Posted on Sep 4, 2016
What are the 10 most important MOSs in the Army?
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Every mos is classified as the most important job. We all work together as team to accomplish the mission. If one of us fails, we all fail.
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All are just as important, you need food, materials, equipment, logistics, all no matter how small or how big you need them all.
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I say, go ordinance. Small arms/artillery mechanics in specific. Whether you be infantry, cav scout, or artillery, you can't complete your mission with broken weapons
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Assigning importance to MOSs is an ego game. We accomplish the mission as a whole not as individuals.
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I was a 13b field artillery when I did my 1st 3 yrs, then I was a 88n transportation coordinator for 4 yrs and then became a 63m Bradley mechanic
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In 1968 the Army trained me as an Arty Surveyor, 83C if I remember it right. They sent me to Nam where I walked recon patrols for six month, got malaria, came back to base camp and two days latter I was a Forward Observer on a permanent OP. What good is an MOS if the Army doesn't make use of the training they provided? After I took a ten year break from the service I joined the Guard as a weekend warrior. Was building spec houses and had been trying to side one in 30 below weather. That weekend at Guards they advertised an AGR (Active Guard Reserve) clerk slot and I thought I could do that for three years and then go back to contracting. Long story short, I got the job, and I knew that the AD Supply Sergeant was about to finish his tour and that the slot was going to become an AGR slot. I typed orders MOS qualifying myself in Supply and Bn signed off, so when the slot opened I moved into that slot. I have held a lot of MOSs in my 20 years Active service, but I found that serving those that served their state and nation, being a servant of servants, was the most important job.
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I think that all MOS's are important, but I would have to say 94E. I just so happens that I was one, but the main reason is because it doesn't matter if you have all the intel in the world, if you can't relay the information to the "man on the ground" or the "man on the ground" can't relay information to higher, in an expedient manner, then what are we working so hard for. Our goal is to always stay two steps ahead of the enemy. With communications, that is possible.
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From 1995 to 1997 I was a 91B in the Army National Guard... Medic seems like a pretty important job... bustin' our ass to save yours...
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