Jul 22, 5:33 PM EDT
By JULIE WATSON
Associated Press
CAMP
PENDLETON, Calif. (AP) -- The Marine Corps has created its first law
enforcement battalions - a lean, specialized force of military police
officers that it hopes can quickly deploy worldwide to help investigate
crimes from terrorism to drug trafficking and train fledgling security
forces in allied nations.
The Corps activated three such
battalions last month. Each is made up of roughly 500 military police
officers and dozens of dogs. The Marine Corps has had police battalions
off and on since World War II but they were primarily focused on
providing security, such as accompanying fuel convoys or guarding
generals on visits to dangerous areas, said Maj. Jan Durham, commander
of the 1st Law Enforcement Battalion at Camp Pendleton.
The idea
behind the law enforcement battalions is to consolidate the military
police and capitalize on their investigative skills and police training,
he said. The new additions come as every branch in the military is
trying to show its flexibility and resourcefulness amid defense cuts.
Marines
have been increasingly taking on the role of a street cop along with
their combat duties over the past decade in Iraq and Afghanistan, where
they have been in charge of training both countries' security forces.
Those skills now can be used as a permanent part of the Marine Corps,
Durham said.
The war on terror has also taught troops the
importance of learning how to gather intelligence, secure evidence and
assist local authorities in building cases to take down criminal
networks. Troops have gotten better at combing raid sites for clues to
help them track insurgents.
They also have changed their
approach, realizing that marching into towns to show force alienates
communities. Instead, they are being taught to fan out with interpreters
to strike up conversations with truck drivers, money exchangers,
cellphone sellers and others. The rapport building can net valuable
information that could even alert troops about potential attacks.
But
no group of Marines is better at that kind of work than the Corps'
military police, who graduate from academies just like civilian cops,
Durham said. He said the image of military police patrolling base to
ticket Marines for speeding or drinking has limited their use in the
Corps. He hopes the creation of the battalions will change that,
although analysts say only the future will tell whether the move is more
than just a rebranding of what already existed within the Corps.
The
battalions will be capable of helping control civil disturbances,
handling detainees, carrying out forensic work, and using biometrics to
identify suspects. Durham said they could assist local authorities in
allied countries in securing crime scenes and building cases so
criminals end up behind bars and not back out on the streets because of
mistakes.
"Over the past 11 years of combat operations in Iraq
and Afghanistan, some lessons learned painfully, there has been a
growing appreciation and a demand for, on the part of the warfighter,
the unique skills and capabilities that MPs bring to the fight," Durham
said. "We do enforce traffic laws and we do write reports and tickets,
and that's good, but we do so much more than that."
Durham said
the Marine Corps plans to show off its new battalions in Miami later
this month at a conference put on by the Southern Command and that is
expected to be attended by government officials from Central American
countries, such as Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador and Belize.
Defense
analyst Loren Thompson said the battalions make sense given the nature
of today's global threats, which include powerful drug cartels and other
criminal gangs that often mix with religious and political extremists,
who use the profits to buy their weaponry.
"This is a smart idea
because the biggest single problem the Marines have in dealing with
low-intensity types of threats is that they basically are trained to
kill people," he said. "It's good for the Marines to have skills that
allow them to contain threats without creating casualties."
Gary
Solis, a former Marine Corps prosecutor and judge who teaches law of war
at Georgetown University, said Marines have already been doing this
kind of work for years but now that it has been made more formal by the
creation of the battalions, it could raise a host of questions,
especially on the use of force. The law of war allows for fighters to
use deadly force as a first resort, while police officers use it as a
last resort.
If Marines are sent in to do law enforcement but are
attacked, will they go back to being warfighters? And if so, what are
the implications? Solis asked.
"Am I a Marine or a cop? Can I be
both?" he said. "Cops apply human rights law and Marines apply the law
of war. Now that it's blended, it makes it tougher for the young men and
women who have to make the decision as to when deadly force is not
appropriate."
Durham said that military police understand that better than any Marine since they are trained in both.
"They are very comfortable with the escalation of force," he said. "MPs get that. It's fundamental to what we do."
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