Marines


ITX 4-24

MFR SEAL - FLAT - 2022
Integrated Training Exercise, 4-24
Twentynine Palms, Ca.

ABOUT 

ITX is the premier annual training event for the Marine Corps Reserve. ITX 4-24 enhances combat readiness, exercises MAGTF command and control, and this year, led by the 23rd Marine Regiment Headquarters, involves 2nd Battalion, 24th Marines; 3rd Battalion, 25th Marines; Marine Aircraft Group 41; and Combat Logistics Battalion 23.This live-fire exercise combines infantry, artillery, aircraft, and combat logistics to train battalion and squadron-sized units in combined-arms maneuver. Approximately 4279 Marines and Sailors from Marine Forces Reserve are mobilizing for Marine Air-Ground Task Force 23's Integrated Training Exercise 4-24 at Marine Corps Air-Ground Combat Center in Twentynine Palms, Calif. 

Media Contact Information

Name:  1st Lt. Quiarra Barros
Address:  2000 Opelousas Ave, New Orleans, LA 70114
Phone:  (504) 913-4445
eMail:  quiarra.barros.mil@usmc.mil

 


ITX 4-24 VIDEO GALLERY

PRESS RELEASES / ARTICLES

Press Release: Marine Corps Reserve Begins Pinnacle Training at Warfighting Center in California
TWENTYNINE PALMS, Calif. – Approximately 4,279 Marines and Sailors from Marine Forces Reserve are mobilizing from across the country to form Marine Air-Ground Task Force 23 and conduct Integrated...


ITX 4-24 PHOTO GALLERY
Marines complete live-fire battle-drill training at Fort McCoy
Marines with the 3rd Civil Affairs Group of Naval Station Great Lakes, Ill., complete live-fire training at a range on North Post on Sept. 8, 2017, at Fort McCoy, Wis. In addition to live-fire training, the Marines completed training in chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear defense and on the Fort McCoy Humvee Egress Assistance Trainer over the course of three days. Civil affairs Marines serve as a critical link between local civilians and military units that operate in their countries. Operations in the counterinsurgency environments of Iraq and Afghanistan relied heavily on civil affairs teams for missions like helping civilian populations build infrastructure. And the Marine Corps’ civil affairs capability, which resides exclusively in the Marine Corps Reserve, will continue to be in high demand. (U.S. Army Photo by Scott T. Sturkol, Public Affairs Office, Fort McCoy, Wis.)

Download Image: Full Size (1.46 MB)
Photo by: Scott Sturkol |  VIRIN: 170908-A-OK556-817.JPG

 



RESOURCES AND ASSISTANCE