270A vs 35P
Legal Administrator (USA) vs Signals Intelligence (SIGINT) Voice Interceptor (USA)
Both recruiters said this was "the best job in the Army." Statistically, they can't both be right.
On one end of the military experience spectrum, 270A: 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. On the opposite end, 35P: the language plus TS/SCI combo makes you a genuine unicorn in the job market — if you maintain the language, which the Army makes surprisingly difficult by stationing you in places where nobody speaks it. The spectrum is wider than the career counselor implied. The spectrum is always wider than the career counselor implied. Same Commander-in-Chief, different everything else between the oath and the DD-214.
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.
“As a Cryptologic Linguist, you'll master a foreign language and use it to intercept, analyze, and exploit enemy communications. You'll earn a Top Secret clearance, achieve near-native fluency, and position yourself for elite careers in the intelligence community, diplomacy, and international business.”
DLI is either the best or worst year of your life depending on your language. Arabic? Buckle up for 64 weeks of wanting to cry into your flash cards. Korean? Hope you like stroke order. Your 'signals intelligence operations' involve wearing headphones for 12 hours and writing down things that people said, which is basically professional eavesdropping with a security clearance and carpal tunnel. The language plus TS/SCI combo makes you a genuine unicorn in the job market — if you maintain the language, which the Army makes surprisingly difficult by stationing you in places where nobody speaks it. Your DLI friends become lifelong friends because shared linguistic trauma bonds people in ways combat sometimes can't. Maintain the language. It's worth more than your GI Bill.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. 270A on the left, 35P on the right.
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Translating and analyzing foreign language communications, producing intelligence reports, and supporting SIGINT collection operations. The work is intellectually demanding — you are listening to, reading, and translating foreign communications in real time. Quality of work varies by assignment: NSA billets involve cutting-edge collection while some tactical units have you doing routine monitoring.
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The pipeline starts at DLI (Defense Language Institute) in Monterey, CA for 36-64 weeks depending on the language category, followed by SIGINT training at Goodfellow AFB (TX) or Fort Huachuca (AZ). DLI is in one of the most beautiful locations in the military — Monterey is world-class. The language training is intense: 6-8 hours of classroom instruction daily in your target language.
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Low. SIGINT analysis and translation work is desk-based. Standard Army PT requirements.
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Cryptologic linguist is one of the most intellectually rewarding MOSs in the Army, and the DLI experience alone makes it worth considering. You learn a foreign language to professional proficiency — an education that would cost $50K+ in the civilian world — for free. The recruiter might not fully explain the pipeline: DLI in Monterey (1-1.5 years) followed by SIGINT school, meaning you could be in training for nearly 2 years before reaching your first unit. Once you get to a real assignment, the work ranges from fascinating (real-time intelligence collection supporting operations) to tedious (monitoring static frequencies for hours). Your civilian value is enormous: the intelligence community is permanently short on cleared linguists, and the combination of language skills, SIGINT training, and TS/SCI clearance commands premium salaries. The biggest risk is language atrophy — if you stop using it, you lose it, and your DLPT scores drop. Maintain your skills and this MOS pays dividends for decades.
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