. MARSOC's creation was announced on 1 November 2005 by U.S.
secretary of defense Donald Rumsfeld, following a meeting between Rumsfeld, SOCOM commander General
Bryan D. Brown and the
Marine Corps Commandant General Michael Hagee on 28 October 2005. MARSOC was officially activated on 24 February 2006 with ceremonies at
Camp Lejeune, North Carolina. The potential participation of the Marine Corps in SOCOM has been controversial since SOCOM was formed in 1986. At the time, Marine Corps leaders felt that their
Force Reconnaissance (FORECON) units were best kept in the Marine Corps'
Marine Air-Ground Task Force command structure and that the detachment of an elite Marine special operations unit would be to the detriment of the Marine Corps as a whole. A re-evaluation following the
September 11 attacks and the
Global War on Terrorism, along with new policy established by Secretary Rumsfeld and Commandant General
James L. Jones at
The Pentagon, caused the Marine Corps to work towards integration with SOCOM. The establishment of MARSOC represented the most significant step towards that goal and followed the establishment of Detachment One (
Det One), a small Marine Corps detachment formed as a
pilot program to test Marine Corps integration into SOCOM. It was made up of mostly Marines from
1st and
2nd Force Reconnaissance Battalions along with other hand-picked support men and served with
Navy SEALs under
Naval Special Warfare Group One. Det One conducted a multitude of special operations in Iraq alongside their special operations brothers of the sister services. SOCOM conducted a study of the unit's deployment, which clearly indicated success and strong performance. Det One was disbanded in 2006 soon after the creation of MARSOC. The first of many Marine Special Operations Companies stood up in June 2006. MARSOC's initial deployment to
Afghanistan in 2007 was mired in controversy when its Fox Company was sent back to the United States and its commander relieved from duty after a
shooting incident. The incident that resulted in as many as 19 civilians killed involved a complex ambush by insurgents that included a suicide
car bomb and small arms fire. Allegations later arose that the MARSOC operators killed the civilians while suppressing enemy fire, but these allegations proved false. MARSOC Marines also took part in
Operation Enduring Freedom – Philippines. Following U.S. Army General
David Petraeus' assumption of command in Afghanistan in 2010, in support of the ALP/VSO program (Afghan Local Police/Village Stability Operations), special forces in Afghanistan were task-organized into battalion level SOTF (Special Operations Task Forces), each with a geographic area of responsibility—for MARSOC, this was western Afghanistan and
Helmand Province. In March 2012, MARSOC teams suffered several casualties to
Green on Blue attacks. In July 2012, a patrol of Afghan Army commandos was ambushed by insurgents from several buildings in
Badghis Province and three Afghans were wounded by small arms fire.
Gunnery Sergeants Jonathan Gifford and Daniel Price raced forward on an
ATV to retrieve the wounded under
direct fire from the enemy. After
evacuating the wounded to an emergency helicopter landing zone, they returned and assaulted the enemy positions in a fierce
close-quarter battle. While throwing grenades down the chimney of an insurgent-occupied building, they were struck and killed by
PKM fire; for his actions that day Price was awarded the
Silver Star. On 6 August 2014, MARSOC claimed and officially bestowed the prestigious
Marine Raider moniker upon their subordinate combat units (
Marine Special Operations Regiment) in commemoration of the fabled and elite amphibious light infantry unit that operated during
World War II.
Marine Corps Times reported that in 2017, Marine Raiders assisted in the
liberation of Marawi from ISIS militants. In February 2019,
Marine Corps Times reported that since the formation of MARSOC 13 years before, it had conducted 300 operational deployments across 13 countries, awarded more than 300 valor awards and that 43 Raiders (including two
military dogs) had been killed in training and combat operations. Since MARSOC's first deployment, it has become a strong partner in SOCOM and proven itself able to conduct full-spectrum special operations. They have successfully conducted both long-term counterinsurgency under the VSO program and carried out complex direct action tasks. ==Organization==