In our country, military doctors belong to a kind of officers. Military doctors are divided into professional technical officers and civilian personnel. Generally, military doctors in grass-roots units belong to technical officers, while military doctors in large organs belong to civilian cadres. The similarity between the two is that they are both officers and officers.
But the difference is that the former wears the captain's epaulettes of the third-class and tenth-class ranks, and the necktie wears the civilian necktie. The latter's epaulettes are civilian epaulettes and also wear civilian bow ties. There are also differences in treatment, promotion and system, so I won't go into details here.
Extended data:
In the armies of most countries, military doctors wear special armbands to show the obvious sign of the Red Cross. The armed forces of Islamic countries use the Red Crescent Society. (For other signs, please refer to the Red Cross entry. These signs tell the enemy soldiers that this man is a military doctor and a non-combatant who provides medical care. For many years, most military doctors carried the least incidental weapons, such as pistols and daggers.
Common defensive weapons are non-automatic rifles, carbines or submachine guns. Military doctors can be equipped with weapons, but generally they can only be used to protect themselves or the wounded. If they use weapons to attack (such as assault or assault) or carry offensive weapons (such as sniper rifles, machine guns and Grenade launchers), they will lose the protection of the Geneva Conventions.
Usually, if a medic has his weapon, he is a soldier with military threat. According to the Geneva Convention, it is a war crime to deliberately shoot a military doctor who is not threatening.
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