| MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. (1/11/2013) – “You're 
			riding along in a convoy conducting a resupply mission when you take 
			contact from the enemy and your machine-gunner goes down,” said Sgt. 
			Jeremy Marsden, the chief machine gun instructor serving with 1st 
			Marine Division Schools. “The only other Marines in that vehicle are 
			a driver, an admin clerk and yourself. What are you going to do?” 
			 
		
			| 
			 Lance Cpl. Alejandro Pena (left), an air traffic control communication technician serving with Marine Air Control Squadron 1, and Cpl. Juan Quijadamadrio, a supply warehouse clerk serving with Marine Air Support Squadron 3, assemble the Mk-19 grenade launcher as other members of their squad do push-ups during a physical training competition as part of the non-infantry machine gunner's course at 1st Marine Division Schools here, Jan. 9, 2013. (Official United States Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Corey Dabney)
 |  As the classroom grew silent Marsden, a 25-year-old 
					native of Boise, Idaho, said “by the end of this course you 
					will know what to do.”
 The Marines of Marine Air 
					Support Squadron 3 and Marine Air Control Squadron 1 trained 
					in a weeklong non-infantry machine-gunners course at 
					Division Schools the week of Jan. 7 to gain skills employing 
					machine guns.
 
 The purpose 
					of the machine-gunner's course is to provide both infantry 
					and non-infantry Marines the proper tactics, techniques and 
					procedures for operating, maintaining and assembling machine 
					guns used in combat, Marsden said.
 
 “Every Marine a 
					rifleman, so we should know how to use the weapons rifleman 
					used in combat,” said Lance Cpl. James Kendrick, an air 
					support network operator serving with MASS-3. “Those guys, 
					grunts (infantrymen), use more than just rifles, so we can't 
					stop at just knowing how to use a rifle.”
 
 All Marines 
					are trained in basic level infantry tactics during recruit 
					training. They gain more experience with rifles as they 
					complete Marine Combat Training and the School of Infantry.
 
 The instructors at Division Schools help improve 
					overall combat effectiveness by teaching Marine students, 
					those who don't typically use machine guns, the skills of a 
					basic machine-gunner.
 
 “Any Marine who can potentially 
					deploy in a combat zone should have this training because at 
					any moment a situation can change, and they may have to fire 
					the M2 .50 caliber machine-gun or the Mk 19 grenade 
					launcher,” Marsden said. “They wouldn't be able to 
					effectively suppress the enemy if they haven't had any 
					training with these weapons.”
 
 The Marines of MASS-3 
					and MACS-1 had this concept in mind when they went through 
					the training.
 
 “I've heard stories all the time about 
					how a Marine who was not an infantryman but rose to the 
					occasion and picked up a weapon to return fire,” said 
					Kendrick, a 23-year-old native of Bellevue, Texas.
 “I 
					wanted this training so I can be relied on – not just as a 
					rifleman, but as a machine-gunner as well.”
 
 The 
					training was both mentally and physically demanding for the 
					Marines. The instructors combined weapons assembly and 
					disassembly training with physical fitness exercises to test 
					how well the Marines could operate the weapon under 
					stressful conditions.
 
 “We take them on runs with the 
					weapon systems and have them do various exercises to 
					physically exhaust them,” Marsden said. “Then, we have them 
					disassemble and assemble the weapons while fatigued – 
					forcing them to think under pressure.”
 
 After 
					completing the week of training, the Marines were tested on 
					the characteristics, functions and maintenance of the weapon 
					systems. Once the final exam was completed the Marines fired 
					the weapons at various targets during a live-fire range.
 
 “This is great training, and we get to work with weapons 
					we normally wouldn't use,” Kendrick said. I can't wait to be 
					certified and able to say that I am a rifleman and a 
					machine-gunner.”
 By USMC Lance Cpl. Corey DabneyProvided 
					through DVIDS
 Copyright 2013
 
					
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