Depends on what branch of military your joining, your military occupational specialty, and your resident geographic location.
Yes, everyone in the Military is required to go to Basic Training.
You would go through OBT - Officer Basic Training. There are no enlisted nurses.
To be a military nurse, you would go through OBT - Officers Basic Training - which is a bit different from the basic training enlisted personnel go through.
Basic training gets you ready for the military lifestyle as well as get you in shape and teach you self discipline.
National Guard does not have a basic training, you are sent to basic training with other members of the Army whether they are in active or reserve status. No, you will not become a veteran if you fail to complete basic with any branch.
Of course you would have to go through collage and then you would have to go through basic training and all that good stuff for the military.
Afman10-100(airmans manual) and bmtsg(basic military training study guide)
Personnel that join the military as officers (doctors, dentists, ministers, lawyers) attend a basic officer's branch course instead of basic combat training.
Depending on what one's military occupational specialty is, will depend on the type of training that they receive. I was a radar repairman. I went to basic training, military combat training, basic electronics school, and radar repairman school.
If you're attending one of the US military academies, your basic training is conducted as part of your curriculum. Now if you attend a JROTC programme at a private university, then you'll have to go through OBT.
The shortest military basic training program is typically found in the Air Force, which has a basic military training course that lasts for 8.5 weeks.
Enlisted go to basic training, and officers go to officer's basix. Enlisted go to their advanced inividual training based on what was agreed upon and signed on the contract with the recruiter.