No, but you'll only get active benefits if you were active for a full 20 years. Otherwise, you'll get the reservist benefits that kick in when you turn 60
2006-11-06 06:03:17
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answer #1
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answered by DOOM 7
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These are things you need to discuss with your personnel office if you are still active duty. If you have already retired, and were entitled to benefits, they would have had you fill out the necessary documents. I'm not sure how your Guard service will count. Yes, you were enlisted, but not full time active duty.
Check out this article: http://usmilitary.about.com/od/reserveretirmentpay/a/reserveretire.htm
When it doubt contact the VA.
2006-11-06 05:25:31
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answer #2
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answered by Sativa 4
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The twenty years has to be active duty. So If you count your time in the coast guard, then Active duty for 4 yrs.....That'd leave you with four years until you could submit a formal application for retirement. (And even then, retirement isn't gauranteed)
2006-11-06 05:25:50
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answer #3
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answered by Ronijn 4
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that's crap. The merchandising cycles are virtually a similar. Being infantry is better significant than shelter vs lively. Plus, practise receives you promoted plenty faster than time served. He can bypass to varsity finished-time contained in the shelter (with it paid for) and get promoted on credit hours on my own faster than serving on lively responsibility. Plus, if he extremely needs to promote, he can do ROTC jointly he's serving as an infantry soldier contained in the shelter & finally end up an officer even as he graduates, then if he needs to bypass lively, he's thoroughly loose to attempt this. How is this even a call though? he's enlisted already. He won't be able to easily elect he needs to modify, it would not artwork that way. If he's int eh shelter now he ought to bypass back to his state & serve including his unit. He can ask to be released to lively responsibility, which will reason him to lose his bonus & they gained't launch him from a severe MOS besides. He can volunteer to installation & even as the unit he's with is scheduled to go back abode he can word to move to an lively unit that's staying some months longer & then he belongs to them. that's accessible, yet slightly loopy, and loses the bonus. Or like I stated, he can basically make the finest of his mission, get some practise, and then bypass lively after he's were given a level.
2016-10-16 07:50:55
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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It has to be 20 "active" years so Army Nat Guard won't count unless you were AGR.
2006-11-06 12:40:47
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answer #5
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answered by kherome 5
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talk to personnel. they gave my husband a total of 7 years served when he talked them - he had 3 years navy, 6 months army (honorable discharge), 3 years navy reserve (activated for 2 of those years) and had just shy of 6 months in the army at the time (for this time in). so they gave him that year he was reserve and not activated. deffinately talk to personnel, they'll give you the difiniative answer and make your paperwork match it.
2006-11-06 05:39:31
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answer #6
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answered by Jenessa 5
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no, as long as you have enough points (it used to be on a "points" system. Check with your local VA office to find out more
2006-11-06 05:25:16
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answer #7
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answered by island3girl 6
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It accumulates even when you switch services. Good luck.
2006-11-06 05:24:13
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answer #8
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answered by Spirit Walker 5
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