Figured someone here might know the answer to this: can a USMC officer be a medic? What are the requirements to be a combat medic? Thanks..
Marines have Navy Corpsman assigned to fulfill the role of combat first aid. There are no Marine medical officers in any capacity. All of our medical and chaplain support comes from the Navy, the idea being that nayone who is a noncombatant per the Geneva Conventions will not be a Marine.
I dont know the exact training for the Navy Corpsman but is is fairly extensive. There are comabt lifesaving courses that some of the grunts take to be able to help the Corpsman out but that is a secondary role to that of trigger puller.
Medical and religous symbols provide protection under the conventions though ignored by all the heathens we find ourselves fighting of late.
Marines have Navy Corpsman assigned to fulfill the role of combat first aid. There are no Marine medical officers in any capacity. All of our medical and chaplain support comes from the Navy, the idea being that nayone who is a noncombatant per the Geneva Conventions will not be a Marine.
I dont know the exact training for the Navy Corpsman but is is fairly extensive. There are comabt lifesaving courses that some of the grunts take to be able to help the Corpsman out but that is a secondary role to that of trigger puller.
Funny how Geneva conventions and UN decisions go out the window with our enemies, yet we still follow them to the letter (or so it seems).![]()
Can o' worms here but...All agreements in warfare short of the total destruction of your opponent (read "Jus in bello") are matters of conveniance...pure and simple. If a combatant sees significant advantage in dispensing with a political agreement in the face of superior or assymetric military force...they will.
It has always been so (as history will show), and likely always will be.
German POW treatment was relatively benign (assuming your name wasn't Moishe), while the Japanese camps were some of the worst ever seen. I wonder what the factors are that play into that?
Brett
Both advanced, civilized nations, yet German POW treatment was relatively benign (assuming your name wasn't Moishe), while the Japanese camps were some of the worst ever seen. I wonder what the factors are that play into that?
I think MasterBates got this one pretty much right. The topic interests me as well. Turn the card around though and an even more interesting example presents itself. Why did the US intern the Japanese and not the Germans? Why did US propaganda tend to aggressively dehumanize (literally) the Japanese?
http://mcel.pacificu.edu/as/students/propaganda/rat.jpg
We had our own Asian immigration issues which helped fuel that fire.
Why did the US intern the Japanese and not the Germans? Why did US propaganda tend to aggressively dehumanize (literally) the Japanese?