The impact of war on our army is serious. In the past ten years, the Army has expanded rapidly, cut entry criteria and prioritize training objectives. Together with the decline of war, the army is facing a change again due to budget cuts and military declines. Through these actions, critics questioned whether the military is still meeting expectations of experts. The answer is that the Army is sticking to the title of "weapons profession" in a way that has never been before.
The position taken by the military is "military occupation" which includes all members of the military organization, unlike "military army professionals" consisting only of military uniforms. The Army is "accredited by the Army" as "a certified expert on ground design, creation, support, and ethical applications, serving under the authority of citizens, defending constitution and the rights of the American people" It is defined as a unique mission assigned. Publications explaining various members. See Army Doctrine Reference Publication (ADRP) 1, Army's Biography (Washington DC: Army Headquarters, June 2015), "Preface", v and paragraphs 1 to 10, 1 to 2.
The Army is a profession consisting of experts accredited for the domestic application of land combat capability in the United States, is entrusted to defend the constitution and the rights of the American people, September 2011) Weapons to the Constitution Profession Pledges moral responsibility to military experts, including compliance with the Convention on the moral enforcement of land power and respect for individual rights ("Weapons Major", December 8, 2010). In order to preserve the value of the country, you need expertise, skills, development, trust, and personality as a framework to nurture an industry leader. Occupational ethical abilities must also be reflected at the institutional and personal level. Therefore,
Recent review of occupation has completed review of specialized development of weapons. First of all, an important contribution to understanding the occupation of modern weapons is the work of Major General Craig Orme in 2011. His report "Beyond compliance" introduces the occupation of Australian weapons concept. When it comes to the fact that professional consciousness is the fundamental value, it proposes four features of professionalism: serving as expert, steward, representative and country. Lastly, the latest review of weapons professionals conducted by the US military between 2010 and 2013. As a result, "US Army Professional" published in 2015 was announced. It lists five basic features that define military careers: trust, military expertise, glorious service, military spirit, and industrial management.