Cooling was born in Baytown, Texas on August 26, 1964 and was adopted and raised from birth by his aunt and uncle. He was an Eagle Scout with three palms.[4]
Education
Cooling attended Robert E. Lee High School in Baytown, Texas. During this time he was a member of the Junior ROTC program, where he served as the Corps of Cadets Commander. Cooling graduated high school in 1982. He then attended the U.S. Naval Academy, graduating in 1986. He graduated 20th in his class (of over 1,000)[5] overall. He graduated first in his class for graduates selecting to serve in the U.S. Marine Corps, for which he received the National Society, U.S. Daughters of 1812 Award (a Mameluke sword). As a Burke and Cox Scholar, he completed the Russian Language Program at Norwich University after graduating from the Academy. He received the Colonial Daughters of the 17th Century Silver Plate Award for the highest ranked graduating history major. He then completed The Basic School with honors in 1987 before attending the Infantry Officer Course, at Quantico, VA. He attended the Marine Corps Command and Staff College in 2000, graduating with distinction while earning a master's degree in Military Studies.[6] He graduated from U.S. Naval War College on 20 June 2008, earning a Master of Arts in National Security and Strategic Studies and graduating with honors.[7]
Military career
Brigadier General Cooling served for more than 33 years in the United States Marine Corps. During this tenure, he deployed 11 times, including multiple combat tours as an infantry commander and operations officer.
Cooling's primary Military Operational Specialty (MOS) was as an infantry officer (0302) until his promotion to Colonel, when he was assigned an 8041, Colonel, Ground MOS. He received his 8003, General Officer MOS upon being promoted to his current rank.[8] His first assignment as an infantry officer was with Second Battalion, Fourth Marines where he commanded rifle, weapons, and anti-armor platoons. Subsequently, he has commanded infantry and light armored reconnaissance units to the battalion level as well as the Marine Corps Mountain Warfare Training Center in Bridgeport, CA.[9][10] He commanded Third Battalion, Third Marines during combat deployments to both Afghanistan during Operation Enduring Freedom[6][11][12] and Iraq during Operation Iraqi Freedom 5.[13][14] During 3/3's Afghan tour, the battalion deployed to Regional Command-East, which included the restive Kunar Province. Operations included ones in and around the Korangal Valley, including Operations Celtics and Spurs. Notably, 3/3 forced the surrender of a key regional high value target, a man named "Najmudeen," who dwelled in the Korangal Valley and was responsible for significant anti-coalition militia activity. Cooling, along with the battalion's operations officer and intelligence officer, and others, developed Operation Stars, which would be passed to their sister battalion, the 2nd Battalion of the 3rd Marine Regiment when 2/3 relieved 3/3 in the spring of 2005. The "shell" of Operation Stars that 3/3 developed would be renamed Operation Red Wings and changed considerably. Operation Stars was to be a conventional forces-centric operation. Red Wings became a special operations forces-centric operation for the opening phases.[15]
Cooling was one of only a handful of commanders throughout the Global War on Terror to hold command of a battalion from pre-deployment training for Operation Enduring Freedom, then command throughout the deployment to Afghanistan, then go through pre-deployment training for Operation Iraqi Freedom and command through the Iraq deployment.[3] After 3/3's deployment to Afghanistan, the battalion, under Cooling's leadership, undertook their pre-deployment training for a deployment to the Haditha Triad region of western Iraq's Al Anbar Province. During their time in the Haditha Triad region, the Marines of 3/3 conducted more than 8,000 patrols, located 54 weapons caches and detained more than 800 insurgents and suspected insurgents.[16] Among notable achievements during 3/3's time in the Haditha Triad was the locating of a man named "Colonel Farouk." The Marines of the battalion returned Colonel Farouk to the city of Haditha, his home, where he began rebuilding a police force with aid and assistance from Marines of 3/3 and then 2/3. Farouk would be a critical reason for ultimate success in the Triad over Al Qaeda in Iraq. Another key accomplishment of 3/3's time in the triad was the bolstering of the capabilities of the Iraqi Army in the region. When 3/3 arrived, units of the Iraqi Army in the area under Marine Corps supervision conducted operations under a "partnered squad" construct, meaning that the Iraqi Army could not conduct independent operations at the squad level. Upon completion of their tour, the Iraqi Army in the region could conduct independent battalion level operations, a significant increase in capabilities.[3]
Cooling is the author of a number of professional military articles, notably ones published in the Marine Corps Gazette, including "Hue City 1968: Winning the Battle While Losing the War," published in the July 2001 issue and "Creating the Conditions to Win the Street Fight," published in the January 2002 issue. Cooling also contributed, as part of the Commandant's Staff Group, to a number of works published by General Charles C. Krulak, 31st Commandant of the Marine Corps.[19]
^ abcdEd Darack (2019). The Warriors of Anbar: The Marines Who Crushed Al Qaeda - The Greatest Untold Story of the Iraq War. New York, NY: Hachette Book Group. p. 256. ISBN978-0-306-92265-7.