No. In order to count for ten years, the service must have been active service for which you received pay. Because you are not drilling, you are not being paid.
Yes, 10 years of inactive reserve service is generally eligible for the issuance of the Armed Forces Reserve Medal. The medal is authorized for individuals who complete 10 years of honorable and satisfactory service in one or more reserve components, including the Individual Ready Reserve (IRR).
That would be an illegal issuance of debt by the US Federal Reserve, which is not authorized to do so by the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 or any subsequent legislation.
Being inactive in the Army Reserve means that a reservist is not currently obligated to participate in training or deployments. They are still a member of the Reserve and can be called upon to serve when needed, but they are not actively engaged in military duties during this time.
Talk to your last units clerk and he/she will get the paperwork started.
The small group of elite banks that is the federal reserve gives the President of the United States of America a list of pre-"authorized" people from which to choose the Federal Reserve Chairman.
In the active reserve/national guard , it is the day your unit must release you from active reserve duty. This means you do not have to drill once a month anymore but will probably still be in the inactive reserve for some time specified in your contract.
Active duty applies to a person who is in the Air force full time, it can also apply to a reservist who is performing active duty to meet his or her yearly obligation. Inactive duty usually applies to a member of the inactive reserve. They are not in a drill status, but could still be recalled to active duty.
Re-up
He's contract will state 8 years. Yes he will have to serve reserve for 4 more years after he decides to get out before ahnd. It is inactive reserves. Meaning they call you in the event you are needed for duty. I got out at 4.5 years and was never notified and never served in the reserves. It is up to the soldier.
They are the Reserve Retirement Credits that a reservist can get for doing military correspondence courses (1 credit for every 3 study hours that a course requires). They are added to an individuals other inactive duty points for the anniversary year during which they were completed.
The Planning Commission (except one rupee coins and notes)
If they are in uniform. Otherwise it is an honorific that has little relationship to the rest of the world. If they are a senior officer, I would be inclined to use their rank.
There is such thing as an "Inactive National Guard." There is also the Inactive Reserves. National Guardsmen meet one weekend a month, and train two weeks a year. Often they are activated and deployed. Inactive Reserves may or may not be activated, depending on the need of the service. Actually, there is such a thing as Inactive National Guard. You will need the National Guard Almanac for a more proper definition. I remeber reading about it some years ago. If you cannot complete your enlistment obligation, you can request it through your commander. This is usually done due to a hardship or serious illness. NGR 614-1