Armed Forces Day is celebrated each year on the third Saturday in May to honor Americans currently serving in the military.
The holiday was created after World War II in 1947 to establish one unified celebration for all branches of the Armed Forces. President Harry S. Truman proclaimed the first official Armed Forces Day on May 20, 1950. The theme was: “Teamed for Defense.”
“The men and women who serve in our military are among the bravest in our nation. They stand in defense of freedom, often at great personal cost.” — Billy Graham
Today, Armed Forces Day honors the approximately 2.1 million Americans currently serving in uniform across the seven branches of the Armed Forces.
Our brave men and women in uniform are assigned to either the Active Component (AC) (approximately 1.34 million) or the Reserve Component (RC) (approximately 770,000).¹ The Reserve Component comprises all military reserve forces, including the Reserves and the National Guard. Over the course of our Nation’s history, the distinction between the Active and Reserve Components has increasingly blurred.
The Reserve Component provided roughly one-third of all deployed personnel during major phases of Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) and Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) (Source: RAND / National Academies Research). The reliance on the Reserve Component (RC) becomes even more significant when considering the large number of reservists and National Guard personnel activated to backfill positions and units for deployed Active Component forces. The percentage rises to nearly fifty percent when accounting for RC personnel who transitioned to active-duty status to support the Global War on Terror (GWOT), even if they were not directly deployed overseas.
• U.S. Army (founded 1775): ~954,000 (AC: 452,000; RC: 502,000)*
• U.S. Navy (founded 1775): ~401,000 (AC: 344,000; RC: 57,000)
• U.S. Marine Corps (founded 1775): ~204,000 (AC: 172,000; RC: 32,000)
• U.S. Air Force (created in 1947)²: ~490,000 (AC: 320,000; RC: 170,000)
• U.S. Coast Guard (founded 1790): ~49,000 (AC: 41,000; RC: 8,000)
• U.S. Space Force (founded in 2019): ~9,000 AC
Where Are America’s Armed Forces Deployed Today?
Approximately 500,000 to 550,000 U.S. Armed Forces personnel are stationed or deployed around the world in support of combat operations, deterrence missions, alliance commitments, and global stability operations. The largest concentration remains in the Indo-Pacific region, where roughly 375,000 personnel support operations and partnerships across Japan, South Korea, Guam, Hawaii, the Philippines, and ongoing naval operations throughout the Pacific.
In Europe, an estimated 80,000 to 100,000 U.S. personnel are stationed primarily to deter Russian aggression and support NATO. In the Middle East under U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM), approximately 40,000 to 60,000 personnel support operations in Iraq, Syria, the Gulf states, and the Red Sea. A smaller contingency (~6,000 to 7,000) is assigned to U.S. Africa Command (AFRICOM) in advisory and counterterrorism roles. In addition, tens of thousands of personnel remain continuously deployed worldwide aboard carrier strike groups and forward-deployed naval forces.
“The soldier above all others prays for peace, for it is the soldier who must suffer and bear the deepest wounds and scars of war.” — Douglas MacArthur
Please take a few seconds today to pray for the brave men and women serving in the Armed Forces.
Prayer for Service Members
Lord God,
Watch over the men and women who serve in defense of freedom.
Grant them courage in danger, wisdom in leadership, and strength in hardship.
Protect their families during long separations and bring them safely home.
May they serve with honor, integrity, and justice.
Amen.
Notes
1. Sources: USAFacts (DMDC sourced), DMDC Workforce Reports, Military OneSource Demographics Reports, Air & Space Forces Almanac 2025, Council on Foreign Relations. Updated May 6, 2026.
2. The U.S. Air Force (USAF) was created from the U.S. Army Air Forces (USAAF) in 1947.