Active
Component Officers
Source of Commission |
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The criteria for
the selection of potential officers for commissioning include age, U.S.
citizenship, physical fitness, moral character, education, and cognitive
ability. Given that officers form the militarys leadership and
professional echelon and that financial investment in officer education
programs is high, the selection standards are quite stringent.
[1]
Table 4.3 highlights the flexibility in officer procurement afforded by the alternative commissioning programs. The largest proportion of FY 1999 officer accessions (36 percent) came through ROTC programsand most were recipients of a college scholarship (26 percent of all officer accessions and 74 percent of ROTC accessions). Direct appointments and academy graduates each accounted for 18 percent of incoming officers. OCS/OTS produced about 22 percent of FY 1999 Active Component officer accessions.
There were Service
differences in reliance on the various commissioning sources. For example,
63 percent of the Marine Corps newly commissioned officers came
through OCS-type pipelines, a 4-percentage point increase from FY 1998.
Less than one percent of Marine Corps officer accessions were recipients
of direct commissions compared to 24 percent in the Navy. In fact,
the Marine Corps does not have a Service academy or ROTC program. Midshipmen
at the Naval Academy and in the Navys ROTC program can opt to
enter the Marine Corps upon program completion. The Marine Corps relies
on the Navy for officers in medical and dental specialties and chaplains,
thereby lowering its need for direct commissioning. The Service differences
are probably influenced by retention rates, budget considerations, and
historical fluctuations in officer recruiting needs.
[1]
See Eitelberg, M.J., Laurence, J.H., and
Brown, D.C., "Becoming Brass: Issues in the Testing, Recruiting,
and Selection of American Military Officers," in B.R. Gifford
and L.C. Wing (Eds.), Test Policy in Defense: Lessons from the Military
for Education, Training, and Employment (Boston: Kluwer Academic Publishers,
1991).
[2]
There is no separate academy for the Marine Corps, but a percentage
of each Naval Academy graduating class pledges to become Marine Corps
officers.
[3]
Non-scholarship ROTC is not without benefits. There is a subsistence
allowance upon progress to advanced training. |
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