
U.S. Marines have demonstrated exceptional cold-weather warfighting capability during Exercise Cold Response 26, one of NATO’s most demanding large-scale military exercises conducted in the High North. Operating in sub-zero temperatures, blizzard conditions, and treacherous icy terrain, forces executed complex live-fire operations and joint maneuvers designed to test endurance, mobility, and battlefield precision under extreme stress.

More than 3,000 Marines from II Marine Expeditionary Force and 2nd Marine Logistics Group, alongside 25,000–32,000 troops from multiple NATO nations, took part in the Norwegian-led exercise. The drills included heavy machine-gun live-fire training, distributed logistics operations, multinational airlift coordination, and cross-border maneuver movements across Northern Europe.
Defense analysts note that the integration of a fully distributed Marine Air-Ground Task Force (MAGTF) within NATO’s command structure represents a significant evolution in alliance warfighting doctrine. The ability to sustain combat power in the harshest climates underscores a broader strategic emphasis on rapid deployment, multi-domain coordination, and collective defense preparedness.

As global security dynamics continue to shift, large-scale exercises such as Cold Response highlight the capacity of allied forces to operate effectively in complex and extreme environments. Observers say the message from the Arctic training grounds is unmistakable:
modern deterrence depends on readiness that transcends geography, climate, and conventional operational limits.
📍Northern Norway & Finland — March 26, 2026
