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A Marine student undergoing the 2nd Marine Division Combat Skills Center Pre-Scout Sniper Course applies camouflage at Camp Lejeune, N.C., Jan. 6, 2016. The three-week course is designed to prepare qualified Marines for the Scout Sniper Basic Course, and instructs them in skills such as stalking, camouflage, land navigation and marksmanship. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Paul S. Martinez/Released)

Photo by Cpl. Paul S. Martinez

Division Combat Skills Center begins pre-scout sniper course

6 Jan 2016 | Cpl. Paul S. Martinez II Marine Expeditionary Force

The 2nd Marine Division Combat Skills Center began to train tomorrow’s Marines of the scout sniper community with the Pre-Scout Sniper Course at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, Jan. 6.

The three-week course is designed to prepare Marines for the Scout Sniper Basic Course, and instructs them in skills such as observation, stalking an enemy, camouflage, land navigation and marksmanship with the M40A5 sniper rifle.

“The purpose of the course is to develop these Marines in scout sniper skills and get them prepared for the school house,” said Sgt. Douglas Cairns, an instructor in the course.

According to Cairns, the course was instituted as a result of the attrition rate from Marines in the Scout Sniper Basic Course. The Pre-Scout Sniper Course acts as a stepping stone of training to prepare Marines for the 79-day evolution and help them earn the coveted military occupational specialty of scout sniper.

The first week of the course focused on classroom instruction on scout sniper fundamentals such as camouflage application and construction of a ghillie suit.

“It’s good to immerse yourself in this before going to the actual school,” said Cpl. Samuel Kleinsasser, a student in the course. “These classes cover what is taught at the school, and it helps to have them instructed by Marines that know exactly what they are talking about.”

Kleinsasser believes his original role as an anti-tank missileman with 1st Battalion, 6th Marine Regiment, greatly differs from the tasks demanded of him and others in the course. He aspires to join the scout sniper community to be a part of a specialized group of Marines.

“I am used to using mounted weapons in tactical vehicles, but here, we are always hiking everywhere,” Kleinsasser said. “The operational tempo is much different. It is optimal for a Marine preparing for the schoolhouse to come through this course first.”

The second week of the course will see Marines taking aim down the Carlos Hathcock Range in known-distance firing. The course’s final week will put Marines to the test with a land navigation and stalking exercise.

“The intent is to better prepare Marines to be successful at the schoolhouse,” Cairns said. “This in turn, will result in more school-trained scout snipers in the division.”