Maintaining a strong national defense encompasses such diverse
activities as running a hospital, commanding a tank, programming
computers, operating a nuclear reactor, or repairing and maintaining a
helicopter. The military provides training and work experience in these
and many other fields for more than 2.5 million people. More than 1.4
million people serve in the active Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and Air
Force, and more than 1.1 million serve in their Reserve components, and
the Air and Army National Guard. The Coast Guard, which is also
discussed in this Handbook statement, is now part of the U.S.
Department of Homeland Security.
The military distinguishes between enlisted and officer careers.
Enlisted personnel, who make up about 85 percent of the Armed Forces,
carry out the fundamental operations of the military in areas such as
combat, administration, construction, engineering, health care, and
human services. Officers, who make up the remaining 15 percent of the
Armed Forces, are the leaders of the military, supervising and managing
activities in every occupational specialty of the Armed Forces.
The sections that follow discuss the major occupational groups for
enlisted personnel and officers.
Enlisted occupational groups Administrativecareers
include a wide variety of positions. The military must keep accurate
information for planning and managing its operations. Both paper and
electronic records are kept on personnel and on equipment, funds,
supplies, and other property of the military. Enlisted administrative
personnel record information, type reports, maintain files, and review
information to assist military officers. Personnel may work in a
specialized area such as finance, accounting, legal affairs,
maintenance, supply, or transportation. Some examples of administrative
specialists are recruiting specialists, who recruit and place qualified
personnel and provide information about military careers to young
people, parents, schools, and local communities; training specialists
and instructors, who provide the training programs necessary to help
people perform their jobs effectively; and personnel specialists, who
collect and store information about individuals in the military,
including information on their training, job assignments, promotions,
and health.
Combat specialty occupations refer to enlisted specialties,
such as infantry, artillery, and special forces, whose members operate
weapons or execute special missions during combat. Persons in these
occupations normally specialize by the type of weapon system or combat
operation. These personnel maneuver against enemy forces and position
and fire artillery, guns, and missiles to destroy enemy positions. They
also may operate tanks and amphibious assault vehicles in combat or
scouting missions. When the military has difficult and dangerous
missions to perform, they call upon special-operations teams. These
elite combat forces maintain a constant state of readiness to strike
anywhere in the world on a moment’s notice. Team members from the
special-operations forces conduct offensive raids, demolitions,
intelligence, search-and-rescue missions, and other operations from
aboard aircraft, helicopters, ships, or submarines.
Construction occupations in the military include personnel
who build or repair buildings, airfields, bridges, foundations, dams,
bunkers, and the electrical and plumbing components of these structures.
Enlisted personnel in construction occupations operate bulldozers,
cranes, graders, and other heavy equipment. Construction specialists
also may work with engineers and other building specialists as part of
military construction teams. Some personnel specialize in areas such as
plumbing or electrical wiring. Plumbers and pipefitters install and
repair the plumbing and pipe systems needed in buildings and on aircraft
and ships. Building electricians install and repair electrical-wiring
systems in offices, airplane hangars, and other buildings on military
bases.
Electronic and electrical equipment repair personnel repair
and maintain electronic and electrical equipment used in the military.
Repairers normally specialize by type of equipment, such as avionics,
computer, optical, communications, or weapons systems. For
example, electronic instrument repairers install, test, maintain, and
repair a wide variety of electronic systems, including navigational
controls and biomedical instruments. Weapons maintenance technicians
maintain and repair weapons used by combat forces; most of these weapons
have electronic components and systems that assist in locating targets
and in aiming and firing the weapon.
The military has many engineering, science, and technical
occupations, whose members require specific knowledge to operate
technical equipment, solve complex problems, or provide and interpret
information. Enlisted personnel normally specialize in one area, such as
space operations, emergency management, environmental health and safety,
or intelligence. Space operations specialists use and repair
ground-control command equipment having to do with spacecraft, including
electronic systems that track the location and operation of a craft.
Emergency management specialists prepare emergency procedures for all
types of disasters, such as floods, tornadoes, and earthquakes.
Environmental health and safety specialists inspect military facilities
and food supplies for the presence of disease, germs, or other
conditions hazardous to health and the environment. Intelligence
specialists gather and study information by means of aerial photographs
and various types of radar and surveillance systems.
Health-care personnel assist medical professionals in
treating and providing services for men and women in the military. They
may work as part of a patient-service team in close contact with
doctors, dentists, nurses, and physical therapists to provide the
necessary support functions within a hospital or clinic. Health-care
specialists normally specialize in a particular area—emergency medical
treatment, the operation of diagnostic tools such as x-ray and
ultrasound equipment, laboratory testing of tissue and blood samples, or
maintaining pharmacy supplies or patients’ records, among others.
Human resources development specialists recruit and place
qualified personnel and provide the training programs necessary to help
people perform their jobs effectively. Personnel in this career area
normally specialize by activity. For example, recruiting specialists
provide information about military careers to young people, parents,
schools, and local communities and explain the Armed Service’s
employment and training opportunities, pay and benefits, and service
life. Personnel specialists collect and store information about the
people in the military, including information on their previous and
current training, job assignments, promotions, and health. Training
specialists and instructors teach classes and give demonstrations to
provide military personnel with the knowledge they need to perform their
jobs.
Armed Forces personnel in machine operator and production
occupations operate industrial equipment, machinery, and tools to
fabricate and repair parts for a variety of items and structures. They
may operate engines, turbines, nuclear reactors, and water pumps. Often,
they specialize by type of work performed. Welders and metalworkers, for
instance, work with various types of metals to repair or form the
structural parts of ships, submarines, buildings, or other equipment.
Survival equipment specialists inspect, maintain, and repair survival
equipment such as parachutes and aircraft life support equipment. Dental
and optical laboratory technicians construct and repair dental equipment
and eyeglasses for military personnel.
Media and public affairsoccupations deal with the
public presentation and interpretation of military information and
events. Enlisted media and public affairs personnel take and develop
photographs; film, record, and edit audio and video programs; present
news and music programs; and produce graphic artwork, drawings, and
other visual displays. Other public affairs specialists act as
interpreters and translators to convert written or spoken foreign
languages into English or other languages.
Protective service personnel include those who enforce
military laws and regulations, provide emergency response to natural and
human-made disasters, and maintain food standards. These personnel
normally specialize by function. For example, military police control
traffic, prevent crime, and respond to emergencies. Other law
enforcement and security specialists investigate crimes committed on
military property and guard inmates in military correctional facilities.
Firefighters put out, control, and help prevent fires in buildings, on
aircraft, and aboard ships. Food service specialists prepare all types
of food in dining halls, hospitals, and ships.
Transportation and material handling specialists ensure the
safe transport of people and cargo. Most personnel within this
occupational group are classified according to mode of transportation,
such as aircraft, motor vehicle, or ship. Aircrew members operate
equipment on board aircraft during operations. Vehicle drivers operate
all types of heavy military vehicles, including fuel or water tank
trucks, semi-trailers, heavy troop transports, and passenger buses.
Quartermasters and boat operators navigate and pilot many types of small
watercraft, including tugboats, gunboats, and barges. Cargo specialists
load and unload military supplies, using equipment such as forklifts and
cranes.
Vehicle and machinery mechanics conduct preventive and
corrective maintenance on aircraft, ships, automotive and heavy
equipment, heating and cooling systems, marine engines, and powerhouse
station equipment. These workers typically specialize by the type of
equipment that they maintain. For example, aircraft mechanics inspect,
service, and repair helicopters and airplanes. Automotive and
heavy-equipment mechanics maintain and repair vehicles such as jeeps,
cars, trucks, tanks, self-propelled missile launchers, and other combat
vehicles. They also repair bulldozers, power shovels, and other
construction equipment. Heating and cooling mechanics install and repair
air-conditioning, refrigeration, and heating equipment. Marine engine
mechanics repair and maintain gasoline and diesel engines on ships,
boats, and other watercraft. They also repair shipboard mechanical and
electrical equipment. Powerhouse mechanics install, maintain, and repair
electrical and mechanical equipment in power-generating stations.
Officer occupational groupsCombat specialty
officers plan and direct military operations, oversee combat
activities, and serve as combat leaders. This category includes officers
in charge of tanks and other armored assault vehicles, artillery
systems, special operations forces, and infantry. Combat specialty
officers normally specialize by the type of unit that they lead. Within
the unit, they may specialize by the type of weapon system. Artillery
and missile system officers, for example, direct personnel as they
target, launch, test, and maintain various types of missiles and
artillery. Special-operations officers lead their units in offensive
raids, demolitions, intelligence gathering, and search-and-rescue
missions.
Engineering, science, and technical officers have a wide
range of responsibilities based on their area of expertise. They lead or
perform activities in areas such as space operations, environmental
health and safety, and engineering. These officers may direct the
operations of communications centers or the development of complex
computer systems. Environmental health and safety officers study the
air, ground, and water to identify and analyze sources of pollution and
its effects. They also direct programs to control safety and health
hazards in the workplace. Other personnel work as aerospace engineers to
design and direct the development of military aircraft, missiles, and
spacecraft.
Executive, administrative, and managerial officers oversee
and direct military activities in key functional areas such as finance,
accounting, health administration, international relations, and supply.
Health services administrators, for instance, are responsible for the
overall quality of care provided at the hospitals and clinics they
operate. They must ensure that each department works together to provide
the highest quality of care. As another example, purchasing and
contracting managers negotiate and monitor contracts for the purchase of
the billions of dollars worth of equipment, supplies, and services that
the military buys from private industry each year.
Health-care officers provide health services at military
facilities, on the basis of their area of specialization. Officers who
assist in examining, diagnosing, and treating patients with illness,
injury, or disease include physicians,registered nurses, and dentists.
Other health-care officers provide therapy, rehabilitative treatment,
and additional services for patients. Physical and occupational
therapists plan and administer therapy to help patients adjust to
disabilities, regain independence, and return to work. Speech therapists
evaluate and treat patients with hearing and speech problems. Dietitians
manage food service facilities and plan meals for hospital patients and
for outpatients who need special diets. Pharmacists manage the purchase,
storage, and dispensation of drugs and medicines.Physicians and
surgeons in this occupational group provide the majority of medical
services to the military and their families. Dentists treat diseases and
disorders of the mouth. Optometrists treat vision problems by
prescribing eyeglasses or contact lenses. Psychologists provide mental
health care and also conduct research on behavior and emotions.
Media and affairs officers oversee the development,
production, and presentation of information or events for the public.These officers mayproduce and direct motion pictures,
videotapes, and television and radio broadcasts that are used for
training, news, and entertainment. Some plan, develop, and direct the
activities of military bands. Public information officers respond to
inquiries about military activities and prepare news releases and
reports to keep the public informed.
Protective service officers are responsible for the safety
and protection of individuals and property on military bases and
vessels. Emergency management officers plan and prepare for all types of
natural and human-made disasters. They develop warning, control, and
evacuation plans to be used in the event of a disaster. Law enforcement
and security officers enforce all applicable laws on military bases and
investigate crimes when the law has been broken.
Support services officers manage food service activities and
perform services in support of the morale and well-being of military
personnel and their families. Food services managers oversee the
preparation and delivery of food services within dining facilities
located on military installations and vessels. Social workers focus on
improving conditions that cause social problems such as drug and alcohol
abuse, racism, and sexism. Chaplains conduct worship services for
military personnel and perform other spiritual duties covering the
beliefs and practices of all religious faiths
Officers in transportationoccupations manage and
perform activities related to the safe transport of military personnel
and material by air and water. Officers normally specialize by mode of
transportation or area of expertise, because, in many cases, they must
meet licensing and certification requirements. Pilots in the military
fly various types of specialized airplanes and helicopters to carry
troops and equipment and to execute combat missions. Navigators use
radar, radio, and other navigation equipment to determine their position
and plan their route of travel. Officers on ships and submarines work as
a team to manage the various departments aboard their vessels. Ships’
engineers direct engineering departments aboard ships and submarines,
including engine operations, maintenance, repair, heating, and power
generation.
In 2003, more than 2.5 million people served in the Armed Forces.
More than 1.4 million individuals were on active duty in the Armed
Forces—about 490,000 in the Army, 377,000 in the Navy, 368,000 in the
Air Force, and 179,000 in the Marine Corps. In addition, more than 1.1
million people served in their Reserve components, and the Air and Army
National Guard. In addition, 38,000 individuals served in the Coast
Guard, which is now part of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
Table 1 shows the occupational composition of the 1.2 million
active-duty enlisted personnel in 2003; table 2 presents similar
information for the 216,000 active-duty officers.
Table 1. Military enlisted personnel by
broad occupational category and branch of military service, June
2003
Occupational Group - Enlisted
Army
Air Force
Coast Guard
Marine Corps
Navy
Total, all services
Administrative occupations
15,175
25,674
1,775
8,642
21,225
72,491
Combat specialty occupations
104,876
253
745
33,070
3,316
142,260
Construction occupations
15,340
6,261
5,145
5,397
32,143
Electronic and electrical repair occupations
14,035
37,155
3,530
16,082
52,094
122,896
Engineering, science, and technical occupations
63,531
43,422
720
35,237
41,003
183,913
Health care occupations
26,660
17,108
685
23,818
68,271
Human resource development occupations
16,202
12,715
6,784
5,510
41,211
Machine operator and precision work occupations
4,528
7,783
2,079
1,710
23,485
39,585
Media and public affairs occupations
4,552
5,921
131
1,556
5,255
17,415
Protective service occupations
24,831
29,516
893
6,086
10,630
71,956
Support services occupations
13,687
1,535
1,213
3,704
11,570
31,709
Transportation and material handling occupations
54,140
33,835
6,423
23,908
39,272
157,578
Vehicle machinery mechanic occupations
48,043
48,433
5,654
18,473
50,266
170,869
Total, by service
405,600
269,611
23,848
160,397
292,841
1,152,297
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Defense, Defense Manpower Data
Center East
Table 2. Military officer personnel by
broad occupational category and branch of service, June 2003
Occupational Group - Officer
Army
Air Force
Coast Guard
Marine Corps
Navy
Total, all services
Combat specialty occupations
18,306
5,422
2
3,990
5,626
33,346
Engineering, science, and technical occupations
17,368
15,902
1,715
3,044
15,413
53,442
Executive, administrative, and managerial occupations
10,139
9,579
388
2,398
8,234
30,738
Health care occupations
9,775
9,247
10
6,531
25,563
Human resource development occupations
1,369
2,406
247
23
3,807
7,852
Media and public affairs occupations
177
503
15
131
932
1,758
Protective service occupations
2,174
1,838
172
174
855
5,213
Support services occupations
1,500
836
40
1,654
4,030
Transportation occupations
12,612
19,710
3,244
6,258
12,679
54,503
Total, by service
73,420
65,443
5,793
16,058
55,731
216,445
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Defense, Defense Manpower Data
Center East
Military personnel are stationed throughout the United States and in
many countries around the world. More than half of all military jobs are
located in California, Texas, North Carolina, Virginia, Florida, and
Georgia. About 395,000 individuals were stationed outside the United
States in 2002, including those assigned to ships at sea. Approximately
104,000 of these were stationed in Europe, mainly in Germany, and
another 85,000 were assigned to East Asia and the Pacific area, mostly
in Japan and the Republic of Korea.
Qualifications, Training, and AdvancementEnlisted personnel.
In order to join the services, enlisted personnel must sign a legal
agreement called an enlistment contract, which usually involves a
commitment to 8 years of service. Depending on the terms of the
contract, 2 to 6 years are spent on active duty, and the balance is
spent in the reserves. The enlistment contract obligates the service to
provide the agreed-upon job, rating, pay, cash bonuses for enlistment in
certain occupations, medical and other benefits, occupational training,
and continuing education. In return, enlisted personnel must serve
satisfactorily for the period specified.
Requirements for each service vary, but certain qualifications for
enlistment are common to all branches. In order to enlist, one must be
between 17 and 35 years old, be a U.S. citizen or an alien holding
permanent resident status, not have a felony record, and possess a birth
certificate. Applicants who are aged 17 must have the consent of a
parent or legal guardian before entering the service. Coast Guard
enlisted personnel must enter active duty before their 28th birthday,
whereas Marine Corps enlisted personnel must not be over the age of 29.
Applicants must both pass a written examination—the Armed Services
Vocational Aptitude Battery—and meet certain minimum physical
standards, such as height, weight, vision, and overall health. All
branches of the Armed Forces require high school graduation or its
equivalent for certain enlistment options. In 2003, nearly 9 out of 10
recruits were high school graduates.
People thinking about enlisting in the military should learn as much
as they can about military life before making a decision. Doing so is
especially important if you are thinking about making the military a
career. Speaking to friends and relatives with military experience is a
good idea. Find out what the military can offer you and what it will
expect in return. Then, talk to a recruiter, who can determine whether
you qualify for enlistment, explain the various enlistment options, and
tell you which military occupational specialties currently have
openings. Bear in mind that the recruiter’s job is to recruit
promising applicants into his or her branch of military service, so the
information that the recruiter gives you is likely to stress the
positive aspects of military life in the branch in which he or she
serves.
Ask the recruiter for the branch you have chosen to assess your
chances of being accepted for training in the occupation of your choice,
or, better still, take the aptitude exam to see how well you score. The
military uses this exam as a placement exam, and test scores largely
determine an individual’s chances of being accepted into a particular
training program. Selection for a particular type of training depends on
the needs of the service, your general and technical aptitudes, and your
personal preference. Because all prospective recruits are required to
take the exam, those who do so before committing themselves to enlist
have the advantage of knowing in advance whether they stand a good
chance of being accepted for training in a particular specialty. The
recruiter can schedule you for the Armed Services Vocational Aptitude
Battery without any obligation. Many high schools offer the exam as an
easy way for students to explore the possibility of a military career,
and the test also affords an insight into career areas in which the
student has demonstrated aptitudes and interests.
If you decide to join the military, the next step is to pass the
physical examination and sign an enlistment contract. Negotiating the
contract involves choosing, qualifying for, and agreeing on a number of
enlistment options, such as the length of active-duty time, which may
vary according to the option. Most active-duty programs have first-term
enlistments of 4 years, although there are some 2-, 3-, and 6-year
programs. The contract also will state the date of enlistment and other
options—for example, bonuses and the types of training to be received.
If the service is unable to fulfill any of its obligations under the
contract, such as providing a certain kind of training, the contract may
become null and void.
All branches of the Armed Services offer a “delayed-entry
program” by which an individual can delay entry into active duty for
up to 1 year after enlisting. High school students can enlist during
their senior year and enter a service after graduation. Others choose
this program because the job training they desire is not currently
available, but will be within the coming year, or because they need time
to arrange their personal affairs.
Women are eligible to enter most military specialties; for example,
they may become mechanics, missile maintenance technicians,
heavy-equipment operators, and fighter pilots, or they may enter into
medical care, administrative support, and intelligence specialties.
Generally, only occupations involving direct exposure to combat are
excluded.
People planning to apply the skills gained through military training
to a civilian career should first determine how good the prospects are
for civilian employment in jobs related to the military specialty that
interests them. Second, they should know the prerequisites for the
related civilian job. Because many civilian occupations require a
license, certification, or minimum level of education, it is important
to determine whether military training is sufficient for a person to
enter the civilian equivalent or, if not, what additional training will
be required. Other Handbook statements discuss the job outlook,
training requirements, and other aspects of civilian occupations for
which military training and experience are helpful. Additional
information often can be obtained from school counselors.
Following enlistment, new members of the Armed Forces undergo
recruit training, better known as “basic” training. Through courses
in military skills and protocol recruit training provides a 6- to
12-week introduction to military life. Days and nights are carefully
structured and include rigorous physical exercise designed to improve
strength and endurance and build each unit’s cohesion.
Following basic training, most recruits take additional training at
technical schools that prepare them for a particular military
occupational specialty. The formal training period generally lasts from
10 to 20 weeks, although training for certain occupations—nuclear
power plant operator, for example—may take as long as a year. Recruits
not assigned to classroom instruction receive on-the-job training at
their first duty assignment.
Many service people get college credit for the technical training
they receive on duty, which, combined with off-duty courses, can lead to
an associate degree through programs in community colleges such as the
Community College of the Air Force. In addition to on-duty training,
military personnel may choose from a variety of educational programs.
Most military installations have tuition assistance programs for people
wishing to take courses during off-duty hours. The courses may be
correspondence courses or courses in degree programs offered by local
colleges or universities. Tuition assistance pays up to 75 percent of
college costs. Also available are courses designed to help service
personnel earn high school equivalency diplomas. Each branch of the
service provides opportunities for full-time study to a limited number
of exceptional applicants. Military personnel accepted into these highly
competitive programs—in law or medicine, for example—receive full
pay, allowances, tuition, and related fees. In return, they must agree
to serve an additional amount of time in the service. Other highly
selective programs enable enlisted personnel to qualify as commissioned
officers through additional military training.
Warrant officers. Warrant officers are technical and
tactical leaders who specialize in a specific technical area; for
example, Army aviators make up one group of warrant officers. The Army
Warrant Officer Corps constitutes less than 5 percent of the total Army.
Although the Corps is small in size, its level of responsibility is
high. Its members receive extended career opportunities, worldwide
leadership assignments, and increased pay and retirement benefits.
Selection to attend the Warrant Officer Candidate School is highly
competitive and restricted to those with the rank of E5 or higher (table
3.)
Table 3. Military rank and employment
for active duty personnel, June 2003
Grade
Army
Navy and Coast Guard
Air Force
Marine Corps
Total Employment
Commissioned officers:
O-10
General
Admiral
General
General
35
O-9
Lieutenant General
Vice Admiral
Lieutenant General
Lieutenant General
126
O-8
Major General
Rear Admiral Upper
Major General
Major General
282
O-7
Brigadier General
Rear Admiral Lower
Brigadier General
Brigadier General
446
O-6
Colonel
Captain
Colonel
Colonel
11,884
O-5
Lieutenant Colonel
Commander
Lieutenant Colonel
Lieutenant Colonel
28,565
O-4
Major
Lieutenant Commander
Major
Major
44,501
O-3
Captain
Lieutenant
Captain
Captain
69,184
O-2
1st Lieutenant
Lieutenant (JG)
1st Lieutenant
1st Lieutenant
29,416
O-1
2nd Lieutenant
Ensign
2nd Lieutenant
2nd Lieutenant
28,597
Warrant officers:
W-5
Chief Warrant Officer
Chief Warrant Officer
Chief Warrant Officer
504
W-4
Chief Warrant Officer
Chief Warrant Officer
Chief Warrant Officer
2,082
W-3
Chief Warrant Officer
Chief Warrant Officer
Chief Warrant Officer
4,385
W-2
Chief Warrant Officer
Chief Warrant Officer
Chief Warrant Officer
6,118
W-1
Warrant Officer
Warrant Officer
Warrant Officer
2,603
Enlisted personnel:
E-9
Sergeant Major
Master Chief
Chief Master Sergeant
Sergeant Major
10,869
Petty Officer
E-8
1st Sergeant/Master Sergeant
Senior Chief Petty Officer
Senior Master Sergeant
Master Sergeant/1st Sergeant
26,545
E-7
Sergeant First Class
Chief Petty Officer
Master Sergeant
Gunnery Sergeant
100,002
E-6
Staff Sergeant
Petty Officer 1st Class
Technical Sergeant
Staff Sergeant
175,281
E-5
Sergeant
Petty Officer 2nd Class
Staff Sergeant
Sergeant
251,122
E-4
Corporal/Specialist
Petty Officer 3rd Class
Senior Airman
Corporal
268,606
E-3
Private First Class
Seaman
Airman 1st Class
Lance Corporal
218,219
E-2
Private
Seaman Apprentice
Airman
Private 1st Class
83,423
E-1
Private
Seaman Recruit
Airman Basic
Private
53,211
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Defense
Officers. Officer training in the Armed Forces is
provided through the Federal service academies (Military, Naval, Air
Force, and Coast Guard); the Reserve Officers Training Corps (ROTC)
program offered at many colleges and universities; Officer Candidate
School (OCS) or Officer Training School (OTS); the National Guard (State
Officer Candidate School programs); the Uniformed Services University of
Health Sciences; and other programs. All are highly selective and are
good options for those wishing to make the military a career. Persons
interested in obtaining training through the Federal service academies
must be single to enter and graduate, while those seeking training
through OCS, OTS, or ROTC need not be single. Single parents with one or
more minor dependents are not eligible to become commissioned officers.
Federal service academies provide a 4-year college program leading
to a bachelor-of-science degree. Midshipmen or cadets are provided free
room and board, tuition, medical and dental care, and a monthly
allowance. Graduates receive regular or reserve commissions and have a
5-year active-duty obligation, or more if they are entering flight
training.
To become a candidate for appointment as a cadet or midshipman in
one of the service academies, applicants are required to obtain a
nomination from an authorized source, usually a member of Congress.
Candidates do not need to know a member of Congress personally to
request a nomination. Nominees must have an academic record of the
requisite quality, college aptitude test scores above an established
minimum, and recommendations from teachers or school officials; they
also must pass a medical examination. Appointments are made from the
list of eligible nominees. Appointments to the Coast Guard Academy,
however, are based strictly on merit and do not require a nomination.
ROTC programs train students in about 950 Army, approximately 70
Navy and Marine Corps, and around 1,000 Air Force units at participating
colleges and universities. Trainees take 2 to 5 hours of military
instruction a week, in addition to regular college courses. After
graduation, they may serve as officers on active duty for a stipulated
period. Some may serve their obligation in the Reserves or National
Guard. In the last 2 years of a ROTC program, students receive a monthly
allowance while attending school, as well as additional pay for summer
training. ROTC scholarships for 2, 3, and 4 years are available on a
competitive basis. All scholarships pay for tuition and have allowances
for subsistence, textbooks, supplies, and other costs.
College graduates can earn a commission in the Armed Forces through
OCS or OTS programs in the Army, Navy, Air Force, Marine Corps, Coast
Guard, and National Guard. These officers generally must serve their
obligation on active duty. Those with training in certain health
professions may qualify for direct appointment as officers. In the case
of persons studying for the health professions, financial assistance and
internship opportunities are available from the military in return for
specified periods of military service. Prospective medical students can
apply to the Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences, which
offers free tuition in a program leading to a doctor-of-medicine (M.D.)
degree. In return, graduates must serve for 7 years in either the
military or the U.S. Public Health Service. Direct appointments also are
available for those qualified to serve in other specialty areas, such as
the judge advocate general (legal) or chaplain corps. Flight training is
available to commissioned officers in each branch of the Armed Forces.
In addition, the Army has a direct enlistment option to become a warrant
officer aviator.
Each service has different criteria for promoting personnel.
Generally, the first few promotions for both enlisted and officer
personnel come easily; subsequent promotions are much more competitive.
Criteria for promotion may include time in service and in grade, job
performance, a fitness report (supervisor’s recommendation), and the
passing of written examinations. People who are passed over for
promotion several times generally must leave the military. Table 3 shows
the officer, warrant officer, and enlisted ranks by service.
Opportunities should be good for qualified individuals in all
branches of the Armed Forces through 2012. Many military personnel
retire with a pension after 20 years of service, while they still are
young enough to start a new career. More than 365,000 enlisted personnel
and officers must be recruited each year to replace those who complete
their commitment or retire. Since the end of the draft in 1973, the
military has met its personnel requirements with volunteers. When the
economy is good and civilian employment opportunities generally are more
favorable, it is more difficult for all the services to meet their
recruitment quotas. By contrast, it is much easier to do so during a
recession.
America’s strategic position is stronger than it has been in
decades. Despite reductions in personnel due to the elimination of the
threat from Eastern Europe and Russia, the number of active-duty
personnel is expected to remain roughly constant through 2012. However,
recent conflicts in other countries and the resulting strain on the
Armed Forces may lead to an increasing number of active-duty personnel.
The Armed Forces’ current goal is to maintain a sufficient force to
fight and win two major regional conflicts at the same time. Political
events, however, could cause these plans to change.
Educational requirements will continue to rise as military jobs
become more technical and complex. High school graduates and applicants
with a college background will be sought to fill the ranks of enlisted
personnel, while virtually all officers will need at least a
bachelor’s degree and, in some cases, an advanced degree as well.
The earnings structure for military personnel is shown in table 4.
Most enlisted personnel started as recruits at Grade E-1 in 2003;
however, those with special skills or above-average education started as
high as Grade E-4. Most warrant officers had started at Grade W-1 or
W-2, depending upon their occupational and academic qualifications and
the branch of service of which they were a member, but warrant officer
is not an entry-level occupation and, consequently, these individuals
all had previous military service. Most commissioned officers started at
Grade O-1; some with advanced education started at Grade O-2, and some
highly trained officers—for example, physicians and dentists—started
as high as Grade O-3. Pay varies by total years of service as well as
rank. Because it usually takes many years to reach the higher ranks,
most personnel in higher ranks receive the higher pay rates awarded to
those with many years of service.
In addition to receiving their basic pay, military personnel are
provided with free room and board (or a tax-free housing and subsistence
allowance), free medical and dental care, a military clothing allowance,
military supermarket and department store shopping privileges, 30 days
of paid vacation a year (referred to as leave), and travel
opportunities. In many duty stations, military personnel may receive a
housing allowance that can be used for off-base housing. This allowance
can be substantial, but varies greatly by rank and duty station. For
example, in July 2003, the housing allowance for an E-4 with dependents
was $505 per month; for a comparable individual without dependents, it
was $353. The allowance for an O-4 with dependents was $961 per month;
for a person without dependents, it was $836. Other allowances are paid
for foreign duty, hazardous duty, submarine and flight duty, and
employment as a medical officer. Athletic and other facilities—such as
gymnasiums, tennis courts, golf courses, bowling centers, libraries, and
movie theaters—are available on many military installations. Military
personnel are eligible for retirement benefits after 20 years of
service.
The Veterans Administration (VA) provides numerous benefits to those
who have served at least 2 years in the Armed Forces. Veterans are
eligible for free care in VA hospitals for all service-related
disabilities, regardless of time served; those with other medical
problems are eligible for free VA care if they are unable to pay the
cost of hospitalization elsewhere. Admission to a VA medical center
depends on the availability of beds, however. Veterans also are eligible
for certain loans, including loans to purchase a home. Veterans,
regardless of health, can convert a military life insurance policy to an
individual policy with any participating company in the veteran’s
State of residence. In addition, job counseling, testing, and placement
services are available.
Veterans who participate in the New Montgomery GI Bill Program
receive educational benefits. Under this program, Armed Forces personnel
may elect to deduct up to $100 a month from their pay during the first
12 months of active duty, putting the money toward their future
education. Veterans who serve on active duty for more than 2 years or
who put in 2 years’ active duty plus 4 years in the Selected Reserve
will receive $528 a month in basic benefits for 36 months. Those who
enlist and serve for 2 years will receive $429 a month for 36 months. In
addition, each service provides its own contributions to the
enlistee’s future education. The sum of the amounts from all these
sources becomes the service member’s educational fund. Upon separation
from active duty, the fund can be used to finance educational costs at
any VA-approved institution. Among those institutions which are approved
by the VA are many vocational, correspondence, certification, business,
technical, and flight-training schools; community and junior colleges;
and colleges and universities.
Table 4. Military basic monthly pay by
grade for active duty personnel, June 1, 2003
Years of service
Grade
Years of service
Less than 2
Over 4
Over 8
Over 12
Over 16
Over 20
O-10
$11,874.90
O-9
10,563.60
O-8
$7,474.50
$7,927.20
$8,468.70
$8,868.90
$9,238.20
10,008.90
O-7
6,210.90
6,739.20
7,120.80
7,559.40
8,468.70
9,051.30
O-6
4,603.20
5388.9
5,641.20
5672.1
6,564.30
7,233.30
O-5
3,837.60
4,678.50
4,977.00
5,403.00
5,991.90
6,329.10
O-4
3,311.10
4,145.70
4,637.70
5,201.40
5,471.10
O-3
2,911.20
3,883.50
4,273.50
4,623.30
O-2
2,515.20
3,410.00
O-1
2,183.70
2,746.80
W-5
5,169.30
W-4
3,088.10
3,420.60
3,733.50
4,044.60
4,356.00
4,664.40
W-3
2,747.10
3,017.70
3,281.70
3,580.50
3,915.60
4,201.50
W-2
2,416.50
2,763.00
2,993.10
3,264.00
3,453.90
3,705.90
W-1
2,133.90
2,501.10
2,782.20
3,006.90
3,203.40
3,409.50
E-9
3,645.00
3,687.00
4,180.80
E-8
2,975.40
3,141.30
3,342.00
3,625.50
E-7
2,068.50
2,428.20
2,667.90
2,838.30
3,066.30
3,182.70
E-6
1,770.60
2,117.10
2,400.90
2,562.30
2,663.10
2709.60
E-5
1,625.40
1,903.50
2,151.90
2,283.30
2,283.30
E-4
1,502.70
1,749.30
1824.00
E-3
1,356.90
1,528.80
E-2
1,290.00
E-1 4mos+
1,150.80
E-1 <4mos
1,064.70
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Defense, Defense Finance and
Accounting Service
Links to non-BLS Internet sites are provided for your
convenience and do not constitute an endorsement.
Each of the military services publishes Handbooks, fact
sheets, and pamphlets describing entrance requirements, training and
advancement opportunities, and other aspects of military careers. These
publications are widely available at all recruiting stations, at most
State employment service offices, and in high schools, colleges, and
public libraries. Information on educational and other veterans’
benefits is available from VA offices located throughout the country.
In addition, the Defense Manpower Data Center, an agency of the U.S.
Department of Defense, publishes Military Career Guide Online, a
compendium of military occupational, training, and career information
designed for use by students and jobseekers. This information is
available on the Internet: http://www.todaysmilitary.com
Suggested citation: Bureau of Labor Statistics,
U.S. Department of Labor, Occupational Outlook Handbook,
2004-05 Edition,
Job Opportunities in the Armed Forces
, on the Internet at http://www.bls.gov/oco/
ocos249.htm
(visited March 09, 2005).