See a Army National Guard recruiter and he/she will give you a waiver form to give to your commander for a transfer.
Go to a national guard recruiter and get a letter of acceptance for you're commander to sign.
The best thing for you to do is go talk to your career advisor. They can help you set it up where the day after your Active Duty is up, you are in the guard.
It is possible but with the drawdowns lately, it's probably unlikely. If you have a critical MOS that's needed, your commander may not grant it.
It's possible, but it's not the easiest process.
Interstate Transfer is a moot point - there is no Interstate Transfer in the Army Reserve - there is only unit transfer. The Army Reserve is completely federal, and not delegated to individual states in any way. You would have to get a conditional discharge from the National Guard, then enlist into the Army Reserve.
Over 1,000,000 soldiers serve collectively in the Active Army, Army Reserve and Army National Guard.
If you are referring to the U.S. Army and Air Force reserves, yes, they are known as the "National Guard." Actually U.S. Army Reserve and Air Force Reserve are federal reserve forces. Air and Army National Guard are state forces that can be federalized by the President.
Arforgen applies to regular army and reserve component (Army National Guard and U.S. Army Reserve) units.
The US Army National Guard and Air National Guard are the United States' military reserve force. The National Guard forces may be called into active duty by their respective governors to aid in times of domestic emergencies such as natural disasters. Deployment to foreign soils for sustained active duty operations is also possible such as was seen following the September 11 terrorist attacks.
If you are referring to the U.S. Army and Air Force reserves, yes, they are known as the "National Guard." Actually U.S. Army Reserve and Air Force Reserve are federal reserve forces. Air and Army National Guard are state forces that can be federalized by the President.
There is no "Florida Army Reserve", although there are Army Reserve units in Florida. The Army Reserve is wholly a federal agency, which the states have no jurisdiction over. The Florida Army National Guard is probably the agency you're thinking of. While no specific number is published, the Florida Army National Guard is estimated to have approximately 12,000 personnel.
United States Army (includes Army Reserve and Army National Guard) United States Air Force (includes Air Force Reserve and Air National Guard) United States Navy (includes Navy Reserve) United States Marine Corps (includes Marine Corps Reserve) United States Coast Guard (includes Coast Guard Reserve)
The National Guard serves as a reserve component of two federal forces - the Army (Army National Guard), and Air Force (Air National Guard). Policies, procedures, etc. adopted by these branches are subsequently adopted by their National Guard components.
Total force Concept
No, they are very different, primarily in that the National Guard has a state mission, while the Army Reserve is entirely federal. Additionally, the Army Reserve is almost entirely support units, save for a single infantry battalion, while the National Guard does consist of combat arms units.
Five -United States Army (includes Army Reserve and Army National Guard)United States Air Force (includes Air Force Reserve and Air National Guard)United States Navy (includes Navy Reserve)United States Marine Corps (includes Marine Corps Reserve)United States Coast Guard (includes Coast Guard Reserve)