How to ace the Marine Basic Recon Course

The U.S. Marine Corps Basic Reconnaissance Course, better known as the Basic Recon Course, is where young Marines earn their place in the Marine Corps’ recon units. The course puts candidates through a grueling assessment and selection that only the best can pass. 

Recon Marines have a history tracing back to World War II when their predecessors established beach landing zones and provided valuable intelligence on enemy positions, strength, and even hydrographic mapping. Recon units have been activated and deactivated over the years, establishing a legacy of success on the battlefield. 

Travis Nardi, a former instructor at the course and author of “All It Takes,” has molded many Recon Marines through the training. 

“Mentally and physically, it’ll probably be the hardest time of their lives. That’s what the course is for. To find mentally and physically strong, capable Marines who are willing to put their entire heart and soul into the training to obtain the [military occupation specialty],” Nardi said. “To find those types of Marines who won’t quit and always put mission and team above anything else that may come up, personal or selfish.”

A brief history of the Basic Recon Course

Recon Marines have a history that traces back to World War II when the Marine Raiders and Observation Group were first established in the early 1940s. The Marine Corps needed a clearing force for the main assault during the “Island Hopping” campaigns in the South Pacific. 

The history of Marine Raiders and Recon Marines is intertwined; both draw their lineage to the early WWII units. Force and Division Recon units have been activated and deactivated over the years with different training courses that trained Marines on the diverse skillset of the Recon Marine. 

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In the 1980s, reconnaissance training was formalized through two schoolhouses: The Basic Recon Course was established at Coronado, California, and the Amphibious Reconnaissance School was established at Little Creek, Virginia. Both programs had identical standards for training Recon Marines. 

In 2002, the Marine Administrative message 043/02 established the 0321 MOS, which covered the ranks of Private (E-1) through Master Gunnery Sergeant (E-9). According to a Naval Postgraduate School thesis by Albert Nowicki, the formalized job pathway “fundamentally changed the force structure and funding of the reconnaissance community within the Marine Corps.” 

However, due to a decrease in funding, the USMC Training and Education Command merged the two training programs into the Basic Reconnaissance Course in 2007, located at the School of Infantry – West aboard Camp Pendleton, California.

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