A better job in the military depends on what you really like doing. Pick the one that fascinates you the most in addition to your strengths.
Becoming a sniper is a very challenging training regimen. Becoming a SEAL is also a very difficult training program to complete successfully. You don't have to got to sniper school to become a SEAL.
I chose to be a Combat Medic, personally. Soldier is a very broad term, and encompasses a number of roles in any army. Truck drivers, administrative clerks, infantrymen, snipers, tank crew members, helicopter pilots, cooks, and members of military bands are all soldiers. So, even if you serve as an army sniper, you're still a soldiers really what i am saying navy,airforce,coastguard,and marines they are all soldiers they just have different names for the branches BUT EVERY ONE IN THE MILITARY IS STILL A SOLDIER!!!!
Not necessarily. If you wish to become a military sniper, you'll have to be in the military already, of course. If you want to be a sniper in something outside the military, such as law enforcement or some backwoods militia, then no.
sniper
SEALS are sailors, not soldiers. All SEALs receive the same basic training in combat skills and tactics. Then they specialize in specific skills, sniper being one, others include explosives, technology retrieval, corpsman and communications.
marine
Sniper is an Army and Marine MOS. It is not related to rank or paygrade.
I know a good sniper film. It's not from the military but it is a great movie. It's called "The Sniper".
A paintball sniper rifle can shoot father.
O'Flaherty wants the reader to view the sniper as a skilled and strategic soldier who is also experiencing the brutal and dehumanizing effects of war. Through his depiction of the sniper's internal turmoil and conflicting emotions, O'Flaherty encourages empathy and understanding towards the complexities of being a soldier in a war-torn environment.
The handle makes no difference.
John Denver was not in the military, his father was however.