Okay, I looked it up @Bigun Can't tell if this would be good or bad news
A bit O/T, but in my world, calling you an REMF is by far the worst pejorative I throw at anyone. I had the "pleasure" of serving with several REMFs during my time in the Army, officers who should never have been allowed near troops. Most were excellent staff officers, but disasters when put in a leadership position.
A (hopefully) brief example: My battery was a composite Chaparral/towed Vulcan platoon. Vulcans had a maximum effective range of 1000 meters. During an ARTEP, my battery commander improperly encoded coordinates for a mission, resulting in a 10KM long route defense for a Vulcan platoon (4 guns). The platoon leader, another REMF, did not question the mission, even though it violated every precept of air defense artillery tactics. That same platoon missed their morning mission by 30 minutes, thanks to the lack of leadership of that same lieutenant.
Had that been real world, people would have most assuredly died. As it was, it almost (could have/should have) flunked the entire battery. I was already irritable, not having slept for a few days leading up to that evaluation, and pressed in service as the XO in addition to my job as the Maintenance Officer. When I learned what had happened, I blew up...I had taken 3 of those 4 platoons successfully through evaluations during my first 18 months in the battery, and these yay-hoos were blowing it.
There's my example of an REMF (or two). The BC came from battalion staff, where he was excellent. He was simply unable to translate those skills into commanding a battery. The Platoon Leader was simply lost, and didn't respond well to guidance from any of us...he knew it all, or so he thought.
Hope that helps.