U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Jacqueline Akamelu/Released 260409-M-CV013-1975.JPG
Quantico, Virginia is best known as the home of the FBI Academy and Marine Corps officer training. But within the same base, in a building called Raider Hall, sits one of the most methodically developed martial arts instructor training centers in the world — the Martial Arts & Fitness Center of Excellence, known as MAFCE.MAFCE is the institutional home of the Marine Corps Martial Arts Program — MCMAP. A system frequently referenced in martial arts circles, but rarely examined in depth.

How the Program Is Structured
MCMAP was officially established in 2002, replacing all previous close combat systems used by the Marine Corps. Its technical foundation draws from multiple disciplines simultaneously. Brazilian jiu-jitsu, wrestling, judo, boxing, Muay Thai, kickboxing, sambo, and capoeira are all integrated into a single structured system.
What sets MCMAP apart from most martial arts programs is its internal balance. Only one third of the curriculum is dedicated to technique and physical development. The remainder focuses on mental discipline, psychological resilience, and leadership.This proportion is unusual by any standard in professional martial arts education.
The Belt System and Instructor Track
MCMAP operates on a tiered belt structure running from Tan Belt through multiple degrees of Black Belt. Alongside it runs a separate instructor track. Instructors are authorized to train and certify others only within their own level. The only personnel qualified to produce new instructors are Martial Arts Instructor-Trainers — MAITs — identified by a vertical red stripe on their belt.

Reaching that level requires more than ambition. Before attending the MAIT course at Raider Hall, a Marine must first complete a local Martial Arts Instructor course. The Martial Arts Instructor Trainer Course — MAITC — is the final step in a long professional progression, not an entry point.
Admission Standards
Entry requirements for MAITC are formally documented and carry no exceptions. Candidates must hold active instructor status at Green Belt level or above, achieve the highest physical fitness category on both the PFT and CFT, be fully deployable, have no shoulder injuries within the past two years, and no concussion or traumatic brain injury within the past six months. Failure to meet any single requirement results in immediate dismissal from the course. Marines
Beyond the U.S. Military
MCMAP does not operate in isolation. The program is officially taught to members of other military branches and to foreign service personnel, with belts awarded upon successful completion. This makes Raider Hall something more than a domestic training facility — it functions as a point of convergence for military martial arts standards across allied nations, a fact that gives the program relevance well beyond American military circles.
In a field where training systems often evolve informally, MCMAP stands as a rare example of structured, documented methodology — one that continues to influence instructor preparation standards internationally.
Source: fitness.marines.mil