Executive Officer
Major Paul Greenberg, USMC
Major Paul Greenberg is the executive officer for Wounded Warrior Battalion East, headquartered at
Camp Lejeune, N.C. He was born and raised in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and was commissioned in the
Marine Corps in 2000. Major Greenberg completed a bachelor’s degree in English from the University
of Pittsburgh at Johnstown (1994) and a master’s degree in teaching from the School for International
Training in Brattleboro, Vermont (2000).
From January 2001 to July 2003, he served as group adjutant and legal officer for Marine Aircraft Group
26, 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing, in New River, N.C.
From August 2003 to August 2005, he was the program manager for an information technology data mining
system in the Programs, Analysis and Evaluation Directorate (J-5) at Headquarters, United States Military
Entrance Processing Command in Great Lakes, IL. At the end of this tour, he went into the Individual Ready
Reserve and took an english language fellow position with the U.S. State Department in Burma from September
2005 to August 2006.
Working directly under the regional U.S. State Department public affairs officer in Rangoon, he taught English
as a Second Language to adult students, conducted teacher training for Burmese English teachers, and created
programs to promote the values of citizenship and democracy.
Major Greenberg accessed into the Marine Corps Active Reserve program in 2006 and was stationed with the Marine
Forces Reserve Public Affairs Office in New Orleans from August 2006 to July 2010. While at MARFORRES, he served
in successive billets as community relations officer, media officer and deputy director, completing a tour in
Iraq from 2008-2009.
Maj. Greenberg’s military schools include the Marine Corps Command and Staff College, the Joint Public Affairs
Officer’s Course, Marine Corps Amphibious Warfare School, Naval Legal Officer Course, U.S. Marine Corps Personnel
Administration Officer Course, The Basic School, Officer Candidate Course, the U.S. Army School of Infantry and
U.S. Army Airborne School.
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