide aid to the Kurds, as part of Operation Safe Haven. The
remainder of the 1990s saw no major warfighting deployments,
other than a divisional headquarters to control land forces
during the short NATO intervention that ended the Bosnian
War.
More recently Royal Marines detachments have been involved
in operations in Kosovo, Sierra Leone, East Timor and the
Congo.
From 2000 onwards, the Royal Marines began converting from
their traditional light infantry role towards an expanded force
protection type role, with the introduction of the Commando
21 concept, leading to the introduction of the Viking, the
first armoured vehicle to be operated by the Royal Marines for
half a century.
In November 2001, after the seizure of Bagram Air Base by
the Special Boat Service, Charlie Company of 40 Commando became
the first British regular forces into Afghanistan, using Bagram
Air base to support British and US Special Forces Operations.
Bravo Company 40 Commando arrived in December 2001, eventually
moving into Kabul itself, beginning the building of the
infrastructure which became ISAF. 40 Commando continued to
roulement Companies until October 2002.
2002 Saw the deployment of 45 Commando Royal Marines to
Afghanistan, where contact with enemy forces was expected to be
heavy. However little action was seen, with no Al-Qaida or
Taliban forces being found or engaged.
3 Commando Brigade deployed on Operation TELIC in early 2003
with the USMC's 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit under command.
The Brigade conducted an amphibious assault on the Al-Faw
peninsula in Iraq, 42 Commando securing the port of Umm Qasr
and 40 Commando conducting a helicopter assault in order to
secure the oil installations to assure continued operability of
Iraq's export capability. The attack proceeded well, with light
casualties. 3 Commando Brigade served as part of the US 1st
Marine Division and received the US Presidential Unit
Citation.
In late 2006, 3 Commando Brigade relieved 16 Air Assault
Brigade in Helmand Province, Afghanistan, as part of Operation
Herrick. In 2008, Lance-Corporal Matthew Croucher of 42
Commando was awarded the George Cross (GC) after throwing
himself on a grenade to save the lives of the other marines of
his patrol. Remarkably, he managed to keep his rucksack and the
grenade, and that together with his body armour, meant he
suffered only very minor injuries.
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