Chief warrant officer
Chief warrant officer is a senior warrant officer rank, used in many countries.
Canadian Armed Forces
In the Canadian Armed Forces, a chief warrant officer or CWO is the most senior non-commissioned member rank for army and air force personnel. Its equivalent rank for navy personnel is chief [petty officer 1st class]. The French language form of chief warrant officer is adjudant-chef.CWO is senior to the rank of master warrant officer and its navy equivalent of chief petty officer 2nd class.
Insignia
The rank insignia of the CWO is a simplified version of the coat of arms of Canada: it lacks the annulus behind the shield bearing the motto of the Order of Canada. It also differs from the usual form of the arms through a lack of compartment and mantling.The insignia is worn in different places depending on the uniform. On ceremonial tunics and mess jackets, full-colour insignia is worn only on the right forearm.
On service dress jackets, full-colour insignia is worn on both forearms. When service dress is worn without a jacket, the insignia is in gold metal and green enamel miniature pins on the shirt collar or on pearl-grey embroidered shoulder slip-ons.
On field combat clothing ranks are worn in the middle of the chest, embroidered in monochrome green or monochrome blue thread. With other operational uniforms, such as flight suits or naval combat dress, the insignia is worn on slip-ons on both shoulders.
Forms of address
CWOs are generally initially addressed as "Chief Warrant Officer", and thereafter as "Sir" or "Ma'am" by subordinates; and as Mr. or Ms. by commissioned officers. If they hold the appointment of regimental sergeant major, they may also be addressed as "RSM" by the commanding officer, other officers, or when referred to in conversation. CWOs are never addressed as "Chief", this being a form of address reserved for chief petty officers. Civilians can address them as "Chief Warrant Officer", "CWO", or "Mr/Mrs/Miss/Ms".Key positions
CWO/CPO1 may fulfill roles in a number of key positions. These positions require the incumbent to act in an advisory or liaison role to a non-command position such as assistant Assistant Judge Advocate General Liaison Chief Petty Officer, Corps Sergeant-Major, or Defence Ethics Program Chief Warrant Officer, for example.Appointments
CWOs may hold a number of appointments, some of which are:- Regimental sergeant major – the most senior NCO in a battalion-sized army unit, including armoured, combat engineer, and signal regiments.
- Squadron warrant officer – the most senior NCO in a squadron-sized air force units and army signal units
- School chief warrant officers/chief petty officers – the most senior NCO in air force, navy and some army schools of battalion or squadron size.
- Base or wing chief warrant officer/chief petty officer – the most senior NCO on a Canadian Forces base or wing establishment
- Fleet chief petty officer – the most senior NCO in either Atlantic Fleet, Pacific Fleet, or Naval Reserve
- Ship's coxswain – the most senior NCO on a Royal Canadian Navy ship
Senior appointments
Senior appointments for chief warrant officers and chief petty officers 1st class entitle the incumbents to wear a modified rank badge or an addition to the rank badge. They are as follows:Formation chief warrant officer
The coat of arms over the central insignia of the badge of the Canadian Armed Forces. This appointment is given to CWO assigned to commanders at the base, brigade, wing, and division levels. Specific examples include base chief warrant officer, brigade sergeants-major, wing chief warrant officers, the division chief warrant officer of 1 Canadian Air Division and the division sergeant-major of 3rd Canadian Division. A formation chief warrant officer would typically be seen with a colonel or brigadier-general, but may occasionally be seen with a lieutenant-colonel or major-general.Command chief warrant officer/chief petty officer (CCWO/CCPO)
The coat of arms with a wreath of laurel wrapped around the base. This appointment is given to CWO/CPO1 assigned to commanders of commands including to the commander Canadian Special Operations Forces Command, commander Canadian Forces Intelligence Command and commander Canadian Joint Operations Command. The command chief warrant officer appointed to the commander Canadian Army is called the Canadian Army sergeant-major, while the command chief warrant officer appointed to commander RCAF is known as Chief Warrant Officer of the Air Force. The command chief warrant officer of the RCN is known as the RCN Command Chief Petty Officer. A command chief warrant officer/chief petty officer would be seen with a major-general/rear-admiral or lieutenant-general/vice-admiral.Messes and quarters
CWOs generally mess and billet with other warrant officers and with sergeants, and their navy equivalents, chief petty officers and petty officers. Their mess on military bases or installations are generally named the "Warrant Officers and Sergeants Mess".Uniforms
Although NCMs, CWOs generally wear the uniform accoutrements of commissioned officers; for example, officer cap badge, waistcoat instead of cummerbund with mess dress, etc.South African Armed Forces
In 2008 the Warrant Officer ranks of the South African National Defence Force were expanded and the rank of Chief Warrant Officer was created.In the South African Navy a Chief Warrant Officer is the senior NCO in Fleet Command. In the South African Army the equivalent is the senior NCO in an Army Formation, such as Armour, Infantry etc.
United States Armed Forces
Chief warrant officer in the United States Armed Forces refers to any warrant officer in pay grades CW2 and above. All warrant officers are officers and rate a salute by all enlisted NATO other ranks personnel. The U.S. Army and the U.S. Marine Corps use WO1/WO through CW5/CWO5 as designators and the U.S. Navy uses WO1 for one specialty ; all other branches of the U.S. Armed Forces use CWO2 through CWO5. The U.S. Air Force, although authorized to appoint warrant officers, does not utilize those grades in any capacity. All warrant officers dine in the officers' mess but rate just below O-1.On 4 June 2018, the Chief of Naval Operations announced the reestablishment of the rank of warrant officer one, for cyber warrant officers, and solicited applications for the rank/grade. These warrant officers will receive their appointment via warrant and not via commission. They will incur a six-year service obligation once promoted to W-1. A minimum of three-years in grade with a total service time of 12 years must be achieved before appointment and commission to chief warrant officer. However, the President also may grant appointments of warrant officers in the grade of W-1 via commission at any time as well as the Secretary of the Navy may also appoint warrant officers in that grade via commission, through additional regulations. In mid-December 2018, the Navy announced that six selectees had been named. They will wear a distinctive cap badge with two crossed anchors.
Warrant officer rank insignia is the only officers' insignia that is not the same for all branches of the U.S. military, with one exception. The rank insignia for a CW5 became the only universal insignia within the warrant officer ranks when the U.S. Navy promoted its first CWO5 in 2002 and the Army adopted the emblem in 2004.
Warrant officers in the United States are classified as officers and are in the "W" category ; they are technical leaders and specialists. Chief warrant officers are commissioned by the president of the United States and take the same oath as regular commissioned officers do. They may be technical experts with a long service as enlisted personnel or direct entrants, most notably as U.S. Army helicopter pilots.
Notable Warrant Officers
- Brigadier General Chuck Yeager, USAF was initially a flight officer ", in the USAAF during World War II
- MAJ Frederick Edgar Ferguson, USA
- MAJ Hugh Thompson, Jr., USA
- CW5 David F. Cooper, USA
- CW4 Michael J. Novosel, USA
- CW4 Oscar G. Johnson, USA
- CW4 Michael Durant, USA
- CW4 Thomas J. Hennen, USA
- CW4 Keith Yoakum, USA
- CW3 Ronald D. Young Jr., USA
- CW3 Hershel Daniel McCants Jr., USA
- CW2 Jason W. Myers, USA
- CW2 Louis R. Rocco, USA
- WO1 Robert Mason, USA
- CWO2/Chief Carpenter John Arnold Austin, USN
- WO1 John W. Lang, USN
- WO1 Floyd Bennett, USN
- CWO4 Hershel W. Williams, USMC
- CWO4 John W. Frederick, Jr., USMC
- CWO4 Henry Wildfang, USMC
- CWO5 Ralph E. Rigby, USA, last continuously serving draftee on active duty in the U.S. Army, retiring in 2014