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MOS COMPARISON

CWT vs 1440

Cyber Warfare Technician (USN) vs Information Warfare Officer (USN)

Intel

Two rates that pass each other in the P-way daily and have zero comprehension of what the other one does for 12 hours.

"So what was your MOS?" asks one vet to another at the VFW. The CWT answers: the schoolhouse at Corry Station in Pensacola is academically brutal — expect college-level networking, programming, and security coursework. The 1440 follows with: the training never stops because the adversary's communications evolve constantly — today's intercept technique is tomorrow's historical footnote. The bartender, a civilian, understands none of it and pours another round anyway. The military is, at its core, a very large organization that convinced a lot of different people they're all doing the same thing.

CWTNavy
Cyber Warfare Technician
Overall ratingNo reviews yet
Do It Again
Civilian Pay
1440Navy
Information Warfare Officer
Overall ratingNo reviews yet
Do It Again
Civilian Pay
$104K
Head to Head
CWT
1440
Getting In
ASVAB Line Scores
AR_MK_EI_GS 222
NOTE Officers qualify via OAR/ASTB (Aviation Selection Test Battery), not ASVAB line scores
Clearance
TS/SCI
Pay Grade
Enlisted
Officer
Training
Training Length
20 wk
14 wk
Pipeline Type
OCS or USNA
Training Location
Corry Station, Pensacola, FL
Corry Station, Pensacola, FL
Day-to-Day
Promotion Speed
Average
Deployment Tempo
Low
Career Field
Information Warfare
Information Warfare
After You Get Out
Civilian Median Pay
$104K
Top Civilian Career
Intelligence Analysts
Credentials Earned
4 certs

After the Uniform

The part the recruiter skips: what each job actually translates to once you're a civilian — and what it pays.

CWTCyber Warfare Technician
Civilian outcome data coming soon for CWT.
1440Information Warfare Officer
Civilian Median Pay
$104K/yr
What It Becomes on the Outside
Intelligence AnalystsStrong
Job market: Average (4%)
$104K
Information Security AnalystsRelated
Job market: Much faster than average (33%)
$120K
Computer and Information Systems ManagersRelated
Job market: Much faster than average (15%)
$170K
Credentials You Walk Away With
Information Warfare qualificationCryptologic Warfare Officer designationTS/SCI clearanceVarious NSA-recognized qualifications

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.

CWTCyber Warfare Technician
What the Recruiter Says

Cyber Warfare Technicians are the Navy's offensive and defensive cyber operators — conducting network operations, vulnerability assessments, and cyber missions at the tactical and strategic level. The TS/SCI clearance combined with hands-on cyber operations experience makes this one of the most in-demand skill sets in the entire military. NSA, Cyber Command, and defense contractors actively recruit from this rating.

What It's Actually Like

You're the renamed CTN with a broader mission scope. The redesignation to CWT reflects the expanded offensive cyber role that the Navy is building. The work is still heavily classified, the clearance is still TS/SCI, and the civilian demand is still insatiable. The schoolhouse at Corry Station in Pensacola is academically brutal — expect college-level networking, programming, and security coursework. The pipeline washes a significant percentage of students. If you make it through, you will never struggle to find employment in cybersecurity. The Navy knows this and retention is a constant challenge — the private sector pays more, and every CWT knows it.

1440Information Warfare Officer
What the Recruiter Says

As a Cryptologic Warfare Officer, you'll lead the Navy's signals intelligence and cyber operations — commanding the teams that intercept, exploit, and protect information across the electromagnetic spectrum. With a Top Secret/SCI clearance and expertise in SIGINT, cyber, and electronic warfare, you'll be positioned for senior intelligence leadership or highly compensated roles in the defense and intelligence industry.

What It's Actually Like

You are a Cryptologic Warfare Officer, which means you work in spaces you can't describe, on missions you can't discuss, using tools you can't acknowledge. Your entire career exists behind vault doors and inside SCIFs where your phone lives in a locker. You lead teams of cryptologic technicians — linguists, signals analysts, network operators — who intercept, analyze, and exploit foreign communications and electronic signals. The work ranges from tactical SIGINT support to fleet operations to strategic national-level intelligence that informs presidential daily briefings. You'll serve on ships, at NSA, at regional SIGINT operations centers, and in deployed positions where your products directly influence targeting decisions. The training never stops because the adversary's communications evolve constantly — today's intercept technique is tomorrow's historical footnote. Your clearance requirements are the most stringent in the Navy, and your lifestyle is permanently constrained by the information you carry in your head. You cannot travel to certain countries, ever. Your social media presence is functionally nonexistent. The reward is doing work that genuinely matters to national security at a level most people don't know exists. Civilian NSA, CIA, and DIA positions actively recruit CW officers, and defense intelligence contractors pay $140-170K for cleared cryptologic professionals with leadership experience.

The Real Life

Same dimensions, side by side. CWT on the left, 1440 on the right.

Daily Life
CWT

1440

Leading cryptologic operations — SIGINT collection and analysis, cyber operations, and information warfare planning. CW officers manage cryptologic missions at NSA sites, fleet commands, and theater intelligence centers. The work is classified and intellectually demanding. Shore-heavy career path with more predictable schedules than most URL communities.

Training / School
CWT

1440

Cryptologic officer training at Pensacola (FL) covers SIGINT operations, cryptologic warfare fundamentals, and intelligence community integration. The pipeline includes classified instruction and requires TS/SCI clearance. Total training: approximately 6 months.

Physical Demands
CWT

1440

Low. Intelligence and cryptologic work is desk-based. Standard Navy PT requirements.

Where You'll Be Stationed
CWT
1440
Fort Meade (MD)Pensacola (FL)Pearl Harbor (HI)San Antonio (TX)Norfolk (VA)
The Honest Truth
CWT

1440

Cryptologic Warfare Officer is an intelligence career that combines operational relevance with genuinely interesting classified work. The recruiter may not fully understand this designator because it's niche and classified. The reality: you lead the Navy's SIGINT and cryptologic missions, working alongside NSA and the broader intelligence community on some of the most sensitive operations in the national security enterprise. The work is intellectually stimulating and the impact is real. What they won't tell you: the career path is shore-heavy (which is a feature, not a bug, for quality of life), the bureaucracy of the intelligence community can be frustrating, and the work is largely invisible — you don't get the visible heroics of aviation or surface warfare. The civilian career prospects are outstanding: intelligence community civilians, defense contractors, and consulting firms hire CW officers at $120-180K+ based on clearance, expertise, and leadership experience. If you want to be at the cutting edge of intelligence without the physical demands of operational communities, CW is an excellent choice.

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