Military ranks of Menghe
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The military ranks of Menghe follow a basic structure which is shared between the Army, the Navy, and certain organs of the Ministry of Internal Security. Menghe lacks an administratively independent air force branch, but personnel of Army Aviation and Naval Aviation wear slightly different insignia from their surface counterparts.
All rank insignia are worn on shoulder straps, with rigid shoulder boards for dress uniforms and slip-on rank slides for field uniforms. Collar and lapel insignia differ by grade, but not by individual rank, with different markers for enlisted personnel, NCOs, junior officers, field officers, generals, and marshals.
History
Army ranks
General-grade ranks
Commissioned ranks
Enlisted ranks
Enlisted ranks are divided into two groups: "non-commissioned officer" and "enlisted without commission." When the enlisted rank system was created in 1901, there were three NCO ranks ending in sa (士/사) and three regular enlisted ranks ending in byŏng (兵/병). Byŏngjang (sergeant) was created in 1910 and originally had a four-bar rank insignia; this was changed to a star in 1919, when it was reclassified as an NCO position. Tŭkmusangsa (sergeant major), created in 1990, is a position for the division's highest NCO, who carries the divisional standard in parades. Regular enlisted personnel can be either conscripts or volunteers, but as a rule, since 2005 all NCOs have been volunteers or re-enlisting conscripts and all have completed a special NCO training course.
Recruits in training are given the rank of hunryŏnbyŏng, or "trainee." The two-bar rank of idŭngbyŏng has also been translated as Specialist and Efreiter, and normally denotes a soldier trained on a special weapon system, such as a sharpshooter, ATGM operator, or tank gunner. Conscripts who re-enlist as volunteers after completing their two-year mandatory term are automatically granted the rank of idŭngbyŏng, even if assigned as a rifleman, though direct volunteers must still serve two years as an ildŭngbyŏng, unless trained as a specialist.
The rank of sangdŭngbyŏng (literally, "upper-level soldier") originally denoted the most senior enlisted soldier in the squad, and was not a command position. In the 1930s, it became standard practice for the sergeant to assign a group of riflemen to act as a separate maneuver unit under the direction of the sangdŭngbyŏng, making the position similar in function to a corporal, but personnel in this rank did not receive additional officer training and were not treated as NCOs. Promotion was often done at the sergeant's discretion. This practice persisted up to 2005, when as part of Menghe's military restructuring the rank was officially granted NCO status with a special fireteam-leader training course. The suffix rank name and three-bar insignia were both retained, even though it was no longer part of the regular enlisted rank series.
Sangdŭngbyŏng, ildŭngbyŏng, and idŭngbyŏng are regularly shortened to sangbyŏng, ilbyŏng, and ibyŏng in conversation, and tŭkmusangsa is regularly shortened to tŭksa. Current regulations state that the long form must be used on written documents but the short form must be used when addressing a soldier vocally.
All enlisted rank insignia use red insignia on the base color of the uniform. On dress uniforms, they are stitched directly onto the olive drab shoulder strap, while on field uniforms they are worn on removable sleeves that fit onto the shoulder strap.
Level | Non-commissioned officers | Enlisted personnel without commission | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Standard rank code | OR-9 | OR-8 | OR-7 | OR-6 | OR-5 | OR-4 | OR-3 | OR-2 | OR-1 |
Menghean name | 特務上士 특무상사 |
上士 상사 |
中士 중사 |
下士 하사 |
兵長 병장 |
上等兵 상등병 |
一等兵 일등병 |
二等兵 이등병 |
訓鍊兵 훈련병 |
Transliteration | Tŭkmusangsa | Sangsa | Jungsa | Hasa | Byŏngjang | Sangdŭngbyŏng | Ildŭngbyŏng | Idŭngbyŏng | Hunryŏnbyŏng |
Official translation | Sergeant Major | Master Sgt. | Sgt. 1st Class | Staff Sgt. | Sergeant | Corporal | Private 1st Class | Private | Recruit |