From the shores of Grenada to the deserts of Iraq, Assault Amphibious Vehicles shielded and carried Marines from ship to sea ...
For decades and across multiple conflicts, the tracked Amphibious Assault Vehicles were a staple of Marine Corps operations.
5, 2025. A new government watchdog report found that military ground vehicles used by the Army and Marine Corps are often not ...
On September 26, 2025, Marines with the Assault Amphibian School, Training Command held the Assault Amphibian Vehicle (AAV) ...
A government watchdog agency examined 18 combat and support vehicles and found mission-capable rates for 16 of them had ...
An amphibious combat vehicle attached to the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit splashes off the amphibious dock landing ship Harpers Ferry during Exercise Balikatan 24 in Naval Detachment Oyster Bay, ...
The Assault Amphibious Vehicle is tracking off into the sunset, after over 50 years of delivering Marines to beaches and ...
The Marine Corps is pivoting back to the amphibious and fleet support roles that defined it during World War II.
The burly, tracked vehicles that shuttled Marine grunts from ships to shore for more than five decades were retired from the ...
The US military is now paying more to keep its older ground systems operational, yet without achieving increased mission-capable rates.
Picture the scene: You’re driving in a convoy when the enemy kicks off a complex ambush. An improvised explosive device sends pieces of the vehicle in front of you flying 100 yards in every direction.
The U.S. Marine who died on Sunday after a vehicle rollover at the Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center in Twentynine Palms has been identified. According to a statement released by the Marine Corps ...