Yes
The National Security Act of 1947 reinforced civilian control by establishing a framework for the organization and coordination of U.S. military and intelligence operations under civilian leadership. It created the National Security Council and the Central Intelligence Agency, both accountable to the President and Congress, ensuring that military decisions and intelligence activities remained under civilian oversight. Additionally, the act merged the Department of War and the Department of the Navy into the National Military Establishment, placing military leadership under a civilian Secretary of Defense. This structure aimed to prevent military influence over national policy, thereby strengthening democratic governance.
(in the US there is no such department. There is however, a Director of National Intelligence, who reports directly to the President and who (supposedly) coordinates the input from the various national civilian and military intelligence gathering organizations.
Virginia C. Allen did not join the military. She was a volunteer and civilian employee for Army Intelligence during World War II.
Join the military, get lucky, and attend flight school for 10+ years.
The Intelligence Corps is a corps of the British Army - its members are serving soldiers. So, no, it's not possible to be in the Int Corps without joining the Army! NB In the British Armed Forces "Military Intelligence" means the intelligence services of the Army (Int Corps), Navy (Intelligence Branch), and Air Force (Air Intelligence/ Reconnaissance), plus the Defence Intelligence Staff of the Ministry of Defence. These focus on military operational intelligence (eg location, type, order of battle etc of hostile forces; field and operational security, deception etc; enemy capabilities/ facilities - supply lines, fuel & ammo dumps, airfields etc; communication interception etc etc), and are concerned with on-going or likely war fighting needs. It does NOT include the Security Service (MI5), Secret Intelligence Service (MI6), and Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), which are civilian agencies of the UK Government whose intelligence gathering remit is far wider than matters of purely military significance. The "MI" ("Military Intelligence") designation is an historical anomaly dating back to the days before there were properly founded military intelligence organisations in the Army and Royal Navy; no longer accurate, nor appropriate, and rarely, in fact, used by the organisations themselves!
If you want to. It's your decision to make, and nobody else's.
The numbers listed below are from a high school textbook are estimated. Axis Powers include: Japan military -1,740,000 civilian - 3939,400 Italy military -226,900 civilian - 60,000 Germany military-3,250,000 civilian-2,350,000 5 Primary Allied Powers: United States military-405,000 civilian-68 France military-122,000 civilian-470,000 Britain military-305,800 civilian-60,600 Russia military-11,000,000 civilian-6,700,000 China military-1,400,000 civilian-8,000,000
As in most countries, a civilian is normally a person is not in the military. Accordingly, an Australian civilian would be an Australian who is not in the Australian military.
If it's not military; then it's civilian.
there are more rules in military than civilian
A villa was a civilian country estate while a fort was a military installation.A villa was a civilian country estate while a fort was a military installation.A villa was a civilian country estate while a fort was a military installation.A villa was a civilian country estate while a fort was a military installation.A villa was a civilian country estate while a fort was a military installation.A villa was a civilian country estate while a fort was a military installation.A villa was a civilian country estate while a fort was a military installation.A villa was a civilian country estate while a fort was a military installation.A villa was a civilian country estate while a fort was a military installation.
Civilian workers in the military provide support to the armed services. Civilian jobs in the military include record keeping, equipment inventory and supply management.