You have some decent options there. Have you considered a job in law enforcement or possibly forensics? It's nothing like the TV show (CSI)
If you have, then CID would be a good place to go. Yes, the School is long, but I'm sure the Army would have no problem deferring your military education until after your civilian education is complete. Although I interrupted my Civilian Education for a military school. It's still a viable option.
When you complete the CID training and have a Bachelor's Degree, Police agencies in Indiana and the FBI as well as other Federal agencies would be interested in you. CID on active duty perform a lot of undercover work. when I was in Bosnia, I frequent contact with a Chief warrant Officer 3 who was in his mid 30's, CID that operated out of Eagle Base, Tuzla. He had a female SSG and a male SFC that worked with him. when I went on pass to Budapest, Hungary in 2002, I bumped into those guys constantly checking out the tourist sights.
In the early 1980's the Army took a heavy hand to ending the drug use by soldiers in barracks. It had been rampant in the 1970's. I was told by one senior NCOs that for every 9 men in a rifle squad, at least five of them were drug users. My cousin who was stationed in Germany in 1974-75 used to take Heroine frequently. It really messed him up. He passed away at age 54; 3 years ago.
CID agents went undercover into random US Army units all over the world. Random Urinalysis testing and drug sniffing dogs were brought into the barracks at night and night and soon the specter of drugs disappeared, in part to the efforts of CID agents.
I'm sure US Army Reservists filling those slots focus more on training than real world missions, but if you ever get deployed to a combat zone or any other lukewarm spot on the planet, you'll be "in the shit."
Oh, by the way. Non-MP type soldiers hate CID agents and if discovered have beaten the snot out of them and in rare instances killed them. It is a dangerous life, not that any occupation in the military is not.