I'm not debating the line between common military tasks and knowledge such as small arms marksmanship, drill and ceremonies, customs and courtesies, etc., and specialized duties like mass communications or C4I.
You said "Since when is public affairs considered 'a phase of military duty?'' which led me to believe that you did not consider public affairs to be a military duty. I pointed out that public affairs (or mass communication) specialists would likely disagree with you about that, and that mass communication is an area where a sailor might be assigned EMI. I didn't say a single word about the relative importance of Photoshop proficiency vs. small arms proficiency or CBRN or anything else... you brought that up as a straw man.
My point, in case you missed it: Public affairs is a military duty; it's not exclusively a military duty, but neither is shooting or wearing a gas mask. As a military duty, public affairs is an area within which a sailor may be assigned EMI if they are found to be deficient in their proficiency/duty performance.
Thank you for your service, sincerely.
i never said shooting and wearing a gas mask is exclusive of military training. I said those are areas that all members in the military learn regardless of their specialty skill set.
Public affairs can be a person's job in the military, but that doesn't make it a "phase of military duty." in the Air Force, enlisted are trained in "ancillary duties," meaning that regardless of whether they are programmers, comm techs, intel analysts, cooks or mechanics, they may also be assigned to guard duty, duty drivers, ...
Note: AFSC means Air Force Specially Code, similar to the Navy MOS code (Military Occupation Specialty).
7.1. Program Description. Ancillary Training is universal training, guidance or instruction,
regardless of AFSC, that contributes to mission accomplishment. It does not include functional,
occupational or additional duty training.
This includes more than war fighting training. It also includes physical fitness, operational security, ... pretty much every mandatory training require for every member is ancillary to their primary function.
In fact, many primary jobs in the military, including the Navy, has their training performed by private contractors or SPAWAR civilians -- both ashore and afloat. I've attended and presented training classes for lots of sailors while working at CINCPACFLT for 10 years as a contractor.
Yes, their jobs are the duties needed to perform their military missions. No, I don't consider that "military" training.
Maybe I lived it for so long on both sides of the active duty/military contractor sides, I have a more definitive understanding of the differences. If I haven't conveyed my understanding in the right words, it's because the line is ambiguous at the treetop level. It's hard to explain how someone like that Navy Commander who might have been a pilot (I didn't research him, but so many in command are former pilots in all branches), doesn't have the basic training to know what he's doing for an M4 demonstration. That's not something he would have been taught in flight school. It would have been a separate day of training and qualifying unrelated to his flying duties.
That's just an example of how I see the division. Not saying he's a pilot. He could just be some admiral's son who worked in public affairs.
