A Warrant Officer (WO) is a member of a military organization holding one of a specific group of ranks. In most countries they are effectively senior non-commissioned officers, although technically in a class of their own between NCOs and commissioned officers. In the military of the United States, however, officers at the Chief Warrant Officer level are in fact commissioned officers and are accorded the same privileges and courtesies, such as terms of address and salutes, as other commissioned officers.
The RAN also has the more senior rank of Warrant Officer of the Navy (WO-N). It is the most senior non-commissioned rank in the RAN and is also a singular rank. That is, it is only held by one person at any time.
A Warrant Officer Class One (WO1) can hold the position of Regimental Sergeant Major (RSM) or Battalion Sergeant Major (BSM) of a battalion or equivalent unit, RSM of a brigade or larger formation, or occasionally a training or administrative position, particularly Quartermaster of a smaller unit. Warrant Officer Class Two (WO2) can hold the position of Company Sergeant Major, Squadron Sergeant Major or Battery Sergeant Major, or a number of training or administrative positions.
Army WO1s can be promoted to Captain, given what is known as a Prescribed Service Commission. It is rare for an officer promoted from WO1 to rise past Major, or to be given a command position.
The insignia of a WO2 is a crown. The insignia of a WO1 is the Australian coat of arms (changed from the royal coat of arms in 1976). The insignia for the RSM-A is the Australian coat of arms surrounded by a wreath. All these are worn on the sleeve on the upper arm.
Warrant Officers in the Army are addressed by subordinates as "Sir" or "Ma'am". They can be addressed by commissioned officers according to their appointment (e.g. "CSM" or "RSM").
The senior WO rank is Warrant Officer of the Air Force (WOFF-AF). It is the most senior non-commissioned rank in the RAAF and like the WO-N in the RAN and the RSM-A in the Army, there is only one WOFF-AF in the RAAF.
The insignia of the WOFF-AF is the Australian coat of arms surrounded by a wreath. The wreath denotes the singularity of the rank.
Rank insignia is worn centred on the forearm of the service dress tunic; on other uniforms it is worn on slip-ons affixed to epaulets. An exception is for the Army dress shirt and sweater: miniature metal rank insignia are worn on the shirt collars, and the shirt and sweater slip-ons bear no rank.
A WO of the Canadian Grenadier Guards and the Governor General's Foot Guards is referred to and addressed as Colour Sergeant (CSgt). On ceremonial full dress and patrol dress uniforms, a Colour Sergeant wears a distinctive rank insignia, but on all other uniforms wears the WO's crown.
There are four grades of warrant officer:
Although Warrant Officers in the Singapore Armed Forces have a similar status to Warrant Officers in other Commonwealth Armed Forces, Army Warrant Officers are, unusually, members of the Officers' Mess rather than the Specialists' (i.e. NCOs') Mess. Navy Warrant Officers have their own separate Warrant Officers' messes. Warrant Officers wear their insignia on their epaulettes, like officers, instead of on the sleeve like specialists and other soldiers. This signifies that Warrant Officers often have similar responsibilities to commissioned officers. Warrant Officers are addressed as 'Sir' by those junior to them and 'Warrant Officer' by commissioned officers. They are not, however, saluted by enlisted ranks.
These sailors became indispensable to the running of the ship and were rewarded with a royal warrant. The warrant was a special designation, designed to set them apart from other sailors, yet not violate the class system that was prevalent during the time.
Nevertheless, while the class distinctions embodied by the distinction between commission and warrant were important at Court and in society both at home and abroad, on board ship a person's status has always depended more on the practical importance of the job that he did rather than the formalities of commission or warrant. Admiralty commissions were therefore never accorded the unique status that the Queen's commission holds in the Army, and in the hierarchy of a Royal Navy ship important warrant officers such as the Master would outrank commissioned officers such as the marine Lieutenants.
Originally, warrant officers were as described at the top of this article: specialist professionals whose expertise and authority demanded formal recognition. They eventually developed into three categories:
It may be noted that the positions listed above are equivalent to commissioned positions in the modern Royal Navy (i.e. navigating officer, surgeon, chaplain and supply officer).
The carpenter was rendered obsolete with the end of wooden sailing ships, but the roles of boatswain and the gunner in the Royal Navy are now carried out by commissioned officers.
The ranks of WO and CWO were changed to 'Commissioned Officer' and 'Senior Commissioned Officer' in 1949, and the WOs Messes were closed down. Collectively these ranks were known as 'Branch Officers'. From 1956, Branch Officers were regraded as Sub-Lieutenants(Special Duties).
In 2004, the RN renamed the top rate Warrant Officer Class 1 and created the new rate of Warrant Officer Class 2 immediately below it, to replace the appointment of Charge Chief Petty Officer. The latter was a senior Chief Petty Officer, but not a substantive rank in its own right. Only those who held the specific appointment of Charge Chief Artificer (a CCPO in a skilled technical trade) gained partial recognition as NATO OR-8 equivalent, as with other WO2s.
Royal Navy warrant rates are thus now the same as those in the Army and Royal Marines, and wear the same rank insignia. Like RM WO2s (but unlike Army WO2s), all RN WO2s wear the crown-in-wreath variation of the rank insignia.
WO2 appointments are:
WO1 appointments are:
The rank below WO2 is Colour Sergeant, the RM equivalent of Staff Sergeant.
Every warrant officer has an appointment, and is usually referred to by his appointment rather than by his rank.
Warrant officers were generally introduced throughout the British Army under Army Order 70 of 1915, although Regimental Sergeant Majors and a few other appointments (beginning in 1879, when Conductors of Stores and Supplies were warranted), had been warranted before that time. These earlier warranted appointments, and some others, became WOIs. The appointments that were designated WOIIs had previously been senior sergeants. WO1s wear a royal coat of arms on the lower sleeve, which may be surrounded by a wreath depending on appointment. Appointments held by WO1s include:
From 1938, there was also a rank of Warrant Officer Class III (WOIII). The only appointments held by this rank were Platoon Sergeant Major, Troop Sergeant Major and Section Sergeant Major. The WOIII wore a crown on his lower sleeve (which is why all WOIIs switched to a crown in a wreath during this period). The rank was placed in suspension in 1940 and no new appointments were made, but it was never officially abolished.
WOs are officially designated using their rank and appointment. For instance, WO2 (CSM) Smith or WO1 (BM) Jones. However, they would usually be referred to as "CSM Smith" and "Bandmaster Jones". WO2s holding Sergeant Major or Corporal Major appointments are often referred to as the "Sergeant Major" or the "Corporal Major", but WO1s are only ever referred to using their full appointment or its abbreviation (the "RSM" or the "Garrison Sergeant Major", for instance).
How warrant officers are addressed depends, as does much else in the British Army, on the traditions of their regiments or corps. However, there are some general rules of thumb:
The four most senior warrant officer appointments in the British Army are generally considered to be, in descending order of seniority:
There are no "warrant officers" per se in the U.S. Navy, but rather the term "chief warrant officer" is correct. In the U.S. Navy, a sailor must be in one of the top three enlisted ranks to be eligible to become a chief warrant officer. In the U.S. Army, a person can progress to the warrant officer rank at a grade lower than E-7 thus having a longer career and greater opportunity to serve and grow. In the U.S. Marine Corps, after serving at least eight years of enlisted service, and reaching the grade of E-5 (sergeant), an enlisted Marine can apply for the Warrant Officer program.
Warrant officers in the U.S. Marines are sometimes informally referred to as "gunner," a term of respect similar to the informal "gunny" moniker frequently given to enlisted Gunnery Sergeants. The term is derived from one of the original functions of a warrant officer, that being the command of a gunnery or artillery detachment, although it is no longer technically accurate as warrant officers can and do hold a wide variety of billets. Although commonly used, "gunner" is traditionally reserved only for artillery and infantry weapons chief warrant officers.
Upon the initial appointment to WO1 a warrant is given by the secretary of the service, and upon promotion to chief warrant officer (CW2 and above) they are commissioned by the President of the United States, take the same oath and receive the same commission and charges as commissioned officers, thus deriving their authority from the same source.
Chief warrant officers can and do command detachments, units, activities, and vessels as well as lead, coach, train, and counsel subordinates. As leaders and technical experts, they provide valuable skills, guidance, and expertise to commanders and organizations in their particular field.
Even when commissioned, they remain specialists, in contrast to commissioned officers who are generalists, though many chief warrant officers fill lieutenant and lieutenant commander billets throughout the US Navy.
In the U.S. Army and U.S. Marines, CWOs may fill positions normally held by more senior officers as well. The US Army has many pilots within the warrant officer community, which differs in philosophy from the other uniformed services. Often in a battalion sized unit, the military personnel technician (adjutant), medical technician, and maintenance technician are warrant officers.
Each branch of the military "runs" the "Chief Warrant Officer" program in slightly different ways. Little is known or published concerning the chief warrant officer, and consequently they are often misunderstood by the un-indoctrinated.
A chief warrant officer's benefits and privileges are the same as those of a commissioned officer depending on warrant officer grade. Warrant Officers are paid closely to commissioned officer pay grades but because they normally have more years in service, their pay is often higher. A WO1 is paid slightly higher than an O-1 (second lieutenant or ensign), a CW2 is paid roughly the same as an O-3/O-4 (captain/major), a CW3 is paid approximately the same salary as an O-4/O-5 (major/lieutenant colonel), and a CW4 is paid roughly the same as an O-5/O-6 (lieutenant colonel/colonel).
In the United States Navy and United States Coast Guard one must have been a senior enlisted (E7 through E-9) to gain the commission.
The USAF inherited warrant officer ranks from the U.S. Army at its inception in 1947, but their place in the Air Force structure was never made clear. When Congress authorized the creation of two new senior enlisted ranks in 1958, Air Force officials privately concluded that these two new "supergrades" could fill all Air Force needs then performed at the warrant officer level, although this was not publicly acknowledged until years later. The Air Force stopped appointing warrant officers in 1959, the same year the first promotions were made to the new top enlisted grade, Chief Master Sergeant. Most of the existing Air Force warrant officers entered the commissioned officer ranks during the 1960s, but tiny numbers continued to exist for the next 21 years.
The last active duty Air Force warrant officer, CWO4 James H. Long, retired in 1980 and the last Air Force Reserve warrant officer, CWO4 Bob Barrow, retired in 1992. Since then, the U.S. Air Force warrant officer ranks, while still authorized by law, are not used. The W-5 grade was authorized by Congress for use by the Air Force along with the other armed forces, but was never used.
Stating in 1942 Army enlisted personnel who qualified as glider pilots received the warrant grade of flight officer. While there were commissioned officers who also qualified to fly gliders, there was Army Air Force opposition to commissioning all pilots of non-powered aircraft. The insignia was a bar of ultramarine blue with a short golden-orange bar across it. After World War II helicopters replaced gliders and this rank has been obsolete for many years.
Today, approximately half of Army Warrant Officers serve as helicopter pilots. The other half of the corps serve in what are known as technical billets. In fact there is a different promotion track for aviation and technical Warrant Officers - aviation W.O.s must wait six years after promotion to be considered in the primary zone for promotion to the next level, whereas W.O.s in technical fields such as ordnance, maintenance, intelligence, and even aviation repair, need only wait five years.
The Army's Warrant Officer Candidate School is currently colocated with the Warrant Officer Career Center on Fort Rucker, Alabama.
Army Warrant Officers are officially addressed as either Mr. or Ms., although the informal and technically incorrect "Chief" is widely used.
While Marine warrant officers may often be informally referred to as "gunner", this title is actually reserved for a special category of chief warrant officers known as the "Marine Gunner," or "Infantry Weapons Officer." These Marines serve as the senior weapons specialists in an infantry unit, advising the commanding officer and his staff on the proper use and deployment of the current Marine infantry weapon systems. The title "Gunner" is almost always used in lieu of a rank (i.e., "Gunner Smith" as opposed to "Chief Warrant Officer Smith"), and the rank insignia worn on the right collar or shoulder is replaced with a "bursting bomb", similar to the insignia inside the rank chevrons of a Master Gunnery Sergeant.
| Abbreviation | Paygrade and Rank | Army | Air Force (discontinued 1959) | Navy / Coast Guard | Marine Corps |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WO1 (USA) WO-1 (USN/USMC/USAF/USCG) | W-1 - Warrant Officer 1 |
||||
| CW2 (USA) CWO-2 (USN/USMC/USAF/USCG) | W-2 - Chief Warrant Officer 2 |
||||
| CW3 (USA) CWO-3 (USN/USMC/USAF/USCG) | W-3 - Chief Warrant Officer 3 |
||||
| CW4 (USA) CWO-4 (USN/USMC/USAF/USCG) | W-4 - Chief Warrant Officer 4 |
||||
| CW5 (USA) CWO-5 (USN/USMC/USAF/USCG) | W-5 - Chief Warrant Officer 5 |
| Wo5-sb.gif
Unites States Congressional Budget Office study on Warrant and Limited Duty Officers
http://www.cbo.gov/ftpdocs/32xx/doc3287/WarrantOfficer.pdf
http://www.cbo.gov/showdoc.cfm?index=3287&sequence=0&from=0#anchor
Military ranks of the Commonwealth | Military ranks of Australia | Military ranks of Canada | Military ranks of Singapore | Military ranks of the United Kingdom | Military ranks of the United States Army | Military ranks of the United States Air Force | United States Marine Corps ranks | Military ranks of the United States Navy
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"Warrant Officer".
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