Posted on Apr 19, 2017
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It seems to me that officers are recogized far more often then enlisted soldiers. I mean an officer and junior enlisted could do the same exact thing, or an enlisted could do more then an officer and chances are the officer will be given a higher award. Why? I have been in for almost 8 years and only have 1 AAM which is my only actual award.
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MSG Stay At Home Dad
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Man, there are a LOT of officers responding with their thoughts on why the enlisted ranks don't get the amount or level of awards that officers get.

And most of these answers are hilarious. But only because I'm a RETIRED MSG and it doesn't matter to me anymore.

There is an unwritten law in the Army that the higher the rank you are, the higher the award you get for doing a thing. and I am not whining, it really doesn't matter to this retired Soldier so I am speaking objectively.

I have been on the receiving end of not getting the award that an officer who did the same thing DID get, I have put in Soldiers for Awards and seen officers that I put in get upgraded while enlisted (especially lower enlisted) get downgraded for THE SAME ACTIONS.

And when I have mentioned these discrepancies, I have been told "that must just be your unit," "that's probably not what happened," or my favorite, "you don't understand the dynamics of what happens at higher levels."

I WAS the higher damned level. I ran a Batalion and a Brigade S2 Section. And I repeatedly watched as enlisted Soldiers got awarded lesser awards than officers, often for events in which the enlisted Soldier did something well beyond the officer's actions.

This is an Army-wide issue, and one that has been going on for decades. In 1993 as a Private I got an Certificate of Achievement for beating the best time on the "Green Hell" obstacle course in Fort Sherman Panama. My partner, a junior NCO, got an AAM. Later I found out that two officers, a 1st Lieutenant and a Captain, recieved ARCOMs for getting the "best time," which wasn't actually the best time but what translated to the "best time for a pair of officers," which they happened to leave off of the award citation.

In Iraq in 2009 I put a couple of Soldiers in for ARCOMs for their actions in the Intel field. I put our OIC in for an ARCOM as well, because I knew that putting him in for anything less would be a ska in the face that would cause all of my Soldiers' Awards to get slapped down. Our OIC had only been with us for bout a third of the deployment, prior to that we were without an OIC, having myself and one other NCO to run things. Our OIC was awarded a Bronze Star, and most of my Soldiers received AAMs.

I and most NCOs have long understood that the system is INCREDIBLY flawed, and that one just needs to Lee their teeth together and grind it out because the people who would CHANGE the flawed system are the same people who currently BENEFIT from the flawed system - namely, officers. and it's not ONLY officers; Senior NCOs are often given awards that are WILDLY out of proportion for the actions they have taken. Not too long ago a 1SG got an ARCOM for reporting Soldiers who were complaining ONLINE about their leadership. This, to me, says that her "trolling" of these Soldiers is equal in merit to the Army as my actions in COMBAT that merited an ARCOM. Which is, obviously, fucking RIDICULOUS.

I am not trying to offer any type of fix for this, I am simply stating the facts: officers (and to an extent senior NCOs) receive preferential treatment when it comes to awards. Anyone who tells you different is either delusional, bullshitting, or an officer who is trying to defend a flawed system.

And that's okay. My DD-214 is two pages long with all of the damned awards and decorations I received by being in the wrong place at the wrong time for the Army over three different decades, and I've found that once you're out not a single one of them matters.

So drive on, Airborne. Huaa?
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SSG Bill McCoy
SSG Bill McCoy
>1 y
Good thread; but I'd say that enlisted get more VALOR awards than officers. For example, 77% of Medals of Honor have gone to enlisted personnel; 23% to officers. Officer DO get mroe achievement awards, no doubt about it. And junior enlisted are lucky to gat an AAM while higher ranks get athe ARCOM ... some with a "V" device and many SSG's and above get the Bronze Star - even those who spent their entire tour, "inside the wire," whild mor juniof SGT's got far less. Same with the CAB - my son's unit gave all SSG's and above the CAB - again, even those who never participated in a firefight and no rounds landed inside the wire. Meanwhile, PVT's thru SPC's got NO CAB, even those involved in firefights.
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1SG James Kelly
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MAJ Byron Oyler
MAJ Byron Oyler
5 d
MSG (Join to see) - I gave up an MSM at retirement that I trully earned because they downgraded my E4's ARCOM to an AAM. When my Chief asked me to submit a write up to her, I submitted myself for an AAM. Her office returned it saying I should try higher. I never did and did not get a retirement award. If you are going to downgrade my enlisted soldiers ARCOM then F(*K you when it comes to mine. I did not need it like he did.
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A1C Medrick "Rick" DeVaney
A1C Medrick "Rick" DeVaney
5 d
MAJ Byron Oyler - ..
I Didn't Get Many Awards, But The Ones I Did Get Were Issued To The Units, Not Me.
But I'm More Than "OK" With It Because, I Personally, Didn't DO Sh*t To Earn Them. Therefore I'd Be Getting Credit And Acknowledgement For What Others Achieved Before I Even Got There. ... Somewhat Similar To "Stolen Valor"...... I'll Pass
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CPT Jack Durish
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A very reasonable question with a very simple answer. Junior officers, the ones in closet contact with enlisted personnel aren't very adept leaders. They are lucky to know how to do the simplest tasks of leadership let alone something sophisticated like recommending personnel for awards and decorations. Their immediate superiors aren't much better. However senior officers who are well aware of the significance that decorations can have on a military career rarely witness the accomplishments of the troops as individuals. What's the solution? If you witness an act of valor or a significant accomplishment that you feel is worthy of recognition, bring it to the attention of your immediate superior. Suggest a that they submit a recommendation for recognition if they're too dense to take the hint. Write it up yourself if you have to. Then hope that someone does the same for you when you deserve it. If anyone gives you trouble for following my advice, refer them to me.
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Sgt Dennis Doty
Sgt Dennis Doty
3 y
Navy corpsmen were some of the finest Marines I ever knew. Absolutely entitled to the Eagle, Globe and Anchor they wore.
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SPC Infantryman
SPC (Join to see)
3 y
Sounds like a BS officer answer, does not explain the true heart f the problem. Such officer good ole boy system for promotion points, such as an Nco being pit in for silver star being down graded to bronze for saving 2 lives while losing his own, yet the senior ncos and officers recieved the same award for sitting at the fob and planning the mission.
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MSgt Thomas O'Rourke
MSgt Thomas O'Rourke
3 y
I believe that our SNCOs have to be the catalyst here. We have a well educated and deployment savvy group here that can spot noteworthy performance and articulate its relevant merits with clarity and conviction. The SNCO training that I received prior to promotion into that level was focused on this aspect of PME.
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A1C Medrick "Rick" DeVaney
A1C Medrick "Rick" DeVaney
5 d
I'd Like To Comment On This One, CAPTAIN DURISH:
I Must Admit, I Always DID Wonder. "Why Does Someone Be Given A Commission,
Responsibilities And A Title, When Their Degree And Line Of Studies, Have Nothing To Do With Their Leadership Abilities, Nor Knowledge In The Field To Which They've Been Assigned?.. I've Had College Educated People Working For Me; Once When I Became The Purchasing Dept Director For F.M.C. In Indiana; Then Again, When I Was A Business Owner For 27 Years. ... And, If You Take A Peak At My Bio, You'll Discover,
I'm A Self-Educated Enlistee Whom Received ALL Of His "REAL" Education While In The USAF During My 4 Year Enlistment.....I Entered As An 8th GRADE Drop Out..
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MGySgt James Forward
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Don't get wrapped around the axle on awards, sometimes there is not much rhyme or reason. Do you best always, I never worried about any awards. End of tour before PCS orders is a give away award in my book and does not occur that much in the Marine Corps. We also don't give promotion point for them either. Yes, looks nice on your uniform but you evals and performance are what count in my book. Semper fi and keep charging.
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PO2 Lon Hebert
PO2 Lon Hebert
3 y
98f8efa7
GUNNY my son was in the corps 2002-2010 in 2005 he went to fajuallah and on his first patrol he got a bronze star for calling in air support he was a 0621 CPL at the time. he sent me a dvd for the awards ceremony and watched it had tears in my eyes. he is my hero. he did another tour in fajuallah with 1st recon he became a sgt. got out in 2010. went to school over the internet got his degree in IT ENGINNERING. now he is working on his bachelors in IT CYBER SECURITY. The marines gave him the leadership needed to excel ahead. this was him in 2002 after MCRD SAN DIEGO.
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SSG Bill McCoy
SSG Bill McCoy
3 y
SGT Randall Smith - Yes, some "whinning," but I don't think it deserved a "down vote." After all, you weren't in his boots and what he said could be entirely accurate. Frustrations after combat tours are common, and exacerbated by what he said he experienced. Give the man a break.
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CPL Jason Northedge
CPL Jason Northedge
3 y
I'm not a marine but I like your answer. Don't sweat the BS. You can be a great marine or soldier and have 1 medal/award.
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SFC James Welch
SFC James Welch
3 y
All military personnel are judged by the set of ribbons on their Class A’s and the. Badges they wear. They combine to tell the story of you and your career at a glance. It has always been this way. No one thing in Military Life holds so much resentment, jealousy, by those who haven’t been there, done that. This is true of all ranks. The old”I don’t have those so you couldn’t possibly have earned them”syndrome. When I returned from Vietnam it was so bad I wore only my Aircraft Crewman Wings and my highest award was Bronze Stars. My Sargent Major hated a Buck Sargent who had a Silver Star(he was Infantry in the 1/22 Infantry Battalion. He made his already difficult life hell. The man was suffering from PTSD but people didn’t know much about it then. There were also Officers in that unit who hadn’t been anywhere overseas who resented anyone who had been in Combat. Jealousy is a horrible thing!
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