Japan, U.S. Marines Exercise Amphibious Capabilities
by U.S. Marine Corps 3rd Division PA November
9,
2020
In the early hours of November 1, 2020, the silence is broken by
the sound of an amphibious assault featuring Japan Self-Defense
Force CH-47JA Chinooks touching down and delivering streams of
Amphibious Rapid Deployment Brigade troops, while U.S. Marines hit
the beach via small boats briskly navigating over the horizon from
the USS Ashland to Gaja-Jima.
U.S. Marines teamed up with Japan’s Amphibious Rapid Deployment Brigade to conduct an amphibious assault on Gaja Jima, a small island off the coast of mainland Japan, as part of Keen Sword
on Nov. 1, 2020. Japan Self-Defense Force CH-47JA Chinooks touched down delivering streams of ARDB troops while U.S. Marines hit the beach via small boats briskly navigating over the horizon from the USS Ashland. ARDB members took point alongside Marines with 1 Battalion, 3d Marine Regiment arriving from the air and sea in the amphibious operation. This mission showcased a combined ability to seize territory threatened by an adversary, defend key maritime terrain, and establish expeditionary advanced bases for follow-on operations through swift, integrated, and lethal action. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Scott Aubuchon)
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As they disappear in fast-moving columns into the foliage of the
small uninhabited island off the coast of Japan, their counterparts
to the south are already preparing missile launchers and
coordinating fire support against enemy targets on land and sea.
These scenes and more dotted the islands and waters off the
coast of Japan for two weeks, as U.S. Marines and the JSDF conducted
Keen Sword 21, a bilateral exercise with a series of wide-ranging
missions focused on strengthening the interoperability of forces
forged through the 60-year-old alliance.
ARDB members took
point alongside Marines with 1st Battalion, 3d Marine Regiment
arriving from the air and sea in a bilateral amphibious assault on
Gaja-Jima featuring troops from both forces landing simultaneously
on the remote island and demonstrating the ability to eliminate an
occupying enemy.
“Working with the Japanese forces, I could
tell they are masters of their trade. Setting up bilateral security
upon insertion and relaying information across units came with
ease,” said Cpl. Juan Pena, a team leader with 1st Bn., 3d Marines.
This mission showcased a combined ability to seize territory
threatened by an adversary, defend key maritime terrain, and
establish expeditionary advanced bases for follow-on operations
through swift, integrated, and lethal action.
U.S. Marines
shortly after landing on Gaja Jima, a small island off the
coast of mainland Japan, as part of Keen Sword on Nov. 1,
2020. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Scott Aubuchon)
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“Our
interaction with the ARDB was seamless as if we previously trained
with that specific unit,” said Sgt. Ashton Wilson, a squad leader
with 1st Bn., 3d Marines. “I would not hesitate to serve with them
in combat or other operations.”
More than 200 miles to the
south, a complex but effective integrated joint targeting and fire
support coordination effort maintained a blistering pace, with
elements of the U.S. Army’s 17th Field Artillery Brigade joining
12th Marine Regiment and 3d Marine Division in mobile
command-and-control nodes on Camp Hansen and Camp Courtney in
Okinawa.
Employing deliberate and dynamic targeting against land, sea, and
air targets, these Marines and Soldiers further enabled the
bilateral amphibious force to maneuver through the littorals while
supporting naval operations at sea.
One such precision,
long-range fires capability was on display as High Mobility
Artillery Rockets System launchers, from both the Marine Corps and
Army, landed on beaches via ocean-going transports in support of an
amphibious raid elsewhere in the exercise area. HIMARS launchers can
be moved throughout a distributed maritime environment via air, sea,
or land. This freedom of movement, coupled with the long-range
strike capability of HIMARS, means that the U.S.-Japan team can
rapidly move precision-fire weapons into position and strike distant
targets smoothly.
Meanwhile, Marines from the 5th Air-Naval Gunfire Liaison Company
integrated into the ARDB and embarked on a Japan Maritime
Self-Defense Force ship to enhance combined command and control
capabilities to further enable bilateral amphibious operations.
“Our Marines assisted in mission coordination between the JSDF
Amphibious Task Force and USS Ashland with 1st Bn., 3d Marines
embarked,” said Maj. Bradley ach, air officer with 5th ANGLICO.
“During the execution of the bilateral amphibious exercise, we
employed a Joint Terminal Attack Controller to assist with close air
support and provided liaisons to the ARDB Fire Support Coordination
Center during the assault.”
While U.S. and Japan naval and
expeditionary forces continued operations at sea and establishing
advanced bases, Marines with 1st Bn., 2d Marines and 1st Bn., 3d
Marines conducted a grueling force-on-force exercise stretching
across the challenging terrain of the jungles in northern Okinawa.
As the Marines battled through the heat and humidity and thick
vegetation in the hilly jungles, members of 1st Bn., 2d Marines and
the JSDF’s 15th Brigade exercised command and control through
combined operations centers located on Camp Foster and Marine Corps
Air Station Futenma.
U.S. Marines with Japan’s Amphibious Rapid Deployment Brigade on Gaja Jima, a small island off the coast of mainland Japan, as part of Keen Sword
on Nov. 1, 2020. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Lance Cpl. Scott Aubuchon)
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“This force-on-force evolution in a
jungle environment provided a realistic training opportunity focused
on defeating a peer adversary in any climb and place,” said Maj.
Dennis Graziosi, who brings combat experience from Afghanistan to
his current assignment as operations officer for 1st Bn., 2d
Marines. “Integrating these operations with joint and bilateral
command and control nodes at other location on Okinawa increases our
interoperability with allies and bolsters our ability to fight
together.”
Keen Sword 21, the latest in a series of
regularly-held exercises between Japan and the United States,
represents continuing advancements among the longtime allies in
combined operations across an increasingly distributed and complex
environment. Through this exercise, the shape of future operations
in the region is on display – fast, fluid, and together with allies
and partners.
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