350L vs 350F
Attaché Technician (USA) vs All Source Intelligence Technician (USA)
Two soldiers walk into a motor pool. One works there. The other just needs their vehicle back. Both are trapped for the next 4 hours.
Two promises walked into a recruiting station. The first: "develop deep regional expertise as a foreign area officer technician, advising commanders on culture, politics, and foreign military capabilities." The second: "be the analytical engine behind the S2 and G2." Both promises were technically true in the way that "water is involved in surfing" is technically true about the Navy. 350L reality: the honest part: Foreign Area work requires a level of intellectual engagement and self-directed learning that not everyone wants to sustain across a career. 350F reality: the hardest part of the job isn't technical — it's knowing when your assessment is solid enough to brief and when you need more collection. A recruiter once described both of these as "high-speed." The definition of speed was not specified.
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.
“Develop deep regional expertise as a Foreign Area Officer technician, advising commanders on culture, politics, and foreign military capabilities.”
The 350L warrant is the regional and language expert who has put in the years to develop genuine area expertise — this is not a first-assignment specialty, this is a career built on language training, in-country experience, and genuine study of a specific region's military, political, and cultural landscape. You'll work at senior echelons as an advisor on foreign military capabilities and regional dynamics, attend the Defense Language Institute and potentially in-country language immersion, and develop relationships with foreign military counterparts that take years to build and are genuinely strategic assets. The honest part: Foreign Area work requires a level of intellectual engagement and self-directed learning that not everyone wants to sustain across a career. The PCS shuffle can disrupt the regional continuity you're trying to build. DIA, EUCOM, PACOM, CENTCOM, and the IC community all have appetite for your expertise post-service. This is a niche career that suits a specific personality type extremely well.
“You'll be the analytical engine behind the S2 and G2 — the warrant officer who fuses HUMINT, SIGINT, IMINT, MASINT, and OSINT into finished intelligence products that commanders actually act on. All-source intelligence means you're not limited to one collection discipline. You see everything, you connect the dots, and you brief the product. Operating DCGS-A at brigade and division level, you'll provide named area of interest analysis, course of action assessments, and threat assessments that shape mission planning. The 350F warrant is the intelligence professional who synthesizes chaos into clarity under time pressure.”
All-source sounds like a superpower until you're staring at contradictory reporting from three different collection systems at 0200 and the battle update brief is in four hours. DCGS-A is a complex system that never works perfectly in a deployed environment, and you'll spend real time troubleshooting connectivity and data feeds instead of doing analysis. The hardest part of the job isn't technical — it's knowing when your assessment is solid enough to brief and when you need more collection. Bad analysis at the G2 level costs lives. The pressure to produce is constant, the data is never complete, and the commander wants the answer now. Welcome to the intelligence community.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. 350L on the left, 350F on the right.
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Serving as the senior all-source intelligence technician — integrating intelligence from all disciplines (HUMINT, SIGINT, GEOINT, OSINT) into coherent analysis products. You advise commanders on the intelligence picture and manage the fusion of multiple intelligence streams. The work is intellectually demanding and operationally significant.
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WOCS at Fort Novosel (AL) followed by the All Source Intelligence Technician Course at Fort Huachuca (AZ). The training covers advanced intelligence analysis, collection management, and intelligence operations at the senior level. Entry requires extensive prior MI experience.
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Low. Intelligence analysis and management is desk-based. Standard Army PT requirements.
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All source intelligence technician warrant officer is the career analyst path for the Army's most experienced intelligence professionals. You are the person who fuses intelligence from every discipline into the analysis that commanders use to make decisions. What the warrant officer advisor won't fully explain: the quality of your experience depends enormously on your assignments. Strategic-level billets (DIA, combatant commands, NSA support) provide world-class intelligence experience. Tactical assignments can be frustrating if the supported command doesn't prioritize intelligence. The civilian career ceiling is high: defense contracting, intelligence agencies, and consulting firms all pay premium salaries for senior all-source analysts with TS/SCI clearances. The warrant officer path lets you stay in the intelligence craft without the administrative overhead of field-grade officer duties — which is exactly why most 350Fs chose the warrant track.
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