The Coast Guard uses the same rank structure as the Navy. Thus, anyone who wears the rank of Ensign, Lieutenant JG, Lieutenant, Lieutenant Commander, Commander, Captain, or any Admiral rank, in considered a commissioned officer of the Coast Guard, and is also recognised by the rest of the Armed Forces as a commissioned officer, as well.
The correct answer to your question is: as of September 15th, 2004 there were 6,183 Commissioned Officers and 1,505 Commissioned Warrant Officers, for a total of 7,688 officers. It varies by day, depending on accessions/promotions and discharges/retirements, but that should be pretty close even though it's a few years old.
They are officers of the Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard, the Naval Services
They are officers doing the job of recruiting part time.
They can serve in the medical field, but they can't be actual combat medics.
A "non-commissioned officer" an enlisted man with petty officer rank.
DCDR and VCDR
There is no kind of about it. Both the US Navy and Coast Guard use the Rank Master Chief Petty Officer for the highest enlisted rank. Only Warrant and Commissioned officers rank above Master Chiefs.
An American Naval Officer is a commissioned officer in the US Navy or US Coast Guard.
Yes.
yes they do all military branches are paid under the same pay scale
After Coast Guard Reserve Officer Candidate Indoctrination (ROCI), candidates who successfully complete the program move on to Officer Candidate School (OCS). OCS is an intense 17-week program designed to train and evaluate candidates' leadership abilities, physical fitness, and knowledge of Coast Guard operations. Upon graduation from OCS, candidates are commissioned as officers in the Coast Guard Reserve.
Boarding and search by the US Coast Guard. . . . and Officers of the Texas DPS.