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    Target Engaged

    2d LAR Fires TOW Missile

    Photo By Lance Cpl. Emma Gray | U.S. Marines with 2d Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion, 2d Marine Division, fire...... read more read more

    CAMP LEJEUNE, NC, UNITED STATES

    09.23.2022

    Story by Staff Sgt. Kimberlyn Patterson 

    2nd Marine Division

    A U.S. Marine Corps light armored vehicle makes its way down the beach. Marines with 2d Light Armored Reconnaissance Battalion, 2d Marine Division, conduct system checks and retrieve coordinates for the target placed off the coast of Onslow Beach. Once locked on the coordinates, the command is given, “fire, fire, fire.”

    In order to enhance the Marine Corps’ capability to control littoral areas with a reduced footprint, 2d LAR conducted a test of a radio frequency missile fired from a TOW missile system on Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, Sept. 19, 2022.

    “The purpose of this live-fire exercise was to validate that a radio frequency missile can be employed against threats on or coming from the water surface,” said Chief Warrant Officer 3 Jon Osborn, the battalion gunner for 2d LAR. “The radio frequency missile does not utilize a wire to communicate with the gunner, it uses a radio frequency signal between the missile and launch tube.”

    When utilized properly, radio frequencies give the unit more control of the missile’s trajectory by eliminating factors dictated by their surroundings.

    “Once a TOW missile is launched the copper wires unspool from the missile and sag,” explained Sgt. Courtland Mabe, a Douglasville, Georgia, native and vehicle commander with 2d LAR. “They can get caught on debris like trees or bushes. The wires, while shooting over water, can become submerged and cause the missile to be erratic.”

    This ties directly back to the Marine Corps’ efforts to control littoral areas and waterways, explained Osborn. This live-fire validated that the TOW missile system can be employed to restrict access from the sea. Capabilities of this nature aid the Department of the Navy with maritime control and freedom of movement.

    “The TOW missile system on the LAV allows us to load two missiles and swiftly switch from one to another,” said Mabe. “We could load different types of missiles and engage different types of targets within seconds on the battlefield.”

    Every Marine and Sailor with 2d Marine Division is continuously striving toward the mission, to generate, train and certify forces in order to conduct expeditionary operations in support of II Marine Expeditionary Force campaign objectives and crisis response tasking.

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    NEWS INFO

    Date Taken: 09.23.2022
    Date Posted: 09.23.2022 13:18
    Story ID: 429973
    Location: CAMP LEJEUNE, NC, US
    Hometown: DOUGLASVILLE, GA, US

    Web Views: 220
    Downloads: 3

    PUBLIC DOMAIN