Is it possible for me to commission into the Army (through ROTC) then get a conditional release to be an Air Force Officer?
If you really want to be an AF officer, I would recommend pursuing AF ROTC. Otherwise, if you are looking at pursuing a commission through Army ROTC, you will need to accept that you may very well have to stick with an Army career.
Intraservice transfers in concept work like this: the gaining service has to accept you. The Army then has to release you. Sounds deceptively simple. If you are accessed into a shortage field then you will not get released until your branch deems that your year group is over strength, and then maybe not. I had a fellow cavalryman that was branched infantry. He tried year on year without success to transfer to aviation. He finally got accepted into a naval aviation program to fly Sea Stallions. That languished for months. He finally had to take leave, fly to HRC in DC, found the staff officer that was sitting on it and confronted him directly. To the Colonels credit, he asked one question do you really want to be a Naval Officer. Bob told him yes, and he endorsed the transfer paperwork and walked him place to place and had it approved by the end of the week. A few weeks later he was watching Top Gun trying to figure out how to put his crap on his khakis....there is no transition course.
There would have to be something significant for justification to make it happen.
What I don't know is if you tried floating between the Army National Guard and the Air Guard.
Predeployment lock ins are a fact of life
I had an O-6 recommend from my CO to go here, I couldn't get it, I suggest both NPS and AFIT, as well as USUHS for you (not USPHS, that's the other service I'd mentioned, USUHS is a school, of course, as I'd said), because the moment you go commissioned, all commissioned and warrants are expected, trust me, been there, done that (BTDT), to get to at least masters level, even if needing to go part time, the days when a bachelors would suffice to stay in are, I assure you, at least from my personal exposure, long, long gone...plus, you'll most definitely find you'll need the added training, that much I can most definitely promise you, aside from needing to do your professional mil educ (PME) coursework, USAF was SERIOUS about wanting it done FAST, as in ASAP, from the very day you commission, that much I can most definitely promise you, I'd expect Army wouldn't be any different, honest...just food for thought, OK? As I'd said, if you'd care to elaborate and/or chat more, just ask, I'd be most interested, I'll try to suggest more as well if you like....

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The Naval Postgraduate School (NPS) is a public graduate school operated by the United States Navy and located in Monterey, California. It grants master's degrees, doctoral degrees, and certificates. Established in 1909, the school also offers research fellowship opportunities at the postdoctoral level through the National Academies' National Research Council research associateship program.[3]

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The Air Force Institute of Technology (AFIT) is a graduate school and provider of professional and continuing education for the United States Armed Forces and is part of the United States Air Force. It is located in Ohio at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, near Dayton. AFIT is a component of the Air University and Air Education and Training Command.
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Look at this also, their toll-free phone is [login to see] , if you'd be interested in them at all, esp their Jr and Sr COSTEP, the USPHS analogues to ROTCs and USMC platoon leaders course (PLC), I think they actually use med lab techs (MLTs), I'm also reasonably certain all such programs as COSTEP, the ROTCs, and PLC, can also be applied to be allowed to use for grad school, whether you'd be able now, being as you're, I gather, Army ROTC, I haven't a clue, of course, I just figured you might find their stuff of at least interest to look at, if nothing else, you know? When I'd been doing my allied health clinical doctorate before I had to go total perm disabled, I trained under a USPHS O-6 during my rotations, I'd really wanted to go in with them, it just unfortunately never happened, I'm afraid, trust me, I think you might find their stuff of interest, honest....
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You might also care to look through these, esp the PhD programs in biomed sciences, you hadn't said if you'd had any interest in going grad school, you'd need to do a couple of tours to have a serious chance at this, I'd expect, I just didn't know if you knew about it, at all....

The mission of the Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences is to educate, train, and comprehensively prepare uniformed services health professionals, scientists, and leaders to support the Military and Public Health Systems, the National Security and National Defense Strategies of the United States, and the readiness of our Uniformed Services.
I'm not entirely certain I understand your basic underlying circumstances sufficiently to nenaboe to answer you properly, however, I !merely thought here to offer you another possibility I quite wish I'd known about when I'd gone in, beforehand. I was originally Army ROTC, then wound up going USAF OTS instead, when it'd been at Lackland, not Maxwell as it is now. I'd wanted to ne on the clinical side, however, virtually everything conceivable went wrong, and I wound up as a line engineering officer, doing completely nonclinical stuff, which, while technically interesting, as well as necessary, and for which I was technically qualified, was hardly what I'd gone in to do to begin with. I'd wanted to go to USUHS, if I could've, or possibly osteopathic led, then to have been a flight surgeon, which obviously never happened, I tried to go clinical, I was doctoral level allied health before my now total perm disability, I'd wanted to go this route, I was really eager to try. I was just never able. Sp, indulge me, if you would, on a point, OK? Elaborate considerably as to your basic motivations and history, bachelors, masters, doctoral aspirations, your major, your GPA if you could see your way clear, why you want USAF, what field you want, ultimately, I gather from what I can see that youre medmlab right now, do you want that still? Do you want to switch to something else? Do you want direct patient care of some type? Are you looking to get away from clinical? I can assure you that USPHS, if you want clinical, has amplemties to the regular services, more than sufficient to let you be allowed to try to be assigned to them, e.g., the Army uses USPHS psych related fields, and has a detailed memo of agree!ent to allow such exchanges. I'm not entirely certain where med lab fits into USPHS, I do know USPHS is allowed warrants, though they've never had them, however, might warrant interest you in any service? Try to elaborate, as I'd said, the more detailed info you give the more I and/or others here can answer you, I only also would observe that while I understand your question, others pointed out here that your approach, while I'm certain you evidently have good reason to ask, is, I think, a trifle circuitous, I might, having been where you want to go, though I wasn't prior enlisted, might ne able to help, however, as I'd said, it'd obv help to know a good deal more, many thanks, I'd be most eager to know more, certainly....

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