“We’re trying to move the ocean toward Twentynine Palms. We haven’t quite figured that out yet,” joked Capt. Garrett Loeffelman, simulation officer for the Marine Corps’ range and training programs division, at the Modern Day Marine conference last year.
In a Project Tripoli scenario, a Marine acting as a joint terminal air controller would be directing both live aircraft and simulated aircraft operated by Marines elsewhere. “Things light up on the real F-35, they light up in the simulator, they light up on the ships,” says Col. Bryan Eovito, commanding officer of the Marine Corps Cyberspace Operations Group.
“We can literally have tens of thousands of Marines and tens of thousands of sensors spread throughout a huge geographic region and come together and interact in a new way.”