Tank Corps, National Army, a stateside United States unit during World War I
National Football League | United States Army | British Army | Union Army | National Register of Historic Places | National Hockey League | Army | Red Army | United States Marine Corps | England national football team | United States Army Corps of Engineers | National Basketball Association | National Science Foundation | National Geographic | Confederate States Army | National Trust | National Endowment for the Arts | National Geographic Society | Argentina national football team | National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty | National Park Service | National League | Australian National University | National Guard | National Geographic Channel | National Institutes of Health | National Guard of the United States | National Collegiate Athletic Association | United States National Research Council | United States Army Air Forces |
After the defeat of the ICU by the alliance of the Transitional Federal Government (TFG), the autonomous states of Puntland and Galmudug, various warlords and, most importantly, the army of Ethiopia, he returned to Mogadishu and was present on January 12, 2007 at Villa Somalia where an agreement was reached between the Mogadishu warlords and the TFG to disarm the militias and to direct members to join the national army and police.
In 1901, Filomeno Mata appointed him a correspondent on Diario del Hogar and, that same year, he enlisted as a reservist in the National Army, where he reached the rank of second lieutenant (cavalry).
He was 20 years old, and a Section Commander and Acting Captain in A Battalion, Tank Corps,
During World War I, Brett was ordered to the European battlefield with the Tank Corps and was promoted to the rank of Captain on July 25, 1917.