The National Guard and Reserves are branches of the active duty military.
The same as the active duty army and reserves do.
50 states and it's possessions and territories are opportunities to serve in the Guard/Reserves; land or air. There's no Navy National Guard.
There is an acronym AGR which stands for active guard reserve. This is for members that are on active duty with the Guard or Reseves.
About 550,000 active duty personnel and another 550,000 reserves and National Guard members.
Yes. They are separate components, with their own recruiting.
If you are referring to the U.S. Army and Air Force reserves, yes, they are known as the "National Guard." Actually U.S. Army Reserve and Air Force Reserve are federal reserve forces. Air and Army National Guard are state forces that can be federalized by the President.
As a National Guardsman deployed to a combat zone, you perform the same duties as Active Duty forces, thus the risk level is the same.
well, there's the National Guard, the Navy, the Marines, the Air Force, and the reserves.
Both entities fall under the same pay scale. There is no difference in pay.
Only retired, reserve or national guard soldiers have ID cards.SSG C. HernandezUS ArmyIf you are not in the reserves, active, national guard or retired, you can not obtain an ID card.
The N.G. is larger than the reserves so naturally it is the N.G.
Susan C. Rosenfeld has written: 'Air National Guard at 60' -- subject(s): Air National Guard, Air defenses, History, Pictorial works, Reserves, United States, United States. Air Force