You could sell it, but I don't believe you can return your vehicle to the dealership for a refund just because you are deploying.
Yes.
Return it to the dealer for replacement.
I'm pretty sure that if you've been accepted into the Military at age 17, you are old enough to be deployed. Once that signature is on the paperwork, you have become military personnel and will have to do what they tell you to do.
Deployed soldiers are usually issued really heavy military gear such as guns, helmets, bazookas and more. These materials are usually very heavy, and very burdensome.
For most occupations, no. Especially if you get deployed.
Admin....95% chance of being a Fobit if you get deployed
You may only file taxes for a deployed soldier if. A) you have a power of Attorney, specifically allowing it. B) you are the Head of Household over the deployed soldier. C) You are the deployed soldier. A general power of attorney does give you the right to file a tax return in the service members name, and the military does provide free tax filing overseas. The deployed service member may also defer filing his taxes until after he returns from deployment if he so chooses without any penalties from the IRS. -Morreale, Keith D. SGT US Army
The same as any other individual taxpayer using the 1040 federal income tax return with the exception that the military has an exclusion from income tax for income that is earned while deployed in a combat zone.
Approximately 12,000 US helicopters were deployed in Vietnam.
The minimum is 180 days of active service duty.
when a person in the military is temporarily deployed for a year, aka being sent overseas, generally without the rest of the family
The senior exits a military vehicle first