18F vs 18B
Special Forces Intelligence Sergeant (USA) vs Special Forces Weapons Sergeant (USA)
Two MOS codes that share a branch, a PT test, and an unshakeable belief that their job is the reason the Army functions.
If time travel were real and you could send one message to yourself at MEPS, the 18F version would be: "Your primary responsibilities are intelligence analysis and supporting the operations NCO in mission planning — threat assessment, target development, ISR coordination, post-mission analysis." And the 18B version: "If you make it — and most don't, and that's the point — you will become genuinely expert on more weapons platforms than most countries have in their entire inventory." Your past self would sign anyway. They always do. One of these translates to a civilian career with surgical precision. The other requires a four-paragraph explanation.
After the Uniform
The part the recruiter skips: what each job actually translates to once you're a civilian — and what it pays.
Salary data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program. A guide, not a guarantee.
Recruiter vs. Reality
The pitch versus what people who actually did the job report back.
“Support Special Forces operations as an intelligence and operations specialist. Work at the intersection of intelligence analysis, mission planning, and operations coordination on an ODA. Develop skills in targeting, intelligence fusion, and special operations planning. A strategic thinker's role in the world's most capable small unit.”
The 18F is the assistant operations and intelligence sergeant, which is technically two jobs and actually three jobs and practically whatever the team sergeant needs done that doesn't fall neatly into another lane. Your primary responsibilities are intelligence analysis and supporting the operations NCO in mission planning — threat assessment, target development, ISR coordination, post-mission analysis. You will spend a significant portion of your working life reading reporting, building targeting packages, and sitting in planning sessions where you're the person who gets asked 'what do we know about X' and is expected to have a coherent answer. The intelligence training in the Q Course is substantive. The operational application is demanding. The intersection of intelligence and operations at the team level is one of the most sophisticated roles in the conventional or SOF world, and the people who do it well become indispensable. Post-Army, the intelligence community is your most natural landing zone — DoD agencies, CIA, DIA, defense contractors doing OSINT and analysis — and the SF credential gets you past the first screening with a credibility that matters.
“As a Special Forces Weapons Sergeant, you'll be the firearms and tactics expert on an elite Green Beret team. You'll master every weapons system in the U.S. and foreign arsenals, train partner forces worldwide, and develop expertise that makes you invaluable in defense consulting, private security, and law enforcement leadership.”
First you have to survive SFAS, which exists specifically to make you quit, and the Q Course, which exists specifically to see if you can think while everything is terrible. If you make it — and most don't, and that's the point — you will become genuinely expert on more weapons platforms than most countries have in their entire inventory. 'Training partner forces' means teaching a farmer who's never zeroed a rifle to conduct a night raid, through an interpreter, in a country nobody at your high school reunion can find on a map. Your ODA is family in a way civilians use that word but don't actually mean. The contractor money afterwards is real. Most 18-series guys will tell you the job itself was the point. They're not lying. For once.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. 18F on the left, 18B on the right.
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Weapons training (US and foreign), demolitions, small-unit tactics, partner force training, and mission planning. As the weapons sergeant on an ODA (Operational Detachment-Alpha), you are the expert on every weapon system the team encounters. Between deployments: advanced training, language study, and readiness cycles.
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The Special Forces Qualification Course (Q Course) at Fort Liberty (NC) is 56-95 weeks depending on your specialty and language assignment. SFAS (selection) alone is 24 days and has a ~70% attrition rate. The Q Course is the longest and most comprehensive special operations training pipeline in the US military. The 18B track focuses on advanced weapons, demolitions, and tactics.
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Elite. SF selection (SFAS) and the Q Course are among the most physically demanding training in the military. Operational tempo requires sustained peak fitness — rucking, climbing, swimming, and extended operations on minimal sleep.
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Special Forces weapons sergeants are among the most skilled and capable soldiers in the world. The recruiter will sell the elite status, and it's earned — the Q Course is genuinely one of the hardest things you can do in the military. What they won't fully convey: the operational tempo is relentless. Multiple deployments, constant training, and long separations from family are the norm, not the exception. Divorce rates in the SF community are high, and the physical toll accumulates over years of hard use. The flip side: the camaraderie on an ODA is unmatched, the work is meaningful, and the post-military career options are extraordinary. SF veterans are among the most sought-after hires in defense, intelligence, and corporate leadership. If you have the physical and mental ability to make it through the pipeline, this is one of the most rewarding careers in the military — just understand the full cost.
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