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Smart Bombs: Military, Defense and National Security

The U.S. Marine Corps Banned the Sale and Issue of a Coat That ‘Bleeds Orange Substance’ When Wet

U.S. Marine Pfc. Emily Zamudio with Alpha Company, Infantry Training Battalion, School of Infantry (SOI) West, prepares for a shooting drill at Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton on Sept. 1, 2021. Zamudio graduated recruit training from the first female platoon to become Marines at Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego, May 2021. She then progressed to SOI West where she completed the Infantry Marine Course and earned the military occupational specialty of 0311, infantry Marine. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Sgt. Tessa D. Watts)
U.S. Marine Pfc. Emily Zamudio with Alpha Company, Infantry Training Battalion, School of Infantry (SOI) West, prepares for a shooting drill at Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton on Sept. 1, 2021. Zamudio graduated recruit training from the first female platoon to become Marines at Marine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego, May 2021. She then progressed to SOI West where she completed the Infantry Marine Course and earned the military occupational specialty of 0311, infantry Marine. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Sgt. Tessa D. Watts)

Summary and Key Points: The Marine Corps has suspended sales and first-time issue of its grey all-weather coat after a specific production lot began bleeding orange dye when wet, staining the coat and uniforms underneath.

-A January 28 directive orders recruit depots to de-issue affected coats while the Defense Logistics Agency identifies the contracts and lot numbers associated with the defect and establishes replacement procedures.

U.S. Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Elijah Geiwitz fires an M4 carbine in the short bay during a live-fire rifle range for the combat marksmanship course on Camp Hansen, Okinawa, Japan, March 13, 2025. CMC refines Marines marksmanship fundamentals and enhances their lethality through advanced marksmanship training. Geiwitz, a native of Wisconsin, is an automotive maintenance technician with 3rd Landing Support Battalion, 3rd Marine Logistics Group. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Michael Taggart)

U.S. Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Elijah Geiwitz fires an M4 carbine in the short bay during a live-fire rifle range for the combat marksmanship course on Camp Hansen, Okinawa, Japan, March 13, 2025. CMC refines Marines marksmanship fundamentals and enhances their lethality through advanced marksmanship training. Geiwitz, a native of Wisconsin, is an automotive maintenance technician with 3rd Landing Support Battalion, 3rd Marine Logistics Group. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Michael Taggart)

-The niche item is usually reserved for inspections, ceremonies, and cold-weather service dress, but the episode lands amid broader frustration over strict uniform rules and the costs they can impose on junior Marines.

-Officials said the runny dye makes the coat look unprofessional, and the order remains in effect until it is rescinded.

Marine Corps Pulls All-Weather Coat After Dye Defect

The U.S. Marine Corps has pulled its all-weather coat from sale after discovering a manufacturing flaw that quite literally shows when the rain starts falling.

According to a service-wide directive issued on January 28, a specific production lot of the grey, double-breasted coat bleeds an orange-coloured substance when exposed to water, staining both the garment itself and the uniforms worn underneath. The Corps said the coat consequently looked “unprofessional.”

Stars and Stripes cited an internal Marine Corps message confirming that all sales and first-time issuance of the coat have been suspended indefinitely, and recruit depots will now de-issue affected coats.

The Defense Logistics Agency has been tasked with identifying the contracts and lot numbers tied to the defective coats, after which further guidance and replacement procedures will be issued across the force.

On paper, the problem is small, but in practice, it lands in the middle of a much larger and long-running frustration over Marine Corps uniform policy and who ends up paying for it.

The Marine Corps has strict uniform requirements, backed up by a 260-page rulebook. That rigidity has increasingly clashed with cost concerns, especially for junior enlisted Marines.

Just last year, Business Insider reported discontent among Marines stationed at the Pentagon after leadership ordered a return from camouflage utility uniforms to formal service dress. Marines complained that the change drove up dry-cleaning bills and added hassle with little explanation.

US Marines

US Marines. Image Credit: Creative Commons.

The reporting explained that the old guidance had cited dry-cleaning costs of a few hundred dollars annually as one reason for permitting green cammies in office settings. The scrapping of the guidance could be controversial, given that the Defence Department is seeking to reduce costs.

The all-weather coat has historically filled a small niche in Marine life. The coat is formally required as part of the uniform, but is generally only worn for ceremonial duties, inspections, or when service attire is needed in damp, cold weather.

In any case, the Corps is not apt to treat this issue, or any for that matter, as a laughing matter. All members of the Marine Corps Total Force must follow the January directive, which remains in effect until explicitly cancelled.

At the very least, this spat has served as a reminder that when it comes to one of the world’s most elite military branches, no detail is too small.

About the Author: Georgia Gilholy

Georgia Gilholy is a journalist based in the United Kingdom who has been published in Newsweek, The Times of Israel, and the Spectator. Gilholy writes about international politics, culture, and education. You can follow her on X: @llggeorgia.

Written By

Georgia Gilholy is a journalist based in the United Kingdom who has been published in Newsweek, The Times of Israel, and the Spectator. Gilholy writes about international politics, culture, and education. 

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