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    Marines brace against Aussie advance during Exercise Hamel 2012

    Marines brace against Aussie advance during Exercise Hamel 2012

    Photo By Gunnery Sgt. Jonathan Wright | Marines with Company G., Battalion Landing Team 2nd Battalion, 1st Marines, 31st...... read more read more

    SHOALWATER BAY, QL, AUSTRALIA

    07.02.2012

    Story by Cpl. Jonathan Wright 

    31st Marine Expeditionary Unit       

    SHOALWATER BAY, Australia - The Marines hugged the walls inside the buildings as they trained their eyes skyward from the edges of the windows. The low hum that drove them to cover became louder and high above the town hung the silhouette of an Australian unmanned aerial vehicle.

    Elements of Company G, Battalion Landing Team 2nd Battalion, 1st Marines, 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit, have held a defensive position since June 27, in an area called Raspberry Creek here during Exercise Hamel 2012, the multi-national training evolution between the U.S. Marines, Australian army and New Zealand army.

    Holed up in a simulated small town, the Marines of 3rd and Weapons platoons, with Australian assets acting as either the local police force or the civilian populace, have been weathering the storm of impending attack from the Australian 1st Brigade.

    “They’re out there, but they’re being very cautious in how they advance,” said Lance Cpl. Luis Duran, squad automatic weapon gunner with Company G, BLT 2/1, 31st MEU. “In the meantime, UAVs have been constantly flying overhead while small reconnaissance teams have been testing our defenses.”

    First Brigade, the Australian army unit who is undergoing certification for operational deployment during Exercise Hamel, is tasked with pushing back the Marine and Australian contingent and eventually eliminating them.

    Per the scenario, as of the 1st of July, all Marine and Aussie advances have been repelled back to Raspberry Creek, which serves as a dividing terrain feature between the two forces.

    “I give it up to the Australians for treating this exercise like it is a real conflict,” said Sgt. Jose Morales, squad leader with Company G., BLT 2/1, 31st MEU. “Any procedures they would conduct in a combat environment are practiced, such as treatment of enemy prisoners of war. No corners are being cut in this exercise.”

    Aside from various skirmishes past the Raspberry Creek lines, no major offensive has occurred. The 1st Brigade has been preparing for the assault against the town through use of continuous UAV surveillance, flyovers by jet aircraft and ground reconnaissance.

    Using recon hides and artillery assets of their own, the Marine reinforced contingency has been fending off 1st Brigade’s intelligence collection attempts and is keeping them at bay- for now.

    “We’ve had the opportunity to continually reinforce the defences in and around the town as we fend off 1st Brigade,” said Lance Cpl. Theodore Kavich, team leader with 3rd plt., Company G., BLT 2/1, 31st MEU.

    The Raspberry Creek area is surrounded by a trench system, concertina wire and tertiary mine fields. Inside the town lies more c-wire with 3rd platoon, reinforced with two machine gun teams from Weapons platoon, one 84mm rocket system, and one FGM-148 Javelin system.

    The Marines will keep conducting response to contact drills throughout the town, but the continual threat of UAVs have kept them under the cover of the buildings. Until the 1st Brigade launches their offensive, the Marines are keeping a vigilant eye to the west.

    The 31st MEU is the only continuously forward-deployed MEU and is the nation’s force in readiness in the Asia-Pacific region.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 07.02.2012
    Date Posted: 07.02.2012 07:23
    Story ID: 90972
    Location: SHOALWATER BAY, QL, AU

    Web Views: 396
    Downloads: 1

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