Yes
yes, you do get to use guns in Australian navy cadets.
All types
In World War II.
water guns
The US Navy has made purchases from Browning many times throughout its history.
They used M1 garands i think shooting at incoming pilots from high stations and gatling guns from the navy vessels well not much guns were used it was a navy and plane areas they used the guns from the vessals and Americans shootong from their planes(hell)
Carry guns? Yes, generally. Work in the civilian population? Not generally. NCIS stands for "Navy Criminal Investigation Service", and they only work on cases that involve Navy personnel.
They can hit a target the size of a bus at over 20 miles.
1. Battleship USS New Jersey, 16" guns 2. US Navy heavy cruisers armed with 8" guns 3. US Navy light cruisers armed with 6" guns 4. US Navy destroyers armed with 5" guns 5. US Artillery: 175mm self propelled guns 6. US Artillery: 155mm self propelled guns 7. US Artillery: M56 SPAT 90mm self propelled anti-tank gun 8. US Artillery: M42 Duster; twin 40mm pom-pom guns 9. US Artillery: 8" inch guns 10. US Artillery: split trail 105mm and 155mm field guns (towed pieces) 11. USMC: M50 Ontos (six 106mm recoilless rifles)
HMS Zulu, in 1984 with her forward and after 4.5 single turret guns.
The United States Navy was created on Friday, October 13, 1775, at a meeting in Philadelphia of the Continental Congress. The Congress voted to fit out two sailing vessels, armed with ten carriage guns, as well as swivel guns, and manned by crews of eighty, and to send them out on a cruise of three months to intercept transports carrying munitions and stores to the British army in America. This was the original legislation out of which the Continental Navy grew and as such constitutes the birth certificate of the navy.
One of his 1851 Navy's is at the Museum in Cody Wyoming, in the Buffalo Bill wing, I saw it there in May 2013...