Military Duties, Responsibility and Integrity Military duties, responsibilities and integrity is important to the Army. An NCO duties includes taking care of his or her Soldiers and accomplishing the mission. A Soldier’s duty includes obeying orders. Duty and Responsibility is part of the Army values for a reason. I’m accordance with Army regulation Field Manual 7-22.7 covers the duties,responsibilities and authorities of a Non Commissioned Officer. Duty is fulfilling your obligations. Doing your duty means more than carrying out your assigned tasks. Duty means being able to accomplish tasks as part of a team. The work of the U.S Army is a complex combination of …show more content…
Mission accomplishment demands that officers and NCOs work together to advise, assist and learn from each other. Responsibilities fall into two categories: command and individual. Individual responsibility as a noncommissioned officer means you are accountable for your personal conduct. Soldiers in the Army have their own responsibilities. For example, if you write a check at the commissary, it is your responsibility to have sufficient funds in the bank account to cover the check. Individual responsibility cannot be delegated, it belongs to the soldier that wrote the check. Soldiers are accountable for their actions, to their fellow soldiers, to their leaders, to their unit and to the United States Army. As a leader you must ensure that your soldiers understand clearly their responsibilities as members of the team and as representatives of the Army. The army has various responsibilities such as: to protect people from all foreign and domestic threats, protect its borders from attacks, plays a role in the expansion of the country?s borders and plays a role in assisting the country have more leverage in international affairs depending on how strong or weak the army is in the International community. There may be situations you must think carefully about what you're told to do. For example, duty requires that you refuse to obey illegal and orders that are
My duties are something I need to do for a person is expected or required to do. I attend regular refresher courses and training, and teach me how to do my work and
In conclusion, the Marine NCO is to provide guidance, display courage, and influence Marines, young and old. As a Sergeant of Marines I am the liaison between junior Marines and my SNCOs, the Sergeants task is greater than that of any in shaping young Marines. Not only does a Sergeant have to hold himself to the highest standard possible, he must also hold his Marines responsible, because after all he is charged with guiding those Marines not only professionally but also through day to day life. If there is anyone in the Corps you can turn to for advice, guidance, or hard work and determination, it should be the Marine
The Army is an organization that imprints pride and discipline in its soldiers, both enlisted and commissioned officers, because of its
Individual responsibility as a noncommissioned officer means you are accountable for your personal conduct. Soldiers in the Army have their own responsibilities. For
Military service, to me, means to give my all in the fight for freedom and equality. Every task must be completed with full ability and effort. Furthermore, military service means not just serving to protect one’s own family and friends, but each of their friends and family as well. Military service is a selfless act, protecting all Americans, while at the same time, serving to propel and maintain America as the world superpower it
An NCO in my eyes is first most a leader, someone that has his soldiers back, there to protect and defend them, mentor them, and guide them into being NCO's themselves one day. As an NCO you need to be able to share your knowledge with younger soldiers, teach them the ways of the Army, let them not only learn from their mistakes, but from the ones we have made along the way as well. An NCO needs to be able to trust in his soldiers, but more importantly, soldiers need to be able to trust their NCO's. How can a soldier follow us into battle if they cannot trust us with the smaller things? How can a soldier turn to you in confidence with an issue that they have if they can’t even trust you, as an NCO, to have their back about something small
I quote straight from the Creed of the Noncommissioned Officer, “My two basic responsibilities will always be uppermost in my mind, accomplishment of my mission and the welfare of my soldiers.” I am disgraced to admit that I failed to comply with this line of the very outline of my role as a noncommissioned officer. I believe that every noncommissioned officer should do more than recite the words for a board. They should live by those words. If there is ever any doubt as to what my responsibilities are as a leader I always refer back to the Creed of the Noncommissioned Officer. I find there are no better words to describe a good leader than those found within that creed. The fact that I did not live by those words shames me as a leader. However, it also strengthens me. It shows me where my faults lie and what I need to improve upon to ensure I am always doing my very best as a leader.
Outstandingly, American Non-commissioned officers have performed commendably in their discharge of their duties worldwide. Every soldier is entitled with NCO who ensures that all soldiers get good and professional training from experienced and qualified experts. NCO is also mandated to identify leaders from soldiers who can effectively perform in small-units. Hence it is very essential for the non commissioned officer to be empowered with knowledge and technique on how to carry out these duties effectively asserts that excellent leaders understand their soldiers' strength and weaknesses Basically, it is the role of non commissioned officer to employ knowledge and skills they have acquired through the many years of service in planning and decision making stages in the Army. In line with this, the US government is taking initiatives to empower the non-commissioned
Duty to me is accomplishing a task that needs to be done regardless the motivation you have, how sick your feelin or how long of a ruck march you had this morning. Whether you love it or hate it the task is there to be done. If one does not fulfill their duties on a regular basis, then those around them have to pick up the slack, and any sense of loyalty begins to become tarnished duty and loyalty are intertwined in private first class Ansons eyes. like i said in the last paragraph when talking about loyalty in order to attain loyalty there are duties that must be completed inorder to seem loyal to another soldier or friend.
you must be aware of your actions and always be vigilant and never to lose self accountability. Once you have gained self accountability, you can then start to worry about other people if the task requires it. Accountability does not only happen on the week days but also during your personal time because a lot of what you do or people see you do on your personal time can affect how people view and see you on work time. Also it can also affect how you feel about yourself or how other people feel about you. The next topic i am going to cover is the importance of being accountable as a Non-Commissioned Officer. This is really important because soldiers will always be coming to you for advice, guidance and almost everything they can not do alone. NCO's are the backbone of the military, they relay information from the top of the channels all the way to the bottom. The NCO mindset comes from a lot of honest hard work and working your way up from the bottom, which is why the NCO’s should know most about accountability, and also because they need to have accountability of not only themselves but that of others that are under them. If one domino falls then most of the time they will all fall. so in other words if one person messes up then it could mess up everyone. In some missions this is very bad because if you are in Afghanistan or Iraq then you need to have accountability so that everyone gets home safe and unharmed. The higher that you go in the NCO support
Officers of my unit will have maximum time to accomplish their duties; they will not have to accomplish mine. I will earn their respect and confidence as well as that of my soldiers. I will be loyal to those with whom I serve; seniors, peers, and subordinates alike. I will exercise initiative by taking appropriate action in the absence of orders. I will not compromise my integrity, nor my moral courage. I will not forget, nor will I allow my comrades to forget that we are professionals, Noncommissioned Officers, leaders!
Duty comes from the Old French word “Duete” originating in the late 1250’s to early 1300’s, a past participle of the Latin word “Devoir”. In which both of these word’s meaning to have an obligation or commitment resulting in action of oneself due to moral commitment. An early philosopher by the name of Marcus Tullius Cicero said “Duty is a result of being a human, is a result of one’s particular place in life, is a result in one character, and also a result of one’s own moral expectations.” Many people even believe in a “Civic Duty” that is one being responsible enough to obey the law, pay taxes and serve on a jury, These are just a few of many “Civic Duties” people acknowledge in our society today. The Army has even accepted its own meaning
I think it is all right to have a purpose behind the duty, but it should be depends on the whether the purpose is negative or positive. If the purpose is positive, I think it can be considered as duty. For example, a person donates his organs to a patient, his purpose is to help the patient instead of his own happiness, or there is a situation that the patient is important to the donor. Both of the situations are out of good will, a good purpose, so it should be considered as a good, moral duty.
join the army is not for money or benefits but for the discipline. Doing work for others, my duty for my
The next step of the process is the chain of command; Officers are at the top warrants in the middle and enlisted at the bottom. Offices come up with a mission and pass that order down to the Enlisted NCOs (E-5 through E-9) (Warrant Officers do not control soldiers they are a specialist on a specific job). That NCO then has one job and that is to complete the mission that is passed down from the officer to him or her. Now I need you to picture yourself as a leader of young men and women getting ready to bored a plane to head over seas to fight in the middle east, all your soldiers families ask you to bring their husband, wife, mom, dad, son or daughter home alive and safe, you look at these family members in the eyes and have no choice but to tell them you will do everything in your power to ensure all your guys come home safe and in one piece! Next thing you know you are in a war zone rounds are flying over your head and you are being penned down by superior enemy fire, your training kicks in and you start to order your soldiers to make a flanking maneuver to suppress the enemy with two way directional fire while preforming buddy rushes and over run the enemy. What happens if your soldiers don’t listen, or don’t respect you enough to trust your plan to win this battle? As a NCO you have to have the respect of your soldiers while at the same time they must