46S vs 12B
Public Affairs Mass Communication Specialist (USA) vs Combat Systems Officer (Bomber) (USAF)
One sleeps in a foxhole. The other sleeps in a hotel and calls it "deployed." Same government, same paycheck, very different TripAdvisor reviews.
In the recruiter's version: the 46S would tell the Army's story to the world, and the 12B would you'll operate the weapons and sensor systems aboard b-52s and b-1s as a combat systems officer, executing complex strike missions with precision targeting authority. In the version where people actually serve: you'll photograph a general's change of command at 0800 and a live-fire exercise at 1400, switching between 'corporate headshot' and 'combat photojournalist' faster than you change lenses. And for the 12B: the pilot gets to land the plane and the CSO gets to break things — the culture has made peace with this. The recruiter's version had better production value. This version has better accuracy. Scroll down for the numbers. They're less funny but more useful than everything above.
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 Public Affairs Specialist, you'll tell the Army's story to the world. You'll master journalism, photography, videography, and media relations — building a professional portfolio that launches careers in broadcast media, corporate communications, and digital marketing.”
You are the enlisted Public Affairs specialist who takes the photos, shoots the video, writes the articles, manages social media, and serves as the Army's spokesperson — all while being one person doing a job that civilian organizations staff with entire departments. Your camera gear costs more than your car and you carry it into environments that void the warranty on day one. You'll photograph a general's change of command at 0800 and a live-fire exercise at 1400, switching between 'corporate headshot' and 'combat photojournalist' faster than you change lenses. Your press releases get edited by every PAO in the chain until they say nothing that could possibly offend anyone, which means they say nothing at all. Your social media management involves posting content that makes the Army look good while dependents flood the comments with complaints about housing and commissary hours. Deployed PA work is where the job becomes genuinely incredible — embedded with combat units, documenting operations, your photos become official Army history and occasionally national news. Your video editing, writing, photography, and crisis communication skills build a portfolio that civilian communications professionals can't match. Corporate PR, journalism, government public affairs GS positions, and media production companies recruit Army PA specialists at $50-80K.
“You'll operate the weapons and sensor systems aboard B-52s and B-1s as a Combat Systems Officer, executing complex strike missions with precision targeting authority.”
The CSO is the officer who is not flying the airplane but is responsible for what the airplane does — weapons employment, navigation, electronic warfare, sensor management. On the B-52, this means managing a crew position with direct control over weapons systems that have not fundamentally changed since the Cold War and also avionics that have been updated six times with questionable integration. On the B-1, the CSO manages the most capable conventional strike platform in the inventory with a targeting precision that was inconceivable when the aircraft was designed. The pilot gets to land the plane and the CSO gets to break things — the culture has made peace with this. The career path for CSOs is narrower than for pilots, which affects promotion rates and assignment variety. The technical expertise in weapons systems and electronic warfare translates to defense industry positions that pay considerably more than Air Force O-pay. Raytheon, Boeing, and every major defense platform contractor needs people who have operated their systems at operational proficiency. That is you.
The Real Life
Same dimensions, side by side. 46S on the left, 12B on the right.
Writing news releases, taking photographs, producing videos, managing social media, and supporting media relations for the command. You tell the Army's story through traditional and digital media. Garrison includes covering training events, change of command ceremonies, and community relations. Deployment involves combat camera, media escorts, and operational communication.
Weapons system management, electronic warfare, navigation, and offensive/defensive systems operation on bomber aircraft. You are the tactical brain of the bomber crew — managing weapons delivery, countermeasures, and systems while the pilot flies.
AIT at the Defense Information School (DINFOS) at Fort Meade (MD) is about 12 weeks. Covers journalism, photography, videography, media relations, and social media management. DINFOS training is genuinely useful and the skills are directly applicable to civilian media careers.
CSO training at Pensacola (FL) followed by bomber-specific qualification. Total pipeline about 2 years from commissioning.
Low to moderate. Some fieldwork documenting training and operations, but most work is writing, photography, video production, and media relations. Physical demands depend on what you are covering — embedding with infantry means infantry conditions.
Moderate. Long-duration flights in bomber aircraft. Same endurance demands as bomber pilots.
Public affairs is one of the best MOSs for creative professionals who want military experience without giving up their craft. You get paid to write, photograph, and produce video content — skills that are directly transferable to civilian media, marketing, and communications careers. The recruiter might undersell it as a support job, but PA specialists produce real content that reaches real audiences. What they won't tell you: you are also the person who writes the command's dry press releases, covers boring ceremonies, and manages social media accounts that nobody reads. The creative work is sandwiched between a lot of bureaucratic communication requirements. The civilian translation is strong: corporate communications, journalism, marketing, PR agencies, and government public affairs all recruit from the 46S community. DINFOS training is respected in the industry.
Bomber CSOs are the weapons and systems experts on strategic bomber platforms. You manage weapons delivery, electronic warfare, and tactical systems. The honest truth: the same duty station trade-offs as bomber pilots apply (Minot, Barksdale, Whiteman), plus nuclear alert. The work is intellectually demanding and operationally significant. The civilian career path is more defense industry and program management than airlines. CSOs who lean into technical expertise build strong post-military careers in defense contracting and systems engineering.
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