As often as needed. That will be determined by your military occupation and status of the unit you're assigned to.
The same as any other state. The amount paid is based on pay grade and time in service. When doing monthly UTAs, pay is based on the table used to determine pay for National Guard and Reserve members for their weekend drills. When called to active duty, they're paid according to the active duty pay scale.
When you enlist, into any of the military services, you are signing a contract for the next SIX years. Most Marines spend four years on active duty and two years on inactive duty. Reserve Marines spend two years on active duty and four years on active reserve. This consists of monthy meeting for one weekend and two weeks of training each year. But with Bush's war now going on you can pretty much figure all six years active whichever way you go.
Most military service members enlist for four years on active duty or active reserve duty. But all enlistments are for eight years. The recruit can enlist for two, three, four, five, or six year periods and serve the rest of the eight years is the Ready Reserve. The Ready Reserve is when the military can call the member up to active duty during war time, but it pretty much never happens now. But all enlistments are for eight years.
it is a date represented in YYMMDD format that represents how much active duty service time you have. For Active Duty members it is usually the date of their enlistment. For Guard/Reserve members it changes and you subtract the total number of ADT days (not including drill weekend or PT days as those are IDT) from today's date and that will give you the TAFMSD. This is a tricky equation and takes practice.
Absolutely. You may however have to change your MOS that serves the Air Guards needs.
it is a date represented in YYMMDD format that represents how much active duty service time you have. For Active Duty members it is usually the date of their enlistment. For Guard/Reserve members it changes and you subtract the total number of ADT days (not including drill weekend or PT days as those are IDT) from today's date and that will give you the TAFMSD. This is a tricky equation and takes practice.
They go to jail
Unfortunately this question is based on several factors including duty status, deployment status, marital/dependent status, rank, time in grade, and whether or not you are Active, Guard, or Reserve.
yes it is, while the personnell conducting/supervising the pft may not care as much while being deployed. you are still required to pass all stages of a pft while on active or reserve duty status
Master Sergeant in the U S Air Force receive around $2339 to $4821 a month. (depending on the number of years active duty and if he/she is in the Air National Guard or Air Force Reserve).
not much about half of nothing
There are around two million active duty men and women. They occupy every function of the military from custodians to frontline combat. This figure is much smaller than the major wartime personnel of the past.