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Commercial computer games have "great training value," for the Marine Corps, said the service's commandant, Gen. James L. Jones.
Many simulations used by the Marine Corps at its facilities in Quantico, Va., rely on commercial video games, Jones said in an interview earlier this year.
"There is a squad leaders' course where a squad leader can stand in front of a giant screen and actually run a squad through a particular scenario," Jones explained. Those scenarios range from combat patrol through the jungle to urban warfare and operations in the desert. "The computer picks up [the squad leader's] command, as if he were talking to a real squad, and the computer can cause the squad to do different things," he added. "When he is engaged by an enemy force, he can maneuver his squad, and they react on the screen. But you really get into the game, and it's all done in real time and is very realistic."
Ideally, said Jones, there should be a balance between simulation-based and live training. "I believe in simulation and live training both. I think simulation can do an awful lot for learning the basics. But there is nothing like getting out there and doing it in real life," he said. "Sometimes that is more expensive, if you are shooting a very expensive shell." Tank gunnery, for example, is "extremely dependent on good simulation.
"We also can improve our individual marksmanship via simulation, with the MIG rifle, that will actually result in higher scores when they go out and do live fire," Jones said.
In addition to combat training, Jones wants to take advantage of Web-based technology to allow more Marines to earn professional degrees online. "We are doing the same thing as the Army," said Jones. "I have told the Marine Corps that I expect resident courses and correspondence courses are to be considered by selection boards to be co-equal.
"We want Marines to get the education. How they do it is of secondary importance to me. And we are going to aggressively link all our off campus to our on-campus courses," Jones asserted. "They'll be seamless."
The Army also has incorporated off theshelf video games into vehicle crew training systems.
A case in point is the use...