MARINE CORPS BASE CAMP LEJEUNE, N.C. –Leading the way for the Marine Corps, II Marine Expeditionary Force (II MEF) puts new doctrine into action by becoming the first command to implement the modernized Operational Stress Control and Readiness (OSCAR) training, certifying 30 new Core Master Trainers from March 24-26, 2026.
The hand-selected Marines and Sailors, representing units from across the East Coast, are now equipped to deliver OSCAR Generation IV (Gen IV) training, a framework redesigned to directly enhance combat readiness by equipping leaders with practical tools to manage operational stress and build more resilient units.
The Gen IV rollout is a critical step in operationalizing Marine Corps Total Fitness (MCTF), translating its core domains: spiritual, social, physical, and mental, into actionable leadership. The training standardizes stress management practices across the force while empowering commanders with the flexibility to tailor the program to their specific mission. This event marks a deliberate shift towards proactive stress management as a leadership function, directly tying a Marine’s mental fitness to overall warfighting effectiveness.
“It's about combat force preservation," said Sgt. Maj. Emanuel Hudson, the command senior enlisted advisor for the Programs Division at Manpower and Reserve Affairs (M&RA). "It's a premier program that helps prevent, identify, and manage stress and stress reactions to ensure our Marines stay ready and stay in our formations."
Led by the mobile training team from M&RA, the intensive three-day certification immersed the candidates in a modernized curriculum that incorporates years of lessons learned and direct feedback from the fleet. A significant enhancement in Gen IV is the "Warrior Toolkit," a collection of 15 guided discussions that enable small-unit leaders to conduct prevention-focused engagements in any environment, from home station to austere forward-deployed locations. The updated framework redefines the roles of OSCAR team members, which include specially trained peers, chaplains, and medical personnel, to create a unified front that supports Marines before stress becomes a crisis.
“Who knows you better than the person to your left and the person to your right?” asked Rebecca Childress, the OSCAR Section Head at Headquarters Marine Corps. “The people that you live with in the barracks, the people that you work with every day, that’s who notices when something is a little different, and when that happens, people who have been trained as OSCAR team members, they know how to take action. They have a bias for action.”
The training at Camp Lejeune extends beyond the classroom, fostering a sense of community and holistic fitness. The agenda included daily group physical training sessions and professional military education to reinforce the interconnectedness of the MCTF domains. Upon graduation, these newly certified trainers returned to their units as mentors and role models, postured to execute OSCAR Gen IV training.
“On a professional level, OSCAR continues to challenge me as a leader. It continues to propel me forward,” said U.S. Marine Corps Capt. Monique Allyn, headquarters company commander with II MEF Support Battalion. “It has broadened my scope of how to deal with situations and how to understand the totality of the circumstances as a leader, and to make intentional decisions for the welfare of my Marines and for the welfare of the institution.”
The certification of the 30 core master trainers at Camp Lejeune are now charged with leading the evolution across the force, weaving the principles of OSCAR Gen IV into the fabric of daily leadership. For II MEF, being the first to field this training is not about adding another tactic to the playbook, it is a deliberate act of sharpening its most critical asset: the individual Marine. By ensuring its warfighters are as mentally and emotionally resilient as they are physically formidable, II MEF reaffirms its promise to the nation: come to fight, come to win.