yes, you do get to use guns in Australian navy cadets.
So you can go 10th prestige and shoot cool guns.
Yes, you do get to use Guns in the Air Training Corps (UK) such as .22 No8 Rifle and the L98 A2 Rifle and the L81 A2 Sniper Rifle In the Royal Canadian Air Cadets, Cadets are limited to using air rifles (the Daisy Model 853C) and I think on some occasions live firearms.
The Australian Navy uses armored vehicles, aircraft and infantry weapons when in war. Javelin missiles, rifles and Tiger attack helicopters are also used. The Tiger attack helicopter has a range of weapons.
Small arms, machine guns, mortars, artillery, mines.
One would certainly hope so. The criminals certainly have no rules controlling them.
Tanks use cannons; and aircraft use machine guns or automatic cannons (small caliber such as 20mm, 30mm, etc). Tank cannons are called "main guns." During the Vietnam War, the US Patton tanks fired 90mm main guns; while the Australian Centurion tanks fired 84mm guns.
Rifles, shotguns, and revolvers, made by many different companies.
There are no guns in the mii channel and cannot use guns to kill.
Many soldiers of Australia used British equipment, most notably the Lee Enfield which was the British standard issue rifle of the time
what type of guns did they use for genocide
Countries that are members of the UN use guns.
Cadets are, in many countries, linked closely to military organisations. In some countries, cadet refers to a pupil at a military institution. In this case, often but not always, cadets are not in a "regiment". However, in other countries, cadets are officers in training or national forces that are sponsored by a military organisation . Often, cadets in this situation do belong to a "regiment" as a single body. Often, organisations that use the term regiment have some sort of rank structure but this differs in different nations.