The
26th Marine Expeditionary Unit (26th MEU) is
one of seven
Marine
Expeditionary Units currently in existence in the
United States Marine Corps. The
Marine Expeditionary Unit is a
Marine Air-Ground Task Force
with a strength of about 2,200 personnel. The MEU consists of four
major parts: a command element, a
ground combat element, an
aviation combat element, and a
logistics element. Since its
establishment in the early 1970s as the 36th Marine Amphibious
Unit, the MEU has deployed extensively, and participated in
numerous combat and contingency operations, as well as training
exercises.
The 26th MEU is based out of Marine Corps
Base Camp Lejeune
, North
Carolina
.
Mission
To provide combatant commanders options throughout the
Mediterranean region, and beyond. It is
a rapid-reaction force capable of conducting multiple and
concurrent missions in support of a spectrum of operations,
including conventional
amphibious
warfare operations, humanitarian assistance, mass casualty
evacuation operations, and noncombatant evacuation operations. It
also has the
ability to
carry out
special operations
tasked by the theater commander.
Current Major Subordinate Elements
Ground Combat
Element:
Battalion Landing Team 2/6
Aviation Combat
Element:
Marine Medium Helicopter
Squadron 264 (Rein)
Logistics Combat
Element:
Combat Logistics Battalion
26
History
Early years
In 1975
the 36th Marine Amphibious Unit participated in Exercise Staff
Zugel in West
Germany
. This marked the first time since
World War I that Marines took a combined arms
force ashore in Germany. The unit was redesignated as the 26th
Marine Amphibious Unit in 1982 and became part of the rotation
cycle of three MAUs on the East Coast in 1985. It was the first of
the MAUs to undergo
Special
Operations Capability training, earn the SOC qualification and
have
AV-8B Harrier attached. In
1988 the unit was again redesignated as the 26th Marine
Expeditionary Unit.
1990s through 2000
The 1990s were a busy time for the 26th MEU. In 1991 the MEU
supported
Operation
Desert Shield by providing a "Show of Force" in the
Mediterranean, and participated in
Operation Sharp Edge, a non-combatant
evacuation operation of Liberia. The next year saw the MEU
participating in
Operation
Provide Promise,
Operation
Deny Flight and
Operation
Sharp Guard off the coast of Yugoslavia.
In 1994 the 26th MEU participated in ceremonies marking the 50th
Anniversary of the D-Day invasion of Normandy, France. The MEU also
supported
Operation Restore
Hope off the coast of Somalia and participated in continued
operations in Bosnia.
Three
years later the MEU launched Operation Silver Wake, evacuating
American citizens and Third Country Nationals from Albania
, and also
participated in Operation
Guardian Retrieval, the staging of forces in Congo for a
possible evacuation of Zaire
.
In 1998 the MEU served as the Headquarters for the Strategic
Reserve Force during Exercise Dynamic Response in Bosnia. The SRF
is a multinational force made up of forces from the Netherlands,
Spain, Italy, Romania, Poland and the United States.
The 26th MEU played a notable role in the Balkan conflict. In 1998
it participated in
Operation
Determined Falcon, the one-day NATO aerial show-of-force in
Kosovo. In April to May 1999 it took part in
Operation Noble Anvil and
Operation Shining Hope. While
supporting Noble Anvil, the NATO bombing Campaign in Kosovo, with
AV-8B Harrier Attack Aircraft, the MEU also provided security for
Kosovar Refugees at Camps Hope and Eagle in Albania. From June to
July 1999 it participated in
Operation Joint Guardian. As the
first U.S. Peacekeepers in Kosovo, the Marines and the Sailors of
the MEU provided stability to the embattled region.
August 1999 saw the MEU taking part in
Operation Avid Response, providing
Humanitarian Assistance to the people of Western Turkey left
homeless by a devastating earthquake.
The MEU Conducted Adriatic presence operations during the election
crisis in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, September 2000. The
MEU also participated in exercises Atlas Hinge in Tunisia and
Croatian Phibex 2000, the first ever bi-lateral exercise between
the Marine Corps and the Croatian Armed Forces. During the next two
months the MEU supported diplomatic initiatives during unrest in
Israel while simultaneously taking part in the NATO exercise
Destined Glory 2000, and continued to break new ground by the
second ever bi-lateral exercise between the Marine Corps and the
Croatian Armed Forces, exercise Slunj 2000.
Global War on Terror
Following the events of September 11, 2001, the Marines of the 26th
MEU were among the first U.S. Forces into Afghanistan as part of
Operation Enduring
Freedom and
Operation Swift
Freedom.
From December 2001 to February 2002, 26th MEU
(SOC) Marines reinforced the 15th MEU who had conducted
the 450 mile seizure of Camp Rhino
in November 2001 and Kandahar
International Airport
in December 2001, Both MEUs worked together and
constructed a detainment facility that held more than 400 Taliban and Al Qaeda
terrorists.
From March-May 2003, the 26th MEU supported Operation Iraqi Freedom
conducting operations in Erbil and Mosul, Iraq. The MEU was
inserted via
KC-130 and conducted
operations until relieved by the
101st Airborne
Division.
The 26th MEU served as the primary tactical unit for
Joint Task Force Liberia from
August to September 2003 in the
Second Liberian Civil War. The MEU
capitalized on its extensive training in humanitarian assistance
operations and U.S.
Embassy relations to help bring peace to the
war-torn nation following the exile of former Liberian
president
Charles
Taylor.
In Iraq, several hundred Marines and Sailors from the 26th MEU
conducted Operation Sea Horse in Iraq from July to August in 2005,
supporting British-led
Multi-National
Division Southeast with a mission to detect and deter illicit
activity along the Iraqi border.
The MEU maintained command and control of
Operation Sea Horse from aboard
ship in the Northern Persian Gulf, while simultaneously and
concurrently conducting training missions in Saudi Arabia
and Djibouti
.
In August 2008, the 26th MEU deployed aboard the ships of the
Iwo Jima Strike Group.
Notable Facts
1995 -- The first MEU to deploy with
M1A1 Abrams Main Battle Tanks.
1996 -- The first MEU to deploy with the Joint
Task Force Enabler communications package.
November 2000 -- The 26th MEU's Battalion Landing
Team, BLT 2/2, launched the first ever
FGM-148 Javelin anti-tank missile fired by a
deployed MEU.
March 2003 -- In 2003,
during Operation Iraqi Freedom, Marine
Corps KC-130s traveled and delivered 1,000
over Marines directly to the battlefield in Mosul, Iraq
- a feat never before attempted.
January 2007 -- The MEU is the first to deploy
with a
MARSOC
attachment.
Unit awards
The 26th MEU has been awarded the following unit awards and
Campaign streamers.

Unit Commendation with two Bronze
Stars
Libya—1986
Kosovo—1999
Afghanistan—2001-2002

Unit Commendation with two Bronze
Stars
Libya—1985-1987
Albania—1996-1998
Turkey—1999

Corps Expeditionary Streamer with one
Bronze Star

Defense Service Streamer with one
Bronze Star

Campaign Streamer with two Bronze
Stars

War on Terrorism Expeditionary
Streamer
See also
References
Notes
External links