As our revisionist adversaries continue to challenge the rules-based international order secured after WWII, the Marine Corps is shifting its strategic focus away from the counterinsurgency operations of the Middle East to the emerging maritime challenges of the Indo-Pacific.
Four years into Force Design, the Corps is continuing to modernize and restructure to become a more nimble, technologically advanced force. Driven by extensive wargaming and campaigns of learning, this strategic transformation is creating an expeditionary force capable of operating effectively in contested environments along key maritime regions.
In this era of renewed great power competition, the casual reader might not expect the conversation to revolve around medical capabilities. Yet, Marine Corps Systems Command's Expeditionary Medical Systems team is at the forefront of a pivotal shift—working tirelessly to increase the warfighter’s battlefield survivability-- and thus, lethality.
“The Expeditionary Medical Team handles Class VIIIA medical supplies and equipment,” Navy CAPT Janine Espinal, EMS team lead and senior medical logistician, recently explained. “We support Role 1 and Role 2 capabilities, which encompass a range of medical services such as battlefield surgery, trauma care, resuscitation, and a full spectrum of other medical capabilities available in the field."