38B vs 11C
Civil Affairs Specialist (USA) vs Indirect Fire Infantryman (USA)
Same DFAC, same 0630 formation, same NCO who's been "about to retire" for six years — completely different jobs behind the camo.
The 38B recruiting pitch and the 11C recruiting pitch both used the word "opportunity." The 38B's version of opportunity: your actual cultural awareness will come from getting it wrong, apologizing, and trying again — which is the most human thing the military does. The 11C's version: ' Your 'precision ballistics' means hanging rounds in freezing rain at 0200 while some butter bar on the radio keeps changing the fire mission like he's adjusting his fantasy football lineup. Two definitions. Same dictionary. Different planets. One of these jobs makes you tough. The other makes you employable. We won't say which.
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.
“As a Civil Affairs Specialist, you'll be the bridge between military forces and civilian populations. You'll master governance support, humanitarian assistance, and cultural engagement — developing diplomatic skills that lead to careers in international development, NGOs, and government foreign service.”
You are the enlisted Civil Affairs specialist who does the actual talking to actual people in actual villages while the officers attend meetings about attending meetings. You'll assess infrastructure, coordinate humanitarian assistance, and try to explain to a village elder why the Army just drove a tank through his irrigation ditch. Your cultural awareness training was a 40-minute PowerPoint. Your actual cultural awareness will come from getting it wrong, apologizing, and trying again — which is the most human thing the military does. You'll carry a notebook, a handshake, and the hope that building a well or fixing a school means something to someone after you leave. Sometimes it does. The work is important and nobody talks about it enough.
“As an Indirect Fire Infantryman, you'll operate advanced mortar systems to deliver precision fire support. You'll master ballistic calculations, coordinate combined arms operations, and develop analytical skills valued in defense contracting and engineering fields.”
You're an 11B who carries a tube instead of extra ammo, and both sides will remind you of this constantly. The infantry doesn't fully claim you. The artillery doesn't even know you exist. You'll hump a baseplate up a mountain that Google Maps says is a 'gentle slope' and call it 'light training.' Your 'precision ballistics' means hanging rounds in freezing rain at 0200 while some butter bar on the radio keeps changing the fire mission like he's adjusting his fantasy football lineup. When it works — when you drop rounds danger close and the grunts on the ground radio back with nothing but heavy breathing and gratitude — there is no better sound on earth. You'll hear 'hang it, fire' in your sleep for the rest of your life. You'll miss it.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. 38B on the left, 11C on the right.
Civil reconnaissance, engaging with local leaders and populations, assessing infrastructure and governance, and coordinating humanitarian assistance and civil-military operations. You are the bridge between the military and civilian populations in the operational area. Garrison includes training, language study, and regional expertise development.
PT at 0630, mortar live-fire exercises, fire direction center drills, and a lot of physical conditioning. Garrison time is split between the mortar pit and the same cleaning details every infantryman knows. Field problems are frequent and you hump the heaviest loads in the platoon.
AIT at Fort Liberty (NC) is about 13 weeks. Covers civil affairs operations, civil reconnaissance, governance assessment, and coordination techniques. The training emphasizes interpersonal skills, cultural awareness, and problem-solving in ambiguous environments.
OSUT at Fort Moore (GA) is 22 weeks — same pipeline as 11B with mortar-specific training in the final phase. You learn the M224 (60mm), M252 (81mm), and M120 (120mm) mortar systems plus fire direction calculations. The math matters more than the recruiter lets on.
Moderate. Civil affairs soldiers operate in the field with supported units. Physical demands vary by assignment — some involve foot patrols in austere environments, others are primarily meetings and coordination.
Extremely high. You carry everything an 11B carries plus mortar base plates, tubes, and rounds that weigh 35-45 lbs each. Rucking loads routinely exceed 80 lbs. Your knees and back will know it.
Civil affairs is one of the most unique and underappreciated MOSs in the Army. You are essentially a diplomat in uniform — meeting with local leaders, assessing communities, coordinating assistance, and representing the US military to civilian populations. The recruiter may describe it as hearts-and-minds work, and that's accurate but reductive. What they won't tell you: the work is ambiguous and often frustrating. You are trying to solve complex governance and infrastructure problems in environments where the situation changes daily. Success is hard to measure. The civilian translation is excellent: international development, foreign affairs, NGO work, USAID, and the State Department all value civil affairs experience. Many 38Bs transition to careers in international relations, humanitarian assistance, or government service. If you are comfortable with ambiguity and genuinely interested in other cultures, this MOS is deeply rewarding.
The recruiter will lump you in with infantry and that's technically correct — you are an infantryman. What they won't explain is that 11C is the forgotten middle child of the infantry world. You carry heavier loads than riflemen, do more math than anyone expects, and when there's no mortar training happening, you get pulled for every detail and working party on the FOB. The upside: mortar crews are tight-knit teams with a real sense of ownership over their weapon system, and a well-run mortar section is genuinely devastating. The downside: promotion is just as glacially slow as 11B, the physical toll is arguably worse because of the loads, and the civilian translation is essentially nonexistent unless you pivot to something else. If you love indirect fire and want to be infantry, it's a rewarding MOS — just go in knowing the costs.
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