Find their Facebook page. If you're an immediate family member contacting them about an emergency, you can use the Red Cross to do this - in fact, in order for a service member to be able to take emergency leave over a family matter, this is how it must be done.
There may be one other option, if you know both their first and last name, and it's not a name so common that they have to add additional characters to distinguish them from other service members with the same name, and that's the Army Knowledge Online (AKO) system. You could try emailing them at (first name).(last name)@us.army.mil. Otherwise, there are no resources available to enable the public to track down and contact service members.
You can either look up your nearest recruiting office in the phone book, or you can go online and do a quick search for "(branch of service) recruiting".
A soldier who drills regularly and is not on active duty.
Yes,they do.
No, they cannot.
i do not believe so,how could he be both??
Yes. The date you report in for Basic.
An active duty military soldier can get joint custody of a minor child. There is not a lot of case law regarding custody and the military, but in cases without extenuating circumstances, joint custody can be given.
Someone who has retired from an active duty position with the army national guard can transition to a role with the air force. The soldier would have to meet the requirements for reenlisting.
NO
you will have to contact an education center to find out.
It is called an M-day soldier. Active duty is called an AGR. M-day is part time status.
Normally on active duty it means Point Of Contact.
It's used to describe soldiers and other service members for whom military service is their primary occupation; i.e., they are service members full time. This is opposed to reservists, who soldier on a part-time basis.