Our mission is to exercise command and control, oversight, and budgetary guidance over the Marine Corps’ network of advanced naval bases in the Indo-Pacific in order to: (1) secure and protect our capabilities, (2) strengthen our alliances, and (3) expand the capabilities of forward-deployed naval expeditionary forces.
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U.S. Navy Sailors with Headquarters and Headquarters Squadron, Marine Corps Air Station Iwakuni, compete in a tug of war during an Undokai event at...
U.S. Marines with Marine Corps Base Camp Blaz wave to the crowd on the Village of Hagat float during the 81st Guam Liberation Day parade in Hagåtña,...
U.S. service members attending the Advanced Riders Course begin class work on Kadena Air Base, Okinawa, Japan, July 21, 2025. The course is mandatory...
U.S. Marine Corps 1st Sgt. Hunter Misner, first sergeant for Bravo Company, Headquarters and Support Battalion, Marine Corps Installations Pacific,...
The Outbox Band performs during the Camp Foster Festival on Camp Foster, Okinawa, Japan, July 5, 2025. The Outbox Band, a Filipino-based group, plays...
On June 7, Sims was shopping in American Village when he and another Marine, LCpl Ryland Sawyer, decided to walk by a nearby beach. During that walk, they noticed a local Japanese woman slip from the concrete barriers that break up the waves and fall headfirst down an approximately 15-foot drop. Sims did not hesitate to spring into action.
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That 7.8 magnitude earthquake, on April 25, 2015, was recorded as the most devastating in Nepal’s history. Killing almost 9,000 people, injuring tens of thousands, and destroying hundreds of thousands of buildings. The earthquake spanned 120 kilometers long and 80 kilometers wide, leaving much of the country in ruins. Shortly thereafter, the U.S. responded to Nepal’s request for assistance. Joint Task Force 505 was formed, employing the skillsets of 900 service members from the U.S. Armed Forces.
Iwakuni EOD officer transports training material to CATC Camp Fuji by U.S. Army helicopter.
Serianthes nelsonii is a tree species found only on Guam and Rota. The CHamoru name for the Serianthes tree on Guam is Håyun lågu, meaning "wood of the north" or "foreign wood," and in Rota, Trongkon guåfi, meaning "fire tree." Specimens were first collected in the late 1800s and again in 1918 by Peter Nelson, from whom the species was described by Elmer D. Merrill. Although there is no remaining knowledge of traditional uses of the tree in CHamoru culture, early navigator Louis Claude de Freycinet listed Håyun lågu as a tree suitable for timber in his travel journals in the 1800s. Given the tree’s full stature and strength, it would have been suitable for shelter construction or canoe-building. In 1987, Serianthes nelsonii was listed as endangered by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service due to its rarity and threats to its survival.
In 2023, it was recorded that 27 Marines and sailors lost their lives due to preventable off duty
Marine Corps Installations Pacific’s Food Services Specialist of the Quarter competition was held at Combined Arms Training Center, Camp Fuji.