7208 vs 7220
Air Support Control Officer (USMC) vs Air Traffic Control Officer (USMC)
Two MOS codes that share nothing except a fierce, eternal argument about who's more "Marine." Spoiler: neither will concede.
Two promises walked into a recruiting station. The first: "be the critical link between ground forces and air power." The second: "air command and control officers are the architects of marine corps airspace management, coordinating all aviation assets in a tactical environment." Both promises were technically true in the way that "water is involved in surfing" is technically true about the Navy. 7208 reality: the recruiter said 'you'll coordinate cutting-edge air-ground integration,' which is true — you will spend your career managing the most complex close air support system in the world from a command post that smells like MRE heaters, burnt coffee, and barely contained urgency. 7220 reality: your 'tactical ATC' means you set up expeditionary ATC in austere environments — think unimproved runways, no radar, binoculars, and a radio — and make it work anyway. Two career paths that diverge at the terminal leave start date and never reconverge.
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.
“As an air support control officer, you'll be the critical link between ground forces and air power. When a ground commander needs air support, your team makes it happen. You'll coordinate with pilots, ground commanders, and fire support agencies in real-time. It's one of the most operationally impactful roles in Marine aviation.”
You are an Air Support Control Officer in the Marine Corps, which means you manage the Direct Air Support Center (DASC) or Tactical Air Command Center (TACC) and ensure that close air support, air interdiction, and other air missions actually reach the Marines who need them. You are the link between the grunt on the ground calling for air and the pilot in the stack waiting for a target, and when this chain works, it is the most lethal and precise form of combined arms in existence. When it doesn't, everyone blames you. The recruiter said 'you'll coordinate cutting-edge air-ground integration,' which is true — you will spend your career managing the most complex close air support system in the world from a command post that smells like MRE heaters, burnt coffee, and barely contained urgency. Every infantry officer's favorite person during a TIC. Every pilot's least favorite person when you change their tasking.
“Air Command and Control Officers are the architects of Marine Corps airspace management, coordinating all aviation assets in a tactical environment. You'll lead the command centers that synchronize air operations across the battlespace and develop C2 expertise that translates to senior leadership roles in defense and aerospace.”
You are an Air Traffic Controller in the Marine Corps, which means you manage airspace with equipment that a civilian controller would report to the FAA as unserviceable. Your 'tactical ATC' means you set up expeditionary ATC in austere environments — think unimproved runways, no radar, binoculars, and a radio — and make it work anyway. Your FAA credentials are real, and the civilian ATC path pays $130K+ by your mid-30s. The catch is that military ATC involves controlling aircraft in conditions that would shut down O'Hare, with equipment that O'Hare threw out in 1998. The skills are gold. The equipment is lead. You make it work with experience, composure, and a vocabulary that FCC regulations prevent in civilian towers.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. 7208 on the left, 7220 on the right.
Managing air support control operations — coordinating close air support (CAS) requests from ground units, directing aircraft to targets, managing the Direct Air Support Center (DASC), and ensuring that Marine aviation assets are allocated where they're needed most. You are the link between the ground commander requesting air support and the pilot delivering it. When a Marine unit is in contact and needs air, your team makes it happen.
Managing the Marine Air Command and Control System (MACCS), coordinating tactical airspace, integrating aviation assets into the ground scheme of maneuver, and overseeing the operations center that coordinates all Marine aviation activities in a given area. You are the orchestra conductor for Marine aviation — ensuring fighters, rotary-wing, UAVs, and ground-based air defense all work together.
The Basic School (TBS) at Quantico (VA) — 6 months of infantry officer training that all Marine officers complete. Followed by MOS-specific training in air support control at various MACCS schoolhouses. Training covers the Tactical Air Command Center (TACC), Direct Air Support Center (DASC), close air support procedures, and air-ground integration. Total pipeline: approximately 12 months after commissioning.
After TBS, Air Command and Control Officers attend specialized training in MACCS operations, airspace management, and command and control procedures. The training is joint-focused, as air command and control involves coordination across all military services.
Low to moderate. Command center operations are desk-based. Deployed DASC and TACC operations involve field conditions and extended hours.
Low to moderate. Operations center management is primarily desk-based, with field exercises requiring deployment of tactical C2 systems.
Air Support Control Officer is one of the most operationally critical and least understood officer MOSs in the Marine Corps. You coordinate the air support that ground Marines depend on in combat — close air support, air interdiction, and assault support — through the DASC and TACC. When this system works, it is the most lethal and responsive air-ground integration in the world. When it doesn't, Marines on the ground suffer. The recruiter probably described this as aviation command and control, which is accurate but undersells the intensity. What they won't tell you: you work in a high-stress command center environment where seconds matter, competing requests for limited air assets are constant, and the ground commander will always believe his request should be the priority. The job requires calm under pressure, rapid decision-making, and deep understanding of both air and ground tactics. The civilian translation is defense contracting (C2 systems, simulation, training) and air traffic management, but the real value is the leadership under fire that defines the role.
The 7220 is the most senior air command and control MOS and arguably the most complex operational planning role in Marine aviation. You manage the system that integrates every aviation asset the Marines have — fighters, helicopters, drones, ground-based air defense — into a coherent operational picture. The OSO probably can't explain this MOS effectively because it's deeply technical and operational. The reality: this is strategic-level aviation management wrapped in a tactical package. The intellectual demands are high, the coordination challenges are immense, and the experience is extremely valuable. Post-military, defense contractors building command and control systems, AI-enabled military applications, and multi-domain operations platforms actively recruit officers with this background. It's a niche MOS with outsized post-military value.
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