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U.S. Marines take to the sand after coming ashore Friday during operation "Dawn Blitz" at Camp Pendleton, Calif. About 5,000 Marines and Navy sailors participated in the largest amphibious exercise on the West Coast since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. With wars in Iraq and Afghanistan largely landlocked, many troops have little experience with huge ships and sea-based fighting. Online. Find images from the amphibious exercise.   denverpost.com/photo
U.S. Marines take to the sand after coming ashore Friday during operation “Dawn Blitz” at Camp Pendleton, Calif. About 5,000 Marines and Navy sailors participated in the largest amphibious exercise on the West Coast since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. With wars in Iraq and Afghanistan largely landlocked, many troops have little experience with huge ships and sea-based fighting. Online. Find images from the amphibious exercise. denverpost.com/photo
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CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. — Brig. Gen. Rex McMillian watched proudly Friday from a scrubby bluff as hundreds of Marines in seafaring tanks hit the Southern California beach in perfect unison with support helicopters buzzing overhead.

It had been nearly 10 years since his Marines last trained in such a large-scale beach invasion exercise with the Navy.

With the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq taking troops to landlocked regions, many of the Marines had never been on a ship — let alone stormed a beach — until the “Dawn Blitz” exercise, the largest of its kind on the West Coast since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. The two-week training drill ended with 5,000 Marines and sailors staging the mock invasion.

The exercise came two days before the 66th anniversary of D-Day and at a pivotal time for the Marines as they face questions from Defense Secretary Robert Gates about whether major amphibious landings that made the Corps so famous worldwide are becoming outdated in today’s warfare.

As the sun streamed through dissipating clouds, the troops landed at exactly 9:15 a.m. as planned — 45 minutes after leaving the cavernous interior of the USS Bonhomme Richard about 20 miles off the coast of Camp Pendleton.

Seconds after rolling in with the deep-blue waves, the Marines poured from their tanks and took their positions, keeping low and aiming their assault rifles toward their imaginary enemy.

California’s morning freeway traffic flowed by on the horizon, with drivers unaware of the drill that Marines said was crucial to maintaining their skills as a versatile force for combat missions and humanitarian operations.

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