Posted on Dec 1, 2015
SFC Infantryman
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I believe Infantry and Operators should be treated with a higher regard in the military.

Even officers and NCOs of all other military specialties should show respect to our nation's true warriors.

The general military is doing a good job of promoting everyone is a warrior but those non combat arms specialties do not train or destroy their bodies like true combatants. I would even say that infantry line medics and navy corpsman that are attached to the marines deserve the same regard.

This is not intended as a put down of other specialties but an awareness that some put in more than others in combat arms.
Posted in these groups: 53e46e2f 11B: Infantryman
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1SG Operations Sergeant Major
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Allow me to be blunt... When I saw this notification I never thought in my wildest dreams it was by a fellow SFC. If antone does this for respect they are in the wrong line of work. With that being said, Respect given is respect earned. It takes 8 POGs for 1 Grunt, it's mutal respect that keeps the guys on the ground killing and burning. Every POG that doesn't do his job is a grunt off the line doing that job. As long as the POGs do their jobs so my boys get what they need that's all the respect I need.
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CW2 Bde Ew Tech
CW2 (Join to see)
4 y
SPC David Glines and GRUNT means General Replacement UNTrained. Aka the new guys.
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SGT Jonathan Leonard
SGT Jonathan Leonard
4 y
SSG (Join to see) - The CIB is handed out for nothing at times as well. I pretty sure over 20,000 CIBs were awarded during Desert Storm. "20,000+" lmao
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CSM Infantry Senior Sergeant
CSM (Join to see)
4 y
I always told my guys that making a big deal about being better than everyone else just makes us look "needy" for attention. We conducted operations that not everyone was trained to do. We chose to do what we do. To be honest after 28 and half years in the Infantry, keeping your mouth shut and just taking care of the dude on your left and right is what separates the Infantry. Don't get me wrong your close friends who aren't in the Infantry will catch hell, but in the end everyone has a purpose. We can't get it done without everyone working towards a common goal.
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SP5 Leo Fitz
SP5 Leo Fitz
4 y
Another attempt to divide the troops. If you take the oath and do your job, you are ok with me.
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COL Jason Smallfield, PMP, CFM, CM
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Should Infantry and Operators be treated with higher regard in the military? I disagree with this statement for several reasons:
1. The Army is a team sport not an individual sport. Saying infantry and operators should be treated with higher regard is the same as saying a QB or running back in football is more important than the other positions, a pitcher in baseball, or a goalie in soccer/hockey. I argue that the greatest QB or RB goes nowhere without a decent line to create the holes.
2. Everyone in the Army is expected to be able fight, not just the infantry or operators. Again using a sports analogy, a kicker or punter does not do a majority of the blocking and tackling but they are expected to be able to block and tackle just like the other players. Is the kicker/punter any less a member of the team and should be treated with less regard?
3. Define "respect", "higher regard", and "true warriors". Do you feel that infantry and operators are not getting enough "respect" and "higher regard" currently? What are we talking here? More/better awards? More pay? Special ceremonies? Really?
4. Inconsistent logic. Not clear how you are equating infantry and operators with infantry line medics and navy corpsman. The latter are obviously not "true combatants" by a legal standard so not sure what definition and standard you are using. Other MOSs also "train and destroy their bodies" if that is the standard you are using. Some infantry (Stryker/Bradley) are much like Armor so should they be treated with "less regard" because they are not training and destroying their bodies like the light infantry do?
5. I am all for being proud of your branch/MOS but I am not sure why that alone is not good enough and "higher regard" is required.
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SGT Mark Rhodes
SGT Mark Rhodes
>1 y
Very well spoken COL Jason Smallfield, we are one big team and it takes all of us working together to make it a well oiled machine.
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MAJ Facilities Engineer
MAJ (Join to see)
>1 y
Great words of wisdom, sir!
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SSG Headquarters Support Ncoic
SSG (Join to see)
8 y
Cpl Evan Kikla - They could probably spell "paid" as well though. The Col here is spot on, and if anyone is doing this for accolades or respect, then they are the people who need to go ahead and move out. We all have a role to play, and our missions are hard fought and failed when the people tasked to carry them out are worrying about what other people doing and trying to convince themselves they could do it better. If you are doing someone else's job, than you are not doing your own.
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Sgt Cannoneer
Sgt (Join to see)
8 y
PFC (Join to see) - Only boot grunts talk like that. Most of those pogues (not "POGs" could do your job at least half-assedly. But could you do their jobs AT ALL? Doubtful.
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SGT David T.
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After I stopped laughing hysterically at the complete total absurdity of this post I can finally respond. I hate to break it to you but your average support Soldier puts in more and harder work than you do. I started off as 11B and reclassed to 92F so I seen both sides. I worked way harder doing fuel than I ever did as a grunt. Let me put this into perspective. The last unit I was in supported a heavy brigade. The grunts came out trained for 30 days and went home. My unit was out there 120 days supporting them working 12-18 hours at a clip nonstop. So tell me how it is that support MOS's don't train. Oh and destroying one's body, try and lift a 4 inch bulk fuel transfer hose full of fuel and tell me how they don't destroy their bodies. If anyone needs awareness it is you. You have no concept of what it is that everyone else does and how they fit into the fight. Remember that the next time you need fuel, ammo, food, medical supplies, transportation, maintenance, medevac etc.
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SMSgt Billy Cesarano
SMSgt Billy Cesarano
4 y
He has a valid point but, he doesn't realize we already do, it isn't new, just forgotten and seldom taught and rarely broadcast. The CIB, Infantry rope and other ribbons and medals do treat them in higher regard through recognition. There are several opinions running rampant on this topic with very weak support from those who only looked on the MOS from the outside and never carried that 100 lb backpack, M60 in full combat gear on weekly 25 mile forced road marches cat napping on rocks, sand and standing watch in mud fox holes for years, training for the day to be prepared to confront the enemy eye to eye, fight and win. What he really wants to say I believe is respect for those POA's. It is an unaware individual that compares combat downtime for such sacrifice to their routine support function and the physical and mental toll it takes. Take a look at the data on how many 20 yr+ retired combat 11B's there are and the resultant quality of life and life expectancy compared to support specialties. While we are amazed by the NFL linebacker who manages a 10 year active line career with a richly rewarded salary and then sympathize with his complications from the rigors it took on his body, we neglect our troops that do far more for far less. This I believe goes to the heart of what started this topic. The toll this POA has on the individual and lack of recognition in comparison to all other support cannot be understated. Knowingly or not, these individuals volunteered for the profession. I did for the college opportunity I was sold on. Other's, to get away from something worse. Extremely rare is the well educated volunteer who is willing to sacrifice oneself for God and Country. Expendable persons and combat fodder. When the SHTF, Combatant commanders don't get off easy either. They must decide who will risk death and who will be spared, until the next day. Who is willing to assume that task in good humane conscience? Divisiveness of specialties is not new and garners a certain competitiveness that is beneficial to a point. What has changed is the original, well thought out and understood and historical (Valley Forge) purpose for special regard of all types and ranks. In today's environment there is an assault that has been evolving from those times to now. Today's military personnel have been raised and conditioned in a warped society to believe everyone should get a trophy of equal value in any contest regardless of contribution or outcome. We fight to win wars and conflicts that seek to impose these and like ideologies in other weak societies yet, turn a blind eye on it in our own. Failure to unite as one educated, American military and society and to recognize what is really going on, death by a million cuts, will inevitably lead to destruction from within.
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SPC Kurt Hesselden
SPC Kurt Hesselden
4 y
Not to rain on any 11Bravo's parade, but this 05Bravo has a CIB and carried a 80lb ruck, didn't have an M60, but a PRC25 and an M16. When not on the radio in a firefight I was on the line with the other riflemen. Ended up on more than most LP's and Ambush patrols since they all needed a radio so was in those patrols rotation more often. The 11Bravo's in my Company neither saw or treated me any differently than any other, we all went thru the Brigade Infantry school at BMB in Bien Hoa, even our 11B's and company of 75th Rangers had to go thru it. You just can't tell by the uniform in a firefight if you're fighting beside a bona fide 11B, and you really don't give a carp what their MOS is. Probably different nowadays, but I bet not much after 50 years.
On the plus side of the 05B''s, that 25lb brick of a PRC25 would absorb a hell of a lot more 7.62 and RPG shrapnel than the thin fatigues would, saved my hide more than once.
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SGT Infantryman
SGT (Join to see)
1 y
I agree with what you said for the most part. Well in the beginning at least. The ending is kind of a kick in the balls. I was infantry, and airborne for a majority of that time. But I had to do everything you just stated at the end. Every single one. Infantry in airborne units are way overworked, in my opinion. We drove and got the ammo, we even had to count and turn it in even if it wasn’t even ours. And our maintenance was us, we didn’t get anyone out there to help us fix anything. I even had to drive fuelers, and yeah we had to fill our own vehicles. The actual fuelers would either sit in the truck, or just wouldn't be there at all. But I think every job sucks and destroys your body. Jumping out of airplanes with 90lbs+ rucks, a weapon, ski’s and if you’re extra lucky an AT-4. The only time we actually got to do our job was when we were in Afghanistan. Even training events we were the first ones there and the last ones to leave. I feel you on the 120 days while others were there for only 90 and sometimes less days than that. But if everyone would just do their jobs it would make things easier for everyone. Doesn’t matter what your MOS is, just pitch in and stop b*thing about it so it gets done. That’s always what I always told me joes. The only people who had “easy” jobs were the warrants
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SGT Infantryman
SGT (Join to see)
1 y
1LT William Clardy
1-501 here! I can attest to this. “Free time” was not a thing. Getting smoked because you didn't know the max velocity of the 249 was a thing. Our privates always had a book on them and they were studying if we weren’t doing anything. Which really wasn’t often.
- 1-501 Geronimo baby!
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