U.S. Marines, 3rd Assault Amphibian Battalion and 2nd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment, 1st Marine Division, drive assault amphibious vehicles to a beach landing on Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, and back to the San Antonio-class amphibious transport dock ship, USS Portland (LPD-27), during Exercise Iron Fist 2020. Filmed in February, 2020.

Film Credits: U.S. Marine Corps Video by Cpl. David Luckey and Cpl. Anabel Abreu Rodriguez, 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit

23 Comments

  1. How does the ship allow water in the back sally without flooding and sinking

  2. Investing a hostile shore.
    Pulp his defenses. Direct accurate and deadly fires on him. Kill the enemy.
    Kill him.
    Land with heavy fires. Overhead resupply for ammo. (Air superiority.)
    FLIR for target acquisition.
    Napalm. Gas. If the ravens, our ravens, or the ravens of Óðinn, tell us us, nuke them. Nuke them again to make the rubble bounce. Nuke them a 3rd time to glass, shiny glass. Nuke them for the 4th time to make it shiny smooth for us. Spray it down with Windex. Massively. Drop us in with Handi Wipes, skates and candles, so we can go skating after the nuclear glow abades.

  3. Unless aliens make all nuclear weapons and like technology disappear so they can’t be used in a 3rd world war, and we are at war against a Chinese-Russian type enemy, there won’t be large scale amphibious operations like how it was in ww2 again. Doesn’t seem likely, and this training might just be in the past now. 🤔

    But still always good to train and be prepared incase that day comes which how in the fuck could I know 😂

  4. these would have been the shit on DDay. instead they just dropped em off at the water line n said tuck n roll between the machine gun fire.

  5. 2nd AAV Bn B Co. 1984. Can't help but wonder if some of those hulls are the same ones we used back in the day….

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