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  • [[Image:Casing.jpg|thumb|250px| A U.S. Army soldier firing a 5.56 mm round from an M4 rifle (the M4 also has an M203 Gr An '''Army''' is a term either referring to the largest type of [[formation]] for a la
    978 bytes (151 words) - 03:37, 27 March 2024
  • ...ade up of two or more [[corps]] plus units under the direct control of the army commander. Typically, it will have at least 100,000 personnel. | Eighth British Army
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  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 20:03, 24 September 2007
  • #redirect[[United States Army]]
    31 bytes (4 words) - 15:45, 12 May 2008
  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 23:12, 10 August 2009
  • 185 bytes (27 words) - 19:47, 20 May 2008
  • ...r, most of the army was disbanded, and was replaced by the [[United States Army]].
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  • 81 bytes (10 words) - 15:16, 9 January 2011
  • ...]]. China continues the Red Army tradition, with the [[People's Liberation Army]] containing the Chinese navy and air force. Under the [[Russian Federation
    892 bytes (126 words) - 13:44, 3 September 2009
  • ...r land warfare. It "consists of the General Staff and the deployable Field Army and the Regional Forces that support them, as well as Joint elements that w | url = http://www.army.mod.uk/structure/structure.aspx
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  • The '''Kwangtung Army''' was the part of the [[Imperial Japanese Army]] formation that initially garrisoned the [[Kwangtung Leasehold]], and, aft ...8 August 1932}}</ref> Muto and subsequent leaders bore the dual titles of Army commander and Ambassador to Manchukuo. In 1933, Muto, who had opposed Emper
    2 KB (228 words) - 21:28, 27 August 2010
  • ...has finished, the Territorial Army is still treated as part of the regular Army until demobilisation, which is not always instant. ...itorial and Reserve Forces Act 1907. Initially, members of the Territorial Army were under no obligation to fight abroad.During peacetime before World War
    1 KB (225 words) - 16:48, 2 November 2008
  • ...oops at the [[Battle of Normandy]] consisted of a corps under the Canadian army headquarters. ...mmanded I Canadian Corps in Italy. It made up the left flank of the [[21st Army Group]] under GEN [[Bernard Montgomery]], later Field Marshal Viscount of
    2 KB (265 words) - 06:34, 31 May 2009
  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 19:05, 20 June 2010
  • The '''Russian Liberation Army (RLA)''',<ref>'''ROA''' is the Russian abbreviation</ref> created from a nu | title = After the Blitzkrieg: The German Army’s Transition to Defeat in the East
    16 KB (2,568 words) - 03:54, 10 January 2011
  • #REDIRECT [[User:Mal McKee/Irish Republican Army]]
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  • {{r|First United States Army}} {{r|Third United States Army}}
    529 bytes (78 words) - 09:20, 16 June 2008
  • 81 bytes (10 words) - 06:54, 18 December 2010
  • 76 bytes (11 words) - 16:53, 12 March 2024
  • ...ade up of two or more [[corps]] plus units under the direct control of the army commander, usually with at least 100,000 personnel
    199 bytes (30 words) - 19:10, 20 June 2010
  • 81 bytes (10 words) - 17:23, 17 September 2009
  • ...Japanese Navy]] gained increasing political power from 1900 onwards. The Army tended to be the more expansionistic and radical of the two. ...aw of 1900, the Army Minister had to be a serving general nominated by the Army, giving it, and comparably the Navy, veto power over forming a government.
    1 KB (164 words) - 14:24, 28 August 2010
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  • '''Third United States Army''' is currently the U.S. Army component of United States Central Command CENTCOM, called ARCENT. Formall
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  • ...rmy|field armies]] and support troops; called Front by Soviets and General Army by Japanese
    202 bytes (27 words) - 15:15, 9 January 2011
  • #REDIRECT [[Third United States Army]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Army]]
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  • National army of the [[American Revolutionary War]], formed by the [[Second Continental C
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  • 247 bytes (32 words) - 13:11, 3 September 2009
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  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 00:56, 7 December 2007
  • Primary reserve land force of the [[British Army]].
    87 bytes (11 words) - 16:51, 2 November 2008
  • ...ld War]], first as an administrative organization but operating as a field army in 1945.
    194 bytes (27 words) - 22:29, 13 February 2009
  • ...a Japanese Army formation roughly equivalent in size to a Western [[field army]]
    109 bytes (18 words) - 19:04, 20 June 2010
  • [[Image:US_Army_Seal.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Seal of the United States Army]] ...s in defense of the United States and its allies, especially [[NATO]]. The Army's official motto is "This We'll Defend".
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Imperial Japanese Army]] formation that initially garrisoned the [[Kwangtung Leasehold]], and, aft
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  • '''Rangers''', in the [[U.S. Army]], are elite light infantry units, which operate in uniform, but often behi
    1,016 bytes (155 words) - 20:20, 25 January 2010
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  • Elite light infantry units of the [[U.S. Army]], whose lineage predates the United States, going back to the [[French and
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  • ...he largest formation in the [[United States Army]]. It is also called U.S. Army-Europe, or USAREUR. *United States Army Europe (USAREUR): Heidelberg, Germany
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  • Center of Industrial and Technical Excellence (CITE) for U.S. Army vehicles (tracked and wheeled), [[artillery]] (self propelled and towed), [
    670 bytes (95 words) - 17:22, 17 September 2009
  • 27 bytes (3 words) - 00:25, 6 April 2009
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Army Special Forces]]
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  • '''Eighth United States Army''' is currently the senior [[U.S. Army]] headquarters in the [[Republic of Korea]] (ROK) (i.e., South Korea); its The two Combat Support Coordination teams each link a ROK [[Army]] to the Combined Forces Ground Component, arranging aviation, all-source i
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  • 44 bytes (5 words) - 10:14, 6 December 2008
  • ...resistance organization, essentially a propaganda force, led by former Red Army lieutenant general [[Andrey Andreyevich Vlasov]] and made up of German [[pr
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  • ...History,'' (2005) oversize, heavily illustrated [http://www.amazon.com/U-S-Army-Complete-Raymond-Bluhm/dp/088363113X/ref=pd_bbs_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=12106 * Brown, Jerold E., ed. ''Historical Dictionary of the U.S. Army'' (2001), 660pp [http://www.questia.com/read/111692384?title=Historical%20D
    2 KB (325 words) - 17:57, 18 August 2008
  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Territorial Army]]. Needs checking by a human.
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  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 08:10, 15 November 2007
  • 81 bytes (10 words) - 09:45, 23 October 2009
  • ...hat the "marshal" term was not adopted because the [[Chief of Staff of the Army]], George C. Marshall, refused to be designated Marshal Marshall. [[Henry Arnold|Henry "Hap" Arnold]] was General of the Army Air Force.
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Continental Army]]. Needs checking by a human.
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  • ...1970. (on Strik-Strikfeldt's experiences as an interpreter for the German army, ending up as a contact officer between the German leadership and Vlasov an
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  • Headquarters organization of the reserve components of the [[United States Army]]
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  • {{r|Eitaro Hata}} Commanding general, [[Kwangtung Army]], (1 Jul 1929 - 31 May 1930) {{r|Takashi Hishikari}} Commanding general, [[Kwangtung Army]], (3 Jun 1930 - 1 Aug 1931), (29 Jul 1933 - 10 Dec 1934)
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  • 81 bytes (10 words) - 18:58, 10 July 2009
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  • ...tates Central Command]], the headquarters organization for [[United States Army]] Components. Also designated ARCENT.
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  • #redirect [[User:George Swan/sandbox/Army Regulation 190-8 (tribunal)]]
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/First Canadian Army]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Army}}
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  • Former name for [[United States Army North]]
    80 bytes (10 words) - 19:33, 23 May 2008
  • ...ons Command of the United States Special Operations Command (USSOCOM). The Army Special Operations Command and Special Forces Headquarters are at Fort Brag ...cial Forces Training come from a number of different places: conventional army units, civilians(newly enlisted go through a program called the "X-Ray" pro
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  • #REDIRECT [[User:George Swan/sandbox/Army Regulation 190-8 (tribunal)]]
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  • {{r|United States Army}} {{r|Rangers (Army of the Republic of Viet Nam)}}
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  • #REDIRECT [[Chief of Staff of the Army]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[User:George Swan/sandbox/Army Regulation 190-8 (tribunal)]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Army/Definition]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Secretary of the Army (U.S.)]]
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  • ...ion, policy, and readiness; like the Office of the [[Chief of Staff of the Army]], not part of the general operational chain of command
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  • Headquarters for U.S. Army units assigned to Homeland Defense missions in the United States
    127 bytes (18 words) - 19:26, 23 May 2008
  • ...retary of the Army''' is the civilian head of the [[U.S. Department of the Army]], now a subordinate organization of the [[U.S. Department of Defense]]. As ...torical precedence in the [[Obama Administration]]. The Secretaries of the Army, Navy, and Air Force, respectively, are the most senior officials in the De
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  • ...cooperation [[George Patton|George S. Patton Jr.]]'s [[Third United States Army]] and [[Elmo Quesada|Elmo "Pete" Quesada]]'s XIX Tactical Air Command (toda *1918 - United States Army Air Service
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  • ...lly consisting of a reinforced division, this is the headquarters for U.S. Army forces in South Korea, but its four-star commander also commands [[United S
    247 bytes (36 words) - 20:09, 14 February 2010
  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Third United States Army]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Army}}
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  • #REDIRECT [[Department of the Army]]
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  • {{r|Department of the Army}} {{r|Chief of Staff of the Army}}
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  • ...rmation in the [[United States Army]]. Also designated USAREUR. Major U.S. Army formation in the WWII [[Battle of Sicily]] ([[Operation HUSKY]])
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  • Currently inactive [[U.S. Army]] designation for a field army headquarters; was one of two field armies under [[Douglas MacArthur]] in WW
    251 bytes (35 words) - 09:44, 17 June 2010
  • ...ons Aviation Regiment (Airborne), the "Night Stalkers". They may carry non-Army special operators, such as [[United States Navy SEAL]]s.
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  • ...dent and confirmed by the Senate, who directs the U.S. [[Department of the Army]]; of Assistant Secretary of Defense rank, the Secretary replaced the cabin
    263 bytes (38 words) - 18:58, 10 July 2009
  • Newly commissioned [[U.S. Army]] lieutenants, attend a school, following general officer training, which t
    330 bytes (42 words) - 20:22, 8 August 2009
  • The highest U.S. Army rank in and immediately following the Second World War
    112 bytes (17 words) - 04:19, 7 June 2009
  • #redirect [[User:George Swan/sandbox/Army Regulation 190-8 (tribunal)]]
    71 bytes (9 words) - 07:58, 26 May 2009
  • [[U.S. Army]] senior lieutenants and junior captains attend a school, such as the Infan
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  • ...Staff''', was the highest operational position in the [[Imperial Japanese Army]]. This individual was co-equal, organizationally, to the [[Chief of Staff ...n the Japanese military, both major field commands such as the [[Kwangtung Army]], as well as junior or midgrade officers, might take significant actions w
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  • ...ndependent in the [[United States Army]]; succeeded by the [[United States Army Air Force]]
    175 bytes (23 words) - 22:12, 15 July 2008
  • ...he Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC), which formally issued the first Army doctrinal guidance in 1976. Many planners also cite, not as a guide but an Essentially, the Army decided that in the next few decades, when it has to deploy large numbers o
    34 KB (5,015 words) - 08:09, 20 March 2024
  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Eighth United States Army]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Army Special Operations Command}}
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/General of the army]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Chief of Staff of the Army}}
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  • {{subgroup|United States Army|Military}}
    40 bytes (5 words) - 03:07, 9 August 2010
  • ...ble for Army preparedness along with the uniformed [[Chief of Staff of the Army]], neither of whom are in the operational chain of command
    307 bytes (46 words) - 01:32, 10 October 2010
  • #REDIRECT [[Restructuring of the United States Army]]
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  • Substantially autonomous air arm of the [[United States Army]] prior to creation of the independent [[United States Air Force]]
    163 bytes (22 words) - 20:20, 12 February 2009
  • [[United States Army]] organization originally created to train and lead guerrillas, highly qual
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  • 115 bytes (13 words) - 21:00, 9 May 2011
  • ...ute of Heraldry—2010.png|right|350px|The coat of arms of the United States Army Institute of heraldry is, ''Or a chevron gules, on a chief sable a label of The '''United States Army Institute of Heraldry''' coordinates and approves coats of arms, heraldic d
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/United States Army Air Force]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|United States Army Air Corps}}
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  • ...bpages}}</noinclude>Senior professional officer of the [[Imperial Japanese Army]], in principle in operational command but not necessarily in practice
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  • ...ate)|Kansas]], home of the [[U.S. Army Combined Arms Center]], the '''U.S. Army Command and General Staff College (USACGSC)''' is a midcareer professional While most of its students are [[United States Army]] officers, a typical class will have officers from all the U.S. military s
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  • #REDIRECT [[User:George Swan/sandbox/Army Regulation 190-8 (tribunal)/Related Articles]]
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  • {{r|United States Army}} {{r|United States Army Reserve Command||**}}
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  • {{r|Army Minister (Japan)}} {{r|Imperial Japanese Army}}
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  • ...ute of Heraldry] official website, from the website of the [[United States Army]]
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  • Midcareer [[staff college]] of the [[United States Army]]
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  • {{r|United States Army}}
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  • {{r|United States Army}}
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  • Select or elite light infantry of the [[Army of the Republic of Viet Nam]]
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  • ...own by its Spanish initials '''FARC''', is a left-wing Colombian guerrilla army which originated in 1964 and is still active in 2008. Since the 1980s, FARC ...nd renamed itself the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia - The Peoples Army (''Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia - Ejército del pueblo'').
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  • {{main|Army of the Republic of Viet Nam}} In the [[Army of the Republic of Vietnam]], using the term generically to include Marines
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  • Second most senior general in the U.S. Army, who directs internal operations in doctrinal development, planning, traini
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  • {{r|Department of the Army}} {{r|Secretary of the Army}}
    429 bytes (63 words) - 01:36, 13 August 2010
  • '''Rangers''' of the '''[[Army of the Republic of Viet Nam]]''', referred to several types of units, all After [[United States Army Special Forces]] units withdrew from the [[Vietnam War]], the LLDB and BDQ
    700 bytes (114 words) - 22:36, 24 January 2010
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  • {{r|Army of the Republic of Vietnam}} {{r|United States Army Special Forces}}
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/People's Liberation Army]]. Needs checking by a human.
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  • #REDIRECT [[Chief of Staff of the Army]]
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  • ...]], acts for the Chief of Staff in his absence, and is more concerned with Army operations while the Chief of Staff works with the Defense Department, Whit ...Chief exercises direct command over combat troops; their role is readying Army forces to serve in the operational [[Unified Combatant Command]]s.
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  • Uniformed professional head of the [[United States Army]], a member of the [[Joint Chiefs of Staff]], and of four-star general rank
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  • ...but ARVN was used generically for the RVN armed forces as well as for the Army. Its major U.S. counterpart headquarters was [[Military Assistance Command, ...asion. That the ARVN had been fighting for many, many years affected its [[Army of the Republic of Viet Nam motivation|motivation and culture]].
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  • ...Republic of Vietnam]] (DRV). It was also known as the '''North Vietnamese Army (NVA)'''.
    367 bytes (57 words) - 18:28, 12 July 2008
  • #REDIRECT [[Army of the Republic of Viet Nam]]
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  • ...efs of Staff]] or the [[Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff]] is an Army officer. He is appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate, cur ...s of Staff]] (JCS), he does not directly command operational forces of the Army, which are under [[Unified Combatant Command]]s that report to the [[United
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  • ...there is no such thing as the Chinese Navy, but the '''People's Liberation Army Navy'''. ...units and commanders, perhaps the best-known unit was the '''Eighth Route Army''', making the [[Long March]], under [[Mao Zedong]] and other commanders.
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  • ...this broad appeal may help to account for its enormous popularity. ''Dad's Army'' ran for nine series; there was a radio show, [[feature film]] and stage s ...es]], [[Pamela Cundell]], [[Olive Mercer]], and [[Wendy Richard]]. ''Dad's Army'' actually ran for longer than the Second World War itself, beginning in 19
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Page text matches

  • {{r|First United States Army}} {{r|Third United States Army}}
    529 bytes (78 words) - 09:20, 16 June 2008
  • ...zi SS and military ranks|Generalfeldmaschall]] commanding an army, then an army group, in [[Operation Barbarossa]]; defendant in [[High Command Case (NMT)]
    229 bytes (30 words) - 02:39, 8 January 2011
  • ...r]] used by the [[Italian Army|Italian]], [[Dutch Army|Dutch]] and [[Greek Army|Greek Armies]]
    170 bytes (21 words) - 21:11, 1 March 2010
  • ...ence]] duty, reporting to the [[Army Minister (Japan)]] rather than to the Army General Staff, a group that expanded its role into militarized politics, so
    334 bytes (43 words) - 05:23, 2 September 2010
  • ...]] US Army Night Vision and Electronic Sensors Directorate: http://www.nvl.army.mil/about/index.php ...Army]] Night Vision Branch, Aviation Center, Ft. Rucker: http://www-rucker.army.mil/atb/nvd/nvdb.htm
    499 bytes (68 words) - 11:28, 14 July 2009
  • ..., [[U.S. Army]], retired; former chief of the litigation division of the Army's Office of the Judge Advocate General
    257 bytes (35 words) - 11:45, 19 March 2024
  • ...riticisms; former Army's Infantry Center and was Chief of Infantry for the Army; advisor to Senator [[Hillary Clinton]]'s presidential campaign
    399 bytes (54 words) - 03:39, 5 October 2009
  • ...Security Project]]; [[lieutenant general]], [[U.S. Army]] retired; head of Army Intelligence
    146 bytes (17 words) - 15:56, 21 December 2009
  • ...tute for Defense Analyses]]; USA (Ret.) President, Association of the U.S. Army;
    261 bytes (37 words) - 13:52, 6 April 2024
  • ...he [[Wehrmacht]], which is actually the umbrella term for all of the Heer (army), navy (navy), and [[Luftwaffe]] (air force) combined.
    333 bytes (53 words) - 09:26, 5 April 2024
  • ...Special Operations Command]] and the school and center for [[United States Army Special Forces]]
    353 bytes (51 words) - 04:58, 10 March 2024
  • ...Vietnam]] and then [[Chief of Staff of the Army]], who built the volunteer army and restructured the reserve components under the [[Total Force Concept]]
    275 bytes (42 words) - 16:57, 17 March 2024
  • {{r|Department of the Army}} {{r|Secretary of the Army}}
    429 bytes (63 words) - 01:36, 13 August 2010
  • (1916 - 2008) A [[United States Army|U.S. Army]] officer specializing in insurgency, [[counterinsurgency]] and [[special o
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  • ...and incorrectly known as the [[Wehrmacht]] (the umbrella term for all air, army and naval forces).
    266 bytes (42 words) - 05:27, 26 March 2024
  • General, [[United States Army]]; 32nd [[Vice Chief of Staff of the Army]] (2008-)
    81 bytes (13 words) - 16:57, 17 March 2024
  • ...ble for Army preparedness along with the uniformed [[Chief of Staff of the Army]], neither of whom are in the operational chain of command
    307 bytes (46 words) - 01:32, 10 October 2010
  • {{r|United States Army}} {{r|United States Army Reserve Command||**}}
    656 bytes (94 words) - 04:45, 10 March 2024
  • {{r|United States Army}} {{r|Army National Guard (United States)}}
    341 bytes (46 words) - 16:54, 24 February 2024
  • ...r, most of the army was disbanded, and was replaced by the [[United States Army]].
    600 bytes (87 words) - 01:23, 7 December 2007
  • ...; General, [[United States Army]], retired; former [[Chief of Staff of the Army]]; Military Senior Advisor Panel, [[Iraq Study Group]]
    186 bytes (24 words) - 16:58, 17 March 2024
  • ...d and in wartime only by major powers; U.S. equivalent is [[general of the army]]
    160 bytes (25 words) - 11:50, 13 September 2009
  • ...rmation in the [[United States Army]]. Also designated USAREUR. Major U.S. Army formation in the WWII [[Battle of Sicily]] ([[Operation HUSKY]])
    273 bytes (39 words) - 21:40, 30 June 2009
  • ...cations]]; retired general, [[U.S. Army]] and 31st [[Chief of Staff of the Army]]
    181 bytes (24 words) - 11:52, 19 March 2024
  • ...ung Army]], (6 Jan 1921 - 10 May 1922);[[Chief of Staff (Imperial Japanese Army)]], (17 Mar 1923 - 2 Mar 1926)
    175 bytes (19 words) - 00:07, 31 August 2010
  • ...Japanese Navy]] gained increasing political power from 1900 onwards. The Army tended to be the more expansionistic and radical of the two. ...aw of 1900, the Army Minister had to be a serving general nominated by the Army, giving it, and comparably the Navy, veto power over forming a government.
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  • ...an Army during the Napoleonic Wars, academic, and reformer of the Prussian Army.
    149 bytes (19 words) - 21:01, 26 September 2013
  • ...ial operations regular and [[Territorial Army]] regiments of the [[British Army]], part of [[U.K. Special Forces]]
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  • ...a Japanese Army formation roughly equivalent in size to a Western [[field army]]
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  • ...mored personnel carrier]] of the [[Stryker (armored fighting vehicle)|U.S. Army's Stryker family]]
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  • General, [[United States Army]], retired; former [[Chief of Staff of the Army]]; advisor to the Center for Security Policy
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  • ...neraloberst]]; tank and mobile warfare specialist who commanded 4th Panzer Army; convicted by [[High Command Case (NMT)]]
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  • ...ade up of two or more [[corps]] plus units under the direct control of the army commander. Typically, it will have at least 100,000 personnel. | Eighth British Army
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  • .... He replaces Gen. [[Martin Dempsey]], who becomes [[Chief of Staff of the Army]]. ...will be [[Donald M. Campbell Jr.]], who has been commanding general, U.S. Army Recruiting Command.
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  • ...is the [[United States Army]] Aviation Center, the home of [[army aviation|Army Aviation]] doctrinal development, training, and management. [[Ozark, Alabam ...M]] Tod Glidewell, and, to reflect the large number of warrant officers in Army Aviation, CWO5 Jeffery Reichard is Chief Warrant Officer of the Aviation Br
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  • A general in the United States Army, who served as Chief of Staff of the Army during the Korean War.
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  • {{r|Army}} {{r|Army Cooperation Aviation}}
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  • ...]], acts for the Chief of Staff in his absence, and is more concerned with Army operations while the Chief of Staff works with the Defense Department, Whit ...Chief exercises direct command over combat troops; their role is readying Army forces to serve in the operational [[Unified Combatant Command]]s.
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  • ...Army War College; Registered Professional Engineer and Board of Directors, Army Engineers Association; Board of Directors, Military Heritage Association; A
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  • ...S. Army", U.S. Army War College, ''Parameters'', 2003, http://www.carlisle.army.mil/USAWC/Parameters/03summer/kelly.pdf
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  • ...[[Training and Doctrine Command]] strategic think tank, alongside the U.S. Army War College at Carlisle Barracks, [[Pennsylvania (U.S. state)|Pennsylvania]
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  • ...ng which time the decision was made to increase the number of women in the Army from 2% to 10%;responsible staff officer for implementation of the enrollme
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  • ...se vehicle of a large family of wheeled armored vehicles, including the US Army's [[Stryker vehicle]].
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  • ...ndependent in the [[United States Army]]; succeeded by the [[United States Army Air Force]]
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  • ...istance Command, Vietnam]] (COMUSMACV)] 1964–1968; [[Chief of Staff of the Army]] 1968–1972.
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  • General, [[Imperial Japanese Army]]; last [[Army Minister (Japan)]] before [[surrender of Japan]], (7 Apr 1945 - 15 Aug 1945
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  • ...rmy|field armies]] and support troops; called Front by Soviets and General Army by Japanese
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  • [[United States Army]] general and Army Aviation pioneer, considered the creator of division-sized, helicopter-mobi
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  • [[Brigadier General]] (Ret.) U.S. Army, Commanding General of the Southeast Army Regional Medical Command; author on [[medical ethics]], [[military medicine
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  • ===Army=== {{r|Fedor von Bock}}(Army Group North)
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  • ...ng Army]]; war minister 1938-1939 during the border wars with Russia; rear army commander during WWII; condemned and hanged as a major war criminal by the
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  • | publisher = U.S. Army War College | coauthors = Army War College (U.S.)
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  • Currently inactive [[U.S. Army]] designation for a field army headquarters; was one of two field armies under [[Douglas MacArthur]] in WW
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  • ...1, a political faction within the [[Imperial Japanese Army]], which wanted Army modernization, purging of the samurai traditions of the [[Choshu Clan]], an
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  • ...an Allied [[army group]]. Japanese Area Armies were comparable to [[field army|field armies]].<ref>{{citation | Fifth Area Army
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  • ...ion Barbarossa|the 1941 invasion of Germany]] and the [[Russian Liberation Army]]
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  • ...rt]] to the Reserve Components of the [[United States Army Reserve]] and [[Army National Guard (United States)]]
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  • {{r|First General Army}} {{r|Second General Army}}
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  • ...manding in the [[Russo-Japanese War]]; [[Chief of Staff (Imperial Japanese Army)]], (16 May 1899 - 20 Jun 1904), (20 Dec 1905 - 11 Apr 1906)
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  • ...an_railroads_war_effort_in_1943 ''Troop Train'', a 1943 wartime film about Army rail movements.] ...o and short history of a rare Medical Department version of a World War II Army "troop kitchen" car that has undergone a post-War conversion into a guard c
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  • ...le both for all training as well as the development of doctrine of how the Army fights, currently headed by General [[Martin Dempsey]]
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  • *[[United States Forces Korea]] (Yongsan Army Garrison, Seoul) **[[Eighth United States Army]] (Yongsan Army Garrison, Seoul)
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  • {{r|Army}} {{r|British Army}}
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  • ...Staff''', was the highest operational position in the [[Imperial Japanese Army]]. This individual was co-equal, organizationally, to the [[Chief of Staff ...n the Japanese military, both major field commands such as the [[Kwangtung Army]], as well as junior or midgrade officers, might take significant actions w
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  • ...stem to run the U.S. Army [[Maneuver Control System]] application of the [[Army Battle Command System]]; intended for planning rather than execution
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  • ...mi''' (1887-1945) was a general in the Imperial Japanese Army and the last Army Minister (Japan)|War Minister. While he personally did not want Japan to su ...is assignments included the109th Division, Eleventh Army, and Second Area Army, with his senior combat command during the Second Sino-Japanese War.
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  • ...include the [[United States Army Signal Command]] and the [[United States Army Intelligence Center]]
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  • ...d the [[Three Crows]] in 1921, expected to become leaders in reforming the Army and ousting the [[Choshu Clan]] influence
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  • ...ers of [[Adolf Hitler]], had been planned by the [[Oberkommando des Heeres|Army General Staff ]] (OKH) with relatively little involvement from the [[Oberko ...Johannes Blaskowitz]], who commanded the 8th Army in the invasion, part of Army Group South. German and allied forces were:
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  • ...retary of the Army''' is the civilian head of the [[U.S. Department of the Army]], now a subordinate organization of the [[U.S. Department of Defense]]. As ...torical precedence in the [[Obama Administration]]. The Secretaries of the Army, Navy, and Air Force, respectively, are the most senior officials in the De
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  • ...]] vehicle-mounted [[SINCGARS]] dual radio, functionally equivalent to the Army's [[VRC-91|AN/VRC-91]] or [[VRC-92|VRC-92]]
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  • ...rofessional army", American Military History ''Volume I, The United States Army and the Forging of a Nationm, 1775-1917'']
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  • ...achucua]], which is responsible for doctrinal development and training for Army intelligence personnel. Fast is a graduate of the U.S. Army War College.
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  • ...efs of Staff]] or the [[Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff]] is an Army officer. He is appointed by the President and confirmed by the Senate, cur ...s of Staff]] (JCS), he does not directly command operational forces of the Army, which are under [[Unified Combatant Command]]s that report to the [[United
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  • {{r|United States Army}} {{r|Sergeants Major Academy (U.S. Army}}
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  • {{r|Army Minister (Japan)}} {{r|Imperial Japanese Army}}
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  • ...has finished, the Territorial Army is still treated as part of the regular Army until demobilisation, which is not always instant. ...itorial and Reserve Forces Act 1907. Initially, members of the Territorial Army were under no obligation to fight abroad.During peacetime before World War
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  • ...d partner of the strategist, [[Ulysses S. Grant]]; [[Chief of Staff of the Army]] after the war's end
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  • ...of Japan]], holder of the highest rank and highest honor for valor in the Army, yet relieved of command for insubordination
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  • ...ates Army]], a theoretician and combat commander who is concerned that the Army is overemphasizing [[counterinsurgency]] to the detriment of other capabili
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  • ...8-1945) General, German Army; Commander of the [[Ersatzheer]] (Replacement Army), under [[Ludwig Beck]] (1937-1944) and chief of armaments (1939-44); awa
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  • ...[[Prime Minister of Japan]] 1941-1944; [[Chief of Staff (Imperial Japanese Army)]], (21 Feb 1944 - 18 Jul 1944); executed for war crimes in 1948 by order o
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  • ...ganizing network]]; sometimes called the "tactical internet" Through the [[Army Battle Command System]], it interfaces to the [[Global Information Grid]].
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  • ...]], moving north on the east bank of the river Meuse, was met by a Spanish army, led by [[Sancho d'Avila]] and Mendoza. ...ted. Hence, the ensuing battle was a disaster for the Dutch. Part of their army deserted during the action, shouting for money. The Spanish lost only 150 m
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  • ...Army and an early member of the [[German Resistance]]; Chief of Staff of [[Army Group South (Russian Front)]] at the time of the [[1944 assassination attem
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  • {{r|Eitaro Hata}} Commanding general, [[Kwangtung Army]], (1 Jul 1929 - 31 May 1930) {{r|Takashi Hishikari}} Commanding general, [[Kwangtung Army]], (3 Jun 1930 - 1 Aug 1931), (29 Jul 1933 - 10 Dec 1934)
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  • ...ience to the Emperor and an end of factionalism in the [[Imperial Japanese Army]], and was assigned to purge elements of the [[Imperial Way Faction]] after From 1941 to 1945, he commanded the Southern Area Army, including the Philippines. He was [[Tomiyuki Yamashita]]'s superior office
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  • {{r|United States Army}} {{r|U.S. Army branch basic course}}
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  • ...on from basic training to the War College, and thus had great influence on Army thinking. | title = Japanese Army: Inspector General of Military Education
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  • ...llied with the [[Army of the Republic of Viet Nam]] against the [[People's Army of Viet Nam]] and the [[Viet Cong]]
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  • ...e commander in the Russo-Japanese-War; [[Chief of Staff (Imperial Japanese Army)]], (11 Apr 1906 - 30 Jul 1906)--died suddenly in office
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  • ...[[United States Army Special Forces]] personnel, and sometimes by their [[Army of the Republic of Viet Nam]] counterparts in the [[Nha Ky Thuat]]
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  • ...}</noinclude>[[Imperial Japanese Army]] officer who commanded [[Kwangtung Army]] from 1 Aug 1931 to 8 Aug 1932, including the [[Manchurian Incident]]; Ch
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Third United States Army]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Army}}
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  • ...orgia]] area; headquarters of [[Forces Command]] and [[United States Third Army]]; recommended for closure by the 2005 [[Base Realignment and Closure]] (BR
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  • ...ned Security Transition Command-Afghanistan]] and Commanding General, U.S. Army [[National Training Center]] and [[Fort Irwin]]; named for four-star rank a
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  • ...]]. China continues the Red Army tradition, with the [[People's Liberation Army]] containing the Chinese navy and air force. Under the [[Russian Federation
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  • A [[United States Army|U.S Army]] General who was relieved early of command of the [[International Security
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  • [[Brigadier general]], [[United States Army|United States Army Reserve]], assistant commander of the 4th Infantry Division, who received t
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  • ...] and used by many countries; modified to a standard vehicle by the [[U.S. Army]]; to be replaced in US service by the [[M1135 nuclear, biological, chemica
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  • ==U.S. Army== ...infantry]] in Afghanistan in 2002 and a platoon of [[75th Ranger Regiment|Army Rangers]] in Iraq and Afghanistan in 2003 and 2004, respectively. Most rec
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  • {{r|Twenty-first Army Group||**}} {{r|Twelfth Army Group||**}}
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  • ...of factionalism in the [[Imperial Japanese Army]]; commanded Southern Area Army at the end of the war, including the Philippines; [[Tomoyuki Yamashita]]'s
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  • ...orces in the [[Vietnam War]]. He later commanded the [[Sixth United States Army]] in the Presidio of San Francisco.
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  • ...e UN Multinational Force of Observers (MFO) organization in the Sinai, and Army [[Deputy Chief of Staff for Plans and Operations]] (DCSOPS); advisor, [[Jew
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  • ...Berlin, to form a resistance army, and supported the [[Russian Liberation Army]] led by [[Andrey Andreyevich Vlasov]]. <ref>{{citation ...ment, 1941-1945 | publisher = Macmillan | year = 1970}}</ref> He joined [[Army Group Center (Russian Front)]] in 1941, serving as special advisor on Russ
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  • ...urma in 1944,'' (1996), short official U.S. Army history [http://www-cgsc.army.mil/carl/resources/csi/Bjorge/BJORGE.asp online edition] * Hogan. David W. ''The U.S. Army Campaigns of World War II: India Burma'' [http://www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/U
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  • (1880-1944) General in the German Army, became f Army Chief of Staff in 1933 with the rise of the Nazis but removed in 1938 for
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  • **Army Group A, [[Gerd von Rundstedt]] ***9th Army ([[Ernst Busch]])
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  • {{r|Army of the Republic of Viet Nam}} {{r|People's Army of Viet Nam}}
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  • ...ion, policy, and readiness; like the Office of the [[Chief of Staff of the Army]], not part of the general operational chain of command
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  • ...[[U.S. Army]]; currently director of comprehensive soldier fitness on the Army staff after service as Assistant Surgeon General for Force Protection and c
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  • ...y and missile defense]], [[combat engineer]]s, [[Army Cooperation Aviation|army cooperation aviation]] and [[special operations|special operations forces]]
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  • ...now occupied by the [[National Foreign Affairs Training Center]] and the [[Army National Guard (United States)|National Guard Bureau]]
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  • ...the [[United States Army]]. Founded in 1802, it is now part of a system of Army educational institutions under the [[Training and Doctrine Command]]. While ...ve a significant career advantage, automatically graduating with a Regular Army commission. This is no longer the case; graduates of the [[Reserve Officer
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  • ...ral of the 7th Infantry Division; Commanding General[[Eighth United States Army]]; the Chief of Staff, [[United States Central Command]]; and Chief of Staf
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  • Located near [[Huntsville, Alabama]], a U.S. Army base housing the [[U.S. Army Aviation and Missile Command]] (AMCOM), the [[Space and Missile Defense Com
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  • #REDIRECT [[Army]]
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  • {{r|British Army}} {{r|Territorial Army||**}}
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  • | url = http://www.history.army.mil/books/wwii/7-8/7-8_CONT.htm | publisher = Office of the Chief of Military History, [[U.S. Army]]
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  • ...o the XVIII Airborne Corps, the headquarters and school of [[United States Army Special Forces]], and the 82nd Airborne Division. It is adjacent to [[Pope ...ding general of XVIII Airborne Corps is the base commander, reporting to [[Army Forces Command]] when not attached to a [[Unified Combatant Command]]. The
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  • ...st [[Army of the Republic of Viet Nam]] (ARVN) troops with [[United States Army]] advisors. It was significant in that the command failures were publicized
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  • ===United States Army===
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  • ...[[Second World War]], he rose to full general and [[Chief of Staff of the Army]]. Recalled from retirement by [[John F. Kennedy]], he took on a number of
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  • ...Republic of Vietnam]] (DRV). It was also known as the '''North Vietnamese Army (NVA)'''.
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  • {{subgroup|United States Army|Military}}
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  • ...media and embedded reporting. He was a signalman and infantryman in the US Army and the New Jersey National Guard from 1991 to 1997.
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  • ...cooperation [[George Patton|George S. Patton Jr.]]'s [[Third United States Army]] and [[Elmo Quesada|Elmo "Pete" Quesada]]'s XIX Tactical Air Command (toda *1918 - United States Army Air Service
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  • ...y]], military commander and three-time [[Chief of Staff (Imperial Japanese Army)|Chief of Staff]]; Three-time President of the [[Privy Council (Japan)|Priv
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  • Former name for [[United States Army North]]
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  • Brigadier general, [[United States Army]].
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  • {{r|United States Army}} {{r|Chief of Staff of the Army}}
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  • ...they reported directly to the [[Army Minister (Japan)]] rather than to the Army command. }}, p. 215</ref> The Army component was called the Special Service Organ.
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  • ...fore his overthrow, then a combination of a counterpart to [[United States Army Special Forces]] and a clandestine human-source intelligence and covert act
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  • ...ate (military rank)|private]] in the [[Army National Guard (United States)|Army National Guard]]. He served as [[chief of staff]] to [[Dwight D. Eisenhower Considered efficient but extremely tough as an Army officer, where he was called Eisenhower's "hatchet man", he used his experi
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  • (1875&mdash;1953) General, [[Imperial Japanese Army]]; [[Army Minister (Japan)]], (16 June 1930&mdash;10 December 1930) [[Prime Min
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  • ...and Doctrine Command (TRADOC)''' is a major command of the [[United States Army]], with the dual mission of managing training from initial to senior profes ...mphasis on doctrinal development and realistic training is a result of the Army's self-examination after the [[Vietnam War]]. Its first commander was GEN [
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  • Standard U.S. Army medium infantry support mortar
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  • * 2332 soldiers from [[Canada]] (2191 Army, 141 Air Force) * 7 unidentified soldiers from Canada (4 Army, 3 Air Force)
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  • ...s Army in World War II: The war in the Pacific) (1948), very thorough U.S. Army official history
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  • ...oops at the [[Battle of Normandy]] consisted of a corps under the Canadian army headquarters. ...mmanded I Canadian Corps in Italy. It made up the left flank of the [[21st Army Group]] under GEN [[Bernard Montgomery]], later Field Marshal Viscount of
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  • Major general, U.S. Army, commanding the [[Manhattan Project]]
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  • Midcareer [[staff college]] of the [[United States Army]]
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  • Primary reserve land force of the [[British Army]].
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  • {{r|Fourth German Army||**}} {{r|Army Group B (Western Front)||**}}
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  • ...sion (U.S.)]], in Baghdad, Iraq (2003-2004); founding director of the U.S. Army/Marine Corps Counterinsurgency Center at [[Fort Leavenworth]]; military fel
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  • Site of the U.S. Army Artillery Center and School
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  • ...]] at Ft. Lewis and the Deputy Commanding General for Transformation, U.S. Army [[Training and Doctrine Command]].
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  • * [http://www.army.mil/cmh-pg/books/amh/AMH-08.htm US Army textbook] ...peace, and valuable tables of the strength and losses of the United States Army.''(1860 ed.)]
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  • A '''private''' is the lowest military rank in most [[army|armies]].
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  • ...there is no such thing as the Chinese Navy, but the '''People's Liberation Army Navy'''. ...units and commanders, perhaps the best-known unit was the '''Eighth Route Army''', making the [[Long March]], under [[Mao Zedong]] and other commanders.
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  • ...our-star USFK commander is "triple hatted" with the [[Eighth United States Army]], USFK, and United Nations command. The role is evolving, and, by 2012, th *[[Eighth United States Army]]
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  • ...]]; General in the [[United States Army]], who was [[Chief of Staff of the Army|Vice Chief of Staff]] between 1999 and 2003, and made major policy change r
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  • Vietnam-era single-shot 40mm [[grenade launcher]] for the U.S. Army
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  • | Army |Army
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  • ...], he commanded [[20th Indian Division]], part of the [[Fourteenth British Army]], during the Burma Campaign in WWII, and subsequently led [[Gurkha]]s into
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  • A U.S. Army corps-equivalent headquarters for ground combat during the [[Vietnam War]]
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  • An extremely strenuous [[U.S. Army]] course, which many candidates cannot complete, in infantry tactics and le
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  • ...45) German [[SS and military ranks |Generalfeldmarschall]] who commanded [[army group
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  • A family of self-propelled [[155mm howitzer]]s developed by the [[U.S. Army]]
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  • [[Chief of Staff (Imperial Japanese Army)]], (2 Mar 1926 - 19 Feb 1930)
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Eighth United States Army]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Army Special Operations Command}}
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  • ...of Vietnam]] (South Vietnam) that were trained and led by [[United States Army Special Forces]] personnel as well as their counterparts from the [[Lac Luo Later, many of the CIDG units were absorbed into the [[Army of the Republic of Viet Nam]], sometimes as elite forces.
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  • ===Army Group & Army Command===
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  • '''Third United States Army''' is currently the U.S. Army component of United States Central Command CENTCOM, called ARCENT. Formall
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  • | Army | [[General of the Army]] [[George C. Marshall]]
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Imperial Japanese Army]] general who was briefly [[Prime Minister of Japan]] in 1937
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  • General, [[United States Army]], especially known for post-Vietnam reform at [[Training and Doctrine Comm
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  • ...he largest formation in the [[United States Army]]. It is also called U.S. Army-Europe, or USAREUR. *United States Army Europe (USAREUR): Heidelberg, Germany
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  • {{r|United States Army}} {{r|United States Army Special Forces}}
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  • {{r|Army of the Republic of Viet Nam motivation}} {{r|Army of the Republic of Viet Nam}}
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  • Headquarters for U.S. Army units assigned to Homeland Defense missions in the United States
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  • ...on military headquarters in Iraq, commanded by GEN [[Ray Odierno]], [[U.S. Army]]
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  • [[Brigadier general]], retired, [[U.S. Army]], who was decorated for innovative battalion tactics in WWII
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  • The army raised by Canada for overseas service during World War I (1914&ndash;1918).
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  • Headquarters of the [[U.S. Army]] [[Tank-Automotive and Armaments Command]], located in [[Warren, Illinois]
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  • ...ute of Heraldry—2010.png|right|350px|The coat of arms of the United States Army Institute of heraldry is, ''Or a chevron gules, on a chief sable a label of The '''United States Army Institute of Heraldry''' coordinates and approves coats of arms, heraldic d
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  • ...History,'' (2005) oversize, heavily illustrated [http://www.amazon.com/U-S-Army-Complete-Raymond-Bluhm/dp/088363113X/ref=pd_bbs_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=12106 * Brown, Jerold E., ed. ''Historical Dictionary of the U.S. Army'' (2001), 660pp [http://www.questia.com/read/111692384?title=Historical%20D
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  • ...drawn considerable interest in its parallel between failure of the German Army to prepare for post-combat operations in the Soviet Union, and is a substan | title = After the Blitzkrieg: The German Army’s Transition to Defeat in the East
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  • U.S. Army rocket-propelled [[line charge]] for blasting safe lanes through minefields
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  • [[Imperial Japanese Army]] officer and pubic official; [[Prime Minister of Japan]]; senior in [[Chos
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  • The operational [[paratroop]] unit of the [[British Army]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Army of the Republic of Viet Nam]]
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  • The lowest rank in most [[army|Armies]] of the world
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  • ==Regular Army== While the main army units were inferior to the Republican Guard, there was a distinct differenc
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  • ...intelligence]] collection system, originally developed for [[United States Army Special Forces]]
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  • [[U.S. Army]] organization for [[signals intelligence]] in the [[Second World War]]; it
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  • General, [[U.S. Army]], retired; headed [[Training and Doctrine Command]]; commanded [[VI Corps]
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  • An [[Australian Army]] officer involved in the establishment of a war widows and orphans benefit
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>(1853-1905) Army officer who became Toronto Canada's first Surveyor General
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  • The highest U.S. Army rank in and immediately following the Second World War
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  • ...hat the "marshal" term was not adopted because the [[Chief of Staff of the Army]], George C. Marshall, refused to be designated Marshal Marshall. [[Henry Arnold|Henry "Hap" Arnold]] was General of the Army Air Force.
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  • ...lahoma (U.S. state)|Oklahoma]] is the main [[artillery]] base for the U.S. Army, containing the Artillery Center and School. The school has two training br Fort Sill was established in 1869 and is the only Army base still operational, of all the forts on the South Plains built during t
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  • ...r of U.S. Army Special Operations Command#U.S. Army Special Forces Command|Army Special Forces Command (Airborne), replacing Maj. Gen. Thomas R. Csrnko in | publisher = Army Special Operations Command news service
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  • U.S. Army serving in Europe during World War I in 1917 and 1918.
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  • [[Chief of Staff (Imperial Japanese Army)]], (17 Dec 1915 - 17 Mar 1923)
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  • General, [[United States Army]], retired; former [[Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff]]
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/First Canadian Army]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Army}}
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  • ...rofessor, National Security Affairs, [[Strategic Studies Institute]], U.S. Army War College; Expert panel, [[Iraq Study Group]]
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  • {{r|Republic of Korea Army}} {{r|United States Army}}
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  • ...ons Aviation Regiment (Airborne), the "Night Stalkers". They may carry non-Army special operators, such as [[United States Navy SEAL]]s.
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  • The primary midcareer professional journal of the [[United States Army]], distributed in four languages
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  • ...r land warfare. It "consists of the General Staff and the deployable Field Army and the Regional Forces that support them, as well as Joint elements that w | url = http://www.army.mod.uk/structure/structure.aspx
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  • ...ary Education of the [[Imperial Japanese Army]], and a participant in many Army and Palalce intrigues.<ref>{{citation He was [[Chief of Staff (Imperial Japanese Army)]], (23 Dec 1931 - 3 Oct 1940), during the conquest of Manchuria, and into
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  • U.S. [[Chief of Staff of the Army]] since 2007; previously commanded [[Multi-National Force-Iraq]]
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  • ...Council; former head of U.S. anti-drug programs; General, retired, [[U.S. Army]]
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  • Now a vice-president for [[Boeing]], a retired [[major general]] in [[U.S. Army]] intelligence
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  • Peer-reviewed journal of the [[Strategic Studies Institute]] at the U.S. Army War College
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  • An ethnically Baltic German who was a proponent of the [[Russian Liberation Army]] led by [[Andrey Andreyevich Vlasov]]
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  • ...Ray S. ''Washington Command Post: The Operations Division, United States Army in World War II.'' (1950) * Coffman, Edward M. ''The Old Army: A Portrait of the American Army in Peacetime, 1784-1898'' (1986), about fighting Indians and coastal defens
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  • Medium transport [[helicopter]] developed by the [[U.S. Army]] and used by a wide range of countries
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  • General, [[U.S. Army]], retired; Former Commander in Chief, [[United States European Command]];
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  • Chief of Egyptian Army intelligence in WWI, then member of Sir [[Henry McMahon]]'s Arab Bureau
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  • ...ard'''; "National Guard" without qualifiers is usually assumed to mean the Army Guard. Guard forces are under a dual command: state governors when not "Fed ...National Guard programs, is administratively part of the Department of the Army.
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  • ...BC), between Carthage and the Roman Republic, during which a Carthaginian army led by Hannibal Barca invaded Italy.
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  • ...1945, the [[mine (naval warfare)|mining]] of Japanese home waters but U.S. Army Air Force [[B-29]] bombers
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  • {{r|Army}} {{r|Army Battle Command System}}
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  • '''Hoang Xuan Lam''' (1921-) was a [[general|general officer]] in the [[Army of the Republic of Viet Nam]], a loyalist to [[Nguyen Van Thieu]], who head ...elieved of command during the operation. This was an unusual incident of [[Army of the Republic of Viet Nam motivation|judging on performance]] rather than
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  • {{r|Department of the Army}} {{r|Chief of Staff of the Army}}
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  • ...y, made up of two or more corps plus units under the direct control of the army commander ...sed of two or more field army| field armies plus units subordinated to the army group commander
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  • National army of the [[American Revolutionary War]], formed by the [[Second Continental C
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  • Former President and Chief of Army Staff in Pakistan, who seized power in a bloodless 1999 coup.
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  • Located in [[Alabama (U.S. state)]], the central base for U.S. Army Aviation development, readiness and training
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  • ...Luftwaffe]] could destroy the retreating forces. While he was promoted to army group command in Russia, he was relieved when he ordered a retreat. ...push into the Dunkirk beachhead.<ref>Shirer, p. 721-722, 731-733</ref> His army occupied Paris on 14 June 1940.<ref>Shirer, p. 738</ref>
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  • ...Infantry Division]] as the major subunits. Several [[Rangers (U.S. Army)| Army Ranger]] units were redirected there during the battle.
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  • {{r|Restructuring of the United States Army}} {{r|United States Army}}
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  • Second most senior general in the U.S. Army, who directs internal operations in doctrinal development, planning, traini
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  • A general in the Continental Army during the American Revolution; he became one of [[George Washington]]'s mo
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  • [[60mm mortar]], based on a French design, used by the U.S. Army and Marines in the [[Second World War]]
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  • General, [[U.S. Army]], presently commanding [[United States Central Command]] after having the
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  • [[People's Army of Viet Nam]] logistics route into [[South Vietnam]], operated by the [[559
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  • [[Image:Casing.jpg|thumb|250px| A U.S. Army soldier firing a 5.56 mm round from an M4 rifle (the M4 also has an M203 Gr An '''Army''' is a term either referring to the largest type of [[formation]] for a la
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  • | title = Soldiers of the Sun: the Rise and Fall of the Imperial Japanese Army ...purge the growing Satsuma influence in the army. They were able to get an Army reorganization and to oust the [[Keigo Kiyoura|Kiyoura Cabinet]].
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  • ...but dedicated [[attack helicopter]] variants are not used in conventional Army operations. ...78. No fundamentally new helicopter replacement is planned for the regular Army; the M-level, standard for new manufacturing, is also a rebuild and life ex
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  • ...olga and seize Russian territory to the East, [[Hitler]] ordered the Sixth Army under General [[Friedrich Paulus]] to take the city first, probably because ...a pincer movement to the west of Stalingrad, thereby encircling the Sixth Army which was trapped in the city environs.
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  • ...recognized both as a visionary thinker and combat leader. One of the first Army Aviators, he may be best known for his leadership of the "Howze Board" of t ...flying ones, earning his aviator wings and becoming the first Director of Army Aviation. He was a founder of the Aviation Center and School in Fort Rucker
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Imperial Japanese Army]] lieutenant general who directed their [[biological weapon]] program at [[
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  • The Real Dads Army, Norman Longmate, Arrow 1974
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/General of the army]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Chief of Staff of the Army}}
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  • ...budget cutbacks, the '''M104 Wolverine heavy assault bridge''' is a [[U.S. Army]] vehicle, built on a [[M1 Abrams (tank)|M1 Abrams tank chassis]], for quic | journal = Army
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  • ...rs.png | File:Navigable branches of the Ohio River, from 1897, from the US Army Corps of Engineers.png
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  • U.S. military helicopters with many variants, the Army and Air Force ones being special operations but the Navy versions fill gene
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  • ...this broad appeal may help to account for its enormous popularity. ''Dad's Army'' ran for nine series; there was a radio show, [[feature film]] and stage s ...es]], [[Pamela Cundell]], [[Olive Mercer]], and [[Wendy Richard]]. ''Dad's Army'' actually ran for longer than the Second World War itself, beginning in 19
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  • Headquarters organization of the reserve components of the [[United States Army]]
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  • Under the [[restructuring of the United States Army]], the main independent tactical unit, replacing the [[division]]
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  • [[Imperial Japanese Army]] general, leader of the [[Control faction]] in Japan's pre-WWII militariza
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  • ...bpages}}</noinclude>Senior professional officer of the [[Imperial Japanese Army]], in principle in operational command but not necessarily in practice
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  • {{r|Bruno Streckenbach}} Polish Einsatzgruppe I, attached to 14th Army {{r|Emanuel Schaefer}} 10th Army
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  • ...tates Central Command]], the headquarters organization for [[United States Army]] Components. Also designated ARCENT.
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  • [[U.S. Army]] [[Brigade Combat Team]] with tanks, armored fighting vehicles for its inf
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  • [[Lieutenant general]], U.S. Army, retired, whose last assignment was Chief of Staff, Allied Forces Southern
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  • ...roup is attached to an oxygen atom of the compound being nitrated. ([[U.S. Army]])
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  • An Oklahoma Army National Guard training facility used for Summer field training exercises a
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  • [[British Army]] and [[United States Marine Corps|U.S. Marine Corps]] interim, modified co
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  • [[People's Army of Viet Nam]] officer commanding operations of the [[Ho Chi Minh trail]]
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  • '''Gerd von Rundsted''' was a senior [[field marshal]] of the German Army, who had great contempt for [[Adolf Hitler]] and the Nazis, but repeatedly ...elm von Leeb]] to block the pro-Nazi [[Walther von Reichenau]] in becoming Army Commander-in-Chief. Von Reichenau was the preference of the pro-Nazi Minis
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  • Retired general, [[U.S. Army]], who was the senior U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan; now a militar
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Imperial Japanese Army]] officer active in early militarized politics, then responsible for Japane
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  • Member, [[Committee for the Present Danger]]; Lieutenant General, U.S. Army (Ret.); United States Ambassador and Special Advisor for Arms Control, 1985
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  • {{r|Restructuring of the United States Army}} {{r|United States Army}}
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  • ! Army ! Army
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  • Aging logistical vehicle, used by the U.S. Army and Marine Corps, intermediate in capacity between the [[HMMWV]] and [[HEMT
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  • ...in the [[Stryker (armored fighting vehicle)|Stryker family]] of the [[U.S. Army]]
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  • {{r|United States Army Special Forces}} {{r|United States Army}}
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  • ...rst''' (November 12, 1755 – June 28, 1813) was a Saxon general in Prussian Army during the Napoleonic Wars, rising as high as Chief of the Prussian General ...it, the structure of the military administration was rationalized, and the army reserves (or [[Landwehr]]) was created. Because of French oversight (follo
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  • Elite light infantry units of the [[U.S. Army]], whose lineage predates the United States, going back to the [[French and
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  • (1876-1962) British Indian Army and political service officer; Linguist; Political Representative in [[Cair
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  • ...riteria for individual compliance with the laws of war, issued by the U.S. Army in 1863
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  • U.S. Army division, known as the "Big Red One" for its insignia, a bold red 1 on a gr
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  • (1924-2010) Trustee, [[Foreign Policy Research Institute]]; General, [[U.S. Army]], retired; former [[Supreme Allied Commander Europe]], NATO; [[U.S. Secret
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  • ..., [[National Institute for Public Policy]]; [[lieutenant general]], [[U.S. Army]], retired; former Director, [[National Security Agency]]; critic of [[Geor
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  • ...de>Nominee, in March 2011, for promotion to four-star general heading U.S. Army [[Training and Doctrine]] command; was commander, [[III Corps]] and [[Fort
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  • A compatible slight upgrade of the U.S. Army [[PRC-25|AN/PRC-25]] tactical radio; see its parent for technical details
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  • Both the title of a specific [[U.S. Army]] manual, as well as a term in customary international law, for acceptable
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  • U.S. Army general (1860–1948) who was C-in-C of the American Expeditionary Force se
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  • Tracking and launch control radar for the U.S. Army [[MIM-104 Patriot]] anti-ballistic and high-altitude anti-aircraft missile
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  • Select or elite light infantry of the [[Army of the Republic of Viet Nam]]
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  • '''Seishiro Itagaki''' (1885-1948) was an [[Imperial Japanese Army]] officer, a specialist in intelligence and covert operations in China, who ...32 to 1937, he was chief adviser on Manchukoan affairs for the [[Kwangtung Army]].
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  • (OKH) German Army headquarters under the [[Third Reich]]; effectively the headquarters for th
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  • ...w Minister for Northern Ireland, assassinated by Irish National Liberation Army
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  • ...(military)|tank-centric]] ground formation, between [[corps]] and [[field army]] size, used as the penetrating force in [[deep battle]], including blitzkr
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  • ...ply Chain Management, Sears, Roebuck & Co.; [[Lieutenant General]], [[U.S. Army]] who commanded the 22nd Logistical Command for the [[Gulf War]] (
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  • Military operations by distinctly different arms of service (e.g., [[army]], [[navy]], long-range [[air force]]s, [[special operations]]) acting unde
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  • '''Rangers''' of the '''[[Army of the Republic of Viet Nam]]''', referred to several types of units, all After [[United States Army Special Forces]] units withdrew from the [[Vietnam War]], the LLDB and BDQ
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  • ...e>An assassination and coup attempt principally by senior anti-Nazi German Army officers, in which Hitler was injured and the coup failed
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  • ...Sinn Fein, in Ireland and Northern Ireland, long had the Irish Republican Army as its military side. ...nce among three elements: the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, the Red Army and the Organs of State Security. Each maintained a divisional-sized force
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  • '''William Childs Westmoreland''' (1914–2005) was a [[United States Army]] general who held command of US forces during the [[Vietnam War]] from 196
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  • ...ink & Abraham LLP]]; [[lieutenant colonel]], Military Intelligence, [[U.S. Army]], retired; (Ret); Liberty and Security Committee, Constitution Project; fi
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/United States Army Air Force]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|United States Army Air Corps}}
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  • ...stol designed by [[John Moses Browning]] in 1905, and produced as the U.S. Army standard sidearm from 1911 to 1945, and used long afterwards
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  • General, [[United States Army]], commanding [[Multi-National Force-Iraq]]; commanded 4th Infantry Divisio
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  • A U.S. program, prior to major land commitments, to train [[Army of the Republic of Viet Nam]] personnel in basic [[communications intellige
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  • Major general, [[U.S. Army]] and [[National Guard (United States)|National Guard]] adviser to the [[Jo
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  • ...oneered the application of mathematics to cryptanalysis and built the U.S. Army Signal Intelligence Service technical base.
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  • A U.S. Army Air Force medium bomber of the Second World War, used primarily at 10-15,00
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  • [[Major general]], [[U.S. Army]]], Deputy Chief of Staff of Operations & Training, [[Training and Doctrine
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  • ...ade up of two or more [[corps]] plus units under the direct control of the army commander, usually with at least 100,000 personnel
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  • [[Lieutenant General]], [[U.S. Army]], retired; commander at [[Battle of the Ia Drang]] and [[Battle of Bong So
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  • * {{r|Army Battle Command System}}
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  • ...armored fighting vehicle|lightly armored fighting vehicles]] of the [[U.S. Army]]
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  • A 1995 film, set in the [[Vietnam War]], in which a [[U.S. Army]] unit replaces a village elephant killed by enemy action
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>An officer in the British Army, an anthropologist, and a pioneer in the field of archaeology.
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  • ...principal doctrinal guide to [[counterinsurgency]] of the [[United States Army]] and [[United States Marine Corps]]
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  • ...first started forces and later joined [[Nazi Party]]; commanded regular [[army group]]; not indicted as major war criminal
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  • A graduate degree granting [[U.S. Army]] professional education school for midcareer officers, typically majors, p
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  • (1937-1996) [[Lieutenant general]], [[U.S. Army]], retired; commanding general, [[I Corps]] and [[Fort Lewis]]; deputy comm
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  • A portable or vehicle-mounted [[U.S. Army]] device that transmits friendly force positions for [[command and control]
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  • ...ler]]'s military service in [[World War I]], and his postwar work for the Army that led him to the predecessors of the Nazi Party
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  • The undergraduate professional college of the [[United States Army]], at [[West Point]], [[New York (disambiguation)|New York]]
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  • '''John F. Campbell''' is a major general in the United States Army, who commands the 101st Airborne Division. His prior assignment was as Dep ...no press conferences, but strongly supported LTG Abboud Qanbar, the Iraqi Army security commander for Baghdad. Campbell positioned himself as Qanbar's dep
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  • ...n the [[Irish Republican Army#Provisional IRA|Provisional Irish Republican Army]] called an end to its armed campaign in [[Northern Ireland]] and [[England ...ntil 1919–1921's [[Anglo-Irish War]], when the original [[Irish Republican Army#Origins]] (IRA) succeeded in removing 26 of Ireland's 32 traditional counti
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  • Army Chief of Staff (WWII), Secretary of State, Secretary of Defense (Korean War
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  • Retired [[colonel]] in the [[U.S. Army]], who founded [[Delta Force]] and was the ground commander in the Iranian
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  • [[U.S. Army]] [[signals intelligence]] aircraft that are assigned to [[corps]]-level in
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  • Failed 1931 coup by [[Imperial Japanese Army]] young officer group that wanted to install the head of the [[Control fact
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  • [[Major General]], [[U.S. Army]], who was the chief of intelligence (i.e., G-2) for [[Douglas MacArthur]]
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  • ...[major general]]. Immensely talented, he had been expected to rise to high Army rank.<ref name=Sheehan>{{citation ...ities in his personal life that would have blocked his promotion to senior Army rank. <ref>Sheehan, pp. 485-493</ref>
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  • Ranks used in the military (Heer/Army, Navy, and Luftwaffe/Air Force) as well as the [[SS]] and other Nazi parami
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  • A trial of senior Nazi Army officers for war crimes against civilians and prisoners of war in Yugoslavi
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  • A highly transportable [[U.S. Army]] digital voice and data tactical switching system, using [[routing]] and [
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  • ...enter for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation]]; lieutenant general, [[U.S. Army]] retired; board of directors, [[Federation of American Scientists]]; Coun
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  • Family of [[U.S. Army]] wheeled and lightly armored vehicles for medium-intensity combat, which a
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  • ...San Antonio, Texas, USA; site of a siege and battle involving the Mexican army against Texans and Americans, February to March 1836.
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  • {{r|Army}} {{r|Seventh United States Army}}
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  • [[U.S. Army]] wheeled [[combat engineering vehicle]] derived from the Australian [[High
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  • Uniformed professional head of the [[United States Army]], a member of the [[Joint Chiefs of Staff]], and of four-star general rank
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  • World War II German Army officer, probably not a Nazi, final chief of intelligence against the Russi
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  • (1907-1944) [Count von Stauffenberg] Colonel, German Army; Chief of Staff of the [[Ersatzheer]]; led [[1944 assassination attempt aga
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  • ...ith the [[SINCGARS]] waveform and security system, which is the basic U.S. Army infantry squad radio being replaced with more advanced, flexible units
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  • ...e in 1815 in which General [[Andrew Jackson]] defeated an invading British army at the end of the [[War of 1812]].
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  • British Army [[special operations]] officer, who commanded the [[Auxiliary Units (WWII B
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  • ...ude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Under the [[restructuring of the United States Army]], these units were formed to take the [[division]] artillery assets that w
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  • Retired [[United States Army]] four-star general, best known for commanding [[United States Central Comm
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  • *''This Man’s Army: A Soldier’s Story from the Frontlines of the War on Terror'' (Gotham, 20
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  • Jointly developed by the [[United States Navy]] and [[U.S. Army]], a high-speed, shallow-water transport ship intended for intra-theater lo
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  • * [http://www.wood.army.mil/wood_cms/usacbrns.shtml Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear * [http://www.wood.army.mil/chmdsd/ Army Chemical Review] Professional bulletin of the Chemical Corps
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  • ...ompany, and a headquarters. Under the [[restructuring of the United States Army]], battalions are now mixed (e.g., two mechanized infantry and one tank com In the [[restructuring of the United States Army]], the brigade is the basic building block.
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  • Field Marshal of the [[British Army]], 1st Viscount Montgomery of Alamein, senior British and joint commander i
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  • ...ld War]], first as an administrative organization but operating as a field army in 1945.
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  • ...''', '''general of the army''', and similar titles are the highest rank in Army service; they are rarely granted in industrialized countries other than dur
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  • [[United States Army Special Forces]] and [[MACV-SOG]] non-commissioned officer, a [[Medal of Ho
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  • [[Brigadier general]], [[U.S. Army]] and Director of Command, Control, Communications and Computers (C4) for [
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  • {{r|Army}} {{r|Eighth United States Army}}
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  • *[[Theodore Roosevelt]], Army *[[Henry Arnold]], Air Force, Deputy Chief of Staff of Army
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  • ...es}}</noinclude>An infantry support weapon used by the [[Imperial Japanese Army]] in WWII, with attributes of a grenade launcher and a light mortar, incorr
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  • ....g., infantry, artillery, engineers) or different military services (e.g., Army and Air Force)
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  • General, [[British Army]], retired as Special Advisor to the Minister of Defence after commanding B
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  • Under the [[Restructuring of the United States Army]], the operational unit that is lightest and fastest to deploy, but having
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  • ...HCLOS) microwave radio, used with the [[Joint Network Node]] of the [[U.S. Army]] to provide high-speed connectivity between nodes.
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  • ==Regular Army== While the main army units were inferior to the Republican Guard, there was a distinct differenc
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  • Standard light to medium transport helicopters of the [[United States Army]]; carry an 11 man infantry squad or equivalent internal or external load;
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  • [[Einsatzgruppe]] attached to [[Army Group North (Russian Front)]], operating grom East Prussia across Lithuania
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  • The southernmost regional command of the [[Army of the Republic of Viet Nam]], including the Mekong River Delta.
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  • [[U.S. Secretary of the Army]] (2009-); formerly [[U.S. Representative]] ([[Republican Party (United St
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  • [[Imperial Japanese Army]] colonel with great authority, generally believed to have ordered war crim
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  • {{r|Gene Betit}} US Army, DIA, Arlington, VA {{r|Sam Provance}} US Army (Abu Ghraib), Greenville, SC
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  • ...rganization of the [[United States Navy]] in the [[Second World War]]; its Army counterpart was the [[Signals Intelligence Service]]
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  • ...d War II]] [[theater of operations]] under the command of [[General of the Army]] [[Douglas MacArthur]] that extended from the [[Philippines]] south throug ...ustralia, but also reflected the interservice rivalries between the [[U.S. Army]] and [[United States Navy]], and the ego of MacArthur.
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  • ...itational second-year U.S. [[staff college]] courses, intended by the U.S. Army to prepare exceptionally promising majors as planners of [[operational art]
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  • ...ai family of the [[Chosu Clan]], was an officer of the [[Imperial Japanese Army]] as well as a government official. ...ame governor-general of Formosa (i.e., Taiwan), simultaneously holding the Army Ministry for the fourth [[Hirabumi Ito]] government. Later, he was home min
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  • ...Minister of Japan]]. Kingoro Hashimoto, chief of the Russia group of the Army General Staff's 2nd Bureau, had formed the Sakura-kai (Cherry Society)of yo ...ch Incident followed the [[Manchurian Incident]], in which the [[Kwangtung Army]] opened hostilities in China.
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  • An [[Army of the Republic of Vietnam]] general that was in the November 1963 junta an
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  • * Craven, Wesley Frank and J. L. Cate. ''The Army Air Forces in World War II'' (1949), ''vol. 6: Men and Planes'' [http://www * Spire, David N. ''Air Power for Patton's Army: The 19th Tactical Air Command in the Second World War'' (2002) [http://www
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  • [[United States Army]] organization originally created to train and lead guerrillas, highly qual
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  • (1898-1974) [[Greek Army]] officer and intense [[Communism|anticommunist]] who commanded [[Guerrilla
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  • [[Australian Army]] wheeled [[combat engineering vehicle]] designed to operate in high-speed
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  • (1875-1953) German [[Field Marshal]]; commanded [[army group]]s in Poland, France and Russia; commander-in-chief West at the tim
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  • Actions by intelligence agencies, primarily in the [[U.S. Army]], where Nazi strongly suspected of war crimes were not prosecuted in excha
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  • U.S. military personnel who trained and assisted [[Army of the Republic of Viet Nam]] troops, originally in noncombat roles only bu
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Imperial Japanese Army]] formation that initially garrisoned the [[Kwangtung Leasehold]], and, aft
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  • A military professional journal published by the U.S. Army Combined Arms Center, supporting the missions of the [[Command and General
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  • ...[[Hirohito]], with several key government leaders killed and wounded, and Army purges following
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  • A formation of the [[Canadian Army]], created for service in the [[Second World War]], disbanded in 1945, reac
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  • ....jpg|thumb|150px|An Abrams tank. Usually tanks are operated by a country's army]] [[Image:USAF F-15C fires AIM-7 Sparrow 2.jpg|thumb|150px|An [[F-15]] firi ...[[Air Force]] (specifically for Aircraft- or Space-based operations), an [[Army]] (for land operations), or a [[Navy]] (for operations at sea).
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  • '''Hajime Sugiyama''' (1880-1945) was a senior [[Imperial Japanese Army]] officer who was in a leadership function through most of [[World War Two ...ntingency plans for the capture of Singapore. In the 1920s, he was head of Army Air Force procurement.<ref>{{citation
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  • [[Ancient Greece|Greek]] general (c.410—362 BC) who led the army of [[Thebes]] to victory over the [[Sparta]]ns at the [[Battle of Leuctra]]
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  • ...pages}}</noinclude>An armed conflict between elements of the United States Army and several of the Plains Indian tribes which took place between September
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  • [[U.S. Army]] balanced combat unit intended for medium-intensity combat, with a balance
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  • ...attack on the [[South Manchurian Railway Company]], staged by [[Kwangtung Army]] officers, in September 1931, which was the pretext for Japanese military
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  • (1865-1937) First Quartermaster-General/Chief of Army Staff for Germany in WWI; became right-wing politician, participated in [[B
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  • [[Lieutenant general]], [[United States Army]], Retired; Military Senior Advisor Panel, [[Iraq Study Group]]; former chi
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  • In the U.S. military, the branch, in the Army, Navy or Air Force, in which military lawyers are commissioned
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  • [[U.S. Army]] dual long-range (35 km) vehicle-mounted [[SINCGARS]] radio, configurable
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  • ...1950s and 60s primarily known for his massive novel about pre-World War II army life in Hawaii, ''From Here to Eternity''.
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  • U.S. Army lieutenant general who commanded the Hawaiian Department in December 1941;
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  • ...29 April 2009, having retired as a [[lieutenant general]], [[United States Army]], and deputy head of the [[NATO]] Military Committee on the 28th
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  • General in the [[Army of the Republic of Viet Nam]], last Chief of the Joint General Staff, and
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  • ...Rogers Field, Clovis Army Air Field, Woodward Army Air Field, and Liberal Army Airfield.<ref>[http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/facility/kegelman.htm
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  • U.S. Army and widely exported [[mortar carrier]], [[120mm mortar|120mm]] in the most
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  • One of the few general officers of the [[Army of the Republic of Viet Nam]] ever relieved, in battle, for incompetence, d
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  • {{r|Seventh United States Army||**}} {{r|Eighth United States Army||***}}
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  • ...rnational relations at [[Boston University]] and Vice Chairman of the U.S. Army War College Board of Visitors; advisor, [[U.S. Committee for a Free Lebanon
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  • ...of and advisor to Emperor [[Hirohito]]; field marshal, [[Imperial Japanese Army]]; briefly [[Prime Minister of Japan]] for the "surrender cabinet"
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  • .../noinclude>Attacks, on 24 March 1927, by Chinese Nationalist Revolutionary Army attack on the Japanese, American and British consulates in Nanking; used as
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  • ...LRS upgrade of [[Blue Force Tracker]], and to [[Army Battle Command System|Army Battle Command (ABCS) ]]systems, to which it sends unit identification, pos ...ncy-hopping]] [[ITU frequency bands|ultra-high frequency (UHF)]] waveform. Army Data Distribution System is also compatible with [[Joint Tactical Informat
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  • ...President]] (from 1789 to 1797) and commander in chief of the Continental Army during the [[American Revolution]].
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  • The '''AN/TTC-56''' is a mobile packet switch developed by the U.S. Army. It is a hybrid of a digital circuit switch, a commercial Internet Protocol | url = http://www.sed.monmouth.army.mil/comm/tactical/ANTTC56V1.htm
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  • Actions by intelligence agencies, primarily in the [[U.S. Army]], where Japanese strongly suspected of war crimes were not prosecuted in e
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Imperial Japanese Army]] research and development facility for [[biological weapon]]s, headquarter
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  • General in the [[France|French]] Army during the [[Second World War]], and last commander of French forces in [[F
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  • Largest base of the [[U.S. Army]], near [[Killeen, Texas]]; home location of the [[III Armored Corps]], the
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  • (1908-44) First Lieutenant in the German Army and adjutant to [[Claus von Stauffenberg]]; assisted him with the bomb and
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  • Developed for the [[U.S. Army]], the '''M1064 [[mortar carrier]]''' family consists of self-propelled [[m ...rol over mortar fire. An article states delivery is being made to the U.S. Army as well as Israel.<ref>{{citation
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>(1887-1945) [[Norway|Norwegian]] army officer and politician, who formed a pro-Nazi party in 1933 and prepared th
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  • ...ate)|Kansas]], home of the [[U.S. Army Combined Arms Center]], the '''U.S. Army Command and General Staff College (USACGSC)''' is a midcareer professional While most of its students are [[United States Army]] officers, a typical class will have officers from all the U.S. military s
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  • ...ssment Group for the [[Afghanistan War (2001-2021)]]; former faculty, U.S. Army War College
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  • [[Major general]], U.S. Army, retired; founder, [[Stand Up for America USA Project]], military analyst f
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  • ...n] - Contains information about Thompson's tenure as a spy for the British army, including images of his letter written in invisible ink.
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  • One of the two major ultranationalist factions in the [[Imperial Japanese Army]] and militarized politics in the 1930s; emphasized spirituality over the t
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  • {{r|Restructuring of the United States Army}} {{r|United States Army}}
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  • The senior U.S. command, primarily the [[Eighth United States Army]] and [[Seventh Air Force]] is a sub-unified command of [[United States Pac
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>(1880-1950) [[Imperial Japanese Army]] general, [[Prime Minister of Japan]] between July 1944 and April 1945, an
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  • A U.S. Army Air Force medium bomber of the Second World War, especially noted for its u
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  • '''Kuniaki Koiso''' (1880-1950) was an [[Imperial Japanese Army]] general, [[Prime Minister of Japan]] between July 1944 and April 1945, an ...(i.e., Tokyo area), chief of the 5th Division, and commander of the Korea Army, he was promoted to full general in 1937.
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  • A retired U.S. Army [[colonel]] who has written extensively on [[military transformation]] and
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  • A member of the [[Stryker (armored fighting vehicle)|U.S. Army Stryker vehicle series]], which contains four workstations for command and
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  • Colonel-general in the Army of Nazi Germany; head of operations branch of [[Oberkommando der Wehrmacht]
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  • {{r|Army Staff (U.S.)}} {{r|Department of the Army (United States)}}
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  • A generally covert U.S. Army unit in [[Joint Special Operations Command]], specializing in hostage rescu
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  • ...ampett |coauthors= |date= |year=1944 |month= |format= |work= |publisher=US Army Signal Corps |pages= |language= |archiveurl= |archivedate= |quote= }}
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  • [[Major general]], [[United States Army]] who commanded Joint Task Force 170, initially responsible for [[interroga
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  • ...lly consisting of a reinforced division, this is the headquarters for U.S. Army forces in South Korea, but its four-star commander also commands [[United S
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  • ...rg. After graduation from law school in 1966, he joined the United States Army and was assigned to the [[Defense Intelligence Agency]]. After his Army service, since he had the necessary clearances, he became Associate Counsel
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  • ...Wass de Czege''' is a retired [[brigadier general]] in the [[United States Army]], and a writer and theoretician of military doctrine, especially of [[oper ...mand and General Staff College]]. After retirement, he was involved in the Army After Next project.
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  • ...n 29 April 2009. He retired, on the previous day, from the [[United States Army]] with the rank of [[lieutenant general]], having been the Deputy Chairman ==Army career==
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  • The workhorse tactical [[fighter aircraft|fighter-bomber ]]of the US Army Air Forces in World War II, which could, when well-flown, be a [[fighter ai
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  • Substantially autonomous air arm of the [[United States Army]] prior to creation of the independent [[United States Air Force]]
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  • ...]]; Executive Committee, Atlantic Council ; [[lieutenant general]], [[U.S. Army]], retired
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  • ...rica|U.S. President]] (from 1849 to 1850) and the general who led the U.S. army in the [[Mexican-American War]].
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  • ...nce, adopted son of Emperor [[Komei]]; [[Chief of Staff (Imperial Japanese Army)]], (23 Dec 1931 - 3 Oct 1940), followed by [[Hajime Sugiyama]]; key advise
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  • Long-range precision [[Missile vehicle|direct fire system]] for U.S. Army [[Stryker Brigade Combat Team]]s, armed with the [[BGM-71 TOW]] heavy antit
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  • General of Infantry (lieutenant general equivalent), German Army; Military Governor of Paris at the time of the [[1944 assassination attempt
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  • ...ght | 550px | Navigable branches of the Ohio River, from 1897, from the US Army Corps of Engineers.}} | url = https://www.iwr.usace.army.mil/Portals/70/docs/iwrreports/IWR004-002287-002364.pdf
    2 KB (315 words) - 19:50, 6 March 2024
  • ...70) American soldier who became the outstanding general of the Confederate army in the American Civil War and a postwar icon of the South's "lost cause."
    196 bytes (29 words) - 13:33, 12 October 2008
  • ...s}}</noinclude>The extension of border clashes between Japan's [[Kwangtung Army]] and China, into full-scale war, beginning in 1937 and merging into [[Worl
    201 bytes (28 words) - 22:24, 29 August 2010
  • ...[[Prime Minister of Japan]], by junior officers of the [[Imperial Japanese Army]] and [[Imperial Japanese Navy|Navy]]; trials gave light sentences
    236 bytes (30 words) - 14:49, 5 September 2010
  • ...resistance organization, essentially a propaganda force, led by former Red Army lieutenant general [[Andrey Andreyevich Vlasov]] and made up of German [[pr
    242 bytes (32 words) - 16:16, 6 March 2010
  • Director of the [[Office of Management and Budget]] and [[Secretary of the Army]] in the [[Harry S. Truman|Truman Administration]]
    166 bytes (23 words) - 20:56, 17 April 2010
  • ...rican Civil War]]. Following the war, Sherman continued as head of the US Army. Sherman had many careers aside from serving in the army. He was a bank partner, the Superintendent at the Louisiana State Seminary
    783 bytes (117 words) - 12:51, 2 February 2016
  • ...ruppen''; Nazi mobile security, and then killing units, which accompanied Army units advancing into Austria, Poland and Russia; units on [[Russian Front]]
    304 bytes (41 words) - 12:02, 18 May 2023
  • ...ted [[attack helicopter]], introduced in the [[Vietnam War]] by the [[U.S. Army]], but continuing to be produced in a redesigned version that meets the lig
    260 bytes (39 words) - 17:34, 6 February 2024
  • U.S. Army soldier, born 1987, who (as Bradley Manning) released a large quantity of r
    228 bytes (33 words) - 21:17, 14 September 2013
  • Newly commissioned [[U.S. Army]] lieutenants, attend a school, following general officer training, which t
    330 bytes (42 words) - 20:22, 8 August 2009
  • Officer in the WWII German Army; Deputy Chief of the [[Abwehr]] military organization reporting to Admiral
    265 bytes (33 words) - 13:55, 28 November 2010
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