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First Time, First Firefight – Marine Stays Focused During Combat

Pfc. Timothy Workman, mortaman, Weapons Company, 1st Battalion, 1st Marines, Regimental Combat Team 6 stands outside his tent at Patrol Base Paser Lay, Afghanistan, Aug. 19, 2012. Workman, from Peebles, Ohio, recently engaged in his first firefight while patrolling in Trek Nawa, an area between Marjah and Nawa districts in Helmand province, Afghanistan.

Pfc. Timothy Workman, mortarman, Weapons Company, 1st Battalion, 1st Marines, Regimental Combat Team 6 stands outside his tent at Patrol Base Paser Lay, Afghanistan, Aug. 19, 2012. Workman, from Peebles, Ohio, recently engaged in his first firefight while patrolling in Trek Nawa, an area between Marjah and Nawa districts in Helmand province, Afghanistan. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Timothy Lenzo)

It’s a moment of truth for many Marines – the first time they are in combat and their training is put to the test.

When his squad took enemy contact during a recent patrol through Trek Nawa, Pfc. Timothy Workman found his moment.

“I could hear rounds cracking over my head,” Workman said, mortarman, Weapons Company, 1st Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, Regimental Combat Team 6. “The adrenaline started pumping right away.”

| More: Marines emerge unscathed from combat operation |

This was Workman’s first firefight. A year ago, he was standing on the yellow footprints at Marine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island to start basic training, a tradition every Marine recruit goes through. Now, with the mid-morning sun beating down, he was crouched in a ditch, his M16 service rifle ready.

Workman and his fellow Marines fought an estimated six to eight enemies. The insurgents fired from several different positions, shooting through small holes in walls several hundred meters away. Marines took cover in mud compounds and behind mounds of debris.

Workman’s squad split into two units during the firefight. Workman, from Peebles, Ohio, went with Staff Sgt. David Simons, his platoon sergeant, as they moved forward to return fire.

Marines with Weapons Company, 1st Battalion, 1st Marines, Regimental Combat Team 6, patrol through Trek Nawa, Afghanistan, Aug. 16, 2012. Trek Nawa, an area between Nawa and Marjah districts, contains known insurgent sites. Weapons Co. has been involved in numerous firefights since the start of their deployment in June, 2012.

Marines with Weapons Company, 1st Battalion, 1st Marines, Regimental Combat Team 6, patrol through Trek Nawa, Afghanistan, Aug. 16, 2012. Trek Nawa, an area between Nawa and Marjah districts, contains known insurgent sites. Weapons Co. has been involved in numerous firefights since the start of their deployment in June, 2012. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Timothy Lenzo)

“At one point, I witnessed Workman moving up into position to engage the enemy,” Simons said, a native of Sidney, Mont. “He fired on the enemy, and when the enemy returned fire, it allowed us to open up with our machine gun.”

The morning sounds of birds and farmers were replaced with the sudden burst of rifles and the “rat-ta-tat-tat” of machinegun fire. An hour later the fight was over, and the Marines returned to their patrol base.

“Since we’ve been out here, it’s pretty common for (the other Marines) to engage in firefights,” Workman said. “These (insurgents) will stick around and (fight) for awhile.”

Workman’s company patrols the volatile Trek Nawa area of Afghanistan. Trek Nawa is an area between the Marjah and Nawa districts of Afghanistan in Helmand province.

The Marines engaged enemies in firefights ranging from isolated pot shots to three–day long battles. For Workman, the fighting hit home six months before he left for boot camp when, his friend’s older brother, Luke, was killed while serving near this same area of Afghanistan.

“I had gone to school with Luke’s brother since the 6th grade,” said Workman. “At the time (of Luke’s death) I had already decided to join, but this motivated me to continue the work that Luke gave his life for.”

In addition to Luke, Workman said he’s lost a couple other friends to the war in Afghanistan.

Despite losing friends to combat, Workman remembered his training and focused on his job during the fight.

Three Marines with 2nd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, stack up behind each other to view a suspicious compound during a patrol, May 27, 2012. The Marines cleared Zamindawar, disrupting the insurgents leadership and logistics chain. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Timothy Lenzo)

Three Marines with 2nd Battalion, 5th Marine Regiment, stack up behind each other to view a suspicious compound during a patrol, May 27, 2012. The Marines cleared Zamindawar, disrupting the insurgents leadership and logistics chain. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Timothy Lenzo)

“I was trying to get positive identification on the enemy, trying to find where they were firing from, looking for spotters and just covering my brothers,” Workman said.

Now that his first firefight is over, Workman’s platoon will monitor his behavior.

“The main thing we look for is a Marine’s mindset after their first time in combat,” Simons said. “We are a family, so we can tell when one of our brother’s is acting differently. We watch for it and take care of each other.”

Simons said Workman seemed mentally strong before and after the firefight and he is proud of Workman and the discipline he showed on the battlefield.

The Marines have more operations planned through Trek Nawa and expect more firefights, before they return to the States.

“I can say there’s nothing else like the Marine Corps,” Workman said. “I’ll continue picking my sergeants’ and seniors’ brains, trying to be better prepared for the next fight.”

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  • bob l

    “First to fight” Semper Fi ….

  • Sgt. P.R.

    To the writer of this article Cpl. Timothy Lenzo: You were issued an M-16 **Service** Rifle in boot camp, not an “assault rifle” (sic); as a properly trained Marine and a combat correspondent, you of all people should be using the correct nomenclature, not the prejudicial and factually incorrect buzzwords of the agenda-driven, know-nothing left-wing biased mainstream media.

    Also, ” In December 2012 (??!?) , his friend’s older brother, Luke, was killed….” Since December **2012** hasn’t happened yet, it is your moral duty as a Marine to try and save this person’s life by warning him of his impending doom…or it is your professional duty to ensure you and you chain of command proofread all official stories for factual errors and typos.

    Respectfully submitted,
    Sgt. P.R., USMC 1988-1993

  • Big Daddy 5

    Just want to shout out to the Marines, a HUGE THANK YOU!!!! Because of you my family and I sleep well at night, do what we want when we want and most of all we live FREE!!!!! THANK YOU!!!!!

  • Mike P

    Marine Corps training has always produced highly motivated, truly dedicated United States Marine Corps recruits. The real training comes when you get to the Fleet. That’s what Drill Instructor SSgt. Randall told me. He was right. Semper Fi.

  • http://stanrmitchell.com/ Stan R. Mitchell

    Stay safe, Pfc Workman. Keep your head up and your chin down.

    You make all us old war horses proud.

    Stan R. Mitchell
    A/1/8 — 1995-1999

  • Diane

    Thank you for sharing! God bless and keep you all! Looking forward to the day you come home safe and sound!

  • Anonymous

    great story hi from Stockton, Maryland USA