army service ribbon, national defense service metal (if serving during war), global war on terror service metal (if you are deployed you can wear the expeditionary metal).
92f
AIT
For the US Army during the Vietnam War, men went to boot camp (called Basic Infantryman Combat Training). After successfully completing boot camp, they went to AIT; Advanced Individual Training. 1. AIT-Armor Crewman (tank crewmen) 2. AIT-Infantryman (grunt) 3. AIT-Engineers 4. AIT-Cooks 5. AIT-Truck drivers 6. AIT-Artilleryman 7. AIT-Mortarman 8. AIT-Medic etc.
The length of your Advanced Individual Training is dependent upon which MOS you enlisted as. Different occupations require different amounts of training, hence the length of AIT varies between occupations.
EVERY occupation in the Army requires you go through AIT for that occupational specialty.
No, it is not, although some MOS have an AIT in which you receive some college credit for completion. @BurningSaviour Do you learn as much?
In AIT you'll probably only use iron sights, which you need to get the hang of before you move to reflex sights and optics.
Depends. Automatic promotion is six months in service, if I remember correctly, so if your AIT takes you past that point, you'll be promoted during your AIT. If you have less than six months in at the end of your AIT, your instructors may decide to promote you meritoriously if they feel you've earned it.
Depends on your MOS. In you're in an MOS which has One Station Unit Training (such as Army infantry), you would simply continue on as you had before, since you do your Basic and AIT in one package. If you had to go to another post for your AIT, then you'd do that.
You can split it into two parts, BCT and AIT, it's for reserve components only
"What is a ait sensor for a dakota99?"
AR 600-20 as well as AR 350-1