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The first female Marines just applied for the Corps' most elite tier

Jan 25, 2016, 22:24 IST

Students with Infantry Training Battalion practice basic marksmanship techniques at Camp Geiger, N.C., Sept. 26, 2013.US Marine Corps Photo

Amid the Department of Defense's historic change to open all combat jobs to women, the Marine Corps accepted the first female applicants to the sister service branches' special operations command (MARSOC), Military.com reports.

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"We've actively identified all the females in the Marine Corps writ large who meet all the prerequisites just like with our normal screening teams," MARSOC Commander Major General Joseph Osterman told Military.com.

"We've notified or contacted every one of them and let them know, 'it's open, you're eligible.'"

"I totally support women in combat, women being eligible to compete for any position in the military," former Defense Secretary Gates told Business Insider.

"But I would agree with military leaders there can be no lowering of the standards of the requirements to perform specific jobs, lowering standards will put lives at risk," Gates added.

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According to Osterman the standards for MARSOC qualification will not be changed. "Our standards are as they've always been and we're not changing them," Osterman told Military.com.

Marine Heavy Helicopter Squadron 464 assists Marines of 2nd Reconnaissance Battalion conduct special purpose insertion and extraction training aboard Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, N.C., March 13.US Marine Corps Photo

MARSOC candidates arrive for the training in the best shape of their lives and survive on a meal a day and just a few hours of sleep - all the while completing some of the toughest military training in the world.

According to Osterman, approximately 40% of the Marines who enter MARSOC's notoriously grueling training pipeline become US Special Operations Command (USSOCOM) operators.

The training for MARSOC begins after a three-week initial assessment that tests physical fitness and a range of other general technical skills.

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Phase 1 is a 21-day course at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, that screens for "enhance physical ability, confidence, situational awareness, and acclimatization," according to the Marine Corps.

During the first phase, candidates must complete a brutal 8-mile rucksack run, swim 300-meters in cammies, tread water for 11 minutes, complete a second ruck run that's 12-miles long in under 3 hours while carrying 45 pounds.

Marines participate in a month-long urban sniper course at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, N.C., July 16, 2013.US Marine Corps Photo

Then it's on to Phase 2, and then a final nine-month 'individual training course,' which includes close urban combat, recon training and SERE school - the training course that teaches elite soldiers how to survive if they are captured and tortured.

'Rangers lead the way!'

Capt. Kristen Griest (left) and 1st Lt. Shaye Haver (right) will become the first female soldiers ever to graduate from Ranger School on Friday, Aug. 21.US Army Photo

In August, Capt. Kristen Griest, 26, and 1st Lt. Shaye Haver, 25, made military history by becoming the first women to graduate from the Army's excruciating Ranger School at Fort Benning.

"Ranger School is a gut check," Jack Murphy, a Special Operations 75th Ranger Regiment veteran and managing editor of the military-focused publication SOFREP told Business Insider.

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"... When you see another soldier wearing a Ranger tab on his or her uniform you know that you have both slogged it out through some extremely challenging training, which automatically builds a certain amount of trust in each other," Murphy added.

"I never actually thought anything was going to be too difficult that it was worth leaving the course," Griest said at a news conference. "I was thinking really of future generations of women that I would like them to have that opportunity, so I had that pressure on myself," she added.

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