The Assault Amphibious Vehicle was officially decommissioned during an AAV Sundown Ceremony at the Assault Amphibian School at Camp Pendelton, California, Sept. 26.
U.S. Marines fire MK 154 Mine Clearance Launchers from Assault Amphibious Vehicle (AAV)-P7/A1 during a Mine Clearing Line ...
U.S. Marine Corps demonstration of the new Amphibious Combat Vehicle (ACV), developed by BAE Systems and Iveco. The ACV is ...
The Assault Amphibious Vehicle is tracking off into the sunset, after over 50 years of delivering Marines to beaches and ...
After more than 50 years in service, the Marine Corps is sunsetting its Assault Amphibious Vehicle. (Lance Cpl. Brendan Mullin/Marine Corps) From the shores of Grenada to the deserts of Iraq, the ...
The demonstration featured coordinated operations between the U.S. Marine Corps' I Marine Expeditionary Force and the Navy's ...
The U.S. Marine Corps has undergone a modernization initiative to redesign its force structure for future warfare.
The Marine Corps is pivoting back to the amphibious and fleet support roles that defined it during World War II. The US Marine Corps is moving on from the long-serving Assault Amphibious Vehicle (AAV) ...
The burly, tracked vehicles that shuttled Marine grunts from ships to shore for more than five decades were retired from the service last week, making way for the Corps’ next-generation amphibious ...
Marines at Camp Pendleton held a ceremony to decommission the service's last active duty AAVs. The sea/land assault vehicle entered service in 1972. The Marine Corps formally decommissioned the last ...