www.marinecorpstimes.com Open in urlscan Pro
2600:1408:8c00::172e:963a  Public Scan

Submitted URL: http://www.marinecorpstimes.com/news/your-marine-corps/2024/07/05/corps-reactivates-east-coast-helicopter-squadron-it-closed-in-...
Effective URL: https://www.marinecorpstimes.com/news/your-marine-corps/2024/07/05/corps-reactivates-east-coast-helicopter-squadron-it-closed-in-...
Submission: On July 08 via manual from US — Scanned from US

Form analysis 0 forms found in the DOM

Text Content

Hey, What Are You Doing Tonight?

 

After a full day, there’s a lot to catch up on.

Our Daily News Roundup newsletter will bring you up to speed on all things
Marines.

 

SIGN UP NOW



Sections

   Pay & Benefits   Flashpoints   Pentagon & Congress   Off Duty   Education &
Transition   Military Honor   Veterans   Subscribe Now(Opens in new window)

 * Subscribe Now(Opens in new window)
 * News
    * Your Marine Corps
    * Air Force Times(Opens in new window)
    * Army Times(Opens in new window)
    * Navy Times(Opens in new window)
    * Pentagon & Congress
    * Defense News(Opens in new window)

 * Flashpoints
 * Pay & Benefits
    * Benefits Guide(Opens in new window)
    * Military Pay Center
    * Military Retirement
    * Military Benefits
    * VA Loan Center(Opens in new window)
    * Mil Money
    * Discount Depot

 * Off Duty
    * GearScout
    * Military Culture
    * Military Fitness
    * Military Movies & Video Games
    * Military Sports

 * Spouses
 * Education & Transition
    * Transition Guide(Opens in new window)

 * Pay It Forward(Opens in new window)
 * Veterans
    * Black Military History(Opens in new window)
    * Congressional Veterans Caucus(Opens in new window)
    * Military Appreciation Month(Opens in new window)
    * Vietnam Vets & Rolling Thunder(Opens in new window)
    * Military History

 * Military Honor
    * Honor the Fallen(Opens in new window)
    * Hall of Valor(Opens in new window)
    * Black Military History(Opens in new window)
    * Congressional Veterans Caucus(Opens in new window)
    * Vietnam Vets & Rolling Thunder(Opens in new window)
    * Service Members of the Year(Opens in new window)
    * Create an Obituary(Opens in new window)

 * Opinion
    * Editorials
    * Commentary
    * Medals & Misfires

 * Special Projects
    * Installation Guide(Opens in new window)
    * Battle Bracket
    * CFC Givers Guide
    * Task Force Violent

 * Videos
 * Photo Galleries
 * Newsletters(Opens in new window)
 * Early Bird Brief
 * Military Native
    * IHG
    * Long-Term Care Partners
    * Navy Federal

 * Digital Edition(Opens in new window)
 * 





YOUR MARINE CORPS


CORPS REACTIVATES EAST COAST HELICOPTER SQUADRON IT CLOSED IN 2022

By Todd South
 Friday, Jul 5, 2024

Marines with Marine Light Helicopter Attack Squadron 367 operate an AH-1Z Viper
(left) and UH-1Y Venom during a joint maritime strike exercise over Pacific
Missile Range Facility, Hawaii, in 2020. (Lance Cpl. Jacob Wilson/Marine Corps)

The Marine Corps officially has reactivated one of two light attack helicopter
squadrons it shut down in 2022 as part of its overall force redesign.

Marine Light Attack Helicopter Squadron (HMLA) 269, under 2nd Marine Aircraft
Wing, stood back up at Marine Corps Air Station New River, North Carolina, on
Monday, according to a Marine Corps press release.



“It was a decidedly somber day when HMLA-269 deactivated,” Col. Davis
Fitzsimmons, commander of Marine Aircraft Group 29, said in the news release.
“That was certainly reversed today.”

The “Gunrunners” squadron flies the AH-1Z Viper attack helicopter and the UH-1Y
Venom utility helicopter.

RELATED

MARINES SINK MOVING VESSEL AT SEA WITH NEW MISSILE IN PACIFIC TRAINING

THE MISSILE GIVES USERS BETTER STANDOFF AND TRUE "FIRE AND FORGET" CAPABILITIES.

By Todd South

The helicopter squadron was deactivated in December 2022 as the Marine Corps
recalibrated its aviation needs and locations in a global shuffle that touched
jets, fixed wing, helicopters and reached both coasts, Hawaii and Okinawa,
Japan.



In his 2020 document laying out Force Design 2030, then-Commandant Gen. David
Berger explained the squadron drawdown as related to the Corps cutting of three
infantry battalions during the same force structure moves.

“While this capability has a certain amount of relevance to crisis and
contingency missions which we must still be prepared to execute, it is
operationally unsuitable for our highest-priority maritime challenges and excess
to our needs with the divestment of three infantry battalions,” Berger wrote.

Personnel with the squadron rotated to other Marine units following its
deactivation. But its equipment was preserved to “maintain a flexible ready
bench for the service and preserve the ability to make future adjustments,”
Marine officials said at the time.



Marine Col. David Fitzsimmons, commanding officer of Marine Aircraft Group (MAG)
29, addresses the audience during the reactivation ceremony of Marine Light
Attack Helicopter Squadron (HMLA) 269 at Marine Corps Air Station New River,
North Carolina, July 1. (Staff Sgt. Theodore Bergan/Marine Corps)

Retired Master Gunnery Sgt. Lawrence Reeve Jr. told Marine Corps Times earlier
in 2024 when the reactivation was first announced in March that he suspected,
even in 2022, the squadron wouldn’t be gone for long.



Lawrence first served with the squadron in 1994 and later deployed with the unit
to Iraq five times.

He doubted its disappearance mainly because the move left the entire East Coast
with a single light attack squadron as the Marine Corps had shifted most of its
assets to California, Hawaii and Japan.

Marine Corps Times attempted to reach the Marine Corps for comment on specifics
regarding the decision to reactivate the squadron and received no response as of
Friday.

While current variants of the Viper and Venom have been in active service since
2010 and 2008 respectively, which are relatively young for military aircraft,
their basic designs date back to the 1960s and 1970s.



The Corps underwent a major upgrade program planning to update the aircraft’s
Super Cobra and Twin predecessors through the 1990s that resulted in today’s
helicopters.

In March, Bell Textron announced structural and power upgrades to the aircraft
that it expects will keep them flying into the 2040s, which is the Corps’
current plan.

For what comes next, the service was closely monitoring the Army’s Future
Vertical Lift program. A portion of that program called for a new future attack
reconnaissance aircraft, which sought to replace both the Army’s OH-58 Kiowa
Scout helicopter and its AH-64 Apache, a similar capability to the Viper.

However, the Army canceled the future attack reconnaissance aircraft portion of
the program earlier in 2024, leaving a gap in how both services plan to move
beyond existing, aging attack helicopters.



Along with HMLA 269, the Marines also deactivated HMLA-469 out of Camp
Pendleton, California, in December 2022. That squadron remains deactivated.

The move aligned with the service’s most recently published aviation plan in
2022, which called for the active-duty light attack squadrons to draw down from
seven to five and integration of the two reserve squadrons for necessary tasks.

At that time there were seven active light attack squadrons, one fleet
replacement squadron and one reserve squadron each containing 15 Vipers and 12
Venoms. Another reserve squadron held 10 Vipers and eight Venoms, according to
the aviation plan.

The service’s new configuration briefly had five active squadrons with the fleet
replacement and reserve squadrons in the same setup.

The reactivation will push the numbers back up to six active squadrons.

In total, the Corps requires a mix of 284 Venoms and Vipers to fulfill those
mission obligations. Over a five-year period from 2017 to 2021 the Vipers
averaged a 72% readiness score while the Venoms managed 68%, according to the
aviation plan.

More than 84% of the parts needed for the aircraft are interchangeable and the
two platforms fly nearly a quarter of all Marine aviation flight hours.

On the fixed wing side, the Marine Corps deactivated its F/A-18 Hornet pilot
training squadron in late 2023, and graduated its final AV-8B Harrier II
mechanics earlier in 2024 after disbanding its Harrier training unit in late
2021.

Moves with the Hornet and Harrier are due to the jets being replaced by the
F-35.

Squadron commander Lt. Col. Jens Gilbertson pointed out that HMLA-269 had been
named the light attack squadron of the year by the Marine Corps Aviation
Association eight times, more than any other such squadron in the Corps’
history.

“Ultimately, it was up to these Marines to get it done,” Gilbertson said. “They
have discipline, and they have precision, and that’s the same discipline and
precision they’re going to bring when they maintain and fly our aircraft.”

The Viper aircraft made news recently when a crew with the Marine Medium
Tiltrotor Squadron (VMM) 262 Reinforced, 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit
successfully struck a moving target at sea for the first time in the region with
the new “fire and forget” AGM-179 joint air-to-ground missile.

About Todd South

Todd South has written about crime, courts, government and the military for
multiple publications since 2004 and was named a 2014 Pulitzer finalist for a
co-written project on witness intimidation. Todd is a Marine veteran of the Iraq
War.

SHARE:

IN OTHER NEWS

‘TOXIC’ POLITICS INCREASE TERRORISM, EXTREMISM RISK, DHS OFFICIAL SAYS

THE CURRENT POLITICAL CLIMATE LEADS TO EXTREME VIEWS, THE OFFICIAL SAID, SOME OF
WHICH GAIN FOOTING AMONG MILITARY AND VETERAN COMMUNITIES.



HOW A WWII ACE BECAME THE UNLIKELY HONOREE OF A SUBMARINE COMBAT AWARD

JOHN GALVIN BECAME AN ACE PILOT DURING WWII, BUT HIS MOST PRIZED AWARD MAY HAVE
BEEN HIS SUBMARINE COMBAT PATROL INSIGNIA.



MILITARY FAMILIES: TELL US HOW INFLATION HAS AFFECTED YOU

TELL MILITARY TIMES HOW INFLATION HAS AFFECTED YOUR WALLET AND YOUR CHOICES.



TROOPS MAY FACE INFLATED DRUG COSTS UNDER TRICARE, LAWMAKERS SAY

IS THE TRICARE PHARMACY CONTRACTOR HURTING TROOPS AND THEIR FAMILIES BY
SQUEEZING OUT COMPETITION?



DO MILITARY FAMILIES REALLY NEED TO MOVE SO MUCH?

A NEW REPORT FROM A LEADING ADVOCACY GROUP ARGUES IT’S TIME TO GIVE THE PACE OF
MILITARY MOVES, KNOWN AS PERMANENT CHANGES OF STATION, A FRESH LOOK.


Load More


FEATURED VIDEO

0 seconds of 4 minutes, 25 secondsVolume 0%

Press shift question mark to access a list of keyboard shortcuts
Keyboard ShortcutsEnabledDisabled
Shortcuts Open/Close/ or ?
Play/PauseSPACE
Increase Volume↑
Decrease Volume↓
Seek Forward→
Seek Backward←
Captions On/Offc
Fullscreen/Exit Fullscreenf
Mute/Unmutem
Decrease Caption Size-
Increase Caption Size+ or =
Seek %0-9

Settings
OffEnglish
Font Color
White

Font Opacity
100%

Font Size
100%

Font Family
Arial

Character Edge
None

Background Color
Black

Background Opacity
50%

Window Color
Black

Window Opacity
0%

Reset
WhiteBlackRedGreenBlueYellowMagentaCyan
100%75%50%25%
200%175%150%125%100%75%50%
ArialCourierGeorgiaImpactLucida ConsoleTahomaTimes New RomanTrebuchet MSVerdana
NoneRaisedDepressedUniformDrop Shadow
WhiteBlackRedGreenBlueYellowMagentaCyan
100%75%50%25%0%
WhiteBlackRedGreenBlueYellowMagentaCyan
100%75%50%25%0%
Auto1080p720p540p360p270p180p
Live
00:04
04:20
04:25






 

INSIDE THE FAT LEONARD SCANDAL



AVOIDING STUDENT LOAN SCAMS — MONEY MINUTE



U.S. TROOPS TRAIN TO TAME SNAKES; AND SOLDIERS LEARN TO RECOVER FALLEN COMRADES



ROUNDUP: THE BIGGEST TOPICS AT TECHNET CYBER 2024




TRENDING NOW

RETIRED MARINE 2-STAR GENERAL FOUND DEAD AT SPRAWLING CALIFORNIA BASE



CORPS REACTIVATES EAST COAST HELICOPTER SQUADRON IT CLOSED IN 2022



FIRST BATCH OF MARINE AMPHIBIOUS COMBAT VEHICLES ARRIVE IN OKINAWA



SGT. MAJ. PORTRAYED IN ‘GENERATION KILL’ SENTENCED TO PRISON FOR CHILD SEX
OFFENSE



MARINE REPORTEDLY KILLED BY GUN DISCHARGE IN 7-TON TRUCK IN CALIFORNIA





Marine Corps Times © 2024

Marine Corps Times © 2024

TERMS OF USE

 * Privacy Policy
 * Terms of Service

GET US

 * Subscribe(Opens in new window)
 * Newsletters(Opens in new window)
 * RSS Feeds(Opens in new window)

CONTACT US

 * Advertise
 * General Contacts, Subscription Services
 * Editorial Staff

ABOUT US

 * About Us
 * Careers(Opens in new window)
 * Jobs for Veterans(Opens in new window)


search by queryly Advanced Search