I have friends that went to infantry units and others who were in supply. There are a lot of opportunities and you make the most out of your mos. You dont want to do your job because that means shit has hit the fan and people are dying. The mos is pretty dead like others have mentioned. Half my AIT class went to korea, and the rest were sent all over the U.S and Europe. At least when I was there the MoS-Ts were treated like soldiers. You dont deal with many stupid games and formations. The nice thing is you get your own barracks away from the IET soldiers. Your mileage may very because I did this in 2011. The washing and decon stuff is around 6 weeks total. I think each training phase is about 2-3 weeks before you move to the next training portion. So in the grand scheme of things its not as scary as they make it seem. The best part of training is going to the CDTF with the live agents but its a super controlled environment and you detect an agent on a petri dish. Its hot, stuffy, you might wear it for 1hr or up to 4 depending on the weather conditions. This also includes mop4 training, which really sucks. Its broken up into classroom training that covers cbrn terms and things a 74D should know biological agents, chemicals, nerve agents, and equipment that 74Ds use.Īfter that you go into decon which includes learning to wash vehicles in a decon setting, mass casualty decon (you take turns being the "dirty" contaminated soldier and being the clean soldier that gets the "dirty" people to the safe zone). Do not answer n00b questions on the main boards. (8) N00b / Joining questions go in the Weekly Question Thread (or Recruiter Thread) stickied at the top, in the black-on-gold link at the top, and in the sidebar.Links from USAWTFM, ASMDSS and similar at moderator discretion. Moderators reserve the right to change flair at will. The purpose of flair is so we know you have a background in a particular subject matter.
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