Call an Army Recruiting office. They should be able to get you one.
Retired US Army General Shinseki is the new US Veterans Affairs Director.
not near enough!
Among the Supervisors of WikiAnswers we have found the following Veterans:Aggie80 - US NavyLparadis - US ArmyUSCitizen - US Marine CorpsIncaBlue - British ArmyRanger22 - US Army RangerViper1usmc - US Marine CorpsDoditov - US NavyC.Hainsaw - US ArmyLazarus - British ArmyBurningSaviour - US Army and Army National GuardBob811 - US Air ForceDr.Q- 7th group Special forcesC3shooter- US Army (retired)TargetDriver - US Army (retired)Mannydlr - US ArmySupervisors that wish to be listed, please unprotect and add your name!
Cement City, Michigan
Col "Name" (RET) for Air Force and Marine Corps, COL "Name" (RET) for Army.
Phil Sheridan. Sheridan ultimately became Commanding General of the US Army from 1883-89, after Sherman retired.
Military retirement pay is generally 50% of your E-level pay when you retired from active duty.
William B. Caldwell, LT GEN of the US Army (retired), was born January 24, 1954.
The pay of a retired four-star general in the US Army is determined by the years of service and the retired pay base. For each year of service, the retired pay base is multiplied by a percentage, ranging from 50% for 20 years up to 100% for 40 years. Assuming you have 37 years of service, your retired pay would likely be a percentage of the retired pay base, depending on the specific details of your service.
Possibly, because right in the middle of WW2, the US Army Air CORPS changed it's name to US Army Air FORCE...and then two years AFTER WW2, in 1947, the US Army Air Force separated from the US Army and became it's own separate branch of service; the USAF. So, from 1941 thru 1947, there were THREE US Air Forces! Any US serviceman being discharged, promoted, using his GI bill to purchase a house, etc. may have joined the US Army Air CORPS in 1941, fought WW2 while a member of the US Army Air FORCE...then did his "twenty years" and retired from the US Air Force in 1961.
WWII GEN Patton's son GEN George S. Patton retired from the US Army and died in 2004 at the age of 80.
That is a question of national security. You will never find such a list unless you have a top secret security clearance.