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 ...
Imagine a battlefield where land and sea meet. Waves crash against the shore… helicopters roar overhead… and suddenly, armored vehicles[...] ...
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 ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Marines at Camp Pendleton held a ceremony to decommission the service's last active duty AAVs. The sea/land assault vehicle ...
Welcome back to The Daily Aviation for a feature on the US Marine Corps Assault Amphibious Vehicle, the AAV-P7/A1. Know to Marines as the Amtrac, with a lineage dating back to WW II Amphibious ...
Welcome back to The Daily Aviation for a feature on how the US Marines get troops ashore through the use of an Amphibious Assault Vehicle. Voice, text and video editing belong to The Daily Aviation, ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. From the shores of Grenada to the deserts of Iraq, the Assault Amphibious Vehicle (AAV) shielded and carried Marines from ship to ...
The Marine Corps formally decommissioned the last of its “workhorse” amphibious landing vehicles in a ceremony in California last Friday, bidding farewell to the machines that have carried Marines ...