Posted on Jun 22, 2018
The Different Types of Army Staff Officers by Branch
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Did a joint tour with Army Transportation and Logistics officers with some Navy, Marines and one Coastie thrown in for fun. We do Not speak the same language.
LTC Stephen F. SGT (Join to see) TSgt David L. SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth LTC (Join to see) MSgt Don Dobbs Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen TSgt Joe C. SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL MSgt Robert "Rock" Aldi Maj William W. 'Bill' Price Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. COL Mikel J. Burroughs SGT Mark Halmrast Col (Join to see) MSgt Ken "Airsoldier" Collins-Hardy Maj Robert Thornton
LTC Stephen F. SGT (Join to see) TSgt David L. SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth LTC (Join to see) MSgt Don Dobbs Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen TSgt Joe C. SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL MSgt Robert "Rock" Aldi Maj William W. 'Bill' Price Maj Bill Smith, Ph.D. COL Mikel J. Burroughs SGT Mark Halmrast Col (Join to see) MSgt Ken "Airsoldier" Collins-Hardy Maj Robert Thornton
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SGT David A. 'Cowboy' Groth
Thank you for the mention ma'am, did a joint training during the'96 pre-Olympics with Air Guard, Naval and Marine Reserves, definetly strange cats.
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MSgt Ken "Airsoldier" Collins-Hardy
Thank you for the mentionotif Lt Col Charlie Brown. As a Career Staff NCO turned self-employed CMII-MC-DevOps Strategist at Air & Space Ministries, Inc., I still read every website from the bottom up. Old habits are hard to break. I couldn't help notice that the blog stats/metrics at the bottom of Angrystaffofficer.com, which indicated 1,561,767 hits since November 2013. That's valuable operational intelligence and CCIR's on the military state of morale leveraged by Angrystaffofficer.com collection efforts and powered by WordPress.com—https://wordpress.com/
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Pretty funny! For some reason I like the Artillery guys. I mean it's true: There is no problem that can’t be solved by the application of massed and concentrated high explosives. Of course the Ordnance plan is perfect: Blow it up. Just blow all of it up. Odd that I would like them! Hahaha
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TSgt David L.
LTC Jeff Shearer - Frag makes a wicked buzz when it comes by. Or so I've been told! Base plates from a bomb make an even more menacing sound. As do bases from a base ejecting projo. Mk-82s (500lb bomb) and up split down the side and send "swords" out at a few 1,000 feet per second. THAT sounds scary once you've heard it. Proper demo techniques help to limit kick-outs/frag but not entirely. There is a science to ordnance disposal to limit damage that Engineers and other "Demolition" folks don't learn.
We had some SF guys sit through the Demolition section of EOD School when I was an instructor there (not sure how or what strings somebody pulled for that) and they enjoyed themselves. Who wouldn't I guess.
We had some SF guys sit through the Demolition section of EOD School when I was an instructor there (not sure how or what strings somebody pulled for that) and they enjoyed themselves. Who wouldn't I guess.
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TSgt David L.
PO1 William "Chip" Nagel - Woops. You are correct. Not sure how I messed that up. They had the 16" rounds at NAVSCOLEOD when I went through and it is a HUGE round. Bad news on the receiving end!
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Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen
Back during Vietnam SAC would select a couple crews a quarter to go in country to observe B-52 strikes. Our crew never got selected but the stories from those who did were awesome. Doubt there is anything like that today, so we have to rely on what you folks on the ground tell us.
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and for a real fun assignment go joint, when they include all of the other services and other government agencies... a simple conversation takes forever as you are use the same acronym to mean something different.
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TSgt David L.
Growing up in a Joint-Service school, being an Instructor at said school for 6 years and working with joint services (mostly Army) for 20+ years I'm fairly "multi-lingual" to a point. I can talk to my 11B son and know most of what he's talking about. There are always the unique lingo things that needs explanation though.
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Lt Col John (Jack) Christensen
LTC (Join to see) Yup, first half of any meeting is trying to decode their lingo.
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