Short answer: no. Your status as a US Military Service Member has no bearing on the visa or residence status of another person.
Active Duty Operational Support orders
Typically, the captain or commanding officer of the vessel orders the course for the helmsman to steer. Alternatively, the officer of the deck may also issue the course to be steered by the helmsman under the direction of the captain.
Of course. Any officer or enlisted is ALWAYS "on orders" of one kind or another, even if they are "standing orders," such as in a permanent duty station.
All US military orders look the same. They simply say ORDERS on them.
An "apparitor" was an officer who attended magistrates and judges to execute their orders, or a messenger or officer who serves the process of an ecclesiastical court.
Yes. If the noncommissioned officer is mp and the commissioned officer is under arrest. That's about it. Even an e-9 can only suggest a lower officer do something.
No, your parole will be revoked
any Non-Commissioned officer may conduct Non-Commissioned officer business to any enlisted personal under him. Non-Commissioned officers take orders from officers and assign tasks of those orders to subordinates to be carried out
Orders from the president of the U.S. and to support the active duty personnel there.
Wherever you are needed.
specially-trained qualified Panama Canal pilots give the steering orders on ships going through the canal, supplanting the vessel"s captain or Officer of the Deck- the deck officer normally giving the Conning orders.
Yes. It could be done for a number of reasons.