Talk:Warrant officer
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circular definition
[edit]" ...a commissioned officer who is designated an officer by a commission..."
--23.119.205.88 (talk) 04:35, 27 July 2014 (UTC)
- Fixed. Evensteven (talk) 06:07, 27 July 2014 (UTC)
- No, you haven't. What you've done is converted the entire intro to describe what an American WO is. This is not what a WO is in Commonwealth forces, for instance, where a sergeant-major (including the equivalent of a US first sergeant) is a WO and very much within the chain of command. -- Necrothesp (talk) 10:44, 28 July 2014 (UTC)
- Sorry, then. A warrant officer originally (within the Royal Navy, from at least the late 18th century and well beyond) was not in the chain of command, and presumably it was also this way within Commonwealth forces later. The shifting of Royal Navy warrants in the mid-nineteenth century did not apply to all WO ranks, and the definition of chain of command is a separate issue that may or may not have redefined with WO ranks (I don't know). There has apparently been a change in Commonwealth forces I wasn't aware of, but the American usage clearly originates from the British history, even though it wasn't adopted wholesale even at first. Evensteven (talk) 14:52, 28 July 2014 (UTC)
- British sergeant-majors have been warranted since the late 19th century! Unlike most American WOs, all British WOs are promoted from the ranks and many of them are not technical specialists. A British WO2 is equivalent to a US master sergeant and a WO1 to a sergeant major. They don't occupy a separate tier as they do in the US, although Royal Navy WOs did until after WWII. American usage was probably based on Royal Navy usage, but not on British Army usage. See Warrant officer (United Kingdom). -- Necrothesp (talk) 15:01, 28 July 2014 (UTC)
- I don't doubt what you say. I was working off only the information I have, which is not comprehensive. My first object was to eliminate the circularity of wording mentioned at the start of this section. The technical specialty/chain of command thing once had fairly broad application (to my knowledge), and the article mentioned it too. I thought what I had added was compatible both with what I knew and what was said in the article, and thought it worthy of mention in the lead, so I added it there, figuring others would correct me if I got it far wrong. So, thanks for your clarifications here. I do think the article could do more to make clear how the WO ranks relate to chain of command both historically and presently, and hope you might be in a position to improve it in that direction. I just don't have the expertise. Evensteven (talk) 16:22, 28 July 2014 (UTC)
- British sergeant-majors have been warranted since the late 19th century! Unlike most American WOs, all British WOs are promoted from the ranks and many of them are not technical specialists. A British WO2 is equivalent to a US master sergeant and a WO1 to a sergeant major. They don't occupy a separate tier as they do in the US, although Royal Navy WOs did until after WWII. American usage was probably based on Royal Navy usage, but not on British Army usage. See Warrant officer (United Kingdom). -- Necrothesp (talk) 15:01, 28 July 2014 (UTC)
- Sorry, then. A warrant officer originally (within the Royal Navy, from at least the late 18th century and well beyond) was not in the chain of command, and presumably it was also this way within Commonwealth forces later. The shifting of Royal Navy warrants in the mid-nineteenth century did not apply to all WO ranks, and the definition of chain of command is a separate issue that may or may not have redefined with WO ranks (I don't know). There has apparently been a change in Commonwealth forces I wasn't aware of, but the American usage clearly originates from the British history, even though it wasn't adopted wholesale even at first. Evensteven (talk) 14:52, 28 July 2014 (UTC)
- No, you haven't. What you've done is converted the entire intro to describe what an American WO is. This is not what a WO is in Commonwealth forces, for instance, where a sergeant-major (including the equivalent of a US first sergeant) is a WO and very much within the chain of command. -- Necrothesp (talk) 10:44, 28 July 2014 (UTC)
Re “Confusion about Warrant Officer Status” and “what’s the difference between a warrant and a commission?”: Warrant Officers are NOT non-commissioned officers!
[edit]In both of the above named sections, MR2David makes the highly erroneous assertion that US Warrant Officers in the grade of W-1 are “non-commissioned officers.” The ranks of WO1 in the US Army and WO in the US Marine Corps are NOT non-commissioned officer ranks. (The other services do not have Warrant Officers in the grade of W-1 or don't have WOs/CWOs at all.)
Warrant Officers are in a separate rank class (W grades vice E grades) from the enlisted grades. By regulation non-commissioned officer ranks end at E-9, with the exception of the several Senior Enlisted Advisors to the various Service Chiefs and the Chairman of the Joint Chief of Staff (these “super senior” non-commissioned officers have a special pay-grade, which is position dependent.)
While there are a few somewhat esoteric, albeit important legal, distinctions between a warrant officer and a commissioned officer (primarily concerning certain aspects of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, specifically Articles 88-91 & 133), on a practical level warrant officers are officers just as much as are CWOs or any other grade of officer:
- Warrant Officers swear the Oath of Office (the same as commissioned officers) – non-commissioned officers do not.
- Warrant Officers wear officer uniforms and insignia – non-commissioned officers do not.
- Warrant Officers receive officer customs of the service, including being addresses as “sir,” receiving salutes from all persons of lesser rank, having rooms/spaces/areas/units called to “attention” upon their arrival/entry if they are the senior person present – non-commissioned officers do not.
- Warrant Officers are entitled to “by your leave” privileges to approve a request from a person of lesser rank to overtake them while walking in the same direction, and “gang way” privileges over all persons of lesser rank requiring them to make way for the officer in passageways, congested areas, confined spaces, etc.
- Warrant officers routinely serve as unit (platoon, flight, and section), vessel, and aircraft leaders and commanders, officers-in-charge of detachments, divisions (naval ship/squadron departmental sub-units), and sections and may serve as commanding officers of units. Non-commissioned officers do not normally fill these roles unless there is a shortage of officers available.
- Warrant Officers assigned as unit commanders and officers in charge have Non-Judicial Punishment authority over all non-commissioned officers and other enlisted members of their unit (Manual for Courts-Martial United States, Part V, Para. 2a; 2b). Non-commissioned officers do not have this authority.
- Warrant Officers may, with probable cause, apprehend or order the apprehension of any military personnel suspected of committing offenses (including commissioned officers and other warrant officers) – non-commissioned officers may apprehend officers (commissioned and warrant) with certain caveats (Rules for Courts-Martial (R.C.M.) 302(b).)
- Warrant Officers may serve as members of courts-martial for any accused non-commission officer and other enlisted members (R.C.M. 502(a) (1) (b)) – non-commissioned officers (and other enlisted members) may serve on courts-martial only under very specific circumstances (R.C.M. 503(a) (2)).
- Warrant Officers are eligible to join the Officer’s Mess, dine in the Officer’s Field Mess (when one is provided), are members of the Wardroom aboard ship, and are billeted/quartered/housed in officer’s quarters, accommodations, and staterooms. Non-commissioned officers have separate facilities in most cases. In conclusion, Warrant Officers are officers, appointed from the non-commissioned ranks by warrant from the Secretary of their respective Service Branch. Non-commissioned officers are not appointed or promoted by warrant by the Service Secretary, but rather are promoted by orders from their respective Service Branch Headquarters. Non-commissioned officers may receive, especially in former times in the USMC, a promotion "warrant," which is a formal certificate of promotion, but it is not a Warrant Officers appointment warrant, which is somewhat similar in form to an officer's commission.CobraDragoon (talk) 06:14, 29 March 2015 (UTC)
- The US armed forces use the term differently than other armed forces, and that's a great summary of many of the differences. I'm always curious about the social component - UK Warrant Officers are also in a separate class but fill senior NCO billets and mess with other NCOs while US Warrant officers serve in similar roles as commissioned officers and mess with officers yet all rank below a newly-graduated O-1 (2nd Lt.) and their promotion potential is severely limited. Is this to preserve the distinction between officers who attended a service academy? In the UK we can fall back on class as a distinction where officers are from the upper class and warrant officers are not, but in the US it would seem more democratic and egalitarian to promote warrant officers to their line officer equivalents so are US warrant officers assumed to be from an enlisted (e.g. lower class) background? I keep hoping some historians start writing about this so we can improve this article! Kirk (talk) 19:34, 6 April 2015 (UTC)
- Yes, the US interpretation, classification, and use of Warrant Officers is unique. No, it has nothing to do with service academy graduation; the majority of US second lieutenants and ensigns are not graduates of one of the five federal service academies (USMA, USNA, USCGA, USMMA, and USAFA), but rather are commissioned after graduating from their respective service's Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) program at a state or private university or college. A smaller number are commissioned through Officer Candidate School (OCS - for Army, Marine Corps, Navy, and Coast Guard) or USAF Officer Training School (OTS) programs for enlisted members. An even smaller number are commissioned directly from civilian life (primarily clergy and health care professionals) and then attend an orientation course as an officer. The USMC does not have a separate service academy or ROTC program (and does not commission directly from civilian life), but rather commissions a percentage of US Naval Academy graduates and Naval ROTC (NROTC) Marine Corps option graduates. The USMC also uses the "Platoon Leaders Class" (PLC) program (unique to the USMC), which permits students at colleges and universities not having a NROTC program to attend USMC OCS during either two six-week training sessions conducted during their summer academic break or one 10-week PLC combined session (virtually identical to the 10-week Officer Candidate Course (OCC) program at OCS conducted for college graduates and enlisted Marines). The US Coast Guard does not have a ROTC program and the great majority of its ensigns are commissioned through the USCG Academy or USCG OCS. As to promotion to "their line officer equivalents," again US WOs are unique and their positions/slots/billets are purposely not intended to be "equivalent" to the duties of O-1s and above. Warrant officers are by design and intention, "officer-level specialists and technicians" rather than military management "generalists." Besides, in US use "line officer" denotes a specific community of officers, which includes warrant officers (of all five grades) and "traditional" (my use of the term) commissioned officers from second lieutenant/ensign to general/admiral, who are authorized to lead and command combat units. Additionally, while there are some Warrant Officers who hold university (BA/BS) and higher level (i.e., masters, etc.) academic degrees prior to appointment (W-1) or commissioning (W-2 and above), and many who hold two-year college degrees (AA/AS), academic education level is rarely a pre-requisite for appointment/commissioning as a warrant officer. Conversely, the overwhelming majority of all officers commissioned as a second lieutenant or ensign possess at least a BA/BS, with some holding graduate/first professional and even post-graduate/doctoral degrees. For an overview of the history of the Warrant Officer rank in US service, see Warrant officer (United States). CobraDragoon (talk) 00:05, 8 April 2015 (UTC)
- Warrant officers are not unique - they either fill roles that could be filled by commissioned officers or senior NCOs, which again I though you explained very well above. For example, the US services that have warrant officers the vast majority are(or possibly were...things have changed recently) helicopter pilots, but I thought fixed-wing combat aircraft pilots were only commissioned officers (again, could have changed!). There's also some reason the Air Force doesn't need warrant officers, which is unusual considering how other services use them. In the UK there is no requirement that commissioned officers have any sort of degree (eg. Prince Harry) and its considered normal for Warrant Officer to be commissioned at some point in their career. Warrant officers have historically been 'not quite officer and gentleman material for some reason', and personally I think that's still the key difference between a commission and a warrant. Kirk (talk) 14:03, 8 April 2015 (UTC)
- I suppose that we will just have to agree to disagree that US warrant officers are or are not unique; however, they are obviously unique in the US interpretation of their role, status, etc. No, the vast majority of US warrant officers were never helicopter pilots; even in the US Army during the height of the War in Vietnam only about 50% were aviators (and they did and still do pilot airplanes, as well as helicopters). The majority of warrant officers, in all US services that have them, are technical or administrative specialists and include legal (paralegals) and medical specialists (physician's assistants). The USMC and the US Navy have had warrant officer aviators, who also piloted both helicopters and airplanes, but do not currently designate warrant officer aviators. The last USMC CWO aviators retired circa 1981 and piloted KC-130s and OV-10s, while the US Navy had a short-lived program to train CWO aviators to pilot P-3s, EP-3s, E-6s, P-8s, and H-60s. The last being commissioned/designated in 2011. Also, the reason that the US Army does not have "fixed-wing combat aircraft" has nothing to do with social class but rather with politics and inter-service rivalry. The infamous "Key West Agreement" of 1948, and as amended in 1954, and the "Johnson-McConnell Agreement" of 1966 essentially stripped the US Army of any armed fixed-wing aircraft (and intra-theater tactical airlift airplanes) in favor of the USAF, but allowed the army free-reign in the development of armed and attack helicopters. Since the USAF did not then, and does not now, have WOs as pilots, those agreements effectively terminated non-naval aviators from ever having the opportunity to fly tactical airplanes with the exception of the now retired OV-1s, the recent RU-21/RC-12 tactical reconnaissance/electronic surveillance airplanes, and a few C-23 tactical utility transports. The USAF decided to phase-out warrant officers starting in 1959 with the last one retiring in 1992. This was primarily a cost-cutting initiative because the USAF chose to use the then new (1959) enlisted "super-grades" of E-8 and E-9 (designating them as "superintendents") to fill previous WO/CWO positions. This also helped reduce the USAF officer/enlisted ratio which was, and remains, the highest in the US military due to the large number of aeronautical rated officers (pilots, combat systems officers, etc.) in the USAF as compared to the other services. So, as a former CWO who became a "real" commissioned officer, I strongly disagree that WOs are not "officer and gentlemen material." CobraDragoon (talk) 17:18, 8 April 2015 (UTC)
- I think the way the term is used in the US Army today is unique, since 15%+ of Officers are Warrant Officers with their many jobs performed in other services by non-com or commissioned officers (e.g. Pilots) and there doesn't seem to be a good reason for this from the outside looking in. I was flippantly referring to the historical difference - in the US armed forces, there's basically no difference between commissioned officers and chief warrant officers, but in most other armed forces, Warrant Officers are the ultimate enlisted ranks. Kirk (talk) 20:53, 8 April 2015 (UTC)
- Warrant officers are not unique - they either fill roles that could be filled by commissioned officers or senior NCOs, which again I though you explained very well above. For example, the US services that have warrant officers the vast majority are(or possibly were...things have changed recently) helicopter pilots, but I thought fixed-wing combat aircraft pilots were only commissioned officers (again, could have changed!). There's also some reason the Air Force doesn't need warrant officers, which is unusual considering how other services use them. In the UK there is no requirement that commissioned officers have any sort of degree (eg. Prince Harry) and its considered normal for Warrant Officer to be commissioned at some point in their career. Warrant officers have historically been 'not quite officer and gentleman material for some reason', and personally I think that's still the key difference between a commission and a warrant. Kirk (talk) 14:03, 8 April 2015 (UTC)
- Yes, the US interpretation, classification, and use of Warrant Officers is unique. No, it has nothing to do with service academy graduation; the majority of US second lieutenants and ensigns are not graduates of one of the five federal service academies (USMA, USNA, USCGA, USMMA, and USAFA), but rather are commissioned after graduating from their respective service's Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) program at a state or private university or college. A smaller number are commissioned through Officer Candidate School (OCS - for Army, Marine Corps, Navy, and Coast Guard) or USAF Officer Training School (OTS) programs for enlisted members. An even smaller number are commissioned directly from civilian life (primarily clergy and health care professionals) and then attend an orientation course as an officer. The USMC does not have a separate service academy or ROTC program (and does not commission directly from civilian life), but rather commissions a percentage of US Naval Academy graduates and Naval ROTC (NROTC) Marine Corps option graduates. The USMC also uses the "Platoon Leaders Class" (PLC) program (unique to the USMC), which permits students at colleges and universities not having a NROTC program to attend USMC OCS during either two six-week training sessions conducted during their summer academic break or one 10-week PLC combined session (virtually identical to the 10-week Officer Candidate Course (OCC) program at OCS conducted for college graduates and enlisted Marines). The US Coast Guard does not have a ROTC program and the great majority of its ensigns are commissioned through the USCG Academy or USCG OCS. As to promotion to "their line officer equivalents," again US WOs are unique and their positions/slots/billets are purposely not intended to be "equivalent" to the duties of O-1s and above. Warrant officers are by design and intention, "officer-level specialists and technicians" rather than military management "generalists." Besides, in US use "line officer" denotes a specific community of officers, which includes warrant officers (of all five grades) and "traditional" (my use of the term) commissioned officers from second lieutenant/ensign to general/admiral, who are authorized to lead and command combat units. Additionally, while there are some Warrant Officers who hold university (BA/BS) and higher level (i.e., masters, etc.) academic degrees prior to appointment (W-1) or commissioning (W-2 and above), and many who hold two-year college degrees (AA/AS), academic education level is rarely a pre-requisite for appointment/commissioning as a warrant officer. Conversely, the overwhelming majority of all officers commissioned as a second lieutenant or ensign possess at least a BA/BS, with some holding graduate/first professional and even post-graduate/doctoral degrees. For an overview of the history of the Warrant Officer rank in US service, see Warrant officer (United States). CobraDragoon (talk) 00:05, 8 April 2015 (UTC)
- The US armed forces use the term differently than other armed forces, and that's a great summary of many of the differences. I'm always curious about the social component - UK Warrant Officers are also in a separate class but fill senior NCO billets and mess with other NCOs while US Warrant officers serve in similar roles as commissioned officers and mess with officers yet all rank below a newly-graduated O-1 (2nd Lt.) and their promotion potential is severely limited. Is this to preserve the distinction between officers who attended a service academy? In the UK we can fall back on class as a distinction where officers are from the upper class and warrant officers are not, but in the US it would seem more democratic and egalitarian to promote warrant officers to their line officer equivalents so are US warrant officers assumed to be from an enlisted (e.g. lower class) background? I keep hoping some historians start writing about this so we can improve this article! Kirk (talk) 19:34, 6 April 2015 (UTC)
Yes, and the entire premise of this discussion topic is just that; in United States use all Warrant Officers and Chief Warrant Officers are officers, NOT non-commissioned officers, and all WOs and CWOs, of all US services, outrank all persons of lesser rank, including all enlisted grades, officer (and warrant officer) candidates, cadets, and midshipmen. CobraDragoon (talk) 15:12, 9 April 2015 (UTC)
WO6 is a legit US rank
[edit]It's something that's approved by congress, but the military hasn't adopted it. 139.138.6.121 (talk) 14:53, 19 January 2021 (UTC)
"Chief Warrant Officers are commissioned"
[edit]The oath taken by both being the same is correct. But at least in the United States Army, a commissioned officer is appointed with the "special trust and confidence of the President of the United States." Conversely, warrant officers are warranted with the "special trust and confidence of the Secretary of the Army." Similar, but not the same. 2600:1004:B12F:D69D:0:43:15F8:5501 (talk) 02:40, 21 February 2022 (UTC)
Off topic
[edit]@Necrothesp: I am failing to see why a rank that isn't related to the page, is included on the list of countries that use the rank. As you said yourself, the rank of Praporshchik is "effectively" a warrant officer, BUT it isn't. And since this page is called warrant officer, only those should be included. Otherwise we would have around 160 entries all stating that they don't use the rank. There are around 30 countries which use the rank, it would be much better for the page to focus on those instead. Skjoldbro (talk) 16:46, 11 January 2023 (UTC)
- If you think this article should only include those ranks that are actually called "warrant officer" then you should also remove the sections on France, Benelux and Indonesia, yet weirdly you have only removed the section on Russia. It's the inconsistency that I don't get. But anyway, it needs further and wider discussion here. Should we include ranks that are generally considered to equate to warrant officer ranks or only those that use the name? -- Necrothesp (talk) 08:43, 12 January 2023 (UTC)
- To clarify, I think ranks have been included here if they are generally regarded as being in a bit of a separate class from other NCOs. In France, Russia, Benelux and Indonesia (and no doubt others), the ranks described are considered to be a cut above ordinary NCOs, as warrant officers are in Commonwealth countries. They often wear uniforms that are closer to officers' uniforms than NCOs' uniforms and are addressed as officers, for instance. However, in other countries (e.g. the USA), the equivalent ranks are no different from other NCOs (and the USA, of course, has a class of warrant officers who fill a completely different role). -- Necrothesp (talk) 09:03, 12 January 2023 (UTC)
- Yes, I would also removed those. However, since they (unlike "Russia") don't have 4 pages on them already, so that took priority. It is also a section, that is 1) Unsourced 2) provides no useful information, which is already present on the relevant pages 3) etymologically unrelated to warrant officer.
- Additionally, the rank of Praporshchik, isn't always a warrant officer, so it is inclusion is confusing at the least:
- To clarify, I think ranks have been included here if they are generally regarded as being in a bit of a separate class from other NCOs. In France, Russia, Benelux and Indonesia (and no doubt others), the ranks described are considered to be a cut above ordinary NCOs, as warrant officers are in Commonwealth countries. They often wear uniforms that are closer to officers' uniforms than NCOs' uniforms and are addressed as officers, for instance. However, in other countries (e.g. the USA), the equivalent ranks are no different from other NCOs (and the USA, of course, has a class of warrant officers who fill a completely different role). -- Necrothesp (talk) 09:03, 12 January 2023 (UTC)
- So I mean, yes there is a technical possibility to include the rank, but what is said is confusing and useless. "Some countries may or may not use a rank, which may or may not be considered a warrant officer rank".
- If ranks that aren't warrant officers are to be included, then they 1) shouldn't be under "Modern usage", but a separate title 2) reliably sourced, clearly stating why they can be considered as such, fulfilling the (un)/stated requirements. Skjoldbro (talk) 09:38, 14 January 2023 (UTC)
References
- ^ Nyirady, Kenneth E. (1989). "National Security". In Gawdiak, Ihor (ed.). Czechoslovakia: a country study. Area Handbook (3rd ed.). Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress. p. 248. LCCN 88600487. Retrieved 20 October 2021.
- ^ Soper, Karl Wheeler (1991). "Armed Forces and Defence Organization". In Zickel, Raymond E. (ed.). Soviet Union: a country study. Area Handbook (2nd ed.). Washington, D.C.: Library of Congress. pp. 695–753. LCCN 90025756. Retrieved 28 October 2021.
- ^ a b NATO (2021). STANAG 2116 NATO (7th ed.). Brussels, Belgium: NATO Standardization Agency. pp. D-1–D-3.
- I should point out that I have no objection to removing them, since I didn't add them in the first place, but it should be all of them or none of them and it needs wider discussion than just you and me. -- Necrothesp (talk) 10:53, 16 January 2023 (UTC)
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