The Army and the Air Force

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The Army and the Air Force have many similarities and differences, some of the similarities are the troop’s dedication, diversity, and patriotism, and some of the differences are the way each branch trains, their respective customs, and quality life.

As a Soldier in the Army, with many friends in the Air Force, it is easy for me to see the many similarities and differences between the two military branches. Both the Army and Air Force have troops who are dedicated to both the work they do for the military, as well as the military branch they serve. Army and Air Force personnel must wake up early every weekday, to include weekends at times, in order to work long hours to serve and protect the Nation.

Army and Air Force personnel consist of people of all races, ethnic backgrounds, education levels, ages, sexual orientation, and gender. The Army and Air Force are very diverse when it comes to personnel, the personnel in each branch truly reflect America as the melting pot it is.

Patriotism is shown by personnel of both the Army and Air Force. It is displayed through the hard work and dedication put in every day on and off duty, through the combat deployments and temporary duty assignments separating the troops from family, friends, and loved ones, to every hardship troops endure in order to “fight and win the Nation’s wars.” and “to fly, fight, and win…in air, space, and cyberspace.”

According to Army Field Manual 7-0, the Army trains soldiers to “fight and win the Nation’s wars.” Soldiers receive combat training consistently throughout their military careers, in order to be proficient at hand to hand combat, non-conventional warfare tactics, and using weapons to win any war fought. The Air Force trains “to fly, fight, ...

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....” Angry soldiers are created when a hostile work environment is created and maintained, an angry soldier makes a better fighter. A quote by Friedrich Nietzsche states, “For a tree to grow tall it must grow tough roots among the rocks.” As a soldier who grew to be a successful leader in the Army, I have grown tough roots. Now, it is time for me to let the sun shine down on me, so I may also grow bright and strong. I am appreciative of all I have learned from the Army, and all the Army has provided me with, but now I must branch off and move on.

Works Cited

U.S. Army (2008). TRAINING FOR FULL SPECTRUM OPERATIONS. Retrieved from armypubs.army.mil/doctrine/active_fm.html

U.S. Air Force (n.d). Learn about the Air Force. Retrieved from http://www.airforce.com/learn-about/our-mission/

Fredrich Nietzsche (1844-1900). Retrieved from Friedrich Nietzsche quotes

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