| The US Marine
Corps will soon deploy the V-22 Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft to
Iraq, its first combat assignment. Marine Commandant Gen. James
Conway announced last week at the Pentagon that Marine Medium
Tiltrotor Squadron 263, with 10 aircraft and 171 personnel will
be deployed to Al Asad Air Base in Western Iraq, by September
2007.
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| The
Corps’ tiltrotor MV-22 alternates between fixed- and rotary-wing
capabilities, a unique attribute that gives U.S. fighting forces
the versatility of a helicopter, with the 300 mph speed and
increased altitude of an airplane, reducing the threat from
small-arms fire. The Osprey can fly twice as fast and three
times as far as conventional helicopters. Its can fly to a range
of up to 900 miles without refueling. The Osprey will replace
some of the CH-46 helicopters currently deployed in theater.
During the final pre-deployment phase, Marine aviators undergo
Operation Desert Talon training in Yuma, Ariz. - a location
selected for its desert climate and conditions.

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