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Branches of the U.S. Military

Can you name the six service branches of the United States military?
Thank you to those who served
Quiz by Apprentice03
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Last updated: September 26, 2022
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First submittedOctober 20, 2020
Times taken17,370
Average score83.3%
Rating4.30
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Founded
Branch
1775
Army
1794
Navy
1798
Marines
1915
Coast Guard
1947
Air Force
2019
Space Force
+17
Level 62
Oct 20, 2020
Hey! Just wanted to let you know that you misspelt Coast Guard, and that there is actually a 6th branch as of December 20, 2019; Space Force.
+12
Level 65
Mar 10, 2021
I dont really think that theres a space force dude.

edit: holy wow there is xd

+26
Level 77
Sep 26, 2022
I know the concept of "space force" sounds ridiculous today, but I have a feeling that in the next 50 years it's going to be a pretty important branch.
+16
Level 87
Sep 27, 2022
the space force definitely isn't a ridiculous idea. In fact, most media and analysts have admitted that the primary reason they didn't want to accept it was because it was established by Trump. Foreign policy and strategic analysts have been pushing for an independent space force for decades now so we can better coordinate our efforts in space.
+18
Level 89
Oct 3, 2022
It's just a terrible name. Could there be a more 1950s comic book name?
+11
Level 53
Oct 20, 2022
its like air force but in space...space force makes sense to me
+2
Level 39
Nov 19, 2022
It also has me questions, like, what kind of country would attack or go to war with u in SPACE?
+1
Level 39
Nov 19, 2022
Like rn it prob seems a bit pointless
+6
Level 45
Jan 11, 2023
The amount of naive people who don't recognize how much sensitive property America has in space (and the fact that it's prone to attacks) is mind blowing.
+5
Level 92
Sep 26, 2022
I take umbrage with your dates of founding selection. The US Army was founded in 1775 as the Continental Army, yes, but the Navy and Marine Corps also were founded in 1775 as the Continental Marines and Continental Navy. The individual military branches utilize the 1775 dates for their founding traditions and celebrations. Source: prior US military member.
+3
Level 69
Oct 20, 2022
Also while we're here, the Coast Guard existed as the Revenue Cutter Service (founded 1790) before it merged with the Life-Saving Service (founded 1848) in 1915 to form the Coast Guard.
+28
Level 81
Sep 27, 2022
As a citizen of a country indiscriminately bombed by the US military, I would like to emphasize the fact that I personally am not thankful to those who served, quite the opposite, and that I find that remark offensive. I guess you don't care about my opinion, but I had to express it.
+19
Level 61
Sep 27, 2022
The American military is a very controversial topic with foreign countries who we have been at war with. I understand any ill feelings about us. Yet, I do respect the courage and bravery that it takes to put your life on the line for your country.
+14
Level 71
Sep 27, 2022
@vitriden, ordinary troops don't determine military policy. Showing respect to service members isn't an endorsement of what a country's military does, it's an acknowledgement of the sacrifices many of these people made. If you ever met a US service member, you'd probably find they don't hold a grudge against you or your country; they were just doing what they were told, same as the soldiers of any other country. So if you want to criticize the US government or military as a whole, feel free, but I'd urge you to reconsider directing your hatred toward everyday US service members.
+12
Level 89
Sep 27, 2022
@JWatson24, that's all true but you are neglecting that we have a voluntary military force. The vast majority of service members, by signing up, endorse the policies of the American military and government, which are well known. So I do think @vitriden has a fair argument about not being thankful to those who served.
+7
Level 71
Sep 27, 2022
@pctjunkie I think you make good points, but I'm not sold on them. People join the military for a variety of reasons, including getting a stipend, paying for their college education, or even just continuing family tradition. Also, many service members don't end up being deployed in a warzone, so it's not as though every soldier is expecting they'll have to fight. While there certainly are some service members who join for the explicit intent of endorsing military policy, I doubt it's the vast majority.
+7
Level 87
Sep 28, 2022
Both fair points, but I do tend to give more credence to JWatson. I have multiple family members who have all joined the military for a variety of reasons, and it was never just ONE prevailing reason (although I assume it's possible if you believe hard enough in it). Presidents are usually changed every 4-8 years, so if you intend the enlist in the military as a career, you're not just thinking about the short term war hawk, moderate, or pacifist.
+7
Level 87
Sep 28, 2022
I can respect that you disrespect it. However, your usage of the term "indiscriminately bombed" seems ill placed to me. We could have a discussion over the rights vs wrongs on either side, but one thing is for certain: Serbia was not bombed "indiscriminately" as you claim.
+5
Level 81
Sep 29, 2022
It really was. A marketplace in Niš, Aleksinac city centre, Grdelička klisura train, Chinese embassy, a hospital in Belgrade, all of these are not legitimate military targets in any justifiable way. Also, there were thousands of civilian deaths proclaimed by the NATO to be "collateral damage". I really can't see it in any other way other than indiscriminate bombing.
+6
Level 87
Sep 30, 2022
The word indiscriminate means "done at random or without careful thought." I was referring to the bombing campaign in a general sense, which wasn't done randomly or without careful thought. While "careful" can always be a debatable word, the outcome of the campaign ended more or less as intended.

As far as bombing civilians needlessly, I'm very much against that.

+3
Level 89
Oct 3, 2022
Hard to believe the Chinese Embassy was indiscriminate.
+11
Level 82
Oct 20, 2022
Serbia was never indiscriminately bombed by the United States. Stop believing the horse dookie your own corrupt and criminal government feeds you. There were good reasons for the NATO bombings that took place. And yes, as others have pointed out, collateral damage is not the same thing as indiscriminate bombing.
+1
Level 70
Oct 20, 2022
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NATO_bombing_of_Yugoslavia

many innocent serbian civilians died in this war unecessarily

+3
Level 75
Oct 22, 2022
It was the only way of stopping what their government and their military were doing against the Kosovar Albanian population.
+3
Level 82
Oct 25, 2022
I didn't say that Serbians didn't die. Or that their deaths were necessary. The war criminals running Serbia at the time could have easily avoided all of those deaths had they wanted to and its of course unfortunate that they didn't. The NATO action, though, was necessary to stop an ongoing genocide. It stemmed the bleeding of what was already happening. The bombings didn't just randomly produce suffering in a vacuum.
+3
Level 81
Jan 5, 2023
It's great to see you have unbiased opinions based strictly on facts, and not on propaganda and emotion. You have clearly heard of the fact that the ethnic cleansing was done by all sides involved and that there are practically no Serbs in Kosovo, Croatia and a greater part of Bosnia, despite the fact they were a majority in a greater part of these territories. Slobodan Milošević was a war criminal and the man I have always hated for what he has done in all of Yugoslavia, yet that doesn't change the fact the same thing goes for the war time leaders of other republics-turned-countries of former Yugoslavia. There are rarely innocent sides in a civil war, I know that very well. Sorry for your car.
+6
Level 62
Oct 20, 2022
The author of this quiz was clearly trying to making a nice gesture, and it was pretty rude to butt in for the sake of making yourself heard.

I am sure if you made a quiz of, for example, your country's national holiday, you wouldn't want a random quizzer saying they think it is a dumb or pointless holiday.

+2
Level 81
Feb 17, 2023
I find it rude to bomb and kill civilians for your political profit, so I guess we are even...
+5
Level 75
Oct 22, 2022
Serbia was not indiscriminately bombed. Serbia was literally carrying out war crimes such as ethnic cleansing against Kosovar Albanians. Prior to that, Serbs were committing mass genocide against Bosniaks and also against Croats. Serb nationalists try to play victims when they were the perpetrators of the worst atrocities in post-WW2 Europe.
+3
Level 66
Oct 22, 2022
I learned a lot in 2022 when I saw Iranians angry that, "Western" countries, weren't doing anything to help them protest against their government.

Darned if you do, darned if you don't.

+2
Level 68
Oct 25, 2022
Regardless of what one thinks of what happened in Serbia, I agree with the general sentiment that automatically thanking veterans for their service is a little over-the-top. It's one of those automatic empty patriotic gestures ingrained by decades of propaganda.

First, many people in the military never actually "risk their lives" - in fact, being a soldier is less dangerous than being a logger or a fisherman. Next time you see a logger, why not thanking *him* for his service?

Second, people join the military for a variety of reasons - necessity, college tuition, family traditions, lack of other options... I'm sure some people join out of idealism. And I'm also sure some others join because they think it'll be like a video game. Why would you automatically assume that someone joined to "defend your freedom", when you have no actual idea if that's the case?

+1
Level 68
Oct 25, 2022
Third, whether or not the US military actually defends anyone's freedoms is up for debate. When has it last been used to defend any portion of US territory? I'm not saying that armies are useless, or that we should necessarily get rid of them, or even that soldiers are necessarily in agreement with how they are used and deployed, but it's hard to argue that the US army has not *also* been used to subjugate other people's freedoms, for geopolitical or commercial advantage. I'm also not saying that this is unique to the US, but it does happen.

Does participation is such an effort necessarily warrant thanks?

+1
Level 68
Oct 25, 2022
Anyway, I think it's pretty weird that the US has things like Veteran's Day, or veteran discounts, or that some people (apparently) thank random veterans they don't know for their service. This certainly doesn't happen in the countries I'm from. I'd be more inclined to thank a teacher than a veteran.
+2
Level 82
Oct 25, 2022
dg... Veteran's Day comes from WW1 Armistice Day. November 11th. It's still a holiday in France and in many countries by various names. Look something up once in a while maybe before jumping so eagerly to condemn Americans.

As a teacher, I accept your thanks.

+3
Level 45
Jan 11, 2023
I like that you left out the country you're talking about is Milosevic's genocidal Serbian hellscape. The only post-WWII European country to openly engage in mass murder and genocide. Innocent deaths are horrible, but there is no one who thinks bombing Serbia was a bad idea. Sorry.
+12
Level 82
Sep 27, 2022
The guy who came up with "space force" said that the air force was founded back in the 1700s. Please check your source.
+3
Level 68
Sep 27, 2022
I was in the Navy for 21 years. Our birthday is taught as October 13th, 1775.
+3
Level 80
Sep 27, 2022
Marine Corps birthday is November 10, 1775.
+3
Level 87
Sep 27, 2022
Space Force now has its own anthem (as of last week). Is there also going to be a Space Force service academy? With actual space cadets?
+2
Level 75
Sep 28, 2022
They're just going to play pinball all day
+2
Level 77
Sep 27, 2022
coast guard is not miltary, homeland security
+3
Level 70
Oct 1, 2022
The Coast Guard's URL is https://www.uscg.mil

If that's enough for you, you can dive into Title 10 of the US Code and read that it's the only military branch of the armed forces under administered by Homeland Security, but when needed, the Department of Defense, under the Sec. of the Navy, can assume control.

+3
Level 62
Sep 28, 2022
"Chair Force" should be accepted for Air Force.
+1
Level 89
Oct 3, 2022
That holds up for all branches. 10% of Americans, 16 million people, were in the military in World War 2. 10% of those were combat soldiers. Rear echelon members make up the bulk of any military branch.
+1
Level 79
Oct 20, 2022
Never knew that the Air Force was founded after WWII!
+2
Level 66
Oct 20, 2022
The modern one, at least. An American air force dates back to 1907. During WWII it was a branch of the Army.
+2
Level 40
Oct 20, 2022
I thought the coast guard was founded in 1790
+2
Level 71
Oct 20, 2022
The only way I could get Space Force to register was to type it as a single word "spaceforce"
+2
Level ∞
Oct 20, 2022
Punctuation and spaces are always ignored on JetPunk. Space Force is accepted.
+4
Level 69
Oct 20, 2022
What's the difference between Navy and Marines?
+4
Level 35
Oct 20, 2022
"The Navy specializes in controlling the entry and exit points of the sea ports, while the Marines carry out amphibious combat missions." - differencebetween.net
+3
Level 56
Oct 20, 2022
I never would've expected the space force to be a thing about ten years ago. I wonder if there will be another branch of military in the future to cover something else we haven't thought about yet.
+3
Level 56
Oct 23, 2022
Interdimensional Force
+2
Level 82
Oct 25, 2022
Time Enforcement Commission.
+1
Level 24
Dec 3, 2022
You Forgot Navy Seals
+1
Level 61
Dec 3, 2022
The Navy Seals are a part of the Navy, not their own branch