‘MUMS’ the word: Corps stands up first ever Marine unmanned maintenance squadron

The new detail is now the service's only aviation unit built specifically to bring unmanned aviation maintenance to forward deployed combat theaters.

Military Times
75
2 min read
0 views
‘MUMS’ the word: Corps stands up first ever Marine unmanned maintenance squadron
The MUMS-14 activation ceremony at Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point, North Carolina, June 16, 2026. (Pfc. Keani Guthmueller/Marine Corps)

The Marine Corps on Tuesday stood up the service’s first ever unmanned maintenance squadron in a ceremony aboard Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point, North Carolina.

A subordinate unit of the 2nd Marine Aircraft Wing, Marine Unmanned Maintenance Squadron 14, or MUMS-14, is now the Corps’ only current aviation detail built specifically to bring unmanned aviation maintenance to forward deployed combat theaters, according to an announcement.

In that role, Marines will spearhead maintenance support for the service’s Group-5 unmanned aerial systems — namely, the MQ-9 Reaper — to enable multi-mission intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance and targeting across the Marine Air-Ground Task Force.

“Standing up this squadron marks a major step forward for Marine Corps aviation,” Lt. Col. Jeffrey F. Carben, commanding officer of MUMS-14, said in a service release. “Our unit ensures the Marine Corps will maintain a persistent, reliable, and expeditionary capability — one that directly strengthens deterrence and supports Marines operating forward.”

Carben assumed command of the squadron on Tuesday as part of the activation ceremony, with Sgt. Maj. Tavaris J. Douglas stepping in as the outfit’s first senior enlisted leader.

“The work done here will have global impact,” added Carben. “It takes disciplined, technically skilled Marines to keep these systems flying. Today’s activation is more than a ceremony — it’s the beginning of a new chapter of Marine Corps aviation. This squadron will help ensure Marines forward have the persistent eyes, ears and reach they need to compete and win.”

J.D. Simkins is Editor-in-Chief of Military Times and Defense News, and a Marine Corps veteran of the Iraq War.

Original Source

Military Times

Share this article

Related Articles

Size matters: KNDS pitches long-barreled artillery for 60-kilometer base range
🛡️NATO & Alliances
Defense News

Size matters: KNDS pitches long-barreled artillery for 60-kilometer base range

The 155mm howitzer is equipped with a girthy 58 caliber gun tube, about 12% longer than the 52 caliber barrels common in Europe.

vor etwa 3 Stunden4 min
KC-46A boom mishap caused by operator and F-22 pilot errors, investigation finds
🛡️NATO & Alliances
Military Times

KC-46A boom mishap caused by operator and F-22 pilot errors, investigation finds

An investigation found that a KC-46A's emergency landing and refueling boom damage in July 2025 was mainly due to the operator's incorrect control inputs.

vor etwa 11 Stunden3 min
🛡️
🛡️NATO & Alliances
U.S. Department of Defense

Project Patriot Pipeline Crafting Avenues of Service for Skilled Workers

The War Department's Project Patriot Pipeline is an initiative designed to provide a flow of skilled workers to meet the department's needs, while simultaneously supporting the defense industrial base.

vor etwa 12 Stunden1 min
🛡️
🛡️NATO & Alliances
Breaking Defense

Pentagon aims to sidestep potential ‘collusion’ through Defense Production Act: Senior official

“Our interest is using voluntary agreements …. For us to articulate problems to them around nasty issues in the supply chain and the industrial base that allow them to communicate and work together, essentially collude,” said Michael Cadenazzi, the assistant secretary of Defense fo

vor etwa 13 Stunden1 min