Not at all suggesting that all those jobs should go away or become second-tier, just pointing out that they are limited and may be second tier in some communities. For example, the submarine force's need to man squadron and fleet staffs with served DH's trumps the need to put someone at N-87 crunching analysis. Moreover, making more billets just so someone can obtain a graduate education and go off track for a few years (or indefinitely) is at odds with being a better steward of taxpayer dollars.
The billets already exist.
The grad ed already happens, and for at least one community is so heavily used as a retention tool they are unlikely to go away any time soon.
If anything, the SWO community is doubling down on its investment into those programs, while looking to get better ROI out of it.
Ultimately, if the Navy hired you to be a submariner, SWO, pilot, whatever, one shouldn't be too surprised that the Navy wants you to keep doing that job. I wonder how many people quit Apple and write long nasty letters about bleeding smart talent because the company wouldn't pay for them to attend grad school for agricultural sciences and subsequently work on making better fertilizer.
Navy doesn't generally let you go get degrees it's not interested in using fully funded in-residence programs, so I have no idea where you're going with this. ROTC might be different (had a CO who got a Environmental Engineering degree on ROTC duty), but my understanding is that's more of a unit arrangement with the host school.
Most of the Marines at NPS with me were Logistics officers. The pilots/infantry guys were definitely 'off track' for going there, and probably destined to retire as Majors. By contrast, the Army designated its officers to the OR branch, which allowed them to continue to have promotion possibility as they are no longer competing with infantry/armor/whatever to promote.
Yeah, apparently they changed their mind about that. The new guys showing up weren't even given a choice. Basically, if you did too well you're going whether you wanted to or not:
http://www.marines.mil/News/Message...commandants-career-level-education-board.aspx
They go to follow-on tours at Quantico and the Pentagon. I'm pretty sure Marine combat MOS's have as much of a need to keep their operational staffs filled as Navy URL communities.
It would at least appear that the Marines have taken a look at "demand" (billets) and figured out how to match "supply" (educational requirements).