This graph shows the number of active duty U.S. Marine Corps personnel from 1995 to 2010. In 2010, there were 202,612 active duty U.S. Marine Corps members, as compared to 172,955 in 2000.
The U.S. Army remains the largest branch of the American military, with 449,344 active duty personnel in 2023. While the Army leads in numbers, the newly established Space Force had just 8,879 active duty members, highlighting the evolving nature of modern warfare and the increasing importance of space-based capabilities. Confidence in military remains high Despite fluctuations in force size, public trust in the U.S. military remains strong. In 2024, 61 percent of Americans expressed a great deal or quite a lot of confidence in the armed forces, a slight increase from the previous year. While a slightly higher share of Republicans have shown more confidence in the military, trust in the institution remains high across party lines. Global commitments The United States continues to invest heavily in its military capabilities, with defense spending reaching 916.02 billion U.S. dollars in 2023. This substantial budget supports not only domestic defense needs but also enables the U.S. to respond to global crises, as evidenced by the over 40 billion euros in military aid provided to Ukraine following Russia's invasion. The high level of spending, which translates to about 2,220 U.S. dollars per capita.
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The graph illustrates the number of personnel in each branch of the U.S. Military for the year 2025. The x-axis lists the military branches: Army, Navy, Marine Corps, Air Force, Space Force, and Coast Guard. The y-axis represents the number of personnel, ranging from 41,477 to 449,265. Among the branches, the Army has the highest number of personnel with 449,265, followed by the Navy with 333,794 and the Air Force with 317,675. The Marine Corps and Coast Guard have 168,628 and 41,477 personnel, respectively. The data is displayed in a bar graph format, effectively highlighting the distribution of military personnel across the different branches.
Background report to the monthly statistical publication on personnel strengths, requirements, intakes and outflows from the Royal Navy and Royal Marines .
For the fiscal year of 2025, the U.S. Navy had a proposed budget of about 203.87 billion U.S. dollars, an increase from the previous year. This is compared to the U.S. Marine Corps, which had about 53.72 billion U.S. dollars at their disposal.
In 2023, around 21.3 percent of active duty officers in the United States Navy were women. Additionally, approximately 19.4 percent of officers in the Space Force were women.
Financial overview and grant giving statistics of Women Marines Association
Financial overview and grant giving statistics of Marines Memorial Foundation
Financial overview and grant giving statistics of Rome Marines
This graph shows the total number of U.S. Marine Corps Reserve personnel from 1995 to 2010. In 2010, there were a total of 39,222 U.S. Marine Corps Reserve members.
Across all branches of the U.S. military, men were more likely to be officers than women. In 2023, there were 75,077 male officers in the U.S. Army, compared to 17,709 female officers. This contrast was even more stark in the Marine Corps, where there were 19,074 male officers and 2,171 female officers.
At the end of the fiscal year of 2024, it is estimated that there will be 15 Generals serving the United States Army, and a total of 354,948 enlisted personnel. Military personnel The military departments in the United States are: the U.S. Army, the U.S. Navy, the U.S. Air Force, the U.S. Marine Corps, and the U.S. Coast Guards. The President of the United States is the military’s overall head and forms the military policy with the U.S. Department of Defense. The U.S. military is one of the largest militaries in term of number of personnel.
The largest branch of the United States Armed Forces is the United States Army. The United States Army is responsible for land-based military operations. The active duty U.S. Army personnel number has decreased from 2010 to 2021. In 2010, there were 561,979 active duty U.S. Army members, as compared to 482,416 in 2021.
The number of active duty U.S. Navy personnel has decreased slowly over the past 20 years. In 2021, there were 343,223 active duty Navy members in the United States Navy. The United States Navy personnel are enlisted sailors, commissioned officers, and midshipmen. Sailors have to take part in Personnel Qualification Standards, to prove that they have mastered skills.
The United States Air Force is the aerial warfare service branch of the United States. The active duty U.S. Air Force personnel numbers also decreased between 1995 and 2015, although has started to increase slightly since 2015. The number decreased again in 2021, when the Air Force had 328,888 personnel.
Financial overview and grant giving statistics of Delta 1 7 Vietnam Marines Inc.
As of the second quarter of 2025, there were 5,749 personnel in the Royal Marines, compared with 7,219 in the second quarter of 2012.
Under the Equality Act (2010), sexual harassment occurs when unwanted conduct of a sexual nature is directed at somebody with the purpose or effect of violating another person’s dignity, or creating an intimidating, hostile, degrading, humiliating or offensive environment for that person.
This research has been undertaken in order to better understand the nature and extent of sexual harassment in the Royal Navy and Royal Marines, the impact this has on personnel and how effectively the Royal Navy and Royal Marines currently prevents and manages sexual harassment.
The information from the survey findings will enable the Royal Navy and Royal Marines to assess what additional action may need to be taken, for example, future policy changes regarding sexual harassment.
Since 2015, the number of visitors to the Marines Museum in Rotterdam in the Netherlands has increased steadily. As of 2019, it recorded roughly 20.6 thousand entries, whereas it welcomed about 17.7 thousand visitors in 2018. Managed by the Koninklijke Stichtig Defensiemusea, the Marines Museum in Rotterdam is a museum on the history of the Dutch Marine Corps.
The purpose of a background quality report is to inform users of the statistics about the quality of the data used to produce the publication and any statistics derived from that data.
This is a quarterly publication containing information on process of the collection of statistics for the ‘Naval service pocket brief’ for 2011 to 2014 and the information it contains including statistics on strengths, liabilities, intakes and outflows from the UK armed forces by service.
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Demographics, family history, and childhood experiences by sexual offense conviction among U.S. male marines.
This service provides information on the population density of the three-toe gull (Rissa tridactyla) in the German offshore areas based on a 10x10 km grid (EU-GRID). The density [individuals/km²] is determined for each grid cell by adding the individual number of counting points within the respective grid cell and dividing it by the sum of the effort at the counting points. Individual layers show divided by season (art-specific according to Garthe S, Sonntag N, Schwemmer P, Dierschke V (2007) Estimation of seabirdnumbers in the German North Sea throughout the annual cycle and their biogeographic importance. Bird life 128: 163-178) the distribution of each seabird in each year. The data are based on seabird recordings carried out as part of the BfN monitoring programme.
Original provider: Matthew Witt, University of Exeter
Dataset credits: Matthew Witt, University of Exeter
Abstract: We present data spanning approximately 100 years regarding the spatial and temporal occurrence of marine turtle sightings and strandings in the northeast Atlantic from two public recording schemes and demonstrate potential signals of changing population status. Records of loggerhead (n = 317) and Kemp’s ridley (n = 44) turtles occurring on the European continental shelf were most prevalent during the autumn and winter, when waters were coolest. In contrast, endothermic leatherback turtles (n = 1,668) were most common during the summer. Analysis of the spatial distribution of hard-shell marine turtle sightings and strandings highlights a pattern of decreasing records with increasing latitude. The spatial distribution of sighting and stranding records indicates that arrival in waters of the European continental shelf is most likely driven by North Atlantic current systems. Future patterns of spatial-temporal distribution, gathered from the periphery of juvenile marine turtles habitat range, may allow for a broader assessment of the future impacts of global climate change on species range and population size.
Purpose: We set out to determine the spatial and temporal trends for sightings, strandings and captures of hard-shell marine turtles in the northeast Atlantic from two recording schemes. One recording scheme (presented here) included marine turtle sightings, strandings and captures occurring in French waters that originated from annual sightings and strandings publications of Duguy and colleagues (Duguy 1990, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 2004; Duguy et al. 1997a, b, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003). Records presented in Duguy publications prior to 2001 contained location descriptions, providing no geographic coordinates with error estimates. Longitude and latitude positions for these events were estimated to be the closest coastal point to the descriptive location. Duguy publications, 2001 onwards, were accompanied by maps displaying the approximate location of sightings and strandings events. These maps were digitized and georeferenced and coordinate positions determined for all appropriate records. Georefenced hard-shell turtle (Lk and Cc) capture/sighting/stranding records from the papers of Duguy for France 1990-2003 (featured in Witt et al. 2007) only includes records that could have coordinates derived from their locational descriptions. The second recording scheme used were records of sightings and strandings of marine turtles in the British Isles obtained from the TURTLE database operated by Marine Environmental Monitoring. Data from the TURTLE database were submitted to EurOBIS and can be viewed on OBIS-SEAMAP: Marine Turtles.
Supplemental information: Abstract is from Witt et al. 2007; data included in this dataset are a subset of data presented in Witt et al. 2007. References: Duguy, R. 1990. Observations de tortues marines en 1990 (Manche et Atlantique). Annales de la Societe des Sciences Naturelles de la Charente-Maritime 7:1053–1057. Duguy, R. 1992. Observations de tortues marines en 1991 (Atlantique). Annales de la Societe des Sciences Naturelles de la Charente-Maritime 8:35–37. Duguy, R. 1993. Observations de tortues marines en 1992 (Atlantique). Annales de la Societe des Sciences Naturelles de la Charente-Maritime 8:129–131. Duguy, R. 1994. Observations de tortues marines en 1993 (Atlantique). Annales de la Societe des Sciences Naturelles de la Charente-Maritime 8:235–238. Duguy, R. 1995. Observations de tortues marines en 1994 (Atlantique). Annales de la Societe des Sciences Naturelles de la Charente-Maritime 8:403–406. Duguy, R. 1996. Observations de tortues marines en 1995 (Atlantique). Annales de la Societe des Sciences Naturelles de la Charente-Maritime 8:505–513. Duguy, R. 2004. Observations de tortues marines en 2003 (cotes Atlantiques). Annales de la Societe des Sciences Naturelles de la Charente-Maritime 9:361–366. Duguy, R., P. Moriniere and A. Meunier. 1997a. Observations de tortues marines en 1997. Annales de la Societe des Sciences Naturelles de la Charente-Maritime 8:761–779. Duguy, R., P. Moriniere and M.A. Spano. 1997b. Observations de tortues marines en 1996 (Atlantique). Annales de la Societe des Sciences Naturelles de la Charente-Maritime 8:625–632. Duguy, R., P. Moriniere and A. Meunier. 1999. Observations de tortues marines en 1998 (Atlantique). Annales de la Societe des Sciences Naturelles de la Charente-Maritime:911–924. Duguy, R., P. Moriniere and A. Meunier. 2000. Observations de tortues marines en 1999. Annales de la Societe des Sciences Naturelles de la Charente-Maritime 8:1025–1034. Duguy R, P. Moriniere and A. Meunier. 2001. Observations tortues marines en 2000 (Atlantique et Manche). Annales de la Societe des Sciences Naturelles de la Charente-Maritime 9:17–25. Duguy, R., P. Moriniere and A. Meunier. 2002. Observations de tortues marines en 2001 (Atlantique et Manche). Annales de la Societe des Sciences Naturelles de la Charente-Maritime 9. Duguy, R., P. Moriniere and A. Meunier. 2003. Observations de tortues marines en 2002 (Atlantique et Manche). Annales de la Societe des Sciences Naturelles de la Charente-Maritime 9:265–273.
This graph shows the number of active duty U.S. Marine Corps personnel from 1995 to 2010. In 2010, there were 202,612 active duty U.S. Marine Corps members, as compared to 172,955 in 2000.