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World War II German Army ranks and insignia; Military ranks of the Luftwaffe (1935–45) Corps colours of the Luftwaffe (1935–45) Uniforms and insignia of the Kriegsmarine; Japan - army ranks of the Japanese Empire during World War II; Japan - naval ranks of the Japanese Empire during World War II; United States Army enlisted rank insignia of ...
No insignia: Sergeant major: Regimental Quartermaster Sergeant: Company sergeant: Company quartermaster sergeant: Sergeant: Corporal: Private, 3 star: Private, 2 star: Recruit: Maor-Sáirsint Cathlán/Reisimint [b] Ceathrúsháirsint Cathlán/Reisimint [b] Sáirsint Complacht [c] Ceathrúsháirsint Complacht [c] Sáirsint: Ceannaire: Saighdiúr ...
United Nations Development Programme: Human Development Index, 2016 4 out of 188 Transparency International: Corruption Perceptions Index, 2016 10 out of 176 Economist Intelligence Unit: Democracy Index, 2016 13 out of 167 World Economic Forum: Global Competitiveness Report, 2017-2018 5 out of 148 Reporters without Borders: Press Freedom Index ...
Protocol holds that a head of state takes precedence over all other officials, and that heads of state rank in the order that they took office. The following list contains the heads of state for all United Nations member states and non-member observer states.
The rank insignia of the Federal Defence Forces (Bundeswehr) indicate rank and branch of service in the German Army (Heer), German Air Force (Luftwaffe), or the German Navy (Marine). They are regulated by the "presidential order on rank designation and military uniform".
The ranks of the German Armed Forces, (in German: Bundeswehr), were set up by the President with the Anordnung des Bundespräsidenten über die Dienstgradbezeichnungen und die Uniform der Soldaten on the basis of section 4, paragraph 3 of the Soldatengesetz (federal law concerning the legal status of soldiers).
The following table shows comparative officer ranks of World War II, with the ranks of Allied powers, the major Axis powers and various other countries and co-belligerents during World War II. Table [ edit ]
An instruction might be a military order, if a soldier was a defined military superior by the Ministerial Directive Governing Superior-Subordinate Relations (German: Vorgesetztenverordnung). If an order was given by someone not a military superior, it would be juridically called a "military non-order" (without claim of obedience).