Army Regulation AR 670-1 Chapter 20-19 to be more specific on the guidelines surrounding the usage of ceremonial blue overcoats (CBO) with white bib scarf.
The Ceremonial Blue Overcoat with white scarf is worn only on formal ceremonial occasions when (a) cold temperatures demand more protection from the elements than the Army Service Uniform coat can reasonably provide, and (b) the standard black all-weather coat is not suitable for the formality or solemnity of the occasion. Shoulder straps are worn on the CBO, and the Army Service Uniform coat may not be worn under the CBO.
Just our luck that OP choose a 200px dimension image. Or is it?
That's exactly why I keep telling you people, stop doing that! It's a fucking shill tactic to waste everyone's time. If you are not a shill, stop posting this pixelated crap!
I keep reusing the same response because people don't read and keep spouting disinformation.
And no, no ASU coat would be worn under the CBO. This isn't the trench coat that a lot of soldiers wear during Army Balls and events such as those. This is
"ceremonial" garb...
Real General vs Rent-a-general
Army Regulation AR 670-1 Chapter 20-19 to be more specific on the guidelines surrounding the usage of ceremonial blue overcoats (CBO) with white bib scarf.
What does this mean re: the photo? Is OP onto something or just confirmation bias?
means that overcoat isn't going to have anything on it. This does not prove the general is an actor.
WHITE SCARF are the keywords!
Just our luck that OP choose a 200px dimension image. Or is it?
That's exactly why I keep telling you people, stop doing that! It's a fucking shill tactic to waste everyone's time. If you are not a shill, stop posting this pixelated crap!
HD-Sauce: https://youtu.be/ZwvbQR887W0?t=25108
Roger, thanks.
Roger.
I keep reusing the same response because people don't read and keep spouting disinformation.
And no, no ASU coat would be worn under the CBO. This isn't the trench coat that a lot of soldiers wear during Army Balls and events such as those. This is "ceremonial" garb...
Look up Army Regulation AR 670-1. It's in there.