Article 7
Article 91-Insubordinate conduct toward warrant officer, NCO, or PO
Read article 91 of the UCMJ manual
If he is ordering you to then yes, but ethically, it is not proper.Addendum:An NCO who reasonably believes that a soldier is a disruptive influence may act accordingly to minimize or correct this disruptive behavior. This might include issuing a lawful order to others to avoid or minimize contact with the disruptive soldier. An NCO who orders others thus in a vengeful or malicious way is acting contrary to Army Regs and UCMJ.
Technically you can be flagged for not completing an NCOER as a Rater, if you are an NCO in the US Army and have other NCO's under you it is your responsibility to conduct the proper measures to ensure your junior NCO's have the same opportunities for potential success in the Army as you have had. The only way you would be flagged would be by UCMJ for either actions unbecoming of an NCO or failure to preform duties as an NCO. In my personal opinion and if you were in my platoon, company or battalion and under me I would make sure that you yourself would find a swift demotion in your near future because you are a perfect example of a poor NCO, do you expect your NCOER to be done on time, if its not how will it effect your potential professional growth suffer.
World War 1
What article of the UCMJ covers fraternization
There are 62 Punitive Articles of the UCMJ.
(UCMJ) Means The Uniform Code of Military Justice
aparently YES. THAT WOULD BE PUNISHABLE UNDER ARTICLE 92, FAILURE TO OBEY A DIRECT ORDER FROM A NCO, IVE BEEN PUNISHED BY IT A COUPLE WEEKS AGO, IDK WHAT IS THE RESULT OF THE TRIAL YET.
It is a violation of Article 134 of the UCMJ.
It defines who is subject to the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ)