The truth behind the Marlboro Marine and that famous photo

The Marlboro Marine, a photo from Iraq which made headlines
The Marlboro Marine, a photo from Iraq which made headlines (Photo: XY)

Back in 2004, during the furious Second Battle of Fallujah, United States Marine James Blake Miller was doing his job, fighting to stay alive and protect his fellow leathernecks โ€” when the scanning lens of Los Angeles Times photographer Luis Sinco caught his gaze.

Marlboro Marine

It was a moment that changed his life and rattled the emotions of millions of Americans.ย It ran in more than 150 newspapers worldwide. Dan Rather highlighted the image, and James Blake Miller himself, on the CBS Evening News. It instantly becomes known as the Marlboro Marine photo.

And all these years later, the picture is still bounding about the internet, popping up here and there. Sarah Palin posted it to her Facebook page to protest college students protesting tuition hikes. Memes both right and nefarious frame James Blake Miller, sadly without any context, and with no say from the man himself.

James Blake Miller: The truth behind the Marlboro Marine and that famous photo
James Blake Miller: The truth behind the Marlboro Marine and that famous photo (Photo: Luis Sinco/LA Times)

How was it made?

Here are his own words on what was going on when Sincoโ€™s flashbulb gleamed and how it became a Marlboro Marine.

โ€œMy nerves were so shaken up. I felt like I was in some kind of catatonic state โ€” like I couldnโ€™t move, I couldnโ€™t think. I couldnโ€™t blink. I couldnโ€™t show no facial expression.โ€

This was the lede to piece published by the photographer in the Los Angeles Times back in 2007:

The young Marine lighted a cigarette and let it dangle. White smoke wafted around his helmet. His face was smeared with war paint. Blood trickled from his right ear and the bridge of his nose.ย Momentarily deafened by cannon blasts, he didnโ€™t know the shooting had stopped. He stared at the sunrise.ย His expression caught my eye. To me, it said: terrified, exhausted and glad just to be alive. I recognized that look because thatโ€™s how I felt too.

After War: The PTSD

He went on to describe the tough road Miller faced a few years after heโ€™d returned from his deployment. Severe symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) began interfering with his life and career (his USMC career abruptly ended in 2005).

James Blake Miller has become known as Marlboro Marine
James Blake Miller has become known as the Marlboro Marine (Photo: XY)

He also, however, included this very telling story that took place during the height of the photographโ€™s fame โ€” when James Blake Millerโ€™s face had become almost an official emblem for the Iraq War. Itโ€™s a shame it canโ€™t be permanently attached to the anecdote, a caption to the image that canโ€™t be torn away, no matter what:

โ€œMiller get your ass up here,โ€ a first sergeant barked on the radio. Miller had no idea what was going on as he ran through the rubble. He snapped to attention when he saw the general. Natonski shook Millerโ€™s hand. The general said Americans had โ€œconnectedโ€ with his photo, and nobody wanted to see him wounded or dead.

โ€œWe can have you home tomorrow,โ€ he said.

James Blake Miller hesitated, then shook his head. He did not want to leave his buddies behind. โ€œIt just wasnโ€™t right,โ€ he told me later.ย The tall, lanky general towered over the grunt. โ€œYour father raised one hell of a young man,โ€ he said, looking Miller in the eye. They said goodbye, and Natonski scrambled back to the command post.

For his loyalty, Miller was rewarded with horror. The assault on Fallujah raged on, leaving nearly 100 Americans dead and 450 wounded. The bodies of some 1,200 insurgents littered the streets.โ€

According to CNN, in 2013 โ€” thanks to the help of the cameraman who made him famous โ€” Miller reunited with his wife (they had split a year into their marriage after his medical discharge and return to Kentucky in 2006) and was receiving proper treatment for his PTSD.

1 Comment Leave a Reply

  1. My heart broke the first time seeing the photo of Lance Cpl. James Blake Miller. I wept for him and for myself thing could have been my grandson.

    Tears still sneak upon me when I again see the photo.

    Years later when I learned the truth about no WoMD were ever in Iraq I become angry about the lives destroyed by the whims of our politicians!

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