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
VMFA-112 Conduct Long-Range Hornet Strikes
U.S. Marines Sgt. Chancellor Rich, a powerline supervisor with Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 112 (VMFA-112), Marine Aircraft Group 41, 4th Marine Aircraft Wing, Marine Forces Reserve performs final pre-flight checks on an F/A-18 hornet before takeoff aboard Naval Air Station Fort Worth Joint Reserve Base, Texas, August 24, 2021. VMFA-112 participated in an inter-service exercise with Marine Aerial Refueling Squadron 234, Marine Fighter Training Squadron 401, and the Air Force’s 22nd Air Refueling Wing to conduct a long-range strike from Fort Worth to a training range in Yuma, Arizona, spanning over 1000 miles and five flight hours, while evading and maneuvering against F-5N Tiger II’s. The overall mission time, coordination with external agencies, inter-unit and service operability between fellow MAG-41 squadrons and the Air Force, and unfamiliar territory exercised the capabilities of all aircraft and pilots involved.

Download Image: Full Size (2.45 MB)
Photo by: Sgt. Booker Thomas |  VIRIN: 210824-M-TE205-828.JPG

 



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