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Admiral is the highest military rank in most navies. It also may refer to the highest group of ranks (i.e., "general officer", sometimes interchanged with the naval term "flag officer"). Some South American navies, among others, have only one rank of admiral. In the NATO designation system (STANAG 2116),[1] it is level OF-9, which is equivalent to the ground/air forces rank of general. The next lower rank is "vice admiral". Highest ranks[edit]While some navies have a higher grade of "admiral of the fleet" or "fleet admiral", they are no longer used in Western navies. In the U.S. system, however, "admiral" it is one grade higher than NATO; a U.S. admiral is officer grade O-10, not O-9. In modern militaries, typical command assignments at this level would be a theater command (e.g., U.S. Unified Combatant Command), or a very high staff position, such as senior officer of a service or Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Typical modern assignments for an admiral not commanding operational fores include, in the U.S., the Director of National Intelligence, a major support or training/readiness organization such as the Pacific Fleet (above the numbered operational fleets), or Chief of Naval Operations. Lower flag grades[edit]While there are national differences, there are usually three grades of admiral, possibly with a higher rank and a lower rank in wartime.
Insignia[edit]Many countries follow U.S. or British usages. Both wear sleeve insignia of one broad and three full rings. As shoulder or collar insignia, U.S. admirals wear four stars, while the Commonwealth uses a crown, crossed baton & sword and three stars. References[edit]
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