270A vs 353T
Legal Administrator (USA) vs Intelligence Systems Integration and Maintenance Technician (USA)
Same green uniform, different buildings, same parking lot argument about who actually works harder. The debate predates both MOS codes.
When a 270A and a 353T both hit terminal leave in the same month, the job market receives two very different veterans. The 270A brings: the civilian paralegal and legal administration market can absorb you, but the military legal specialty has limited direct civilian translation compared to some other warrant fields. The 353T arrives with: the career is academically demanding in ways that reward people with STEM backgrounds. Both earned their DD-214. The civilian world values them at different exchange rates. A recruiting station near you is currently presenting both of these as "the best-kept secret in the military."
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.
“Manage legal operations, court-martial proceedings, and military justice administration as a specialist warrant officer. A unique legal career in uniform with transferable administrative skills.”
The 270A warrant is the glue that holds Judge Advocate legal operations together — you manage the administrative and operational functions of a JAG office so that the attorneys can focus on the law. Court-martial preparation, legal assistance program management, evidence handling, claims processing, and the voluminous record-keeping requirements of military justice all flow through you. You will know more about the procedural mechanics of military law than most junior JAG officers, and you'll spend years watching butter bar attorneys figure out things you mastered three assignments ago. The relationship with the Staff Judge Advocate is the defining factor in tour quality — a good SJA who respects the warrant function makes this an excellent job. The civilian paralegal and legal administration market can absorb you, but the military legal specialty has limited direct civilian translation compared to some other warrant fields. The job is rewarding if you find meaning in making justice processes work correctly.
“Exploit measurement and signature intelligence to characterize threats and support targeting. The most technical intelligence specialty in the Army, with direct application to national-level intelligence problems.”
MASINT is the intelligence discipline that most Army officers can't explain at a dinner party, which is partly the point — it's the exploitation of physical phenomena that other collection disciplines don't cover. Radar signatures, infrared signatures, acoustic signatures, nuclear and chemical detection signatures — the 353T warrant develops expertise in technical collection and analysis that is genuinely rare. The pipeline is specialized and the work is predominantly at theater and national level rather than tactical. You will spend your career in a relatively small community where deep expertise is expected and shallow understanding is immediately obvious. The NGA, DIA, and national MASINT center community are your likely post-Army employers, and the clearance and technical background make you competitive for positions that pay very well. The career is academically demanding in ways that reward people with STEM backgrounds. If you don't find the technical intelligence tradecraft genuinely interesting, this is the wrong lane.
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