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The Basic School

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The Basic School
The Basic School Insignia
ActiveN/A
CountryUnited States
BranchUSMC
TypeTraining
RoleTrain and ducate newly commissioned or appointed United States Marine Corps Officers
Part ofTraining Command (TECOM)
Garrison/HQCamp Barrett, Virginia
Commanders
Current
commander
Colonel George W. Smith, Jr.
Notable
commanders
General James T. Conway

The Basic School (TBS) is where all newly commissioned United States Marine Corps officers are sent to learn the art and science of being an Officer of Marines. TBS currently lasts 26 weeks. During those 26 weeks, the new officers are given extensive classroom, field, and practical application training on subjects ranging from weapons and tactics to leadership and protocol. Whether commissioned from the Naval Academy, NROTC or one of the other Officer Candidate School (OCS) routes, TBS is the first stop for new Marine officers. During TBS, the officers are selected for a Military Occupational Specialty (MOS) ranging from Infantry to Military Police to Naval Aviator. Following TBS, the Officer will attend one or more additional schools to be trained in that particular specialty prior to being assigned to a unit in the Operating Forces.

The course has 1585 hours of training; spending 932.6 hours(60%) in the classroom and 652.5 hours (40%) in the field. Classroom events include platform instruction, tactical decision games (TDGs), sand table excersises (STEXs) and small group discussions. There are various field events, beginning with fireteam and squad level, moving all the way up to platoon reinforced events. The field events consist of realistic blank-fire training, SESAMS (similar to paintball), and live fire ranges.

The Basic School, a formal school within Training Command, is located at Camp Barrett. Camp Barrett is 11 miles west of Marine Corps Base Quantico in Stafford County, Virginia. Each year, over 1,700 new officers are trained to lead Marines.

Mission Statement

Train and educate newly commissioned or appointed officers in the high standards of professional knowledge, esprit-de-corps, and leadership in order to prepare them for duty as company grade officers in the operating forces, with particular emphasis on the duties, responsibilities and warfighting skills required of a rifle platoon commander.[1]

Instruction at TBS

The most critical aspect of instruction at The Basic School is the Five Horizontal Themes. They were created to clearly define the expectations of every student officer at TBS. These themes are not only taught to the student officers at The Basic School, they cross all subordinate units; from the instructors all the way down to the private who issues the student his weapon at the armory. The purpose for this is consistency, unity of effort and shared vision among all personnel at TBS.

  • A Man or Woman of Exemplary Character
    • Has a clear understanding that a Marine commission brings with it "special trust and confidence" and the highest expectations of the American people.
    • Devoted to our Corps Values of Honor, Courage and Commitment
    • Possesses a moral compass that unerringly points to "do the right thing" - an ethical warrior
  • Devoted to Leading Marines 24/7
    • Embraces the "exceptional and unremitting" responsibility to one's Marines and their families
    • Inspires and instills confidence in his/her Marines during times of adversity
    • Adheres to and enforces standards regardless of time of day, location or duty status
    • Treats all Marines and Sailors with dignity and respect
    • Dedicated to a lifetime of study and learning about the profession of arms
  • Able to Decide, Communicate, and Act
    • Can think critically and arrive at an acceptable decision based on sound tactical thinking within their commander's intent
    • Communicates clearly both orally and in writing in tactical and administrative situations with emphasis on issuing clear, meaningful orders and guidance
    • Has a bias for action - seizes the initiative and acts instead of waiting for the perfect sight picture or direction from higher
    • Once action is initiated, acts with boldness and determination
  • A Warfighter
    • A competent combat leader, grounded in the basic infantry skills, and characterized by sound judgment and aggressiveness in execution
    • Educated in the fundamentals of maneuver warfare, tactics, combined arms, and the time-tested principles of battle
    • Maintains an offensive mindset throughout - proactive, not reactive
  • Mentally and Physically Tough
    • Imbued with a warrior spirit and able to thrive in a complex and chaotic environment and persevere despite the obstacles to mission accomplishment
    • Possesses the self-discipline to push past preconceived limits

[1]

Training Evolutions

TBS students prior to a live-fire exercise
Students conduct a series of urban assaults during MOUT training
  • Rifle Range with M16A2
  • Marine Corps Martial Arts Program
  • FEX I (Field Exercise 1) - a three day evolution that acts as an introduction into infantry squad level tactics. The first two days are blank fire against smaller sized opposing forces and the last day is the live fire attack with automated targets.
    • Day 1 - Squad attacks and offensive maneuvers using blank ammunition with a new "squad leader" for each separate attack.
    • Day 2 - Same as Day 1. The reason for the repetition is for the students to have "brilliance in the basics."
    • Day 3,4, or 5 - The students conduct a squad attack at a live fire range. There is a day attack and an illuminated night attack at the range. Artillery simulations are detonated on the range during the conduct of the attack to simulate explosions, artillery, mortars.
  • Patrol FEX (Field Exercise)
    • Day 1 or 2 - Students conduct an initial daytime security patrol, called I-Day.
    • Day 3 or 4 - Students conduct a daytime security patrol, immediately followed by a nighttime ambush patrol.
  • FEX II (Field Exercise 2) This is a platoon "pure" FEX, as the platoon has no attachments, detachments, or supporting arms that is not organic to the platoon. This is much like FEX1, except on a larger level, being platoon instead of squad.
    • Day 1 - Students conduct platoon level offensive or defensive operations.
    • Day 2 - Students conduct whichever exercise was not completed on Day 1.
    • Day 3 - Students conduct a platoon pure live attack at a live fire range. The attack is broke up into one squad as a support by fire element that suppresses the objective while the other two squads act as a maneuver element and assault the objective by rushes.
  • FEX III (Field Exercise 3) This is a platoon "reinforced" FEX, as the platoon attachments, detachments, and supporting arms available to them to utilize. Mortars, artillery, machine guns and engineers are all part of this FEX. Unlike FEX2 in the fact that this is one entire week (5 days) of constant operations. Up to this point, this is the longest time the students have been in the field.
    • Day 1 - Movement to Contact and Deliberate Attack
    • Day 2 - All day preparation for a night attack that night.
    • Day 3 - Platoon (reinforced) in the Defense
    • Day 4 - Platoon (reinforced) in the Defense with another platoon attacking at night
  • Convoy This is a two day long FEX that prepares students for operations with motorized vehicles. Reaction to IEDs, ambushes, and conducting motorized patrols are all part of this FEX.
  • MOUT (Military Operation in Urban Terrain) This is the longest FEX the students go through at The Basic School. This FEX is designed to prepare students for operations in urban terrain, starting with individual actions, moving all the way up to three platoons conducting an attack on a enemy fortified town.
    • Day 1 - Students receive classes in the mock urban towns and do practical application
    • Day 2 - Students conduct multiple squad level attacks on fortified enemy positions with SESAMS training rounds.
    • Day 3 - Students conduct more SESAMS training, this time squad defensive operations as they are attacked by a platoon size element. Later, students conduct a cordon-and-knock search with motorized vehicles at a nearby village. They also receive vehicle checkpoint (VCP) training taught by members of Instructor Battalion's Dugout Platoon.
    • Day 5 - Urban Lane Training is conducted. The students receive classes with practical application on reaction to sniper, IED discovery, urban patrolling, snap VCP, guardian angel, and complex ambush.
    • Day 6 - Students conduct a squad reinforced urban patrol going through scenarios with real life role-players, simulating the "Three Block War."
  • AMFEX (Amphibious Familiarization Exercise) Students spend two days at Little Creek Naval Amphibious Base and Norfolk Naval Base gaining a basic understanding of amphibious ships and their capabilities. The time also gives the students an idea of what life will be like living on a ship while deployed with a Marine Expeditionary Unit(MEU).

School Staff Personnel

The Basic School is run and taught by the permanent personnel who are stationed at Camp Barrett, Marine Corps Base Quantico, members of Instructor Battalion, The Basic School.[2]

  • Instructor Battalion
    • Headquarters and Service Company (H&S Co.)
      • Warfighting Instructor Section
        • The Bullpen (Officer Warfighting Instructors)
        • The Dugout (Enlisted Warfighting Instructors)
    • Combat Service Support Company (CSS Co.)
      • Artillery Instructor Battery (AIB)
      • Communications Platoon
      • Motor Transport Platoon
      • Motor Transport Maintenance Platoon
    • Combat Instructor Company (CI Co.)
      • Infantry Platoon
      • Weapons Platoon
      • Engineer Platoon
    • Enlisted Warfighting Instructor Course (EWIC)
  • Martial Arts Center of Excellence (MACE)
  • Corporal's Leadership Course

See also

References

Notes

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Marine Corps.
  1. ^ a b "The Basic School". Headquarters Marine Corps. Retrieved 2007-09-17. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  2. ^ The Basic School official website

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