No. Most West Point graduates serve in the United States Army.
No way. When a person graduates from a U.S. Service Academy they promise to serve at least 5 years in the branch of their school.
The percent of high school graduates who join the Marine Corps is 0.3% out of the ones that are considered fit for duty. Less than 1,800 people end up enlisting in the army.
Any Graduate with Physics and Mathematics in 10+2, can join Indian Air Force,provided you qualify all the eligibility conditions and apply for the CDSE exams which is the Combined Defence Service Exam-conducted by UPSC to join the Flying Branch of IAF.Just go through the application all your queries will be answered.
a number of Southern West Point graduates sided with the Confederate cause and left the Union Army. I believe General Robet E. Lee join the confederate cause.............
Anyone wishing to join a service has to complete basic training. In the case of Marines, they do not have to attend Navy, Army or Air Force boot camp. As a Sailor, if I ever lost my mind and wanted to join the Marine Corps, I would need to attend their boot camp. On the other hand, I could join the Army or AF with only an Indoc type class.
You would have to return and be allowed another MEPS medical screening, and with medical proof that the reasons for discharge are expunged and not likely to return. All of this would most likely include another medical board depending on the discharge.
Cross Join is jsut another Join
Depends on how long you have been out, if what you did before is what you still plan to do, etc. The general rule of thumb is if you get out of the service and join the same service within a year, doing the same thing, then yes, you can. If you join another service within a year, doing the same thing, most of the time you will be knocked down one grade (E5 to E4). The longer it has been since you previously got out, the lower the rank you will most likely get. Everything is circumstantial. The only truly solid answer you will find is when you are about to re-sign your enlistment papers and you read the contract. Up until that point, no matter what any rule book says or naval recruiter tells you, the answer is fluid.
1
yes.
for passion