Which term is used has no particular significance, in general. They are often interchangeable, & when their usages differ, it is dependent on the time, place & particular armed forces.Normally I'd say yes Marines and Naval Infantry are historically the same, but my grandfather has a 1919 ed of the US Navy Bluejackets Manuel and it has a couple chapters on Naval Infantry as well as Marines.
The Australian Troops are not Marines or Naval Infantry, they are Army. During the Falklands war the Para's, Gurkha's and one of the Guard battalions landed during an Amphibious assault that does not make them Marines.Thanks for the link!
I think the question I am trying to ask is, would you consider countries that have amphibious trained infantry to be Marines - such as Australia's Royal Australia Reg (2nd Bn.) and Singapore's Guards (1st Guards), or Nigeria's 82 Division (1x brigade)?
Australia and Singapore have amphibious ship capabilities and these unit's have amphibious trained infantry but......I believe they are not dedicated specifically to amphibious landings.
The Marine Security Detachments (MSD) found at the US Embassies and US Consulates are actually in the US Department of State (DoS) organization and not a part of the Department of Defense (DoD) operating forces. MSD are for internal security only and AFAIK they are not allowed to even show weapons outside of Embassy/Consulate grounds. Security is chiefly provided by a local hire contract security organization. In the case of Brazil there are no more than 7 members assigned to each of the MSD in country. These soldiers (both men and women) are truly some very sharp individuals.To further confuse the answers, many of the US embassies abroad have marine detachments for security. Nothing whatsoever to do with amphibious operations. Those nations that don't have marines use army soldiers to do the same missions.
These sharp marines have impressive dress uniforms, they look great at our embassies abroad. The army dress uniforms don't measure up to the marines dress uniforms.
'Naval infantry' and 'marines' I would consider to be interchangeable. But to be considered as such, they'd have to be permanently organized as apart of a larger sea power force - good indicator would be whether or not they do sea tours.Marine (military), a soldier in a force under the authority of a navy, or in several cases (e.g. USMC),a soldier belonging to a force which was formerly under the authority of a navy
Absolutely not! We're not talking about maritime safety, catching smugglers, pollution control, fisheries protection or any of the other coastguard roles. These blokes are soldiers - for fighting - to defend navy shore establishments from land attack. And also for rounding up unruly sailors. Both of these are traditional roles of marines.Coast guard?
The Story of the Sailor Shirt
“Elite forces have traditionally distinguished themselves from the rest of the military by adopting distinctive uniforms or insignia. The Soviet VDV was no exception. Colonel General Margelov was an enthusiastic proponent of the effort, feeling that it bolstered unit morale. The first step was the adoption of the Soviet Navy’s striped blue and white sailor’s shirt, the telnyashka, under the normal khaki tunic, to distinguish the paratroopers from the rest of the Soviet Army. This was an odd choice for an army unit, and was due to Margelov’s combat career in World War II. In the early years of the war, Margelov had served on the Leningrad Front. Many Soviet warships were bottled up in harbors in Leningrad, so the sailors of the Baltic Fleet were brought ashore and used as elite infantry. Although an army major, Margelov was assigned to command the 1st Naval Infantry Regiment, which was used for raiding behind German lines.
“Margelov associated the striped sailor’s shirt with this highly effective unit. He had kept his own naval shirt as a memento of past glories, and now he decided the sailor’s shirt would serve as the basis for the new VDV paratrooper’s uniform. In spite of its odd beginnings, the blue-and-white-striped shirt became the predominant symbol of Soviet and Russian elite forces, especially after Afghanistan.”
Extracted from Steven J. Zaloga’s “Inside the Blue Berets: A Combat History of the Soviet and Russian Airborne Forces, 1930-1995” Presidio Press, 1995.
http://www.sptimes.ru/index.php?action_id=2&story_id=26735
Not really. More like offshore police (though often paramilitary police) in most countries, though the allocation of responsibilities & view of roles varies from country to country. For example, French coastguards are part of the navy, & also carry out a police-like role within the navy. They use Gendarmerie (police) ranks. they do have a security role in naval shore bases, but it's a police-like role, rather than military one, fulfilling the same role as the Ministry of Defence police (who I once spent a while showing my pass to every day when I went to work in the Portsmouth naval base) do in this country. They aren't equipped to defend bases against a military attack. The British coastguard is purely civil, but controls the operations of military search & rescue helicopters as well as civilian rescue assets - including its own.Hmm. I was under the impression that the Coast Guard was something like the Border Guard units in Russia. Armed forces units (or in the Soviet days KGB/NKVD units) stationed at the border.