2621 vs 0231
Communications Intelligence/Electronic Warfare Operator (USMC) vs Intelligence Specialist (USMC)
Same Eagle, Globe, and Anchor — completely different daily realities hiding behind "every Marine is a rifleman."
2621's "about me" section would read: the classified side of Marine communications is a small community — you'll know most of the other 2621s within a couple of years. 0231 would go with: the work cycles between genuinely consequential analysis — the kind where your product changes a mission plan — and soul-crushing production requirements where you're reformatting the same threat brief for the third different audience this week. Green flags, red flags, and the deployment schedule — all below. The career counselor who presented both of these with equal enthusiasm deserves a performance award.
After the Uniform
The part the recruiter skips: what each job actually translates to once you're a civilian — and what it pays.
Salary data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program. A guide, not a guarantee.
Recruiter vs. Reality
The pitch versus what people who actually did the job report back.
“You'll operate the communication backbone of Marine special intelligence — the systems that move classified information supporting SIGINT collection across the MAGTF. This is a TS/SCI world that most Marines never touch, and the combination of operational Marine credibility plus cleared signals systems experience puts you in a hiring category that defense contractors and NSA are always recruiting from.”
You'll manage special intelligence communication systems that keep the Marine Corps connected to the intelligence it needs to operate in denied environments. The classified side of Marine communications is a small community — you'll know most of the other 2621s within a couple of years. Shift work is standard, the information security requirements are constant and non-negotiable, and the work itself cycles between genuinely consequential and mind-numbing system administration. The TS/SCI is real and worth serious money on the outside. What recruiters don't say: the family and friends explanation for what you do is permanently limited to "communications," and you just get used to that. NSA, DIA, and cleared defense contractors hire from this background reliably — the 2621 community has a well-worn path out.
“You'll hold a TS/SCI clearance and produce the intelligence that drives every Marine Corps operation from battalion to theater. Intel specialists are the reason commanders know what they're walking into before they walk into it. The clearance and analytical experience put you on a direct path to the three-letter agencies, defense contracting, and the kind of government work that pays well and never shows up on LinkedIn.”
You will develop a deeply personal relationship with PowerPoint, the DCGS-MC, and whatever classified system your S-2 shop is running this year. The work cycles between genuinely consequential analysis — the kind where your product changes a mission plan — and soul-crushing production requirements where you're reformatting the same threat brief for the third different audience this week. Most of your career will be spent in a SCIF, which means no phones, no windows, and a social life that revolves around who else has a clearance. The TS/SCI is worth real money on the outside and the analytical skills translate, but you need to be deliberate about translating "I made slides in a vault" into language that civilian hiring managers understand. DIA, CIA, NSA, and Booz Allen all recruit from this MOS — the path is well-worn if you walk it with intention.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. 2621 on the left, 0231 on the right.
Signals intelligence collection, analysis, and reporting. Working with classified systems to identify and exploit communications. Good assignments feel like working at NSA. Fleet assignments involve more tactical SIGINT support to MEFs and MEUs.
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Training at Corry Station (Pensacola, FL) is 6+ months of SIGINT fundamentals and language training (if assigned a language). The clearance investigation runs concurrently. Pensacola is a decent training location with beach access on weekends.
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Low to moderate. Intelligence work is desk-based but Marines still meet Marine Corps physical standards. Field exercises with radio battalions involve carrying SIGINT equipment.
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The 2621 is one of the Marine Corps' best-kept secrets for post-military career potential. The TS/SCI clearance combined with SIGINT experience puts you in an incredibly lucrative job market. The recruiter might not even know what this MOS does — it's that niche. The reality: your experience varies massively by assignment. NSA or agency billets are fascinating work with incredible learning opportunities. Fleet SIGINT can mean sitting in a radio van for 12-hour shifts copying morse code or monitoring frequencies. Either way, the credentials you walk away with — clearance, SIGINT training, and potentially a language — are worth more than most four-year degrees in the intelligence job market.
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