The Commander-in-Chief is in charge of the Army, Navy, Air Force, & Marines and he/she decides where troops are stationed in order to protect the U.S.'s best interests.
The President is the Commander in Chief of all of the U.S. Armed Forces: The Marines, Army, Navy, Air Force, and Coast Guard.
Dear Chief ______: If he is a Senior Chief PO or Master Chief PO, then it would be "Dear Senior Chief _____ or Dear Master Chief ______."
The Commander and Chief of the Continental Army was General (later, President) George Washington.
Washington
the president
The Commander-in-Chief is in charge of the Army, Navy, Air Force, & Marines and he/she decides where troops are stationed in order to protect the U.S.'s best interests.
The Commander-in-Chief is in charge of the Army, Navy, Air Force, & Marines and he/she decides where troops are stationed in order to protect the U.S.'s best interests.
The President of the United States is the Commander in Chief of all branches of the US military. The branches are: Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines and Coast Guard.The US President .
The Commander-in-Chief is in charge of the Army, Navy, Air Force, & Marines and he/she decides where troops are stationed in order to protect the U.S.'s best interests.
No. Commander is a job title (e.g., Company Commander, Battalion Commander, Brigade Commander, Division Commander, Corps Commander, etc.), but not a rank. Lieutenant Commander and Commander exist as ranks only in the Navy. Lieutenant Commander is equivalent to a Major in the Army, Air Force, and Marines, and Commander is equivalent is Lieutenant Colonel in the Army, Air Force, and Marines.
The US President is Commander in Chief of all the US Military Forces (US Navy, US Air Force, US Army (US Marines are part of the US Navy) 24 hours a day, 365 days a year.
The President is the Commander in Chief of all of the U.S. Armed Forces: The Marines, Army, Navy, Air Force, and Coast Guard.
Commander in Chief
The President of the United States is Commander-in-Chief of the US armed forces, which include the army, navy and marines, air force, and coast guard. Presidents of other countries may have other relationships to their armed forces.
I think you mean "commander in chief"-- this is another expression that describes the President of the United States. The president is the commander in chief of the U.S. military. This means he makes the decision when to go to war, and the leading generals of all the armed forces (Army, Navy, Marines, etc) report to the president.
Dear Chief ______: If he is a Senior Chief PO or Master Chief PO, then it would be "Dear Senior Chief _____ or Dear Master Chief ______."