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USA35Q

Cryptologic Network Warfare Specialist

Operates offensive and defensive cyber tools to support intelligence collection and operations. Works at the intersection of SIGINT, cyberspace, and network operations to support national intelligence missions.

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Recruiter vs. Reality
What they tell you

Conduct cyberspace operations at the intersection of SIGINT and cyber warfare. Work with advanced collection and exploitation tools. Operate in one of DoD's most technically demanding intelligence specialties. Direct pathways to NSA, CYBERCOM, and defense cyber contractor roles.

What it's actually like

The 35Q sits at the intersection of signals intelligence and cyberspace operations — collection, exploitation, and analysis of digital communications and networks with the technical depth of both fields. The training is classified enough that what you learn in AIT is not discussed at family dinners, which is either thrilling or isolating depending on your relationship with secrets. The work involves network analysis, digital forensics, exploitation techniques, and production of intelligence that feeds both the signals intelligence community and cyber operations planning. The technical depth required is real — this is not a MOS for people who want to operate systems without understanding them. If you have the aptitude, the training is exceptional, comparable to programs that cost six figures in the civilian world. The cleared contractor ecosystem for people with 35Q backgrounds and the relevant clearances is lucrative in a way that is not adequately emphasized during your service. NSA and CYBERCOM are the natural government landing zones. The contractors who support those missions pay what the government can't. The transition, when timed well, is one of the better financial outcomes available to an enlisted soldier leaving the Army.

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Training Pipeline
1
Basic Combat Training10w
Various
2
AIT — Cryptologic Network Warfare26w
Fort Gordon (GA)
Offensive and defensive cyberspace operations, signals exploitation, network penetration. TS/SCI. One of the most technical Army pipelines.
On the Outside

What this actually is in the real world

Your skills translate. Here's what civilian employers call this job — and what they pay.

Cyber Warfare Analyst

Dead-on match
$108,000$78,000$165,000/yr median
Job market: Much faster than average

Penetration Tester

Dead-on match
$115,000$82,000$178,000/yr median
Job market: Much faster than average

NSA/Cyber Contractor

Dead-on match
$125,000$90,000$192,000/yr median
Job market: Much faster than average
Salary data estimated from BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics and comparable civilian roles. Figures are approximations — use as a guide, not a guarantee.
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