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The remainder of the base came under California Army National Guard control in 1977 and the current name of Joint Forces Training Base - Los Alamitos (JFTB), was adapted in 2000 to reflect its multiple uses by the California Army National Guard, California Air National Guard, the U.S. Army Reserve, and other federal reserve component units. [8]
6th Battalion (Constituted in the Army Reserve on 16 October 1995 as the 6th Battalion (less Company A), 52nd Aviation, Activated (less Company A) on 16 September 1996 with its headquarters at JFTB Los Alamitos, California) (Flying Dragons) Headquarters and Headquarters Company JFTB Los Alamitos, California
The 79th Infantry Division is now the 79th Sustainment Support Command (SSC) headquartered at Joint Forces Training Base (JFTB) Los Alamitos, California. The 79th SSC was officially activated on 1 December 2009 with the mission of providing trained, ready, cohesive, well-led sustainment units for worldwide deployment to meet the U.S. Army's ...
As of 2017 the following units are subordinated to the 11th Military Police Brigade: [1] 11th Military Police Brigade, in Los Alamitos, California. 96th Military Police Battalion (I/R) (EPW/CI) San Diego, California
The 40th Infantry Division ("Sunburst Division") [2] is a modular division of the California Army National Guard.Following the Army's modularization in the mid-2000s, the division has become a modular unit consisting of three brigade combat teams, with National Guardsmen from throughout the Pacific and Western United States and Oceania.
Indian Armed Forces Tri-Service Commands; Joint Forces Maneuver Regiment (Italy), a military logistics regiment of the Italian Armed Forces; Joint Forces Command (Malaysia), a joint military command to command tasks in joint operations; Headquarters Joint Forces New Zealand, the New Zealand Defence Force's operational level headquarters
The airport is named after Brigadier General William J. Fox, "a Marine war hero, a movie stunt man, the first Los Angeles County engineer and, for 20 years after his retirement, a cowboy." [2] The National Plan of Integrated Airport Systems for 2011–2015 categorized it as a general aviation facility. [3]
The 19th Special Forces Group (Airborne) (19th SFG) (A) is one of two National Guard groups of the United States Army Special Forces.19th Group—as it is sometimes called—is designed to deploy and execute nine doctrinal missions: unconventional warfare, foreign internal defense, direct action, counter-insurgency, special reconnaissance, counter-terrorism, information operations ...