General of the army/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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==Articles related by keyphrases (Bot populated)== | |||
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{{r|Operation Barbarossa}} | |||
{{r|Indochinese revolution}} | |||
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{{r|United States Army Air Force}} |
Latest revision as of 16:00, 20 August 2024
- See also changes related to General of the army, or pages that link to General of the army or to this page or whose text contains "General of the army".
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- Chief of Staff of the Army [r]: Uniformed professional head of the United States Army, a member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and of four-star general rank [e]
- Douglas MacArthur [r]: Senior U.S. Army commander in the Second World War, head of the Occupation of Japan, holder of the highest rank and highest honor for valor in the Army, yet relieved of command for insubordination [e]
- Field marshal [r]: Highest rank in Army service, rarely granted and in wartime only by major powers; U.S. equivalent is general of the army [e]
- General [r]: In current military organizations, the highest military rank (although the naval equivalent is admiral); also used in the sense of general officer, the highest grade of ranks of which this is the highest [e]
- George C. Marshall [r]: Army Chief of Staff (WWII), Secretary of State, Secretary of Defense (Korean War)and sponsor of the Marshall Plan. [e]
- Omar Bradley [r]: (1893-1981) An American general during World War II and the Korean war, as well as Chief of Staff of the Army and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. [e]
- Judicial Branch of the United States [r]: Those U.S. courts created under authority of Article III of the Constitution [e]
- Operation Barbarossa [r]: The German invasion of the Soviet Union, beginning on June 22, 1941 [e]
- Indochinese revolution [r]: The period, within the Vietnam War, between which France reasserted its colonial authority over Indochina in 1945, created a proto-state of Vietnam under a provisional government during which there was increasing insurgency, fought conventionally combat with the Viet-Minh starting in 1950, and ended in 1954. The end, militarily, involved the defeat of French forces at Dien Bien Phu and. politically, with the creation of North Vietnam and South Vietnam by the Geneva accords [e]
- Red Army [r]: Collectively, the armed services of the Soviet Union, not limited to land forces but including its navy, Strategic Rocket Troops, Air Defense, etc. [e]
- United States Army Air Force [r]: Substantially autonomous air arm of the United States Army prior to creation of the independent United States Air Force [e]