Marine Headline News

Secrets of deployment don’t go unnoticed - I am glad to be back in Okinawa from my recent deployment to Thailand where I worked primarily with members of other services, which was a change for me. What has not changed is the common misconception some people still have. Some service members think they can break any rule they choose while away from home, and no one will talk about it when they return home because “what happens on deployment stays on deployment.”

When someone gives into temptation while abroad they say the same old phrase, and whoever coined it would be a multibillionaire if he received a nickel every time it was spoken.

I do not know why some believe deploying to another country means they can throw away all of their values and stop abiding by the rules. I’m not just talking about the Uniform Code of Military Justice, but the values we live by daily.

While in Thailand there was a buddy rule for all ranks, much like the buddy rules we have in Japan for our junior Marines. However, due to civil unrest in the southern part of Thailand, our first general order was to always have a liberty buddy while out in town.

It was common to see a lieutenant colonel waiting around for his liberty buddy before heading out into town. But like the “10-percent” here, some deployed personnel ignored the rule and headed to markets, malls and shops without an authorized buddy.

In some reported incidents in Thailand, personnel would come to a hotel drunk, act disorderly and argue with hotel staff about why they could not let their new Thai girlfriends, who I assume they just met that day, up to their rooms.

The girlfriend thing is a great transition into why I really wrote this. Why did I see men who told me they have girlfriends, and others wearing bands, out in clubs drinking with women and leaving with them? It doesn’t just happen in Thailand. It happens everywhere I have deployed, and I have heard similar stories from service members deploying all over the world. It is not a problem for everyone, but it is known by some who pretend to look the other way and tell the stories when they come home.

The reality is that fraternization, adultery and acting like a total idiot seems to be a part of deployment for some, but luckily not for all. I have always heard stories with these underlying themes. Why? Because some genius has lead us to believe that what goes on during a deployment stays on the deployment. I spoke with some fellow service members about this face-to-face, but they are responsible for their own actions. If my opinion was heeded or not, is completely on them. If the sea-stories really did stay on deployment, I wouldn’t be writing this.

Does a sexually transmitted disease stay on deployment? Does guilt stay on deployment? Can a marriage or relationship last once you have strayed from the one you love? If you can look someone in the face after betraying their trust and confidence in you while deployed, your conscious is nothing like mine. You should never again counsel a Marine about his Corps Values. How can you or anyone who was witness to your transgressions take you seriously ever again?

God forgives the rule breakers and life goes on after the Marine Corps, but guilt on the heart can last for life. Forgiving yourself can be so hard that you just run from it any way you can. You may even run so far, you leave behind the ones you love.

When you see someone being an “ugly American” at a movie theater or in a club, it won’t hurt if you speak to them about their inappropriate behavior. They might not appreciate it at the time, but, later they may; especially if their significant other discovers “what happens on deployment never stays on deployment.”

Staff Sgt. Mikey Niman (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Jonathan K. Teslevich) (Released)

 

 

 

 

 

 

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