Broadly speaking, "officer" means a commissioned officer, anon-commissioned officer (NCO), or awarrant officer. However, absent contextual qualification, the term typically refers only to a force'scommissioned officers, the more senior members who derive their authority from acommission from thehead of state.
The proportion of officers varies greatly. Commissioned officers typically make up between an eighth and a fifth of modern armed forces personnel. In 2013, officers were the senior 17% of the British armed forces,[1] and the senior 13.7% of the French armed forces.[2] In 2012, officers made up about 18% of the German armed forces,[citation needed] and about 17.2% of the United States armed forces.[3]
Historically armed forces have generally had much lower proportions of officers. During the First World War, fewer than 5% of British soldiers were officers (partly because World War One junior officers suffered high casualty rates). In the early 20th century, the Spanish army had the highest proportion of officers of any European army, at 12.5%, which was at that time considered unreasonably high by many Spanish and foreign observers.
Within a nation's armed forces, armies (which are usually larger) tend to have a lowerproportion of officers, but a highertotal number of officers, while navies and air forces have higherproportions of officers, especially since military aircraft are flown by officers and naval ships and submarines are commanded by officers. For example, 13.9% of British Army personnel and 22.2% of the RAF personnel were officers in 2013, but the British Army had a larger total number of officers.[1]
Commissioned officers generally receive training as generalists inleadership and inmanagement, in addition to training relating to their specificmilitary occupational specialty or function in the military.
Many militaries typically requireuniversity degrees as a prerequisite for commissioning, even when accessing candidates from the enlisted ranks.
In the Israel Defense Forces, a university degree is a requirement for an officer to advance to the rank oflieutenant colonel and beyond. The IDF often sponsors the studies for its officers in the rankmajor, whileaircrew andnaval officers obtain academic degrees as a part of their training programmes.
In the United Kingdom, there are three routes of entry forBritish Armed Forces officers.
The first, and primary route are those who receive their commission directly into the officer grades following completion at their relevant military academy. This is known as a Direct Entry (DE) officer scheme.
In the second method, individuals may gain a commission after first enlisting and serving in the junior ranks, and typically reaching one of the senior non-commissioned officer ranks (which start atsergeant (Sgt), and above), as what are known as Service Entry (SE) officers (and are typically and informally known as "ex-rankers"). Service personnel who complete this process at or above the age of 30 are known as Late Entry (LE) officers.[6][7]
The third route is similar to the second, in that candidates convert from an enlisted rank to a commission; but these are only taken from the highest ranks of SNCOs (warrant officers and equivalents). This route typically involves reduced training requirements in recognition of existing experience. Some examples of this scheme are the RAF's Commissioned Warrant Officer (CWO) course or the Royal Navy's Warrant Officers Commissioning Programme.[8][9]
In theBritish Army, commissioning for DE officers occurs after a 44-week course at theRoyal Military Academy Sandhurst. The course comprises three 14 weeks terms, focussing on militarisation, leadership and exercises respectively.[10][11]Army Reserve officers will attend the Army Reserve Commissioning Course, which consists of four two-week modules (A-D). The first two modules may be undertaken over a year for each module at anOfficers' Training Corps; the last two must be undertaken at Sandhurst.
Royal Navy officer candidates must complete a 30-week Initial Navy Training (Officer) (INT(O))course atBritannia Royal Naval College. This comprises 15 weeks militarisation training, followed by 15 weeks professional training, before the candidate commences marinisation.[12]
Royal Air Force (RAF) DE officer candidates must complete a 24-week Modular Initial Officer Training Course (MIOTC) atRAF College Cranwell. This course is split into four 6-week modules covering: militarisation, leadership, management and assessment respectively.[13]
Royal Marines officers receive their training in the Command Wing of theCommando Training Centre Royal Marines during a 15-month course. The courses consist not only of tactical and combat training, but also of leadership, management, etiquette, and international-affairs training.
Until theCardwell Reforms of 1871, commissions in theBritish Army werepurchased by officers. The Royal Navy, however, operated on a more meritocratic, or at least socially mobile, basis.
Newly commissioned U.S. Navy and Marine Corps officers celebrate their new positions by throwing their midshipmencovers into the air as part of the U.S. Naval Academy class of 2005 graduation and commissioning ceremony.
Commissioned officers are consideredcommanding officers under presidential authority.[14] Asuperior officer is an officer with a higher rank than another officer, who is asubordinate officer relative to the superior.
NCOs, including U.S. Navy and U.S. Coast Guard petty officers and chief petty officers, in positions ofauthority can be said to have control or charge rather than commandper se (although the word "command" is often used unofficially to describe any use of authority). These enlisted naval personnel with authority are officially referred to as 'officers-in-charge" rather than as "commanding officers".[15]
Graduates of theUnited States service academies attend their institutions for no less than four years and, with the exception of the USMMA, are granted active-duty regular commissions immediately upon completion of their training. They make up approximately 20% of the U.S. armed forces officer corps.
The ROTC is composed of small training programs at several hundred American colleges and universities.[16] There is no Marine Corps ROTC programper se, but there exists a Marine Corps option for selected midshipmen in the Naval ROTC programs at civilian colleges and universities or at non-Federal military colleges such asThe Citadel and theVirginia Military Institute.[17]
The Coast Guard has no ROTC program, but does have a Direct Commission Selected School Program for military colleges such as The Citadel andVMI.[18]
Army ROTC graduates of the United States' fourjunior military colleges can also be commissioned in the U.S. Army with only a two-year associate degree through itsEarly Commissioning Program, conditioned on subsequently completing a four-year bachelor's degree from an accredited four-year institution within a defined time.
College-graduate candidates (initial or prior-service) may also be commissioned in the U.S. uniformed services via an officer candidate school, officer training school, or other programs:
A smaller number of Marine Corps officers may be commissioned via the Marine Corps Platoon Leaders Class (PLC) program during summers while attending college. PLC is a sub-element of Marine Corps OCS and college and university students enrolled in PLC undergo military training at Marine Corps Officer Candidate School in two segments: the first of six weeks between their sophomore and junior year and the second of seven weeks between their junior and senior year. There is no routine military training during the academic year for PLC students as is the case for ROTC cadets and midshipmen, but PLC students are routinely visited and their physical fitness periodically tested by Marine Corps officer-selection officers (OSOs) from the nearest Marine Corps officer-recruiting activity. PLC students are placed in one of three general tracks: PLC-Air for prospective marinenaval aviators and marinenaval flight officers; PLC-Ground for prospective marine infantry, armor, artillery and combat-support officers; and PLC-Law, for prospective Marine Corps judge advocate general officers. Upon graduation from college, PLC students are commissioned as active-duty 2nd lieutenants in the U.S. Marine Corps.
In addition to the ROTC,Army National Guard (ARNG) officers may also be commissioned through state-based officer-candidate schools. These schools train and commission college graduates, prior-servicemembers, and enlisted guard soldiers specifically for the National Guard.Air National Guard officers without prior active duty commissioned service attend the same active-duty OTS atMaxwell AFB, Alabama, as do prospective active duty USAF officers and prospective direct entryAir Force Reserve officers not commissioned viaUSAFA orAFROTC.
In theUnited States Armed Forces, enlisted military personnel without a four-year university degree at the bachelor's level can, under certain circumstances, also be commissioned in the Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guardlimited duty officer (LDO) program. Officers in this category constitute less than 2% of all officers in those services.
Another category in the Army, Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard arewarrant officers / chief warrant officers (WO/CWO). These are specialist officers who do not require a bachelor's degree and are exclusively selected from experienced mid- to senior-level enlisted ranks (e.g., E-5 with eight years' time in service for the Marine Corps, E-7 and above for Navy and Coast Guard). The rank of warrant officer (WO1, also known as W-1) is an appointed rank by warrant from the respective branch secretary until promotion to chief warrant officer (CWO2, also known as W-2) by presidential commission, and holders are entitled to the same customs and courtesies as commissioned officers. Their difference from line and staff corps officers is their focus as single specialty/military occupational field subject-matter experts, though under certain circumstances they can fill command positions.
The Air Force has discontinued its warrant-officer program and has no LDO program. Similarly, the Space Force was created with no warrant-officer or LDO programs; both services require all commissioned officers to possess a bachelor's degree prior to commissioning.
The U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps and NOAA Corps have no warrant officers or enlisted personnel, and all personnel must enter those services via commissioning.
During the U.S. participation inWorld War II (1941–1945), civilians with expertise in industrial management also received direct commissions to stand upmateriel production for the U.S. armed forces.
Although significantly represented in the retired senior commissioned officer ranks of the U.S. Navy, a much smaller cohort of current active-duty and active-reserve officers (all of the latter being captains or flag officers as of 2017) were commissioned via the Navy's since discontinued Aviation Officer Candidate School (AOCS) program for college graduates. The AOCS focused on producing line officers fornaval aviation who would becomeNaval Aviators andNaval Flight Officers upon completion of flight training, followed by a smaller cohort who would become Naval Air Intelligence officers and Aviation Maintenance Duty Officers.
Designated as "aviation officer candidates" (AOCs), individuals in the AOCS program were primarily non-prior military service college graduates, augmented by a smaller cohort of college-educated active duty, reserve or former enlisted personnel.
In the late 1970s, a number ofAir Force ROTC cadets and graduates originally slated for undergraduate pilot training (UPT) or undergraduate navigator training (UNT) lost their flight training slots either immediately prior to or subsequent to graduation, but prior to going on active duty, due to a post-Vietnamreduction in force (RIF) that reduced the number of flight training slots forAFROTC graduates by approximately 75% in order to retain flight-training slots forUSAFA cadets and graduates during the same time period. Many of these individuals, at the time all male, declined or resigned their inactive USAF commissions and also attended AOCS for follow-on naval flight-training. AOCs were active-duty personnel in pay grade E-5 (unless having previously held a higher active duty or reserve enlisted grade in any of the U.S. armed forces) for the duration of their 14-week program. Upon graduation, they were commissioned as ensigns in the then-U.S. Naval Reserve on active duty, with the option to augment their commissions to the Regular Navy after four to six years of commissioned service.
The AOCS also included the embedded Aviation Reserve Officer Candidate (AVROC) andNaval Aviation Cadet (NAVCAD) programs. AVROC was composed of college students who would attend AOCS training in two segments similar to Marine Corps PLC but would do so between their junior and senior years of college and again following college graduation, receiving their commission upon completion of the second segment. The NAVCAD program operated from 1935 through 1968 and again from 1986 through 1993. NAVCADs were enlisted or civilian personnel who had completed two years of college but lacked bachelor's degrees. NAVCADs would complete the entire AOCS program but would not be commissioned until completion of flight training and receiving their wings. After their initial operational tour, they could be assigned to a college or university full-time for no more than two years in order to complete their bachelor's degree. AVROC and NAVCAD were discontinued when AOCS was merged into OCS in the mid-1990s.
Similar to NAVCAD was the Marine Aviation Cadet (MarCad) program, created in July 1959 to access enlisted Marines and civilians with at least two years of college. Many, but not all, MarCads attended enlisted "boot camp" atMarine Corps Recruit Depot Parris Island orMarine Corps Recruit Depot San Diego, as well as the School of Infantry, before entering naval flight-training. MarCads would then complete their entire flight-training syllabus as cadets. Graduates were designated Naval Aviators and commissioned as 2nd Lieutenants on active duty in the Marine Corps Reserve. They would then report toThe Basic School (TBS) for newly commissioned USMC officers atMarine Corps Base Quantico prior to reporting to a replacement air group (RAG)/fleet replacement squadron (FRS) and then to operational Fleet Marine Force (FMF) squadrons. Like their NAVCAD graduate counterparts, officers commissioned via MarCad had the option to augment to the Regular Marine Corps following four to six years of commissioned service. The MarCad program closed to new applicants in 1967 and the last trainee graduated in 1968.
Another discontinued commissioning program was the Air Force'saviation cadet program. Originally created by the U.S. Army Signal Corps in 1907 to train pilots for its then-fledgling aviation program, it was later used by the subsequentU.S. Army Air Service,U.S. Army Air Corps andU.S. Army Air Forces to train pilots, navigators, bombardiers and observers through World War I, the interwar period, World War II, and the immediate postwar period between September 1945 and September 1947. With the establishment of theU.S. Air Force as an independent service in September 1947, it then became a source for USAF pilots and navigators. Cadets had to be between the ages of 19 and 25 and to possess either at least two years of college/university-level education or three years of a scientific or technical education. In its final iteration, cadets received the pay of enlisted pay grade E-5 and were required to complete all pre-commissioning training and flight training before receiving their wings as pilots or navigators and their commissions as 2nd lieutenants on active duty in the U.S. Air Force Reserve on the same day. Aviation cadets were later offered the opportunity to apply for a commission in the regular Air Force and to attend a college or university to complete a four-year degree. As the Air Force's AFROTC and OTS programs began to grow, and with the Air Force's desire for a 100% college-graduate officer corps, the aviation cadet program was slowly phased out. The last aviation cadet pilot graduated in October 1961 and the last aviation cadet navigators in 1965. By the 1990s, the last of these officers had retired from the active duty Regular Air Force, theAir Force Reserve and theAir National Guard.
Aplatoon from the Australian29th Battalion being addressed by their officer commanding in August 1918
In countries whose ranking systems are based upon the models of theBritish Armed Forces (BAF), officers from the rank ofsecond lieutenant (army),sub-lieutenant (navy) orpilot officer (air force) to the rank ofgeneral,admiral orair chief marshal respectively, are holders of a commission granted to them by the appropriate awarding authority. In United Kingdom (UK) and otherCommonwealth realms, the awarding authority is themonarch (or agovernor general representing the monarch) ashead of state. The head of state often has the power to award commissions, or has commissions awarded in his or her name.
In Commonwealth nations, commissioned officers are givencommissioning scrolls (also known as commissioning scripts) signed by thesovereign or the governor general acting on the monarch's behalf. Upon receipt, this is an official legal document that binds the mentioned officer to the commitment stated on the scroll.
Non-commissioned members rise from the lowest ranks in most nations. Education standards for non-commissioned members are typically lower than for officers (with the exception of specialized military and highly-technical trades; such as aircraft, weapons or electronics engineers). Enlisted members only receive leadership training afterpromotion to positions of responsibility, or as a prerequisite for such. In the past (and in some countries today but to a lesser extent), non-commissioned members were almost exclusivelyconscripts, whereas officers were volunteers.
In certain Commonwealth nations, commissioned officers are madecommissioners of oaths by virtue of their office and can thus administeroaths or takeaffidavits ordeclarations, limited in certain cases by rank or by appointment, and generally limited to activities or personnel related to their employment.[22][23][24]
In some branches of many armed forces, there exists a third grade of officer known as a warrant officer. In the armed forces of the United States, warrant officers are initially appointed by the Secretary of the service and then commissioned by the President of the United States upon promotion to chief warrant officer. In many other countries (as in the armed forces of the Commonwealth nations), warrant officers often fill the role of very senior non-commissioned officers. Their position is affirmed bywarrant from thebureaucracy directing the force—for example, the position of regimental sergeant major in regiments of the British Army is held by a warrant officer appointed by theBritish government.
In the U.S. military, a warrant officer is a technically focused subject matter expert, such as helicopter pilot or information technology specialist. Until 2024, there were no warrant officers in theU.S. Air Force and theU.S. Space Force continues to have no warrant officers; the last of the previous cohort of USAF warrant officers retired in the 1980s and the ranks became dormant until the program was resurrected in 2024. The USSF has not established any warrant officer ranks. All otherU.S. Armed Forces have warrant officers, with warrant accession programs unique to each individual service's needs. Although Warrant Officers normally have more years in service than commissioned officers, they are below commissioned officers in the rank hierarchy. In certain instances, commissioned chief warrant officers can command units.
A non-commissioned officer (NCO) is anenlisted member of the armed forces holding a position of some degree of authority who has (usually) obtained it by advancement from within the non-commissioned ranks. Officers who arenon-commissioned usually receive management and leadership training, but their function is to serve as supervisors within their area of trade specialty. Senior NCOs serve as advisers and leaders from the duty section level to the highest levels of the armed forces establishment, while lower NCO grades are not yet considered management specialists. The duties of an NCO can vary greatly in scope, so that an NCO in one country may hold almost no authority, while others such as the United States and the United Kingdom consider their NCOs to be "the backbone of the military" due to carrying out the orders of those officers appointed over them.[25]
In most maritime forces (navies and coast guards), the NCO ranks are calledpetty officers andchief petty officers while enlisted ranks prior to attaining NCO/petty officer status typically known as seaman, airman, fireman, or some derivation thereof. In most traditional infantry, marine and air forces, the NCO ranks are known ascorporals andsergeants, with non-NCO enlisted ranks referred to as privates and airmen.
However, some countries use the termcommission to describe the promotion of enlisted soldiers, especially in countries with mandatory service in the armed forces. These countries refer to their NCOs as professional soldiers, rather than as officers.
Officers in nearly every country of the world are segregated from the enlisted soldiers, sailors, airmen, marines and coast guardsmen in many facets of military life. Facilities accommodating needs such as messing (i.e.,mess hall ormess deck versus officers mess orwardroom), separate billeting/berthing, domiciles, and generalrecreation facilities are separated between officers and enlisted personnel. This system is focused on discouragingfraternization and encouraging professional and ethical relations between officers and enlisted military personnel.[26]
Officers do not routinely perform physical labor; they typically supervise enlisted personnel doing so, either directly or via non-commissioned officers. Commissioned officers will and do perform physical labor when operationally required to do so, e.g., in combat. However, it would be very unusual for an officer to perform physical labor in garrison, at home station or in homeport. Article 49 of theThird Geneva Convention stipulates that even asprisoners of war, commissioned officers cannot be compelled to work, and NCOs can only be given supervisory work.
^NCOs are 'backbone' of the Army, US Army Public Affairs Office, Fort Monmouth, NJ, 15 April 2009,archived from the original on 17 October 2012, retrieved4 May 2009
^Fraternization Policy Update Reflects Current Operational Tempo, US Navy Chief of Naval Personnel Diversity Directorate, 26 May 2007