From Black Five..via
National Review....
...In the Atlantic, Marines had trained Army forces for seaborne
landings prior to the North African campaign in 1942, and then made
landings during the same. Marines trained Army forces for the
Sicilian-Italian landings in 1943. Marine Corps amphibious experts were
on Ike’s staff. And most Normandy-bound Army units were in fact
instructed by Marines prior to the 1944 invasion.
So why didn’t U.S. Marines storm the French coast with their Army counterparts?
First, the Marine Corps was then–as it has always been–much smaller
than the Army. During World War II, the Corps swelled to a force
comprising six divisions, whereas the Army expanded to 89 divisions. The
Corps’ resources were stretched thin, and much of its efforts were
focused on the fighting in the Pacific.
Second, a deep-seeded rivalry between the Army and Marines was in
full bloom: Its origins stretching back to World War I; the defining
period of the modern Marine Corps.
Following the 1918 Battle of Belleau Wood (France), in which Marines
played a leading role, newspapers in the U.S. credited much of the
success of the American Expeditionary Force to the Marines. This
occurred at the expense of deserving Army units even when referring to
actions in which Marines did not participate.
In one instance, a number of newspapers covering the fighting at the
Marne River bridges at Chateau-Thierry (a few days prior to the Battle
of Belleau Wood) published headlines that read “Germans stopped at
Chateau-Thierry with help of God and a few Marines.” The headlines
contributed to the Corps’ already legendary reputation, and the Army was
justifiably incensed. The Germans in fact had been stopped at
Chateau-Thierry by the U.S. Army’s 7th machinegun battalion.
Army leaders–including Generals George C. Marshall, Eisenhower, and
Omar N. Bradley–were determined not to be upstaged by Marines, again.
Thus, when America entered World War II in late 1941, the Marine Corps
was deliberately excluded from large-scale participation in the European
theater. And when the largest amphibious operation in history was
launched, it was for all intents and purposes an Army show...
The article is fascinating and filled in a chapter of Marine Corps history that I always wondered about but got few satisfying answers.
Read the entire thing, but one thing is certain...The US Army...more precisely, all the units assigned to take the beach that day performed magnificently. They deserve full credit.
But it is nice knowning why Marines...masters of the amphibious assault...didn't take part. One last tidbit. Originally spoken by Patton but revised in the role by George C. Scott (a Marine)...
Patton said, “The quicker we clean up this g**damned mess, the quicker
we can take a little jaunt against the purple pissing Japs and clean out
their nest, too. Before the g**damned Marines get all of the credit.”
Ah...sweet interservice rivalry. It makes us all step a bit quicker, be a bit better and work just a bit harder.