Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Garrett Ehrenberg, a Holdrige, Nebraska, native and combat engineer with 2d Combat Engineer Battalion, 2d Marine Division, poses for a portrait with a multi-purpose anti-armor anti-personnel weapon system during a Marine Corps Combat Readiness Evaluation on Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, Sept. 1, 2022. “As a MAAWS gunner, whenever we encounter any heavy tactical vehicles, machine gun bunkers or fortified positions, it’s my job to take it out of the fight to ensure mission success,” Ehrenberg says. The purpose of a MCCRE is to formally evaluate the unit’s combat r
Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Garrett Ehrenberg, a Holdrige, Nebraska, native and combat engineer with 2d Combat Engineer Battalion, 2d Marine Division, poses for a portrait with a multi-purpose anti-armor anti-personnel weapon system during a Marine Corps Combat Readiness Evaluation on Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, Sept. 1, 2022. “As a MAAWS gunner, whenever we encounter any heavy tactical vehicles, machine gun bunkers or fortified positions, it’s my job to take it out of the fight to ensure mission success,” Ehrenberg says. The purpose of a MCCRE is to formally evaluate the unit’s combat readiness in preparation for deployment.
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Keywords: 2d, 2dmardiv, ceb, engineers, mccre, training, usmc