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4-> ''"I made coffee through Desert Storm. I made coffee during Panama, while everyone else got to fight, got to be a Ranger. Now it's 'Grimesy, black, one sugar' or 'Grimesy, got a powdered anywhere?'"''
5-->-- '''Specialist Grimes''' complaining while making coffee, ''Film/BlackHawkDown''
6
7Similar to the StrawCivilian, this trope shows up in Military Fiction. Unlike the civilian or the {{Draft Dodg|ing}}er, this guy joins the army when things go bad because he knows the safest place to be is ''in'' the military, in a position where absolutely nothing can go wrong. While everyone else is out fighting on the distant PlanetOfHats, he's safe and sound back in Muskogee, Oklahoma, sewing buttons onto uniforms.
8
9Whereas a civilian might not know any better, being fat and stupid, this guy's actually been through basic training, but he's currently assigned to a unit that's not going into combat anytime soon, if at all. He still gets all the perks of being a soldier (respect, drinks, and a uniform) but none of the hassle (strangers trying to kill you a lot). He's the military version of the fat, lazy cop. In modern military parlance, he's the "Rear Echelon Motherfucker."
10
11Because fiction tends to be black and white, the REMF usually isn't portrayed as someone who got lucky, or as someone doing a superficially dull but vital job, but as someone who kissed a lot of fat, rich behind. A REMF will be someone [[ScrewTheRulesIMakeThem who pulled some strings themselves]] or had [[ScrewTheRulesIHaveConnections Daddy call the right people]] to get a cushy post. He's a Senator's son, or a celebrity, or [[ScrewTheRulesIHaveMoney he's got a lot of money]] in the bank. It's never luck, or actual skill, it's [[ScrewTheRulesIHaveConnections who he is and who he knows]].
12
13The story in RealLife is, naturally, different. The military is a big organization, and a lot of necessary jobs don't involve getting immediately shot at by random [INSERT BAD GUY HERE]s. In fact, in modern armed forces, there's roughly 10-15 [=REMFs=] working in support for every soldier actually pulling a trigger at the front. This doesn't mean the REMF isn't resented, mind you, he's still a REMF who isn't deep in the shit at the moment--many frontline grunts won't care and still hold grudges. There is one and precisely ''one'' universal exception: Medical personnel. Doctors and nurses may never see direct combat, but rare indeed is the front line grunt who will speak ill of the people who stitch them or their buddies back together if things go wrong. There are also other personnel who are specifically forbidden by regulations to enter combat zones, like Military Chaplains, and you'd figure regular combat troops would understand.
14
15Often, and perhaps against the stereotype, the children of important and/or wealthy people do join the military because they want to serve. Fortunately or unfortunately, the military brass aren't morons and know that if the child of a VIP dies on their watch, they're in for a world of trouble. Thus, through no fault of his or her own, [[Music/CreedenceClearwaterRevival the kid with the silver spoon]] might spend the war behind a desk somewhere typing up reports. The same thing can apply to celebrities: had UsefulNotes/MuhammadAli accepted his conscription during UsefulNotes/TheVietnamWar, he most likely would have been giving exhibition matches to entertain troops, as [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joe_Louis Joe Louis]] did during UsefulNotes/WorldWarII (though Louis was not drafted). There are exceptions to this rule, and most of them come from wars up to and including the First World War.
16
17Along with REMF, "pogue" is a term with similar connotations (from POG: Person Other than Grunt). Fobbit (a {{portmanteau}} of "Forward Operating Base" and "[[Literature/TheHobbit Hobbit]]", given how Hobbits love to stay at home and ''never'' go out on adventures) is another similar term, specific to troops deployed but who do not go on patrols for varying reasons. "Wire Hugger", and similar terms have grown from the recent wars in the Middle East (as in, desperately tries to keep close to the base, even if it means hugging barbed wire).
18
19Being a REMF in an unconventional or modern conflict might be almost impossible, since by definition there isn't a rear-echelon once you're in the theatre. Someone whose job normally isn't anywhere near combat might find themselves under fire or IED attack at any time. For soldiers deployed today in places like Iraq, "REMF" generally means personnel stationed in a totally different ''country'' such as Kuwait and Qatar.
20
21Arguably, most of the wars the US has fought since UsefulNotes/WorldWarII could probably have been said to lack a "true" rear, as that was around the time the US Army commissioned the M1 Carbine: to give REMF troops a decent long arm in case the Germans or any other Blitzkrieg-style enemy force suddenly broke through the lines and struck at all the supporting infrastructure.
22
23If becoming a soldier at the rear is actually because of the individual soldier's actual skills, it is known as ''getting wise''. No wonder becoming the company clerk is one of the favorite tasks amongst the conscripts around the world.
24
25This guy is often GungHolierThanThou and a MilesGloriosus. A bad OfficerAndAGentleman and GeneralFailure are both probably [=REMFs=]. A good DrillSergeantNasty rarely is.
26
27See also: ArmchairMilitary, and DeskJockey. Also related to MissionControl. The {{Adminisphere}} is the civilian equivalent, dealing with the disconnect between workers out on the factory floor and their administrators.
28
29[[noreallife]]
30----
31!!Examples:
32[[foldercontrol]]
33
34[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
35* The Military Police in ''Manga/AttackOnTitan'' are internal peacekeepers and the king's PraetorianGuard, and can go their entire careers without so much as ''seeing'' a Titan. The ass-backwardsness of selecting the ''most'' elite soldiers to do the ''least'' fighting is {{lampshaded}}. The same applies to the Garrison forces away from the Front Lines; when [[spoiler:Rod Reiss's massive Titan form]] attacks northern Wall Sheena (the innermost wall), the troops prove rather ineffective, partly because they'd never dealt with Titans before.
36* ''Anime/IrresponsibleCaptainTylor:'' The title character joined the military to get a cushy day job and, to his delight, wound up in the Pension Office. However, he becomes involved in a hostage crisis and is promoted to command rank and [[ReassignedToAntarctica assigned to the destroyer Soyokaze.]] This becomes ReassignmentBackfire when it turns out he's surprisingly good at being a starship captain, despite his own wishes.
37* Yang Wen-Li from ''Literature/LegendOfTheGalacticHeroes'' only joined the military for the education and the pension and was hoping for a position like this. Sadly, he proved to be a military prodigy and ended up getting his own command, as well as becoming the ArchEnemy of TheEmpire (''and'' [[TheLastDJ his own administration]]).
38* ''Literature/HeavyObject:''
39** A majority of the military on all sides fits this trope as Objects dominate the battlefield. It's not uncommon for even units assigned to supporting an Object on a battlefield to see no combat personally. It's considered so safe that civilian students can accompany them.
40** Milinda originally looked down upon this type of soldier. While she, a fourteen year old girl, was risking her life on the battlefield there were grown men and women on the rear line watching in boredom. Quenser and Heivia risking their lives to save her shook up this viewpoint.
41** The PMC Moss Green looked down on a Legitimacy Kingdom force because they were soft from only supporting Objects while Moss Green had been trained to fight actual soldiers in the Northern European Restricted Zone, where Objects are forbidden to enter by international treaties. Their commanding officer is enraged when some of her soldiers are killed by Quenser, viewing it as undignified. As far as Quenser can tell she doesn't really view him or his unit as human beings due to this trope.
42* In ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamUnicorn'' [[TheCaptain Captain]] Otto Midas is a rare positive example, though he technically ''isn't'' a REMF anymore at the time, being assigned to the frontlines and thus becoming something of a ModernMajorGeneral. Still he's AFatherToHisMen and, being [[BadassBureaucrat a skilled desk pilot]], he knows his strengths and limitations, steadfastedly standing by his crew.
43* ''Manga/CatShitOne'': One of the Japanese observers (a chimpanzee) has no problems with the more comfortable aspects of being in the military (such as flashy uniforms) but is very much against getting shot at. He's something of a ButtMonkey: at one point he photocopies a bunch of decorations to attach them to his uniform to look more impressive, unfortunately his superior (a gorilla) takes immediate notice and asks where exactly he obtained them.
44* In ''Manga/FullmetalAlchemist'', the soldiers guarding Central City are the least likely to see combat. As a result, when Roy Mustang and Olivier Armstrong launch their coup at the end of the series, the Central soldiers' poor discipline and lack of experience makes them easy pickings for the protagonists. Olivier, who commands the garrison at Briggs, located in the harsh northern lands and under almost constant attack by Amestris' northern neighbor Drachma, notes how poorly trained the Central troops are compared to her men.
45* In ''Literature/SwordArtOnline'', as the human realm prepares for war, Alice notes that not all of her fellow Integrity Knights, the most elite fighters, are at the front lines. Eldrie, her disciple, explains that some of them stayed behind to guard Centoria Cathedral. A few of those knights appear in the ''Moon Cradle'' arc, and the fact that they never saw front-line service explains why Kirito never met them before.
46[[/folder]]
47
48[[folder: Comic Books]]
49* During World War II, ComicBook/CaptainAmerica had the secret identity of a clumsy infantry private who'd get stuck at the rear.
50* Despite later becoming a badass mercenary, Jon Sable of ''ComicBook/JonSableFreelance'' spent his tour of duty during UsefulNotes/TheVietnamWar as a clerk/typist in an intelligence unit.
51* Portrayed sympatethically in ''ComicBook/{{Sturmtruppen}}'': the comic follows the misadventures of a German battalion in UsefulNotes/WorldWarII [[WarIsHell stuck on the frontlines and long overdue for a leave]], so the soldiers' shenaningans to get reassigned to the rear for at least a while is understandable. The only ones who actually get it without backfiring on them for a while are the two guys from the 27th Armoured Battalion (of Discipline), and that's only because [[TradingBarsForStripes they've taken incredibly dangerous missions to get out of a detention center]] and now for them ''the frontlines are the rear''.
52[[/folder]]
53
54[[folder: Fan Works]]
55* Operations Specialist, 2nd Class Kybok in ''Fanfic/RedFireRedPlanet''. Most of Kybok's fellow Starfleet personnel at Listening Post 204RT rather justifiably view being posted to an early warning station on the edge of the Sol system to be a dead-end assignment. However Kybok's father (Chu'lak from [[Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine DS9:]] "[[Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS07E13FieldOfFire Field of Fire]]") completely snapped from the stresses of serving in the Dominion War and Kybok wants to avoid that fate. But he also wants to serve his country, so he resolved the logical conflict by getting himself put on an unimportant rear-echelon post.
56* In the Literature/{{Discworld}} of Creator/AAPessimal, a [[AmoralAfrikaner student Assassin]] who is capable of planning ahead knows, if he doesn't do anything about it, that the inevitable conscript military service wnen he returns to his native country will involve front-line service in a dangerous border area where skirmishes often flare up into small wars. He got into the Assassins' School because he is a gifted musician, the sort who will effortlessly meet the Concordat requirement that the Assasin should be musically accomplished. [[note]] He knew, even at eleven, that the School offered a far better musical education than anything he is likely to get in Rimwards Howondaland and open up paying orchestral jobs afterwards in Ankh-Morpork and elsewhere[[/note]]. Just to make sure he will get a nice safe posting to a military band somewhere, he contrives to get his Assassin training slanted towards anatomy, physiology and medical care, as bandsmen are also medical corpsmen and this opens up assignation to a military hospital. A third insurance policy is being good at sports, as he knows military units gain prestige from winning inter-Regimental sports competitions, and will not risk their best players in the front lines. It also has the potential for postings close to where his girlfriend lives and works.
57[[/folder]]
58
59[[folder: Film]]
60* The movie ''Film/{{Soldier}}'' deals with a Sorting Algorithm of perfect soldierdom. The first generation of perfect soldiers were chosen at birth and trained therefrom. The second generation were genetically engineered. The first generation are led by a battle-tested son of a bitch (Gary Busey). The second generation are led by a REMF (Creator/JasonIsaacs). In the end, the first generation kills the second, and all the angels applaud.
61* ''Film/MisterRoberts'' (US Navy in WW II) the film and the play. The Captain and Ensign Pulver are happy to be out of the line of fire. The title character desperately wants a transfer to a warship.
62* Specialist Grimes (Creator/EwanMcGregor), one of the [[BadassArmy Rangers]] in ''Film/BlackhawkDown'', has always been away from the fighting, a fact he says isn't his fault. It's because he has a rare and valuable skill beloved by the Army that keeps him busy: He can type. However, he doesn't like being in this trope and actually wants to fight, rather than spending his entire career typing and making coffee. He ends up getting caught up in the [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor worst of the movie's fighting.]] And copes with the stress by [[{{Irony}} making coffee during the lulls.]] This is probably one of the most realistic and unbiased portrayals of the regular REMF there is. The logistics system to maintain even a small force in the field is a beast, and most people get shifted to help maintain it without even a whit of corruption or nepotism involved and Grimes is portrayed as a soldier who does an unexciting but vital task.
63* Lawrence begins ''Film/LawrenceOfArabia'' like this.
64* ''Film/TheHurtLocker'' the unit psychologist (a lieutenant colonel) is criticized by one of the enlisted soldiers for being unqualified to dispense advice about combat stress since he's never left the base. He joins them on a mission a couple days later. It doesn't go well for him.
65* ''Film/SavingPrivateRyan'' has some clerks who land ashore next to Capt. Miller's position to set up a command center. When Miller's only translator is killed, a replacement is drawn from the command center staff, and he ends up with a green Corporal who had been drawing maps and hasn't fired his weapon since basic training. Resentment towards [=REMF=] soldiers even gets a bit of LampshadeHanging, as Miller immediately takes note that the command center troops all have easy access to hot coffee and fresh food, while he's probably been living on C-Rations since he came ashore.
66* [[DoubleSubversion Double subverted]] in ''Film/{{Full Metal Jacket}}'' - the officer in [[DeskJockey charge of the Marine combat correspondents]], Lieutenant Lockhart, states his intention to stay where he is comfortable - ''"in the rear, with the gear"'' - and that very evening the base comes under heavy artillery attack. Later in the movie, however, it's made clear that being posted on the rear base is still relatively much safer than being a front-line rifleman.
67* ''Film/CaptainAmericaTheFirstAvenger''. After taking the SuperSerum and becoming a SuperSoldier, Steve tries to join the war proper, but is told that he's too valuable as a FakeUltimateHero and that a single soldier, no matter how super, is not enough to win a war. He's sent out to do stage shows and publicity stunts, and feels more and more useless as time rolls on.
68* In ''Film/Battleground1949'', Hollie cracks under German bombardment, runs back into the town of Bastogne, and gets himself put on KP duty. This backfires when Bastogne is surrounded and the "rear" disappears, and backfires even worse when Hollie is killed by a German bomb.
69* Norman, the protagonist in the film ''Film/{{Fury 2014}}'', was pulled out of the rear in order to replace one of the titular tank's crew, killed in a battle. As a mere typist, he doesn't take the realities of war well, until he undergoes a large amount of CharacterDevelopment.
70* In ''Film/TheOddAngryShot'', a pompous admin sergeant-major in an air-conditioned office tries to throw his weight around with the SAS troopers arriving in Saigon for leave. Taking none of his bullshit, Harry threatens to punch his teeth down his throat. A fight is only averted by the arrival of a senior officer.
71* ''Film/TropicThunder'': Overlapping with PhonyVeteran, [[spoiler:it turns out John Tayback, the Vietnam veteran who wrote the memoirs on which the ShowWithinAShow is based on, is actually a former member of the Coast Guard who never saw active combat duty in Vietnam nor left the United States, and in fact ''hasn't even been on a boat'', having been in charge of laundry back at base. His "tribute" to the (nonexistent) men he fought alongside (not) in the jungle is BasedOnAGreatBigLie and his wartime injuries are a performance done to sucker people into buying his story, as proven when he drops his "prosthetic" hands and reveals them to actually be gloves.]]
72* In ''Film/InTheArmyNow'', the protagonists want to join the army to get the startup money they need for their new electronics store, but don't want to see actual combat. First, they don't join the actual US Army, but the US Army ''Reserves'' who typically aren't mobilized for combat. They then choose to join a water purification unit, figuring that it is the least likely to see frontline combat. However, this gets subverted when a conflict flares up between Libya and Chad, two [[WhyDidItHaveToBeSnakes desert nations with scarce water supplies necessitating water purification capability]]. While in Chad, they get little respect from the combat troops who derogatorily call them "waterboys". However, they manage to bumble their way to success when they end up having to [[YouAreInCommandNow take charge]] of a Special Forces mission when the original Special Forces unit is wiped out.
73[[/folder]]
74
75[[folder: Literature]]
76* [=REMFs=] show up a lot in the works of Creator/DavidDrake, as he writes mostly MilitaryScienceFiction.
77** At the beginning of ''Literature/{{Redliners}}'', a group of elite commandos on R&R want a drink. The REMF behind the bar sneers at their battered [=BDUs=] and refuses to serve them. The Redliners (a term that means "about to blow") take this badly. Trouble ensues.
78** In his ''Literature/RanksOfBronze'', the bad guys aren't the people the Roman Legionnaires are fighting against (mostly just bronze age, barbarian aliens). The bad guys are the fat assholes telling the Romans who to fight. And one arrogant prick who happens to be a Roman.
79* Creator/RobertAHeinlein, no stranger to the military himself, also had a problem with [=REMFs=]. Sort of. As with every other trope, he [[PlayingWithATrope played with it]].
80** In ''Literature/StarshipTroopers'', he both despised and avoided [=REMFs=]. For anything that required esprit de corps, a member of the MI served (possibly on disability, if it was something like teaching, which requires spirit without the corp). For everything else, they hired civilians. Civilians are like beans; buy 'em as you need 'em.
81** In ''Literature/TimeEnoughForLove'', Lazarus first intends to avoid WWI by fleeing to South America. Then he's faced with the scorn of his birth family and is motivated to join the army; he then realizes that being a lily-white, red-haired gringo in Brazil would paint him as an agent of some European power and get him killed, so his actual best bet is to join the army and be the best damn REMF he can. Unfortunately, his adopted family has some pull, and they put him where every red-blooded, kraut-hating American should ''want'' to be. France. OhCrap.
82** Also in ''Literature/TimeEnoughForLove'', "The Man Who Was Too Lazy to Fail". He joined the navy because he didn't particularly care for farming. Then he bucked for officer. Then he applied for pilot training. Then he bucked for multiengined seaplanes rather than fighters to avoid serving on carriers while still accumulating all the promotion and pay benefits of sea duty. He didn't particularly cotton to getting shot at. Then he bucked for early retirement on disability (crazy on the job), getting an honorary bump to rear admiral and three-quarters pay. Then he went back to the farm (loved the farm; hated the farming) and paid a guy to do all the work, and spent his time lounging in a hammock and putting on his whites for holidays.
83** In ''Literature/GloryRoad'' the hero seeks to avoid combat first by applying to the Air Force, then seeking a clerical job in the Army-he makes sure "typing" is listed as one of his skills. He gets sent to south-east Asia as a combat soldier anyway.
84* As far as Creator/ErnestHemingway is concerned, you're a REMF, you're crazy, or you're dead. And if you're not dead, you're going to be dead. Soon. Alone. In the rain.
85* ''Literature/CiaphasCain:''
86** Cain aspires to be this; early in his career he managed to pull some strings and get himself transferred to a nice, safe artillery unit. Unfortunately, it turned out less safe than expected and gave him a reputation for mighty heroism. Later his reputation makes this much harder, so he has to find somewhere safe to be when the fighting breaks out. It always leads to a sort of self-targeting ReassignmentBackfire when he inevitably gets in danger anyway and thus even more of a reputation when he survives.
87** At one point, he does manage to become a true Soldier at the Rear, and it makes his life measurably worse. Instead of being in a unit that spends great portions of its time securing and guarding planets after combat, his garrison status lets his superior officer assign him to increasingly dangerous special assignments, including a liaison position with SpaceMarines. And because he never has to stay for clean up unless he can somehow justify it, he gets forced into participating into more numerous combat situations then normal. By his own reckoning, Cain thinks he spent more time in gut clenching terror during his garrison time then a front line assignment. His response to this? Play up the idea that he's not cut out for a 'tame' desk job and get sent back to a frontline combat unit, getting him sent to the Valhallan 597th.
88** Some of the books touch on the 597's Third Company, which, while trained for infantry fighting, are mostly specialists such as medical staff, quartermasters, and the regimental colors band. They do see action from time to time, such as during ''The Traitor's Hand'' when a Chaos dropship lands in headquarters, and acquit themselves well, all things considered. Jenit Sulla, a quartermaster, ended up becoming the first Lady General, the highest military rank in the Guard.
89* In a later book Creator/RobertAsprin's ''Literature/MythAdventures'' series, the heroes are trying to disable an army. Some of [[TrueCompanions the gang]] are disabling from within; after Basic Training, they face deployment. At first they're offered, literally, a shit assignment. They mention they know the commander-in-chief... a few comments later their interlocutor learns they know a RetiredBadass... And they're offered their choice of sweet, sweet candy.
90** In a minor subversion, they choose warehouse duty, but not for its safety: it's because of how important supplies are to an army, and how much damage they can do by mishandling requisitions. [[SpringtimeForHitler They end up failing at this]]. Turns out, the military is so inefficient that their attempts at sabotage wind up ''improving'' efficiency.
91* ''Literature/CatchTwentyTwo'':
92** Former PFC Wintergreen always manages to avoid being sent into combat by manipulating the discipline system. Many of the other characters would do the same if they thought they could pull it off.
93** [[CorruptCorporateExecutive Milo Minderbinder]] also avoids combat. His superiors literally grant him the medals from other men's actions while Milo stays safely in the rear.
94** Doc Daneeka wants no part of the war, and even falsifies his records to get out of the training ridealong flights. This bites him back when one of those flights crashes and he's declared dead.
95* ''Literature/AllQuietOnTheWesternFront'' has [[DrillSergeantNasty Corporal Himmelstoss]] - until he's sent to the front as punishment, after he overdid his [[TrainingFromHell usual training method]] on an especially unlucky bunch of recruits, one of whom turned out to be son of an important government official.
96* Richard Marcinko, author and former SEAL, has several of these in his ''Literature/RogueWarrior'' series. Some are inspired by service members and even [=SEALs=] he knew.
97* ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'': In the Night's Watch, the Rangers are the ones who venture beyond the Wall to fight wildlings, while the the Stewards and Builders stay behind and get much less prestige. When Jon is assigned to the Stewards rather than the Rangers, he's extremely disappointed. He complains that rather than face wildlings in battle, he'll be changing the Lord Commander's chamber pot. It takes Sam to make him realize that the Lord Commander is grooming him for command.
98** Sam himself was eager to become a Steward; he barely made it through basic training with Jon protecting him, and his rare skill of literacy made him invaluable to assisting their now blind Maester with the [[InstantMessengerPigeon messenger ravens]]. Unfortunately for him, there was soon cause for a massive scouting force to venture north, and they needed the ravens to coordinate with Castle Black, so he ended up in harm's way anyway.
99* John Clark from Creator/TomClancy's ''Literature/JackRyan'' books ''hates'' [=REMFs=], especially when one is in charge of an operation and fails to run it properly, putting the front-line grunts at risk. In ''Literature/ClearAndPresentDanger'', when he finds out that [[spoiler: National Security Advisor James Cutter]] is behind the deaths of some Army soldiers, he personally talks to the man and convinces him to [[spoiler: [[LeaveBehindAPistol commit suicide rather than face the inevitable Congressional inquiry]]]]. And he does it with a smile.
100* In ''War Story'' by ''Creator/DerekRobinson'', the newly arrived gung-ho pilot, Paxton, is surprised to see the squadron clerk, a mere lance-corporal, is a on old boy from his prestigious public school.[[note]]For USians: in some places, "public school" means "a school owned by a member of the public", as opposed to a "state school", which would be a school run by the gummint. This "prestigious public school" would be the equivalent of an expensive private school in the states.[[/note]] He asks why his old schoolfriend is in the ranks, when surely a chap like you has family, has connections, knows people? You should be at least a captain by now? To which the public-school corporal replies that he'd successfully dodged recruitment until enlistment became compulsory. Then he took a typing course, as men who can type are so rare in the Army that they are never ever sent into the front-line trenches. Then he enlisted as a private soldier, and with any luck will actually ''survive'' the bloody war.
101--> And they say life expectancy for a new pilot is, ooh, sixteen hours, sir?
102* In ''[[http://www.military.com/NewContent/0,13190,SOF_0804_Paratrooper,00.html The Honorary Chinese Paratrooper,]]'' Soldier of Fortune Magazine writer Jim Morris shows how this trope can go from bad to worse. During the 1960's he was in the US Army Special Forces. While his friends went to Vietnam, he went to [[UsefulNotes/TheOtherChineseArmy Taiwan]].
103* Victor Henry goes through most of UsefulNotes/WorldWarII like this in Hermann Wouk's ''WindsOfWar'' / ''War and Remembrance'' duology. He does get a fighting command in the Solomons and at Leyte though. He also takes opportunities to go on observation missions up forward.
104* In the ''Literature/NeroWolfe'' stories set during the war, Major Archie Goodwin is effectively stuck doing his civilian job at half the pay -- his boss, Nero Wolfe, is a genius vital to the war effort, and Archie's the only one who can manage him. Unlike most examples, the people he works with are (mostly) shown as honorable people doing a worthwhile job, despite never getting shot at.
105* Subverted with Lawrence Waterhouse in ''Literature/{{Cryptonomicon}}''. Initially he finds himself assigned to a marching band, but that doesn't stop him from being present on one of the ships sunk in the Pearl Harbor attack. After reasignment it's discovered that he is a cryptography prodigy and therefore one of the most valuable assets in the whole second world war, and the military spares no effort to keep him as far from danger as possible. And yet, at one point he still ends up on a dangerous enigma machine recovery mission, because the remote listening station where he is stationed at that point holds the only unit close enough to an enemy submarine in trouble.
106* Commissar Blenner from ''Literature/GauntsGhosts'' aspires to be such an officer, and he spends decades of his career in rear-echelon garrison positions (not entirely without merit -- while he's something of a NonActionGuy, his [[BunnyEarsLawyer skill with morale and managing the common soldiery]] is very real). Naturally this gets a lot tougher when he signs on with the Ghosts. In ''Salvation's Reach'', he unofficially places himself in charge of a detachment of the regiments' less combat-worthy elements, including their brand-new colors band, which nobody, himself included, wants to see in combat. They end up driving and escorting supply trucks up to the Ghosts' lines, which he explicitly points out is a way to make them feel useful without getting the lot of them killed.
107* In ''If I Die in a Combat Zone (Box Me Up and Ship Me Home)'' Tim O'Brien summarises the feelings and attitude of UsefulNotes/TheVietnamWar era [[{{Conscription}} conscripts]] thus:
108-->''If foot soldiers in Vietnam have a single obsession, it's the gnawing, tantalizing hope of being assigned to a job in the rear. Anything to yank a man out of the field -- loading helicopters or burning trash or washing the colonel's laundry. [...] Except for one or two of them, the men in Alpha Company were quietly, flippantly desperate for a rear job. The desperation was there all the time. Walking along under the sun, pulling watch at night, waiting for resupply, writing love letters -- we thought and talked about all the rear jobs waiting back there. We were not all cowards. But we were not committed, not resigned, to having to win a war.''
109* The ''Literature/HonorHarrington'' series explores various implications with the Solarian League Navy. The League Navy is divided into two internal organizations: Battle Fleet and Frontier Fleet. Battle Fleet is theoretically the primary combat component of the League, receiving the overwhelming majority of the funding and equipment of the League Navy, but since the Solarian League is ''so much bigger'' than every other nation in the universe they have not had an actual war in several centuries. Frontier Fleet, which is dedicated towards policing, disaster relief, exploration and other peace-keeping roles, is the component which has actual service experience. As such, Battle Fleet is generally slovenly and lax even in routine procedures since they have no combat history, much to the disgust of Frontier Fleet and the other space navies that are encountered throughout the series. As members of the Royal Manticoran Navy point out, accidents can happen even in peace-time, so there is no excuse for being so inattentive to proper procedures and protocol.
110* ''Literature/TheSagaOfTanyaTheEvil'': Tanya's stated goal is to become one of these after she's drafted. Unfortunately for her, she's still thinking like a Japanese salaryman, so her "plan" is to be so ruthless and hyper-competent at her job (fighting) that she'll get promoted out of it. Instead, this has the opposite effect, with her superior officers congratulating her as being a super soldier and keep sending her to ever-more dangerous front lines. Her plan was doomed from the start due to the country she's fighting for being on the losing end of a war and facing enemies on every side of them.
111[[/folder]]
112
113[[folder: Live-Action TV]]
114* ''Series/{{Andor}}'': Pretty much all the Imperial military divisions other than the army and naval forces — such as the Imperial Officer Corps and [[SecretPolice COMPNOR]] — act like the worst extremes of this trope, often overlapping with ArmchairMilitary, with their members tending to be [[PaperTiger completely useless in actual fights despite their totally unearned egos]] and clearly doing their best to avoid ever being near the frontlines so they can roleplay as being soldiers and get prestige without really risking anything like the troopers on the ground and crewmen in ships do. The one time we see two officers from such divisions in battle during the season finale, one [[DirtyCoward immediately scrambles behind the stormtroopers doing the actual work]] and contributes nothing but shrieking incoherent orders from far behind cover, while the other immediately has a panic attack and waves her blaster around wildly in fear before getting mobbed and nearly lynched by the enemy, forcing another imperial to wade into the chaos to save her. This happens in a fight against ''[[EpicFail a small mob of unarmed civilians that the Imperials outnumber and outgun greatly]]''.
115* ''Series/BandOfBrothers'' mostly featured genuine grunts on the ground and in the shit. A few people qualified, though.
116** Many of the higher ranking officers might qualify, as they had no real understanding of the situation on the lines. Captain (later Major) Winters was exempt because he had combat experience and trouble distancing himself from his men following promotion.
117** Captain Nixon is an interesting subversion. He never had to fire his gun in combat. And as a rich, Harvard educated intelligence officer, he could easily have spent most of the war back at command. Instead, he mainly stayed close to the front with Winters, even sleeping in a foxhole in Bastogne and refusing what was basically a "get out of war free" card by passing up the opportunity to return to the states to promote enlistment. He ended up being the one of the very few members of 101st Airborne to get three Jump Stars.
118** Any soldier who was insufficiently eager to escape from an army hospital and rejoin the effort was viewed with suspicion. If you didn't buy a ticket home with genuine infirmity, then you belonged on the lines, dammit. [[note]]The miniseries depicts Webster as being "uneager" to get back to the lines, having staying the hospital through Bastogne, but in reality, though the other members of the company weren't happy with his missing the Battle of the Bulge, they gladly welcomed him back. Webster, in his own writings, assumed it was because they had lost so many friends, it was nice to see someone they knew who was still alive.[[/note]]
119** Henry Jones, a [[EnsignNewbie green lieutenant]], fresh out of [[MilitaryAcademy West Point]], showed up late in the war, desperate for field experience. Everyone smirked at him and hoped he didn't get anyone killed. After one sortie across a river, he was promoted because he was slated to serve in the post-war officers corps and everyone shrugged it off.
120** Capt. Herbert Sobel, E Company's first CO, was KickedUpstairs into this after a mass near-desertion revealed to regimental command that, by God, these men were NOT following such an incompetent man into combat. This wound up eating at Sobel for the rest of his life, and until the day he died, he harbored a deep resentment of the men of Easy Company. The fact his XO Richard Winters eventually wound up outranking him did NOT help matters. [[note]]Although to be fair, records indicate he did jump into Normandy as part of the 506th HQ and earn a Combat Infantryman Badge, given to soldiers who saw action. He was also apparently wounded by a German MG and given the Purple Heart. He also retired with a higher rank than Winters, Lieutenant Colonel.[[/note]]
121* ''Series/GrowingPains'': Jason's widowed mother's new boyfriend is a retired soldier who implies that he spent most of his service stateside.
122--> '''Ben''': Did you kill anybody?
123--> '''Wally''': Let me put it this way, Ben. They never found one single Vietcong in Cincinnati.
124* ''Series/ItAintHalfHotMum'' focusses on a military entertainment troupe in the waning days of UsefulNotes/WorldWarII, safely well behind the lines in [[UsefulNotes/TheRaj British India]]. Unusually, both the enlisted men and officers knew they'd landed a safe, cushy post and did everything possible to stay out of the action, it was only [[DrillSergeantNasty Sergeant-Major Williams]] who wanted to go to the front.
125* ''Series/{{MASH}}'':
126** Major Charles Winchester was using family connections to keep his cushy Tokyo posting until he ticked off the wrong person at the wrong time and got [[ReassignedToAntarctica sent to the 4077th]], and spent most of the rest of the show trying to pull strings and get back to a nice safe clean Tokyo hospital.
127** Justified with Father Mulcahy. As an Army Chaplain, he is specifically forbidden by regulations to fight, so his proper role is usually behind the lines. Normally no one has a problem with this, but one front line soldier refused to talk to him because he had no combat experience. As a result, Mulcahy has an adventure in the front which includes doing an emergency tracheotomy under fire, which impresses the soldier.
128** Inverted in the episode, "Friends and Enemies," when Col. Potter found that an old friend, who was assigned to garrison duty in fuel logistics far behind the lines, took it upon himself to attend to a matter at the front when he could have easily sent a subordinate. Once there, the officer, obsessed with his GloryDays being in action, illegally took command of a combat unit out of his chain of command and ordered it to take a ridge it was previously ordered by the proper commanders to leave alone. As such, the unit suffered heavy casualties to satisfy the officer's battle lust and Potter is forced to report his friend to Command when he should have remained a REMF.
129* ''Franchise/StarTrek'':
130** ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'':
131*** An inversion: one episode dealt with Riker being [[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS2E14TheIcarusFactor offered his own command]]. He turned it down because the ships offered were in areas of space that were less likely to see action. He also noted that being the executive officer on the flagship ''Enterprise'' was superior in terms of prestige to being captain of ''any'' other ship.
132*** Captain Picard himself is also an inversion: he's been offered promotion to Admiral rank many times, and is more than qualified to hold such a position, but continually declines as he prefers to be out among the stars rather than behind a desk. He's ''so good'' at his job that Starfleet never, in the series or the movies, moves to push him out of his captaincy. [[FridgeBrilliance Maybe they learned their lesson from all the hijinx Kirk used to get up to every time they kicked him out of the captain's chair?]]
133** ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'':
134*** Captain Ben Sisko. After his wife was killed at Wolf 359, he transferred out of starship duty into working at the Fleet's shipyards. Of couse, while there he was part of the design team of the ''USS Defiant'' to fight the Borg (and later he used it against the Dominion). [[{{Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS06E04BehindTheLines}} As the war progressed]], Admiral Ross "promoted" Sisko to a desk job as his adjunct and Commander Dax took over as the ''Defiant'''s CO. As much as it grated for him to see his baby in someone else's hands, Sisko would later hatch a plan to retake Deep Space Nine and get his command back.
135*** In the episode "[[{{Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS02E21TheMaquis}} The Maquis]]", Sisko complains that his superiors back on Earth will never understand the grievances of the Federation colonists because Earth is a paradise, see also ArmchairMilitary.
136*** Poor Nog. He joined Starfleet and was the TeamPet and a good engineer. Then [[{{Recap/StarTrekDeepSpaceNineS07E08TheSiegeOfAR558}} he gets sent to AR558]]. He idolizes the {{Shell Shocked Veteran}}s, until the WhamEpisode goes in full effect....
137* ''Series/{{Blackadder}}'':
138** In ''Blackadder Goes Forth'', Captain Darling is happy to be General Melchett's aide-de-camp because that way he doesn't have to be in the trenches. In the last episode he gets sent there anyway. He's also tried to get transferred to an even safer assignment.
139--->'''Darling:''' There's nothing cushy about life in the Women's Auxiliary Balloon Corps.
140** Blackadder himself spends the entire series trying to get out of the trenches and into a position where he's less likely to be killed. [[FailureIsTheOnlyOption It never quite works out.]]
141** In the last episode it was mentioned that Blackadder first enlisted into the army during the Congo because it was a heavily armed military going against a bunch of guys hurling hard pieces of fruit.
142* ''Series/ThePhilSilversShow'' centers around the motor pool soldiers on a backwater army base in Kansas. Nobody on the base has seen a battlefield since World War Two and we almost never see them doing any actual military work.
143* ''Series/DadsArmy'':
144** The series is about a group of mainly elderly men in the Home Guard who were meant to be Britain's last line of defence should the German army invade. Most of them are earnest about doing their bit. Some, like the ancient Cpl Jones, are actually dead keen to come face to face with the enemy. However, since Britain was not invaded, they are mostly given unimportant duties or sent on training exercises. The closest they get to the enemy is occasionally guarding some [=POWs=]. They're portrayed sympathetically - while they're not particularly competent, they're certainly not lacking in courage. In one episode where they think the Nazis have invaded, they all make a heroic stand to buy time, despite believing this will result in their own deaths.
145** Frazer, a former sailor, boasts that he was at the battle of Jutland, but he was actually below decks making the shepherds pie. He gets prickly when this is brought up.
146** Joe Walker will do almost anything to stay off the frontlines.
147* ''Series/DowntonAbbey'''s Thomas, a JerkWithAHeartOfJerk, joins the army at the announcement of WWI anticipating a cushy assignment at a hospital, having wrangled something with the local physician. Instead he ends up in the trenches as a field medic, terrified for his life and hating every minute of the war. The only way for him to leave is if he gets killed or injured. So he encourages a German sniper to shoot him in the hand and gets reassigned to Downton as the sergeant in charge of the hospital staff.
148* ''Series/{{Enlisted}}'' is a 2014 sitcom about such soldiers on a base in Florida.
149* Inverted on the 2013 [[ChristmasEpisode Christmas Special]] of ''Series/CallTheMidwife'': One patient's husband is a former "reemy"[[note]] A member of the '''R'''oyal '''E'''lectrical and '''M'''echanical '''E'''ngineers[[/note]] who had served as a conscripted mechanic in UsefulNotes/TheKoreanWar and was perfectly content to fix engines and not see combat. However, the [[UsefulNotes/ChineseWithChopperSupport Chinese Army]] overran the UN/British lines (historically accurate), and he, along with the rest of his rear-end unit, were forced to defend the base, and [[ZergRush there were so many Chinese soldiers that the Brits ran out of ammunition]] and had to fight with bayonets. He came back to England [[ShellShockedVeteran with severe PTSD and smelling blood constantly]].
150* ''Series/TheArmyGame'' is about a group of conscripts stationed at the Surplus Ordnance Depot at Nether Hopping. The are all very keen to see out their National Service while avoiding anything remotely military and making a little cash on the side.
151* Played with in the case of Gunnery Sergeant Victor Galindez in ''Series/{{JAG}}''. The Gunny was ex-infantry, who got out to join his hometown Sheriff’s department, suffered a friendly fire incident from a scared fellow trooper, re-enlisted in the Corps was an instructor at Marine OCS and was a short time away from retirement, with a cushy job lined up with a weapon system manufacturer. But he blew the whistle on the company’s defective anti-tank missile, so Mac, impressed with his integrity offers him a job at JAG HQ. The Gunny accepts it only because the job will allow him to do some background investigative work besides the usual administrative filing and paper pushing. Two years after joining JAG HQ, the towers fall and Galindez requests a transfer back to frontline combat duty again.
152[[/folder]]
153
154[[folder: Music]]
155* [[Music/CreedenceClearwaterRevival Creedence Clearwater Revival's]] song "Fortunate Son" from ''Music/WillyAndThePoorBoys'' is about an unnamed young man[[note]]At the time, but John Fogerty later explictly claimed to have been inspired by David Eisenhower, grandson of Dwight D Eisenhower and son-in-law of Richard Nixon[[/note]] from a wealthy, political, and military family. He was in the Navy during Vietnam. The band felt that his cushy assignments only came because of who his grandfather, father and father-in-law were.
156* Roy Zimmerman's "Chickenhawk" satirizes "celebrity" [=REMFs=].
157* [=SSgt=] Barry Sadler's song [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S8uIwi1oHuw "Garet Trooper"]] talks about one of these.
158* [[Music/PinkFloyd Pink Floyd's]] "Us and Them" from ''Music/TheDarkSideOfTheMoon''.
159--> "Forward!" he cried from the rear
160--> And the front rank died
161[[/folder]]
162
163[[folder: Newspaper Comics]]
164* ''ComicStrip/TerryAndThePirates'' had a famous strip in which Terry, having just gotten his fighter wings, is given a speech by his instructor who makes it clear that he expects Terry to treat his support crew like the supply pilots and mechanics with respect.
165* Many of Bill Mauldin's [[ComicStrip/WillieAndJoe cartoons]] are about soldiers who aren't allowed in the rear because they don't look soldierly enough. "It's either enemy or off-limits."
166** Mauldin also described a hybrid species between the REMF and the combat dogface: the garritrooper. "They're too far forward to shave and too far back to get shot at."
167* [[ComicStrip/BeetleBailey Beetle Bailey's]] entire unit appears to be composed of such; while they're frequently seen attempting field exercises, they never have been (and per WordOfGod, never will be) deployed to a combat zone.
168[[/folder]]
169
170[[folder: Radio]]
171* In ''Radio/TheNavyLark'' C.P.O. Pertwee dreads the spectre of active service, mainly because he's making a very good living selling navy stores on the black market. Despite his best efforts ''HMS Troutbridge'' eventually does put to sea.
172[[/folder]]
173
174[[folder: Tabletop Games]]
175* ''TabletopGame/{{Battletech}}'': Caradoc Travana is a subversion. He had a career that involve mostly sitting in depots away from the front lines of the Clan Invasion, leading to many people assuming that he was a coward or incompetent. In fact, he was a fairly good mechwarrior, but he was absolutely brilliant when it came to strategy and logistics so most of his superior officers had chosen to keep him out of combat where his skills could be put to better use. Indeed, when he did end up seeing combat due to Clan Jade Falcon launching a massive invasion of the planet Coventry, where he was stationed, his attention to details and support meant that the mechwarriors serving under him performed far better than other units during both the initial invasion and as resistance fighters in the subsequent occupation, and the strategies he came up with were instrumental in convincing the Falcons to leave when reinforcements arrived rather than sticking around for a prolonged battle that would have devastated both sides.
176* ''TabletopGame/Twilight2000'': Being a REMF is actually ''the best'' start one can have. Characters get a discount on skills depending on their service so far, and being in the Maintenance, Logistics and similar allows to increase vital skills for long-term survival for chump change, while being a grunt or even a spec ops [[InverseLawOfUtilityAndLethality makes you good at shooting and not much else]].
177[[/folder]]
178
179[[folder: Theatre]]
180* ''Theatre/WesterosAnAmericanMusical'': In "First Watch", Sam in mentioned to be given a hard time by Pyp and Grenn due to having non-combat duties.
181[[/folder]]
182
183[[folder: Video Games]]
184* NCR Soldiers garrisoned at the Mojave Outpost in ''VideoGame/FalloutNewVegas'' don't see any real fighting, and won't unless [[TheHorde Caesar's Legion]] decide to push west. Pointdexter of the Misfits specifically joined the military with the goal of obtaining a military paycheck while performing as little as possible (though if properly trained/motivated he can become a competent soldier).
185* Cezary Regard in ''VideoGame/ValkyriaChronicles'' is only a Sniper because it keeps him away from the front lines. He's also one of the more unpleasant members of the army, being a {{Jerkass}}, a KnowNothingKnowItAll, and a racist. He is also the only member of Squad 7 who will blame Welkin if killed in battle.
186* ''You'' potentially in ''VideoGame/{{Foxhole}}''. A lot of the game is [[AvertedTrope averting]] EasyLogistics, so a lot of players choose to work in logistics, resource gathering and base-building, away from the fights in the front.
187* In ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles3'' Mwamba expresses a desire to put in a transfer to salvaging duties after completing [[OneLastJob a final active combat mission]] so that he can live out the final month of his life in a far less risky position and achieve the much sought after Homecoming. The other character's actually respect and support this decision, since they're all invested in the value of Homecoming as well and think that Mwamba has more than earned it with his life of watching their backs. [[{{Retirony}} He ends up being killed by D before getting the chance.]]
188* In ''[[VideoGame/ProjectWingman Project Wingman: Frontline 59]]'', K-9 Squadron is made up of reserve pilots with the bare minimum of training and only serve part time. However, as the Federation suffers massive casualties in their war against Cascadia, they are forced to mobilize K-9 Squadron out of sheer desperation to fill the ranks.
189[[/folder]]
190
191[[folder: Web Comics]]
192* ''ComicStrip/PVTMurphysLaw'' had a comic about "Fobbits"; in a visual pun, it's Bilbo in a flack vest and [=ACUs=] (and a bag of snacks from the FOB's PX).
193* ''Webcomic/TerminalLance'' had a few comics about various types of "[=POGs=]", typically admin troops and "Water Dogs" (Marine plumbers. Someone needs to make sure there is fresh drinking water.) Representations of these troops varies from obnoxious to merely being definitely-not-grunts but otherwise inoffensive.
194* ''Webcomic/SchlockMercenary'': [[BigBookOfWar The Seventy Maxims of Maximally Effective Mercenaries]] warns about this.
195-->'''MAXIM 18''': If the officers are leading from in front, watch for an attack from the rear.
196
197[[/folder]]
198
199[[folder: Web Original ]]
200* ''Podcast/RedPandaAdventures'': The Red Panda's millionaire playboy alter ego was officially given one of these jobs when he enlisted, to cover for the Red Panda's real mission: fighting Nazi agents on Canadian soil.
201* In ''Literature/TheSalvationWar'', [[GoodLookingPrivates Keisha Stevenson]] started her military career as a supply clerk, and was reassigned to a tank crew when the previous commander killed himself.
202[[/folder]]
203
204[[folder: Western Animation]]
205* In ''WesternAnimation/HeyArnold'', Gerald's dad joined the army during the Vietnam War and was sent there with his company even though he was in the infirmary for most of basic training due to illness. During a rifle practice session, he accidentally shot his commanding officer and was assigned a desk job. While he didn't fight in the war, when transporting some documents he ran across an injured soldier and brought him to the nearest medic, saving his life.
206* In ''{{WesternAnimation/Futurama}}'', Fry and Bender join the military purely for the benefits, intending to quit immediately after a trip to the store with their military discount. Unfortunately for them, within ''seconds'' of enlisting, war [[ShoutOut were]] declared and they are shipped to the front lines.
207* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'': In "Simpson Tide", Homer joined the US Naval Reserve expecting it to be like this. It doesn't quite go according to plan.
208* In ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheCloneWars'', both sides have a WeHaveReserves mentality regarding their troops (clones for the Republic, droids for the Separatists).The people safe and sound away from the front lines are occasionally criticized for it. One general is criticized for his reckless plans that cost lives because, unlike Anakin, he's not willing to share the risk his troops will be facing. However, it turns out [[spoiler: he's a MoleInCharge, a fallen Jedi who is trying to join the Sith by purposely causing as much damage to the current operation as possible to impress Count Dooku, so there's actually a sinister reason behind his behavior.]]
209* ''WesternAnimation/{{Archer}}'':
210** Woodhouse was an assistant, or bat man, for the commander of a Flying Corps fighter squadron during World War One. As he was behind the front lines looking after the commanding officer, he is an example. He does see combat when said CO is shot down, running into No Man's Land to attempt a rescue, then, when a sniper kills the CO, goes into an UnstoppableRage, killing fifty Germans. He's awarded the Victoria Cross and discharged.
211** In Archer's coma dream, he imagines himself as a decorated World War 2 veteran turned private detective in 1947 Los Angeles. When he and a night club band are arrested and must break out of jail, he insists he be squad leader, citing his combat experience. All of the band members reveal they served in the war (except Ray, who, being CampGay, was declared 4F ineligible), but being black and owing to segregation laws at the time, Cliff and Floyd were in non-combat support roles. Archer agrees it's bullshit for them to be denied the opportunity to serve in a frontline capacity, but states it doesn't make them any less heroic, though Archer still has the most experience (the third band member, Verl, reveals afterwards he was a tanker in the all-black 761st Tank Battalion, which saved Archer's company in the Battle of the Bulge).
212[[/folder]]

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