Marine Sergeant Francisco Parra, left, a crew master with Marine Aerial Refueler Transport Squadron (VMGR) 352, Marine Aircraft Group (MAG) 11, directs F/A-18C Hornets with Marine Fighter Attack Squadron (VMFA) 323, to move into position during a MAG-11 training exercise, that included more than 30 aircraft, over San Diego, Calif., Feb. 1. MAG-11 conducted this training to exercise their real-world capabilities. Exercises such as this provide realistic, relevant training necessary for 3rd MAW to “Fix, Fly, and Fight” as the Marine Corps’ largest aircraft wing and ensures the unit remains
Marine Sergeant Francisco Parra, left, a crew master with Marine Aerial Refueler Transport Squadron (VMGR) 352, Marine Aircraft Group (MAG) 11, directs F/A-18C Hornets with Marine Fighter Attack Squadron (VMFA) 323, to move into position during a MAG-11 training exercise, that included more than 30 aircraft, over San Diego, Calif., Feb. 1. MAG-11 conducted this training to exercise their real-world capabilities. Exercises such as this provide realistic, relevant training necessary for 3rd MAW to “Fix, Fly, and Fight” as the Marine Corps’ largest aircraft wing and ensures the unit remains combat-ready, inter-operable, deployable on short notice, and lethal when called into action. ( Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Joshua McAlpine)
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Keywords: /-18, 11, 3rd, air, aircraft, ch-53e, corps, excellence, exercise, fight, fix, fly, group, hercules, hornet, kc-130j, mag-11, marine, maw, mcas, miramar, operational, stallion, station, super, training, wing