Hivi kazi za ADC ni nini hasa maana huku uraiani wanamwita Body Guard
Google to chamaa lee. Soma hii hapa chini nimekutafutia kwa google, iko kwa kimombo lakini:
ADC (Aide De Camp) is a
personal assistant or
secretary to a person of high
rank, usually a senior
military,
police or
government officer, a member of a
royal family, or a
head of state.
This is not to be confused with an
adjutant, who is the senior administrator of a military unit.
The first
aide-de-camp is typically the foremost personal aide.
In some countries, the
aide-de-camp is considered to be a
title of honour (which confers the
post-nominal letters ADC or A de C), and participates at ceremonial functions.
The badge of office for an
aide-de-camp is usually the
aiguillette, a braided cord in gold or other colours, worn on the shoulder of a uniform. Whether it is worn on the left or the right shoulder is dictated by protocol.
The
President of Tanzania has an
aide-de-camp from the
Tanzania People's Defence Force from the
rank of colonel.
Within the
United States Army,
aides-de-camp are specifically appointed to
general-grade officers (
NATO Code OF-6 through
OF-10), the
Secretary of the Army,
Secretary of Defense,
Vice President, and
President of the United States; rank and number determined by the grade. For those general officers with more than one aide, the senior-ranking aide is usually considered to be the senior aide and serves in the capacity of coordinating the other aides and the others of the general's personal staff such as the driver,
orderlies, et al. In general, for the majority officers, the maximum tour of duty for aides is two years. The following is a listing of the accepted number of aides and allowable maximum rank allotted a general officer:
[17]
Brigadier general: one
lieutenant
Major general: one
captain; one lieutenant
Lieutenant general: one
major; one captain
General: one
lieutenant colonel, one major, one captain
General of the Army (or
Chief of Staff, USA): one
colonel, one lieutenant colonel, one major
Note: AR 614-100 states a general officer may choose any commissioned officer of any rank equal to or below the allowed rank stated above.
Lieutenant colonels and colonels commanding units (battalions and brigades, respectively) do not have aides. Occasionally, the unit's
adjutant – called the
S-1 – will assist the commanding officer as an aide but this is uncommon. Since a General of the Army does not retire and remains an officer of the United States Army for life, he or she is entitled to an aide of the rank of colonel.
U.S. Army
aides-de-camp wear a special device in place of the
branch-of-service (i.e., infantry, artillery, quartermaster, et al.) insignia they would otherwise wear on the lapels of their service uniform. The rank of the general officer being served is indicated on the device worn by the
aide-de-camp, as illustrated below. Although the Chief of Staff of the Army and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff are O-10 positions, their
aides-de-camp wear devices specific to those offices, rather than the normal four-star aide device. Also, an
aide-de-camp wears a special
aiguillette on the shoulder of his or her dress uniform.
The
aide-de-camp in the
United States Navy is also known as a flag aide (command ashore) or flag lieutenant (command afloat).
[18][19]
The military aides to the US President number five (one from each of the armed services), and they are majors and lieutenant colonels (in the Army, Marine Corps and Air Force). Navy and Coast Guard military aides to the President hold the rank of lieutenant commander or commander. One of their major roles is to hold the Presidential
emergency satchel. There are, in addition to these five permanent
aides-de-camp, some 40–45 military social aides, who are more junior (lieutenant to major) and are temporary officers whose appointment is, as their titles suggest, for social purposes (primarily as hosts at the
White House). They are part-time, required for perhaps 2–4 afternoons a m