No. Warrant Officers are pulled from the ranks of enlisted soldiers who apply for WOCS.
Warrant Officers get their authority from the Secretary of the Army, but remain specialists
Most services only have commissioned officers as pilots, and a degree is a requirement of being a commissioned officer. However, it is possible to fly as a Warrant Officer - most Army helicopter pilots are Warrant Officers, rather than commissioned officers.
Gonzalo Ferro has written: 'Recruitment and accession of special forces warrant officers' -- subject(s): Armed Forces, Recruiting, enlistment, United States, United States. Army, Warrant officers
None. The system of Warrants did not begin in the US Army until WWI. There were perhaps some in the US Navy, where, until 1912, graduates of the Naval Academy served two years as Warrant Officers before being commissioned as ensigns.
Nearly 7,000 US military officers perished in Vietnam.
A Warrent Officer is usually a skilled technician, and are often slotted as Maintence Officers. It is an intermediate in rank between a noncommissioned officer and a commissioned officer, having authority by virtue of a warrant. He is saluted by enlisted persons and can use the Officers Club.
no
A warrant officer is the highest rank of the soldiers rank, soldiers ranks range from private to warrant officer. Warrant officers normally would have done about 20 years of service and in the army. A warrant office is a RSM. Regimental Sergeant Major. They only have 1 RSM in a Battalion and the promotion of a RSM has to be approved by the Queen and signed for.
A Warrant Officer salutes any Warrant Officers senior to themselves, and all commissioned officers.
No, they arresting officers do not have to have the warrant in their possession, only the knowledge that it exists.
There are no warrant officers in the chaplain corps. There are chaplains, which are commissioned officers, and chaplain assistants, which are enlisted. No warrants.