11B is the actual MOS. 11 is the Career Management Field - 11 Series is Infantry Branch, and the "B" indicates that the person is enlisted, and may be serving as Light Infantry, Mechanized Infantry, Motorized Infantry, or as a TOW anti-tank crew member. Infantry officers have the MOS of 11A and mortar crew members have the MOS of 11C.
The next bit is a bit confusing to me, because it seems a bit off. "2" is supposed to be the skill level - a Skill Level Identifier of 2 indicates a service member with the rank of Sergeant/pay grade of E5. After the Skill Level Identifier comes the Special Qualification Identifier (e.g., Airborne, Airborne Ranger, etc.), and then the Additional Skill Identifiers. The problem is that there is no "T" Special Qualification Identifier, and "2T" (in which case, they'd have left out the Skill Level Identifier) is an Additional Skill Identifier for a TENCAP Data Analyst - not something an infantryman would have....
So the 11B part is an actual MOS, but the "2T" bit is questionable.
11B denotes infantry rifleman. 2 is his rank sergeant. and the V signifies he's in a Ranger Batt. so he's an E-5 infantryman in a Ranger Battalion.
The MOS of 812 designates a heavy weapons man, in particular an nco. This was effctive July 1944 for the US Army.
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Infantry may be stationed anywhere the US Army is garrisoned or deployed. In essence, every soldier in the US Army, regardless of his MOS or assignment is infantry.
That depends entirely on their MOS.
I dont know an exact number, but it's the 2nd largest MOS in the army after infantry.
Presuming you mean "chief", the highest ranking officer in the British army is called a Brigadier.
Enlist in the US Army, and request artillery for an MOS. You'll even be PAID to learn that information.
You can go to related links and view all the US Army jobs (MOS) that are offered as well you can view a video on each job/MOS which gives a brief video description. You can also see what qualification and restrictions apply to each. If not you can always go to your local US Army recruiter.
US Army MOS is Military Occupational Specialty. Also, interchangeable with US Marine Mode of Service, but of course each branch has it's own codes and ratings. Best chance to get an answer: Call an US Army Recruiting Center and ask them. They should have a book listing all the diverse occupational ratings and specialties. I'm sure they will give you a swift and precise answer.
The Military Occupational Specialty (MOS) for US Army military police (MP) is 31B. Skill designators (10, 20, 30, 40, 50) identify the rank category of the soldier. The lowest rank starts with 10, so an MOS designation for ranks E-1 through E-4 would be 31B10.
The US Army Reserve is mostly support troops. Combat arms units--infantry, armor and engineers--normally belong to the National Guard. There is one infantry battalion in the US Army Reserve - the 100th Battalion, 442nd Infantry Regiment, which is headquartered in Hawaii, and composed of Reservists from Saipan, Guam, Hawaii, and American Samoa. Additionally, there are personnel with an 11 series MOS in various Reserve units (usually in IT or EX divisions), who serve in an instructor's role.