Marines


ITX 3-25

3/25 Logo
Integrated Training Exercise 3-25
Twentynine Palms, Calif.
ABOUT 

Approximately 4275 Marines and Sailors from Marine Forces Reserve are mobilizing from across the country to form Marine Air-Ground Task Force 25 and conduct Integrated Training Exercise 3-25 at Marine Corps Air-Ground Combat Center in Twentynine Palms, Calif. ITX is a live-fire exercise combining infantry, artillery, aircraft, combat logistics, and all the supporting elements to train battalion and squadron-sized units in the tactical application of combined-arms maneuver, offensive and defensive operations during combat.

As the Marine Corps Reserve’s premier annual training event, ITX provides opportunities to mobilize geographically dispersed forces for a deployment; increase combat readiness and lethality; and exercise MAGTF command and control of battalions and squadrons across the full spectrum of warfare. This year’s ITX will be led by 25th Marine Regiment Headquarters as the command element; 1st Battalion, 23rd Marines and 2nd Battalion, 25th Marines as the ground combat element; Marine Aircraft Group 49 as the aviation combat element; and Combat Logistics Battalion 25 as the logistics combat element.

 

Media Contact Information

Name:  MFR CommStrat
Address:  2000 Opelousas Ave, New Orleans, LA 70114
Phone: (504) 697-9335

eMail:  mfrcommstrat@usmc.mil

news  /  PHOTOS  /  VIDEOS
U.S. Marine Corps Sgt. Connor Myshrall, a motor transportation operator with Truck Company, 23rd Marine Regiment, 4th Marine Division, carries out logistics through operating trucks, sustaining the fight, and building the next generation of Marines.
CBRN Marines Complete Advanced Training
TUNNEL HILL, Ga. – Lance Cpl. Steven Deason, a hazmat technician with Chemical Biological Radiological Nuclear Platoon, Combat Logistics Regiment 4, 4th Marine Logistics Group, Marine Forces Reserve, documents a potentially dangerous building during a CBRN training exercise at Volunteer Training Site, Catoosa, Tunnel Hill, Ga., April 4, 2017. While in an area where the circumstances of the environment are unknown, the CBRN Marines document everything they see because they are the first reconnaissance team to access the area. Photos and sketch pads are used to document details collected from every room to brief the rest of their platoon after they return to the combat operations center. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Devan Alonzo Barnett/Released)

Download Image: Full Size (1.1 MB)
Photo by: Cpl. Devan Alonzo Barnett |  VIRIN: 170404-M-QY382-821.JPG

 



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