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U.S. Marine Corps logistics systems vehicle replacement travels down the highway near Fort Worth, Texas, May 24, 2021, near Monahans, Texas, May 23, 2021. Marines with 2nd Transportation Battalion, Combat Logistics Regiment 2, 2nd Marine Logistics Group conducted a convoy across the United States starting in Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, in one of the longest convoys in recent Marine Corps history. Marines on the convoy experimented with long-range communications, as far away as Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms, California, the half-way point on the route. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Scott Jenkins)

Photo by Lance Cpl. Scott Jenkins

Marines return from historic 5,500-mile convoy

4 Jun 2021 | Capt. Robert Vachon II Marine Expeditionary Force

CAMP LEJEUNE, NC – In one of the longest military convoys in history, U.S Marines drove 18 vehicles approximately 5,500 miles in a continuous 34-day mission.

The convoy, comprised of Marines from 2nd Transportation Battalion, part of 2nd Marine Logistics Group (MLG), drove from Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, North Carolina to Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms, California… and the entire way back.

In a mission which sought to test the limits of Marine Corps capabilities, the unit not only pushed their vehicles farther than ever before, but also tested the limits of the men and women on the convoy, and the strength of their command-and-control abilities.

“This sets the bar, this is the new standard,” said Brigadier General Forrest Poole, commanding general of 2nd MLG, “we’re looking to replicate this in a different environment, maybe outside of the United States. It highlights the importance of Marines and Sailors trusting their equipment and… [those] on their left and right.”

The convoy broke new ground not just for its record-setting length, but also for the of communications experiments which were conducted during the convoy. Marines tested tactics and procedures for employing “distributed command and control” over vast distances. At each stop along the convoy, they used High Frequency (HF) beyond line-of-sight, highly secure radio communications to regularly speak with an operations center all the way back in Camp Lejeune.

The HF radio calls to the combat operations center in Camp Lejeune took place from across the Southern United States, including stops in Albuquerque, New Mexico, Texarkana, Texas, and the Grand Canyon.

The convoy concluded on June 3, at a homecoming ceremony held in their honor aboard Camp Lejeune. Speaking from their Maintenance Bay, the Marines and sailors who completed the convoy were lauded for their achievement and reminded of the importance of such exercises on maintaining Marine Corps readiness in the future fight.

Training such as this convoy ensures the logistics combat element of the Fleet Marine Force is ready and able to provide the transportation support critical to accomplishing a wide range of military operations.


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