WASHINGTON (AP) — For the first time in Marine Corps history, women are attending a previously male-only combat training course in California.
Marine Capt. Joshua Pena said 40 female Marine students checked-in Tuesday to the Marine Combat Training Battalion at Camp Pendleton.
The move comes at least seven months after senior Marine leaders said they were considering the change, amid criticism that much of the early training excludes women.
The entry-level course is for Marines who've finished boot camp and aren't assigned to infantry jobs. It lasts about a month and involves basic combat training, including patrol and convoy operations, marksmanship and the use of grenade launchers and machine guns.
Pena said the female Marines will be fully integrated with the men, and that their inclusion triggered no changes to the course instruction. He said that eventually as many as 1,700 women would go through the combat training there each year.