The U.S. Marine Corps is expanding its drone reconnaissance and aerial attack training at Camp Pendleton, using advanced ...
The Marine Corps is ramping up new training courses with plans to field 10,000 small drones and equip its ground combat teams ...
For any Marine, whether standing post on a rooftop or speaking with civilians at a gate, not having their service rifle slung ...
Beyond Walks on MSN
Marines build readiness in live-fire machine gun exercise
U.S. Marines with 3rd Littoral Combat Team, 3rd Marine Littoral Regiment, 3rd Marine Division, participate in a live-fire training event at Pohakuloa Training Area, Hawaii, Jan. 15-16, 2026. The ...
During World War II, San Diego became a vital hub, preparing Marines for the island-hopping campaigns that would define the ...
The Valiant Mark, an annual exercise conducted by the U.S. Marine Corps and the Singapore Armed Forces, wrapped up Wednesday at the SAFTI City training facility in Singapore, with next year's exercise ...
The U.S. Marine Corps is stepping up its game in the fast-evolving world of drone technology by launching a specialized unit dedicated to attack drones. Established in January 2025, the Marine Corps ...
A Neros Archer first-person view drone sits on a case during a demonstration at Weapons Training Battalion on Marine Corps Base Quantico, Virginia, on 7 March 2025. (US Marine Corps Training and ...
Walking Archive on MSN
How Marines Practices Unmanned Tactical Resupply Training
U.S. Marines with Combat Logistics Battalion 31, 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit fly tactical resupply vehicles during a ...
The Wave Warrior ACV driver training simulator is shown here. It was previously produced by an XR Training-led consortium. (XR Training) A consortium led by XR Training (XRT) has been awarded an Other ...
WASHINGTON — The Marine Corps will institute a sex-neutral scoring physical fitness test for Marines with a combat arms primary military occupational specialty, the service announced this week. “Our ...
Marine Corps Times on MSN
How a Marine lost over 100 pounds ahead of basic training enrollment
A recent Marine Corps basic training graduate who once weighed 290 pounds lost more than 100 pounds over two years to meet Marine enlistment standards.
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