It was established sometime(though not from the beginning) during TNG's run that O'Brien was an enlisted man, a chief petty officer.
...we had a Battalion Sergent Major (more or less equivilent to a Senior Chief)...
...we had a Battalion Sergent Major (more or less equivilent to a Senior Chief)...
I apologize for the nitpick, but a Battalion Sergeant Major would be equal to a Master Chief.
A Company First Sergeant (or even a Master Sergeant) would be equal to a Senior Chief.
Again, sorry for the nitpick, and yes, I know you said "more or less equivalent".![]()
^^^
Sorry 'bout that, Sonak.
Side-note: when I was in the Army, we had a Battalion Sergent Major (more or less equivilent to a Senior Chief) who loved nothing more than torturing brand new Second Lieutenants (more of less equivilent to an Ensign). Some 2LT would show up convinced of his absolute god-given military genius, and the SGM would methodically and completely disassemble his ego. Never raising his voice, or overtly disrespectful to the LT, but unrelenting. Always entertaining, and occasionally educational.
^^^^
Did you mean, maybe, Bashir and O'Brien? That'd be good.
In "A Man Alone", the O'Briens explicitly discuss a promotion. Curiously, they say that Miles has received one, but would have to give it up if he transferred elsewhere. So probably it isn't a promotion in rank, but only in position - from one of the many Transporter Chiefs of a starship to the one and only Chief of Operations on a Fleet installation.By the time they finally decided on O'Brien's rank insignia, it was approximate to that of a Senior Chief in the U.S. Navy, suggesting a possible promotion since his days on the Enterprise...
... It's fortunate that despite all the insignia confusion in TNG, the character played by Colm Meaney there never gets explicitly addressed by any specific rank or rate....
Re: O'Brien as a Tactical Officer on the Rutledge.
Not necessarily an inconsistency. How big was the Rutledge? We don't know, but it may have been a reletively small ship. Perhaps small enough that the position of "Tactical Officer" was filled by an NCO. Or...the assigned (commissioned) Tactical Officer had been killed, and O'Brien got slotted into the position because he was handy (ship out on the front lines, replacements hard to come by, etc.) despite his being an NCO. Third possibility: O'Brien received a temporary "battlefield commission" during the war, and reverted back to his actual enlisted rank after the war was over (this sort of thing actually happened in the US military during and after WW2).
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