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  • ...restricted to U.S. military personnel, civilian government employees, and military contractors. To varying extents, it can be reached, with suitable logins to ...control access to local area networks that are actively part of NIPRNET. A military reserve training organization at a university might have the LAN in its bui
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  • SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Sturmbannfuehrer]]; member of the SD; Deputy Chief of Sonderkommando
    162 bytes (22 words) - 00:23, 18 November 2010
  • SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Brigadefuehrer]]; member of the [[Gestapo]]; Commanding Officer of Ei
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  • SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Obersturmbannfuehrer]]; member of the [[SD]]; Commanding Officer of S
    172 bytes (22 words) - 04:08, 18 November 2010
  • ...secret imprisonent in Germany, of civilians judged to be resisting German military occupation
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  • Partner, [[Fink & Abraham LLP]]; [[lieutenant colonel]], Military Intelligence, [[U.S. Army]], retired; (Ret); Liberty and Security Committee
    274 bytes (32 words) - 11:35, 19 March 2024
  • ...cially of [[statistics]], to developing optimal solutions to challenges in military operations. While it is usually described as having started in WWII, the Ca | publisher = Military Operations Research Society
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  • An extensively used interconnection standard among military electronics components, slow in comparison with [[local area network]]s but
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  • ...ermany; forbidden by the 1919 peace treaties, but carried out under German military threat in March 1938.
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  • ...l [[Dien Bien Phu City]], now a regional airport; it has both cultural and military tourist attractions
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  • In a military context, waterways where relatively light shore-based weapons are potential
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  • Based at the [[United States Military Academy]] at West Point, New York, a think tank for understanding the motiv
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  • ...ed Kingdom]] in Northern Ireland, goes back to 1922 under civil authority; military forces joined operations in 1971
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  • Military operations involving multiple countries, each with its own [[joint warfare]
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  • SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Gruppenfuehrer]]; [[Inspector of Concentration Camps]] (1939-1945); b
    183 bytes (23 words) - 18:12, 8 November 2010
  • ...eign Service Officer]]s; usually not more than 5 active in the rank; rough military equivalent of [[lieutenant general]] to general
    196 bytes (27 words) - 16:57, 17 March 2024
  • | date = September 1984 | title = Military Explosives}}, p. 2-5</ref> '''nitrostarch''' is of the family of [[aliphati ...is spiral, consisting of approximately 1,000 anyhdroglucose units. <ref>''Military Explosives'', p. 8-15</ref>
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  • ...th Atlantic Treaty Organization]] (NATO) alliance. The postwar West German military, the [[Bundeswehr]], was its product. | contribution = Explaining NATO to the West Germans: Helmut Schmidt as a Military Affairs Writer in the 1960s
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  • Term used by military forces to describe the deaths of their own personnel caused by other hostil
    178 bytes (27 words) - 18:35, 1 June 2008
  • The highest U.S. military decoration for valor, "above and beyond the call of duty", at the risk of l
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  • ...f Office 1 (Minerals in the Reich) [[WVHA Amtsgruppe W]], SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Obersturmbannfuehrer]]; convicted in [[Pohl Case (NMT)]]
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  • ...rab Revolt (First World War)]] against the [[Ottoman Empire]] with British military operations
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  • [[SS]]-[[Nazi SS and military ranks |Brigadefuehrer]] attached, 1939-1944, [[Reich Foreign Office]]; Mini
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  • Technological aid, intelligence, the sale of dual-use and military equipment, but no direct combat against Iran, in the 1980-1988 [[Iran-Iraq
    183 bytes (24 words) - 17:09, 11 September 2009
  • ...partially under remote human control; used for commercial, scientific and military applications
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  • [[SS]]-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Standartenfuehrer]]; Manager of [[Lebensborn]], reporting to [[Heinri
    207 bytes (27 words) - 11:38, 25 November 2010
  • Used in various military contexts to describe source-to-target relationships that are beyond line of
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  • [[United States of America|United States]] interest group devoted to military veterans of foreign wars.
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  • Military computer workstation for the [[Force XXI Battle Command Brigade and Below]]
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  • A single journey by a single military aircraft or ship, as part of one or more missions
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  • ...an of the Joint Chiefs of Staff]] and [[Supreme Allied Commander Europe]]; Military Senior Advisor Panel, [[Iraq Study Group]]
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  • ...a]]; [[U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations]], 1979-1981; [[Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change]] (2004)
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  • ...[[U.S. Ambassador to the United Arab Emirates]], 1974-76; [[Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change]] (2004)
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  • ...and control]], fires with [[precision-guided munition]]s, and [[logistics (military)|logistical support]]
    246 bytes (30 words) - 22:06, 27 August 2008
  • ...President Harry S. Truman in 1947 of giving Greece and Turkey economic and military aid to prevent their falling into the Soviet sphere.
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Adolf Hitler]]'s military service in [[World War I]], and his postwar work for the Army that led him
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  • ...troopers just after landing, who have not yet assembled into their regular military units
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  • * [[AK-47]] a military rifle
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  • The military history of the organized navies of the world from 300 BCE to the present.
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  • French military officer and aristocrat who served in both the American Revolution and Frenc
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  • {{r|Military formation (ground)}} {{r|Theater of operations (military)}}
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  • {{r|Fire control (military)}}
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  • ...ted States intelligence community]] in [[Chad]], as well as diplomatic and military activities that indirectly produce intelligence
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  • ...Meridor]] ([[Likud]]), who also holds the Atomic Energy portfolio. Each military unit has tactical intelligence functions, and there is intelligence analysi [[Aman]] is the national level military intelligence agency, with a role similar to the Russian [[GRU]] or U.S. [[D
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  • {{r|Historical examples of military swarming}} {{r|Swarming (military)}}
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  • ...hat indicates the most forward positions of friendly forces in any kind of military operation at a specific time." (U.S. [[Joint Chiefs of Staff]])
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  • ...of the Nazi slave labor program; executed by sentence of the International Military Tribunal for the Major War Criminals
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>German Army [[Nazi SS and military ranks|Generaloberst]]; tank and mobile warfare specialist who commanded 4th
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  • ...s to promote the peaceful use of nuclear energy and to inhibit its use for military purposes.
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  • ...Reich Commissar in the Netherlands; executed by order of the International Military Tribunal for the Major War Criminals
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  • A long-range (35 km) U.S. military tactical [[SINCGARS]] radio intended to be cryptographically secure, and ve
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  • Ranks used in the military (Heer/Army, Navy, and Luftwaffe/Air Force) as well as the [[SS]] and other
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  • The consul and military commander for the Roman Empire who was the surviving senior commander at th
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  • ...eece]], 1985-89; [[U.S. Ambassador to Zimbabwe]], 1980-84; [[Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change]] (2004)
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  • Military units that emphasize speed and mobility, and are used for scouting, harassm
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  • Educational institutions operated by military organizations for officers, and civilian politicomilitary counterparts, exp
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  • ...information operations deep into enemy territory, affecting [[counterforce|military forces]] in the homeland, or [[countervalue|population, industry, and infra
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  • (1896-1975) [[SS]]-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Obergruppenfuehrer]], [[HSSPF]] of [[Warthegau]], second [[HSSPF]] o
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  • ...www.psywarrior.com] Entertaining and informative website, primarily with a military focus
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  • ...mployed by a navy as a force for creating a credible threat to [[littoral (military)]] areas.
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  • ...erritories on the Eastern Front; tried and executed by the [[International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)]]
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  • Vietnamese military officer who fought against the [[Viet Minh]] with the French, then became a
    215 bytes (30 words) - 23:44, 8 December 2008
  • ...www.psywarrior.com] Entertaining and informative website, primarily with a military focus
    237 bytes (33 words) - 10:31, 11 August 2009
  • ...ry force, but ground-oriented and more lightly armed than the conventional military forces under the [[Saudi Ministry of Defense and Aviation]].
    818 bytes (121 words) - 13:21, 3 September 2009
  • Beginning on October 7, 2001, in response to the [[9/11]] attack, military operations against the [[Taliban]] and [[al-Qaeda]] by United States and [[
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  • {{r|Military rank}}
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  • The '''Changing of the Guard''' is a short, formal [[military]] [[ceremony]] in which the ''guard'', or official watch guarding an edific ...iament Hill]] in [[Ottawa]], the guards are primarily reservists receiving military training during the summer while attending university. <ref>[http://www.par
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  • {{r|Military sociology}} {{r|Sovereign Military Order of the Temple of Jerusalem}}
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>German military officer who became [[Weimar Minister of Defense]] and Reich Minister of War
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  • ...d service member dies or goes missing in action.<ref name="milpar">In U.S. military parlance, a surviving spouse is referred to as "primary next of kin" (PNOK) In all branches of the military, casualty assistance officers must meet certain qualifications. They typica
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  • ...transport ship intended for intra-theater logistics support in [[littoral (military)|littoral operations]]
    237 bytes (29 words) - 10:05, 10 February 2023
  • Office 3 (chief dentist), [[WVHA Amtsgruppe D]], Waffen SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Obersturmbannfuehrer]]; responsibilities included removal of gold tee
    251 bytes (31 words) - 21:58, 24 November 2010
  • ...y objective until the [[neoconservatism|neoconservative]] push toward U.S. military intervention; still remained more fact-oriented than some more ideologicall
    346 bytes (42 words) - 11:47, 19 March 2024
  • ...Assistance Force]]; chief of public affairs, [[Patrick Air Force Base]], Military Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations
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  • A military [[weapon]] that, in practice, be operated by one person; when it has been m
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  • A senior military rank, in the middle to bottom range the top of the "general officer " syste
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  • The operational but obsolescent family of U.S. military communications satellites, optimized for providing survivable low to medium
    242 bytes (31 words) - 14:48, 11 April 2009
  • The popular term for a collection of techniques that make a military vehicle (air, space, land, sea, or undersea) hard to detect and harder to d
    201 bytes (31 words) - 22:58, 15 August 2008
  • ...rs (C4) for [[United States Africa Command]]; Council on Foreign Relations military fellow (2007-2008)
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  • ..., the '''Minister of Defense''' was the top official of the treaty-limited military forces of the [[Reichswehr]]. Under [[Adolf Hitler]], the position was chan | First military officer
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  • ...a senior diplomat, or perhaps related foreign policy specialist such as a military officer, to a university, for mentoring and for personal research
    220 bytes (31 words) - 09:58, 2 September 2009
  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>One of the [[Nuremberg Military Tribunals]] dealing with members of Nazi civilian ministries, accused of pl
    214 bytes (29 words) - 22:05, 1 January 2011
  • ...ring surveillance and control]], etc.; may be commercial, recreational, or military
    252 bytes (32 words) - 06:41, 24 August 2010
  • SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Obersturmbannfuehrer]] in the [[SD]]; Commanding Officer of Einsatzko
    208 bytes (25 words) - 00:16, 18 November 2010
  • ...Japanese General [[Tomiyuki Yamashita]], challenging the legitimacy of the military commission that tried him
    217 bytes (29 words) - 01:16, 16 November 2010
  • ...ief and Chief of Office 1 (Food), [[WVHA Amtsgruppe B]], SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Standartenfuehrer]]; convicted in [[Pohl Case (NMT)]]
    188 bytes (25 words) - 23:35, 24 November 2010
  • ...Force; Vice Commander, [[Eighth Air Force]], [[Barksdale Air Force Base]]; military fellow, Council on Foreign Relations, 1999-2000
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  • The staff committee of the most senior members of the U.S. military services, charged with policy advice, doctrinal development, and preparedne
    223 bytes (31 words) - 20:37, 7 September 2009
  • ...ial Japanese Army]] officer, who was a protege of Emperor [[Taisho]] and a military academy classmate of [[Sadao Araki]] and [[Shigeru Honjo]]. ...f of Staff [[Prince Kanin]] forced him to resign as [[Inspector General of Military Education]] over his criticism of Palace decisionmaking.
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  • ===Military and security===
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  • ...wn for the 7 years she was the only court illustrator for the [[Guantanamo military commissions]]
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  • Series of military campaigns fought between the independent Kingdom of Scotland and the Kingdo
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  • SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Oberfuehrer]], chief of the Personal Staff of the Reich Physician SS,
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  • In many military organizations, a largely ceremonial term for what, as an operational unit,
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  • The maximum effective distance at which a military vehicle can journey from its base; this is not the maximum one-way range bu
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  • Within a military command, the staff function, sometimes including a [[SCIF]] or other secure
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  • ...be subject to whatever restriction the Secretary of War or the appropriate Military Commander may impose in his discretion. ...ents are made, to accomplish the purpose of this order. The designation of military areas in any region or locality shall supersede designations of prohibited
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  • ...electronic warfare, computer network operations, psychological operations, military deception, and operations security.
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  • ...nted equipment, formal designation structures, such as the U.S. and allied military AN/ designation system, reserves this usage for systems that may move among ...p", or "Submarine". For example, a radio permanently mounted in a [[tank (military)|tank]], cabled to its power supply and antenna, would be have a V (vehicle
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  • Military leader of the [[Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan]]; a former Soviet paratroop
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  • ...[[SS]] of [[Nazi Germany]]; executed for war crimes by the [[International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)]]
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  • The chemical has both commercial and military applications, including as a plasticizer for cellulose esters, lacquers, ch ==Military==
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  • ...gruppe C]] and chief of Office 2, (special construction), SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Obersturmbannfuehrer]]; convicted in [[Pohl Case (NMT)]]
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  • SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Obersturmbannfuehrer]]]; member of the [[SD]] and [[Gestapo]]; Comman
    190 bytes (24 words) - 00:16, 18 November 2010
  • (OKW) In [[Nazi Germany]], the High Command of the Armed Forces, or the military staff office in direct support of [[Adolf Hitler]]
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  • Major General in [[Reichswehr]] who headed [[Abwehr]] military counterintelligence and was deputy defense minister;associate of [[Kurt von
    259 bytes (33 words) - 23:25, 9 December 2010
  • ...additional missions including [[foreign internal defense]], direct action (military), special reconnaissance, counterterrorism, etc.
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  • ...l, who operated in civilian clothing, by a Presidentially appointed secret military tribunal
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  • ...rps|U.S. Marine Corps]], retired; Terrorism Task Force, Regular Member and Military Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations, 2001-2002
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  • ...currently lead political anchor for CNN, previously their White House and military affairs correspondent; after starting with [[Reuters]], spent 15 years as [
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  • A military aircraft, ship, weapon, or other asset with such power, either as a [[force
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  • *[http://www.cmhg-phmc.gc.ca/cmh/page-140-eng.asp Canadian Military Gateway]
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  • =====Military transports=====
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  • In [[military rank]] of many armies, the lowest of the middle-level "staff" or "field off
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  • On military [[helicopter]]s, ahollow extension goes above the top of the driveshaft, ca
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  • (1859-1916) An important military officer and politician during the later years of the Chinese [[Qing Dynasty
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  • A U.S. heavy military [[transport aircraft]], designed for [[strategic airlift]] and freeing the
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  • ...adopted son of Emperor [[Komei]], Chief of Staff and Inspector-General of Military Education of the [[Imperial Japanese Army]], and a participant in many Army He received his military training in France. In 1916, he led an effort to assassinate [[Chang Tso-L
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  • United States military operations in [[Somalia]], under UN [[Chapter VII peace operations]] author
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  • SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Sturmbannfuehrer]]; member of the SD; Deputy Chief of Sonderkommando
    214 bytes (29 words) - 07:17, 17 November 2010
  • In actual or potential warfare, a situation where a military force combined technology, techniques, training and leadership to achieve a
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  • ...or equipment capable of being used either in civilian applications, or for military applications subject to [[counterproliferation]] controls, or for other sen
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  • A failed U.S. military [[hostage rescue]] operation, in April 1980, intended to recover the hostag
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  • A U.S. military investigating committee charged with learning lessons, and providing securi
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  • ...one commander, the [[Commanding Officer]], and is composed of [[sub-unit (military)|sub-units]]. ...mallest have a headquarters organization, which will contain both [[staff (military)|staff]] for planning and controlling operations, and often [[combat suppor
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  • The hierarchy of Iraqi military units capable of conventional combat in the [[Gulf War]], although at least
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  • U.S. military personnel who trained and assisted [[Army of the Republic of Viet Nam]] tro
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  • '''EADS (European Aeronautics Defence and Space)''' is a joint military manufacturing venture made up of DaimlerChrysler Aerospace of Germany, Aero
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  • SS-[[Nazi military and SS ranks|Hauptsturmfueher]] and camp physician at [[Buchenwald Concentr
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  • A military professional journal published by the U.S. Army Combined Arms Center, suppo
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  • ...legal section in executive office, [[WVHA Amtsgruppe W]], SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Hauptsturmfuehrer]]; convicted in [[Pohl Case (NMT)]]
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  • ...ages}}</noinclude>Probably the most serious [[Japanese militarism|Japanese military]] coup before [[World War Two in the Pacific]], suppressed strongly by Empe
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  • The opposition movement to the military regime of Myanmar; its prominent figure is Aung San Suu Kyi, the General Se
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  • ...s Air Force]], and specialist in [[air mobility]]; vice commander of the [[Military Airlift Command]] during the [[Gulf War]]; adviser; [[Jewish Institute for
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  • Rear Admiral in the German Navy during WWII; commanded [[Abwehr]] military intelligence service, which contained many anti-Nazi conspirators and was e
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  • Attorney, advisory board member of Center for Military Readiness; serves on bank and hospital boards in Marietta, Ohio; bass-barit
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  • ...hones and data access devices, at levels below [[division]], by which U.S. military units connected to [[corps]], [[echelons above corps]], and national networ
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  • SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Sturmbannfuehrer]] and medical officer at [[Buchenwald Concentration
    228 bytes (27 words) - 02:06, 10 November 2010
  • A piece of construction equipment, with military applications, characterized by a movable blade for pushing earth or debris
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  • A history of forced military service in the [[United States of America|United States]]. The draft is cu
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  • General in the [[U.S. Army]]; Commander, U.S. [[Military Assistance Command, Vietnam]] (COMUSMACV)] 1964–1968; [[Chief of Staff of
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  • {{r|Military doctrine}} {{r|Swarming (military)}}
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  • [[Nazi SS and military ranks|Obersturmbannfuehrer]]; member of the SD ; member of the Gestapo ; Co
    192 bytes (25 words) - 00:17, 18 November 2010
  • ...m North Vietnam to South Vietnam via Laos and Cambodia, used to infiltrate military forces into the South
    185 bytes (28 words) - 20:37, 5 December 2008
  • ...nion]], 1981-87; [[U.S. Ambassador to France]], 1977-1981; [[Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change]] (2004)
    183 bytes (23 words) - 10:32, 31 August 2009
  • ...tnam]], which is an transportation hub for central Vietnam and was a major military base during the [[Vietnam War]]
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  • (1894-1945) [[SA]] and [[SS]]-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Gruppenfuehrer]], first [[HSSPF]] of [[Generalgouvernement]] (1939-1
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  • The conditions under which a military unit may open fire if fired upon or threatened, and the type of force it ca
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  • SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Brigadefuehrer]]; member of the SD; Commanding Officer of Einsatzgrup
    168 bytes (25 words) - 03:50, 18 November 2010
  • ...ngo]], 1990-93; [[U.S. Ambassador to Burundi]], 1986-1990; [[Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change]] (2004)
    189 bytes (24 words) - 10:38, 31 August 2009
  • A large U.S. military assistance organization, which can both provide support and combat leadersh
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  • A widely used U.S. designed main battle [[tank (military)]] tank, replaced by the [[M1 Abrams (tank)]], and itself a derivative of t
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  • Military-operated educational institutes that train midlevel officers to take on sta
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  • In the newer military usage of "fires" as anything that interferes with the enemy, systems whose
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  • A U.S. military command and control system, including soldier- and vehicle-level workstatio
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  • ...ung Army]] officers, in September 1931, which was the pretext for Japanese military action outside the [[Kwangtung Leasehold]] and throughout [[Manchuria]]
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  • ==Charges at the [[Nuremberg Military Tribunals]]== | title = Trials of War Criminals before the Nuremberg Military Tribunals under Control Council Law No. 10. October 1946–April 1949.
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  • [[Lieutenant general]], [[United States Army]], Retired; Military Senior Advisor Panel, [[Iraq Study Group]]; former chief of the [[National
    222 bytes (27 words) - 09:52, 14 October 2009
  • ...red; commanded [[United States Central Command]], 1991-94; [[Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change]] (2004)
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  • ...nd largest port, and largest transportation area for northern Vietnam; key military supply import point during the Vietnam War
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  • SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Sturmbannfuehrer]]; member of the SD; officer of Einsatzkommando 12 o
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  • Former voice teacher and [[opera]] singer; SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Sturmbannfuehrer]]; member of the [[SD]]; Sonderkommando 7b of [[Eins
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  • ...which contains the Guantanamo Bay detention camp but also other unrelated military functions such as supporting naval patrols in the Caribbean
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  • ...d J. "The Military Revolutions of the Hundred Years War," ''The Journal of Military History'' 57 (1993): 241-78. in [[Project Muse]] ..., and the Infantry Revolution of the Fourteenth Century," ''The Journal of Military History'' 68.2 (2004) 361-380 in [[Project Muse]]
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  • ...of the [[History of Japan]] in which territorial expansion was pursued by military means, roughly from the [[Meiji Restoration]] to the [[Surrender of Japan]]
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  • ...e Southeast Army Regional Medical Command; author on [[medical ethics]], [[military medicine]], and treatment of detainees
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Originally developed for U.S. military needs, a satellite-based system for obtaining precise position and time inf
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  • ...ador to Indonesia]], 1973-77; [[Foreign Service Officer]]; [[Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change]] (2004)
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  • ...ogether to achieve a common goal. Examples are teamwork, as in sport, or a military alliance in wartime.
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  • A military rifle that fires a full-power rifle cartridge (e.g., 7.62x51mm NATO), and i
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  • A trial of senior professional military officers of Nazi Germany, for which some were convicted of war crimes, crim
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  • ...ld War, called the Dakota in British service and the R4D by the U.S. Navy; military version of the [[DC-3 (airliner)]]
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  • ...cident]]; only civilian official sentenced to death by the [[International Military Tribunal for the Far East]]
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  • ...movement and maintenance of forces." (Department of Defense Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms)
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  • ==Military and emergency==
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  • ...s to play a role in a [[Court Martial]], or similar military Tribunal or [[Military Commission]].<ref> | url=http://www.military.com/benefits/legal-matters/ucmj-convening-authority
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  • Within the [[Department of Defense]], the military headquarters responsible for defense of the continental United States, and
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  • ...ron Trevesey and Oaksey, President of the [[Nuremberg Trials|International Military Tribunal for the Trial of the Major War Criminals]] and primary British jud
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  • ...andestine operations]] by the [[United States intelligence community]] and military special operations forces
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  • ...le-male [[twin]] pairs who served in the [[United States of America|U.S.]] military between 1965 and 1975, the era of the [[Vietnam War]].
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  • ...States in its zone of occupation of Germany, following the [[International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)]]
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  • ...ng the last nine years of Emperor [[Meiji]]'s rule; [[Inspector General of Military Education]] {22 Jan 1898 - 25 Apr 1900) and {14 Jan 1904 - 9 May 1905); fat
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  • ...a Major War Criminal sentenced to life imprisonment by the [[International Military Tribunal for the Far East]].
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  • The '''United States Military Academy''' at [[West Point]], New York, is the undergraduate professional c ...disciplines. The faculty is a mixture of permanent civilians and rotating military personnel.
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  • ...ect support of ground combat requiring extreme care to avoid [[fratricide (military)|fratricide]]
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  • The collective term for all the [[military]] forces of the [[China|People's Republic of China]]
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  • ...ing of the [[U.S. Department of Defense]], as well as a symbol of the U.S. military
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  • ...y a towing rocket, or by traction on a nonexplosive line used as a guide. Military applications include clearing [[mine (land warfare)|minefields]] or areas c ...ncrete surface, possibly as an entry point for mechanical removal, and, in military use, to deny use of a road, runway, or other mobility asset.
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  • ...command staff; executed for war crimes by sentence of the [[International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)]]
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  • A very broad Soviet/Russian military theoretical concept, encompassing what the West regards as [[camouflage]],
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  • ...ational policies. His work in [[Millennium Challege 2002]], exploring U.S. military action against Iran, became known and controversial. | title = Military mentors paid well for advice
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  • ...ution of Axis Criminality, Nazi Conspiracy and Aggression, [[International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)]] ...imt/nightfog.htm}}</ref> This order called for the summary execution after military tribunal, or transfer to Germany with no information released, of persons d
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  • ...icle]], part of the [[Stryker (armored fighting vehicle)|Stryker family of military vehicles]] and deployed with [[Stryker Brigade Combat Team]]s
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  • ...TR), which covers the HF through VHF spectrum, is the first widely defined military [[software-defined radio]], although it precedes the [[Joint Tactical Radio
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  • A group of civilian and military U.S. officials critical of the foreign policy of the [[George W. Bush Admin
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  • ...these two great democracies." It has a significant number of retired U.S. military officers as advisors, and, based on lessons from the 1973 Arab-Israeli War, ...ch as American Israel Public Affairs Committee, concentrating, instead, on military and industrial ties. "During the 1973 war, a number of us began meeting wit
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  • ...Fellow; trainer for K3 Enterprises in Civil Information Management to U.S. Military Civil Affairs Units and Human Terrain Teams assigned to Iraq and Afghanista
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  • ...; detention may be under the orders of legally constituted but nonjudicial military tribunals or security officials
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Japanese policymakers, in the military, Palace and government, who favored a war for resources that would invade [
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  • '''Lieutenant general''' is a senior military rank, near the top of the "general officer " system that divides officers i | title = NATO codes for grades of military personnel: Agreed English texts
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  • ==Military== ...killed. Alternatively, however, the Japanese [[kamikaze]] attacked purely military targets, with a frequent motivation being that the pilot would inevitably d
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  • [[command and control|Command, control]], [[military communications|communications]] and intelligence, part of the broader moder
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  • ...special duties in security and genocide; overall command of [[Nazi SS and military ranks|Oberstgruppenfuehrer]] [[Paul Hausser ]]
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  • ...r conviction in the [[Medical Case (NMT)|Medical Case]] of the [[Nuremberg Military Tribunals]]
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  • ...vide integrated at-sea and coastal security. They fill a niche that other military organizations have done as a secondary role. ...s. [[United States Coast Guard]] units are a hybrid of law enforcement and military skills, although they may be the most skilled in seamanship.
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  • ...Dinh Diem]], who was Prime Minister twice as well as Vice President, under military dominated rule but maintaining a certain personal independence and integrit
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  • In the context of engineering, communications and electronics, especially military, a '''transportable''' device or system that can be can be moved quickly by In the U.S. and allied AN/ designation system for military electronics, transportable device designations, such as [[TTC-39|AN/TTC-39]
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  • General of Infantry (lieutenant general equivalent), German Army; Military Governor of Paris at the time of the [[1944 assassination attempt against H
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  • ...ations]] of the [[United States Navy]], 1953-1957; strong advocate of U.S. military intervention to aid [[France]] at [[Dien Bien Phu]] during the colonial per
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  • In a government or military organization, is an individual, or office function, to which concerns about
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  • A military targeting doctrine, first articulated in the context of nuclear warfare but
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  • In military air or sea operations, the most critical units (e.g., [[C3I-ISR]] or tanke
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  • ...ssed sulfanilamide and other drug treatments for the benefit of the German military
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  • | title = John D. Altenburg, Jr. Appointing Authority for Military Commissions: Biography ...ement he was chosen to be in charge of the "Guantanamo military commission|military commissions" that are to try selected individuals held in the Guantanamo Ba
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  • [[Nazi SS and military ranks|SS-Standartenfuehrer]] Chief of the [[Main Staff Office of the Reichs
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  • ...for the military precision with which the graves of thousands of ordinary military personnel are laid out, but visitors are often surprised to find that Arlin ...the [[Changing of the Guard]] is carried out every 20 minutes by a special military unit, “The Old Guard”. ''The [[United States Marine Corps]] War Memori
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  • '''Xenophon''' (c. 427/31–c. 354/5 BC) was a Greek historian and military leader.<ref>http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/xenophon.htm</ref> Many consider his
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  • ...om one shares some type of brotherhood. Hence the [[Fratricide (military)|military usage of fratricide]] to denote the inadvertent killing in the heat of batt
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  • ...organizations in [[Vietnam]]; during the [[Vietnam War]], it included the military, as opposed to the separate chains of command in Iraq and Afghanistan
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  • '''Military rank''' is a partial indication of status within a military organization. A basic division is into Commissioned officer|officer, non-co ...vernment. Their fundamental role is commanding units, although they may be military staff or other specialists. They may be of the "line", which puts them int
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  • {{r|Military History}} {{r|Military history}}
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  • ...1934) German Field Marshal in WWI, with great popularity although moderate military skills, more a figurehead with the operational control under [[Erich Ludend In his earlier military career, he served in the [[Austro-Prussian War]] (1866) and [[Franco-Pruss
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  • '''Franz Ritter von Epp''' (1868-1946) was a Bavarian and German military officer, with a distinguished combat record, who formed a [[Freikorps]] aft ...ists at Greising, a Munich suburb. For a brief period, von Epp was the the military dictator of Bavaria, which became a center of oppositional and Nazi activit
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  • '''Gaius Terentus Varro''' was a consul and military commander for the Roman Empire. He was the surviving senior commander at th
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  • Officer in the WWII German Army; Deputy Chief of the [[Abwehr]] military organization reporting to Admiral [[Wilhelm Canaris]]; active member of the
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>The influence of military officers on the governance and foreign policy of Japan, principally prior t
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  • ...erial Japanese Army)]], (3 Oct 1940 - 21 Feb 1944); [[Inspector General of Military Education]] {1 Aug 1936 - 9 Feb 1937) and {18 Jul 1944 - 22 Jul 1944)
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  • [[Colonel]], [[United States Air Force]]; military fellow (2008-), Council on Foreign Relations; former deputy assistant chief
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  • ...r war crimes in the [[Medical Case (NMT)|Medical Case]] of the [[Nuremberg Military Tribunals]]
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  • {{r|Support to Military Operations, Central Intelligence Agency}} {{r|Joint Military Intelligence Program}} (JMIP) JMIP included Defense-wide programs not pecul
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  • * [http://www.militarywords.com Military Words - over 100,000 military and government acronyms]
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  • {{Image|King Williams War Map.png|right|250px|Military actions during King William's War 1689-1697.}}
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  • A firearm capable not only of [[Full-automatic (military)|full-automatic]] fire, but with additional features, such as large ammunit
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  • ...d 14 miles west from central [[London, United Kingdom|London]]. Formerly a military airfield, it is currently operated by BAA Limited, the privatised British A
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  • ...d States Army]] dental officer, who was killed in action protecting a U.S. military hospital, during the [[Battle of Saipan]] from being overrun by Japanese tr
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  • Originally the [[military police]] of the [[Imperial Japanese Army]], with both conventional and coun
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  • ...ain overall [[situational awareness]] by fixating on one specific goal; in military aviation, the classic example is so concentrating on delivering a bomb to a
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  • | cat2 = Military
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  • A [[Raytheon]] commercial and military system of navigation [[radar]]; while on U.S. Navy ships including the ''[[
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  • ..., currently used on [[maritime patrol aircraft]] also used in [[littoral (military)]] and overland operation; the still highly classified system will go onto
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  • ...uered countries, and sentenced to life imprisonment by the [[International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)]]
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  • ...ditions of insitutionalized insubordination ([[gekokoju]]) in the Japanese military, both major field commands such as the [[Kwangtung Army]], as well as junio ...these two, the most important Army officer was the [[Inspector General of Military Education]].
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  • ...nd a powdered metal oxide, which, when ignited, generates extreme heat for military and civilian applications
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  • ...esearch, [[Bureau of Intelligence and Research]], 1997-99; [[Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change]] (2004)
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  • ...ner von Blomberg]] and to the [[Reichswehr]], creating tension between the military and the SS. <ref>Richard J. Evans, ''The Third Reich in Power'' (Allen Lane
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  • ...ica|U.S.]] executive-managed government agencies; this one administers the military forces of the United States, and their supporting civil servants.
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  • ...bout Air-Land Warfare'' (1993) [http://www.questia.com/read/30405396?title=Military%20Helicopter%20Doctrines%20of%20the%20Major%20Powers%2c%201945-1992%3a%20Ma * Doughty, Robert. et al. ''American Military History And The Evolution Of Western Warfare'' (1996)
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  • ...ising majors as planners of [[operational art]]. See [[School of Advanced Military Studies/Related Articles]].
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  • ...07) Distinguished Chair of the Combating Terrorism Center, [[United States Military Academy]] (2003-2007); Deputy National Security Assistant after the [[9/11]
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  • {{r|Battery (military unit)}}
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  • The '''Military''', in a general sense, refers to the standing armed forces of a country, t ==Examples of Military Forces==
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  • '''Fighter aircraft''', generally known as '''fighters''', are military aircraft which are essentially used in air-to-air combat. Famous examples i
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  • A series of military operations, from mid-June, 1864 to April 1, 1865, in the area around [[Rich
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  • Japanese military and political leader associated with the [[kokutai]] philosophy and [[Imper
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  • ...r of U.S. Advisory Council of the [[Israel Policy Forum]]; [[Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change]] (2004); director of State Department [[Policy Plann
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  • ...[[Reich Interior Ministry]] but commanded by [[SS]] officers, first [[Nazi military and SS ranks|Oberstgruppenfuehrer]] [[Kurt Daluege]] (1936–1943) then by
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  • ...ty in [[French Indochina]], and was the last British head of the Pakistani military
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  • ...y explosive ignition; commercial use as too weak to detonate virtually all military explosives
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  • ...racted (long and drawn out) and take place over hours or days. Successive military battles are often part of a larger war. ...th the same goal are fought over time, they are often termed a [[campaign (military)|campaign]], which indicates both their focus and the fact that the battles
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  • The United States' '''Military Intelligence Program (MIP)''' consists of programs, projects, or activitie | title = Department of Defense Directive No. 5205.12, Military Intelligence Program (MIP)
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  • | cat2 = Military
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  • ...oth in 1865 in London and currently operating in 110 countries as a quaisi-military organization with uniformed and ranked "officers", "bases" and "corps", "ha
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  • ...kage, intended to have a linear blast pattern much longer than it is wide; military applications in [[mine (land warfare)|clearing mines]]; general application
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  • ...eld Barracks, Hawaii. From July 1995 to June 1997, he commanded the 470th Military Intelligence Brigade in Panama. Thereafter, he served as joint intelligenc *Undergraduate degree and [[Reserve Officers Training Corps]] commission in Military Intelligence, [[Auburn University]], 1974
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  • ..., charged with providing national-level analysis specifically relevant for military needs, and being the focal point for [[measurement and signature intelligen
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  • ...tes Special Operations Command]], which takes on the most sensitive covert military operations, usually working unacknowledged within the geographic area of a
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  • The combined regular military forces (i.e., excluding the [[SS]]) of Nazi Germany, under the High Command
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  • ...in [[navigation]], [[air traffic control]], [[Safety of Life at Sea]], and military operations (e.g., [[Identification-friend-or-foe]] which, when interrogated
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  • Professor of Law at [[Campbell University]]; advisory board, Center for Military Readiness; [[Colonel]], [[U.S. Army]], retired; former chief of the litig
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  • ...ndustry''' is derived from the design bureaus. This industry develops both military and civilian aircraft for the [[Russian Federation]], although, especially ...me Soviet-designed export versions were made less capable than the Russian military version, some current designs are fully optimized, for example, for the nee
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  • ...ack cargo ship|''Tolland'' class]] [[attack cargo ship]] designed to carry military cargo and [[landing craft]].
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  • ...t fails, or the trigger is released. This contrasts to a [[semi-automatic (military)|semi-automatic]] weapon, which will load and fire once for each pull of th
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  • ...ssion]], as the fourth [[Secretary of Transportation]], and the [[Court of Military Commission Review]].
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  • ...ce of Military Commissions]], to serve as evidence during the [[Guantanamo Military Commissions]]. According to ''[[Reuters]]'' the [[Office of Military Commissions]] paid Kohlmann $20,000 to make the film.<ref name=reuters2008-
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  • ...et]]s, which can be fitted with a wide range of warheads, used by all U.S. military services and for export; they are principally helicopter weapons but can be
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  • A recent, but prior to the [[Joint Tactical Radio System]], U.S. military tactical [[software-defined radio]] family that operates in the full VHF/UH
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  • ...rfare)|land]] and [[mine (naval warfare)|naval mining]]; construction of [[military obstacles]] including ditches, walls, and barbed wire entanglements, etc.
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  • ...t of War'' (Chinese: 兵法), an immensely influential ancient Chinese book on military strategy; one of the earliest [[realism (foreign policy)|realists]] in [[f
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  • ...tions (e.g., search and rescue) that may or may not be part of the regular military of some other nations.
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  • Military [[tilt-rotor aircraft]] capable of vertical takeoff as a [[rotary-wing]] he
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  • (1900-1942) Nazi police and intelligence officer; SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Brigadefuehrer]]; [[SD]] officer; [[HSSPF]] of Bohemia and Moravia, t
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  • Second-ranking member of the U.S. military and [[Joint Chiefs of Staff]] (JCS), not in the line of operational command
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  • ...f Staff]] on counterinsurgency and covert operations, the latter including military support to [[Central Intelligence Agency]] operations
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  • ...ning Command, Randolph Air Force Base, Texas; Council on Foreign Relations military fellow
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  • ...CSOUTH) and Director of Operations for [[United States Southern Command]]; military fellow, Council on Foreign Relations, 2002-2003
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  • The killing of one's brother, but in a military context, the killing of one's own forces ("friendly fire").
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  • ...''[[Luftwaffe]]'') during WW II. Sentenced to death by the [[International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)]] but committed suicide shortly before execution
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  • ...ector for Strategy and Policy at Navy Staff;; Council on Foreign Relations military fellow 2006-2007
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  • In the context of communications and electronics, especially military, a device or system that can be operate "[[on the move]]" (OTM) from a fiel
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  • Civil, private or military facility for aircraft to take off, land, and often be maintained, minimally
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  • ...sisting of a cabinet-level minister, and agencies for counterintelligence, military intelligence, and general intelligence and covert operations
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  • {{r|Division (military)}} {{r|Military Assistance Command, Vietnam}}
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  • ...ian name,[[Glavnoye Razvedovatel'noye Upravlenie]] ([[GRU]]), the national military organization of both the [[Soviet Union]] and [[Russian Federation]], rough
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  • ...f the United States]], stating that there was no basis for trying, by U.S. military commission, a person captured in combat with U.S. allies on foreign soil, a
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  • ...eld, [[Fort Bliss]], [[Texas (U.S. state)|Texas]], is the headquarters for military assistance to trans-border threats, working with law enforcement; it is com
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  • ...cause, symbolically represented by a national flag. It can be applied in military, civilian, and clandestine contexts (e.g., clandestine human-source intelli In the strictly military context, it is a subset of ruse of war|ruses of war, defined by Article 35
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  • ==Military== The elite force of the Turkish military were the [[Janissaries]], who were recruited by stealing very young boys fr
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  • ...nors for emergencies when not "federalized", but regular parts of the U.S. military when they are
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  • [[Nazi SS and military ranks|Obersturmbannfuehrer]]; member of the SD; Commanding Officer of Sonde
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  • A relationship between military units, in which the supported unit does not have operational control of the
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  • {{r|U.S. foreign military assistance organizations}} {{r|Saigon Military Mission}}
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  • ...11 surrounding provinces. It had had various earlier names, such as Saigon Military District. The are contained 38 percent of the population and 90 percent o ...rters should not be confused with the ARVN Joint General Staff (JGS) and [[Military Assistance Command, Vietnam]] (MACV), also in the Saigon area at [[Tan Son
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  • ...], and the "political ''dau trinh''" form of strategy rather than the more military form of [[Vo Nguyen Giap]]. Both were eclipsed in power by [[Le Duan]].
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  • ...n a [[squad (infantry)]] or [[fire team]], a lightweight [[full-automatic (military)|full automatic]] [[machine gun]]; can be fired by one soldier who is usual
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  • {{rpl|Base (military)}}
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  • Military computer workstation and communications processing to interface to the [[Ar
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  • First Pakistani citizen to become commander-in-chief of the military of Pakistan; became President under martial law from 1958 to 1962; continue
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  • == Military==
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  • ...partment, U.S.]]; the position was abolished with the consolidation of the military by the [[National Security Act of 1947]], although the [[Secretary of the A
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  • ...I of the [[United Nations Charter]], which allows the UN units to use full military firepower, not only in self-defense, to enforce the UN goals
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  • U.S. military doctrine and training for Survival, Evasion, Rescue and Escape, given, at v
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  • {{rpl|The Military Balance}}
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  • ...es Marine Corps|U.S. Marine Corps]], retired; Council on Foreign Relations military fellow 2003-2004
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  • ...es Navy]], Retired; former commander, [[United States Strategic Command]]; Military Senior Advisor Panel, [[Iraq Study Group]]
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  • A difficult-to-execute military tactic in which the center falls back, drawing in the opposing force, as tw
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  • ...ps (equiv. Allied [[lieutenant general]]) in the WWII German Army, overall military communications chief; failed to cut [[Adolf Hitler]]'s communications after
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  • {{rpl|Vector (military)}}
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  • ...esponsive to overall national needs rather than to the needs of a specific military service or specific mission (e.g., terrorism); they may, however, be orient
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  • U.S. conservative think tank with special interests in military aspects of space and [[ballistic missile defense]], as well as [[terrorism]
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  • Military vehicle-mounted medium to high power (100-400W) [[ITU Frequency Bands|High
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  • ...]; director, [[White House Situation Room]]; Council on Foreign Relations military fellow, 2007-2008; commanding officer, [[USS Milius (DDG-69)|''USS Milius''
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  • {{rpl|Division (military)}}
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  • {{r|Armor (military branch)}} {{r|Tank (military)}}
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  • ...nder (naval)]], retired [[United States Navy]]; advisory board, Center for Military Readiness; commanded [[Blue Angels]]; combat in Libya (1986) and [[Gulf War
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  • ...commanding SS-Volunteer Legion Flandern; first commander, as [[Nazi SS and military ranks|Standartenfuehrer]] of [[10th SS Panzer Division Frundsberg]]
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  • ==Military== | title=The First World War Mesopotamian Campaigns: Military Lessons on Iraqi Ground Warfare
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  • Generally considered to be the best overall [[tank (military)|tank]] of the [[Second World War]], this medium tank went into production
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  • The military wing of the [[National Front for the Liberation of South Vietnam]] (NLF); a
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  • The '''National Security Act of 1947''' restructured the U.S. military from its traditional structure of a separate Army and Navy, to a unified or ...ice of the Secretary of the Air Force. To improve civilian control of the military, a National Security Council was established, composed of voting members as
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  • Military actions taken to reduce the effectiveness, or destroy, the [[radar]]s, [[ra
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  • ...eneral]] in the [[United States Army]], who was the first unified (i.e., [[military police]] and [[interrogation|intelligence interrogation]]) task force comma
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  • General-purpose military command and control laptop computer, using the [[Microsoft Windows]] operat
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  • ...to|Emperor Akihito]] and younger brother of [[Hirohito|Emperor Hirohito]]; military and Staff College graduate with an interest in aviation, and both patron an
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  • ...ial, which be used or stored for use for industrial, commercial, medical, military or domestic purposes, and released with an improvised explosive device or t
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  • ...thorizing the Secretary of War and his designated commanders to establish "military areas" as they see fit and exclude "any or all persons" from entering or re
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  • (1897–1946) [[SS]]-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Oberstgruppenfuehrer]] and Police General heading the [[ORPO]] [[Pr
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  • The series of wars and military tension between the [[State of Israel]] and Arab states; often includes the
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  • {{r|Military Intelligence Company (Brigade Combat Team)}} {{r|Staff (military)}}
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  • A military and intelligence communications system approved for [[classified informatio
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  • ..., 1983-86; [[U.S. Ambassador to Czechoslovakia]], 1981-83; [[Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change]] (2004)
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  • ...)|Captain]], [[United States Navy]], retired; Council on Foreign Relations military fellow 1999-2000; commanded [[USS Key West (SSN-772)|''USS Key West'' (SSN-
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  • ...and Security Review Commission]]; retired [[colonel]], [[U.S. Army]] and [[military attache]] to China; past Asian Studies Center Director and Vice President
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  • ...rom [[captain (land forces)|captain]] to [[brigadier general]] of [[armor (military unit)|armored forces]]; spent 12 years in Communist captivity before emigra
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  • ...ft at high altitudes. Used for emergency escape from aircraft in distress, military landings, and the sport of [[skydiving]].
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  • ...f IoT devices occur in consumer, commercial, industrial, infrastructure or military applications. Some examples are: * military - battlefield sensors and monitoring systems
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  • A '''platoon''' is a small land military unit, typically the smallest commanded by an officer, and having a minimal Vehicle-borne platoon usually have four vehicles: a typical [[tank (military)|tank]] platoon consists of two sections of four tanks each, although some
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  • *P.D. Feaver with Christopher Gelpi, Choosing Your Battles: American Civil-Military Relations and the Use of Force (2004), Princeton: Princeton University Pres *P.D. Feaver, Armed Servants: Agency, Oversight, and Civil-Military Relations (2003), Cambridge: Harvard University Press.
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  • ==Jefferson's Military Policy== Historians have debated Jefferson's military policy since the mid-nineteenth century.
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  • ...Samuel Eliot Morison Prize]] for lifetime achievement by the [[Society for Military History]]; Senior Fellow, Center for the Study of America and the West, [
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  • ...flight hours in special operations and airlift; advisory board, Center for Military Readiness; served as President of [[The Citadel]] (1989-1996)
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  • SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Brigadefuehrer]]; member of the SD; Commanding Officer of Vorkommando
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  • Military, intelligence, or political activity carried out in such a way that the ide
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  • ...at [[Dachau Concentration Camp]], who testified before the [[International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)]] with regard to a wide range of experiments and dire
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  • ...at [[Dachau Concentration Camp]], who testified before the [[International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)]] with regard to a wide range of experiments and dire
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  • ...at [[Dachau Concentration Camp]], who testified before the [[International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)]] with regard to a wide range of experiments and dire
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  • ...at [[Dachau Concentration Camp]], who testified before the [[International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)]] with regard to a wide range of experiments and dire
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  • {{r|Military}}
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  • A U.S. military communications satellite system, used for the one-way distribution of large
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  • ...sro</ref> ([[July 14]], 1888 – [[June 27]], 1930) was a Georgian nobleman, military commander, folk hero, and National Hero of Georgia.
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  • Heavily armed and armored but expensive and heavy, [[tank (military)|main battle tank]], designed for the [[United States Army]], and used by t
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  • [[SS]]-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Gruppenfuehrer]]; [[SIPO]] chief in Krakow 1940; Commander of Einsatz
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  • | cat2 = Military
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  • Providing the transmission infrastructure for a variety of [[routing|routed]] military networks, the '''Defense Information Systems Network (DISN)''' was also an ...interconnects fixed locations that connect to WIN-T and its predecessors. Military satellite communications systems complement the ATM backbone.
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  • ...se enough to the enemy that there is a significant danger of [[fratricide (military)|fratricide]] or degrading friendly capabilities
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  • The '''Wehrmacht''' was, collectively, the regular military forces (i.e., excluding the SS) of Nazi Germany, under the High Command of
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  • ...quate, or that can be bought without extensive paperwork. One reason that military and government systems can be so expensive is that relatively small volumes ...of $600 toilet seats and $5000 coffeemakers often are heard as examples of military waste. In the case of the toilet seat, a COTS one would have been adequate;
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  • ...l Intelligence Agency]]; there are major drug enforcement programs, shared military projects, and the [[Federal Bureau of Investigation]] had jurisdiction in W
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  • Military operation by Allied forces in September 1944, during World War II, with the
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  • ...evertheless, it means that civilians are the ultimate policymakers for the military
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  • ...ul 1926 - 26 Aug 1927), (8 Aug 1932 - 27 Jul 1933); [[Inspector General of Military Education]] {26 Aug 1927 - 26 May 1932)
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  • ...the North. It acted as a shadow government and had the [[Viet Cong]] as a military wing.
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  • ...edy]]; [[Joint Chiefs of Staff]] recommended against the plan but the U.S. military was not involved in its execution
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  • ...or '''Saïgon''', renamed '''Ho Chi Minh City''' after the North Vietnamese military victory of 1975, is the major urban area of Vietnam. Before the French inva
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  • ...mmand]], near Albany, New York, manufactures and maintains include [[tank (military)|tank]] and [[artillery]] [[cannon]], [[marine propulsion|marine propulsio
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  • ...ircraft]] to a ground attack aircraft employing multiple [[full-automatic (military)|automatic weapons]], fired from one side the aircraft to converge on a [[b
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  • {{r|Battery (military unit)}} {{r|Tank (military)}}
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  • A family of military [[radio]]s, intended for ground combat and operating in the [[ITU Frequency
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  • ...ity]], but also having the responsibility for [[information assurance]] of military, diplomatic, and other critical communications.
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  • {{r|Support (military)}}
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  • The '''''Abwehr''''' was the military counterintelligence unit of Nazi Germany. It was headed by Admiral [[Wilhel
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  • ...y that the Ambassador had control of all U.S. organizations, including the military, a different situation than in the [[Afghanistan War (2001-2021)]] and [[Ir ...e [[Military Assistance Command Vietnam]] was assisting an ally, while the military forces in the recent wars entered in combat, without diplomats.
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  • In the context of engineering, communications and electronics, especially military, a device or system that can be can be moved quickly by truck, cargo aircra
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  • ...or War Criminals]] and Chief U.S. Prosecutor at the subsequent [[Nuremberg Military Tribunals]]; continued to write on [[war crime]]s
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  • ...measures which are required to bring about the successful conclusion of a military operation and which are not forbidden by the laws of war.
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  • ...a retired lieutenant general of the United States Marine Corps, whose last military assignment was Deputy Commander of United States Central Command during the ...versity and an honorary Doctorate in Strategic Intelligence from the Joint Military Intelligence College in Anacostia, Maryland.
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  • ...formation]] for a land-based military force, or the entirety of a nation's military force responsible for its land defenses, both of which are composed of [[So
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  • ...tion, to his overthrow and death in the [[Vietnam War, Buddhist crisis and military coup of 1963]]. He was of the Catholic minority, ascetic and autocratic, an
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  • | cat2 = Military
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  • ...f war crimes in the [[Medical Case (NMT)|Medical Case]] of the [[Nuremberg Military Tribunals]]. He was sentenced to death and executed by hanging. His rank was [[Nazi SS and military ranks|Oberfuhrer]] (Senior Colonel) in the [[Waffen SS]]. He held the posit
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  • ...ikely or potential areas of employment, to train and prepare for follow-on military operations</blockquote> ...Scorpions (Iraq War)). Other activities, however, clearly are conducted by military units.
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  • ...measures which are required to bring about the successful conclusion of a military operation and which are not forbidden by the laws of war. ...tions]] principally assume the belligerents are nation-states. In a modern military environment, if an insurgent force fighting an advanced opponent followed t
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  • ...e deaths of their own forces caused by hostile forces or by "[[Fratricide (military)|friendly fire]]" during combat. The [[United States Department of Defense] ...y would be classified as '''died of [battle] wounds''' ([[DOW]]) by the US military, and many historians also use that term. The [[NATO|North Atlantic Treaty O
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  • ...TC-56|AN/TTC-56]] in the transition to routed rather than circuit-switched military communications
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  • Core of legislation that restructured the U.S. military from its traditional structure of a separate Army and Navy, creating the [[
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  • ('''MOPP''') Set of U.S. military standard levels for wearing [[chemical weapon|chemical]]-[[biological weapo
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  • (1906-1947) SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Haupsturmfuhrer]]; second [[Lagerfuhrer]] of [[Auschwitz Concentratio
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  • {{rpl|Charge (military)}}
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  • ...or member of the uniformed services of the United States, statutory senior military adviser to the President and Secretary of Defense; currently Admiral [[Mike
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  • ...6?-1598) Japanese feudal warlord, regarded as one of the nation's greatest military leaders and a unifying figure in mediaeval Japan, elevated to the status of
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  • ...e successful invasion of Malaya and Singapore, was sidelined to China over military politics, returned to lead the ground defense of Leyte, and later executed
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  • | title = Joint Publication 1-02 Department of Defense Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms ...stealth), precision guided munitions, network-centric warfare, swarming (military) in appropriate situations and airborne command & control.
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  • ...nt of the Reich. Sentenced to 10 years imprisonment by the [[International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)]]
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  • | cat1 = Military
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  • ...ial, which be used or stored for use for industrial, commercial, medical, military or domestic purposes, and released with an improvised explosive device or t
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  • ...93-97; [[Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff]], 1985-89; [[Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change]] (2004)
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  • * Cocroft, Wayne. ''Dangerous Energy: The Archaeology of Gunpowder and Military Explosives'' (2000) 222 pages * Cook Jr., Weston F. ''The Hundred Years War for Morocco: Gunpowder and the Military Revolution in the Early Modern Muslim World,'' (1994) [http://www.questia.c
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  • ...6; deputy permanent representative to the U.N., 1989-1993; [[Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change]] (2004)
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  • ...anges (e.g., [[Meiji Restoration]], [[Japanese militarism|development of a military-dominated government]]) and wars (e.g., [[First Sino-Japanese War]], [[Russ
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  • ===Military===
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  • {{r|Military veteran reentry}} {{r|Military quality of life}}
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  • General in the [[U.S. Army]], who was the last head of [[Military Assistance Command, Vietnam]] and then [[Chief of Staff of the Army]], who
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  • ...ents. Bulldozer-like blades are sometimes attached to the front of [[tank (military)|tanks]] or other [[armored fighting vehicle]]s to give them a secondary fi
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  • ...s an [[Australia]]n author and historian, specializing in space flight and military history. He is a former customer service manager for [[Qantas]] Airways, a
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  • [[Wargames]], either for hobby use or combat training, which models military conflict at a low tactical level, such that depicted units range from indiv
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  • ...of the United States that set precedents related to presidentially ordered military tribunals, conducting them in secret, and denying ''habeas corpus''. <ref n ...ilitary order on July 2, 1942, was lawfully constituted and the prisoners' military detention was lawful.
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  • ...Case trials of Nazi medical personnel]], which was part of the [[Nuremberg Military Tribunals]]; it forms the basis for the [[Declaration of Helsinki]]
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  • ...i-shek]] as nominal Supreme Commander; in practice with an overall British military commander and a U.S. subcommander in China
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  • [[SS]]-[[Nazi military and SS ranks|Obergruppenfuehrer]], Waffen SS; Head of the SS [[WVHA]]; and
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  • ...s elected early in 2011 in an attempt to return [[democracy]], after the [[military]] seized power in 2010 after Mamadou Tandja, the previous president, plunge ==Military Coup==
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  • One of the [[Nuremberg Military Tribunals]], the '''Ministries Case''', also known as the '''Wilhelmstrasse ...ice of Military Government for Germany (US) | title= Indictment, Nuremberg Military Tribunal 11 - Ministries Case. Paper 1.
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  • ...Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System]] that is civil-military
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  • Military or paramilitary operations that differ from conventional operations in degr
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  • ...eral, French ground forces, for operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm ;military fellow, Council on Foreign Relations, 2002-2003
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  • ...om the [[George W. Bush Administration]] wanted to try for war crimes by a military commission
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  • | cat3 = Military
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  • ...xahydro-1,3,5-trinitro-1,3,5-triazine; considered the most powerful common military explosive; a member of the [[nitramine]] class of [[organic nitrate explosi
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  • ...sion to [[Republic of Vietnam|South Vietnam]], to assess the political and military situation there, by a career [[Foreign Service Officer|diplomat]] and a [[m
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  • A branch of military service concerned with [[materials MASINT|detection]] and [[decontamination
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  • Nazi [[Nazi SS and military ranks|Gruppenfuehrer]]; first commandant of [[Dachau Concentration Camp]] a
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>German [[Nazi SS and military ranks|Generaloberst]] who commanded forces moving into the Sudetenland and
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  • In a military context, the modification, maintenance and protection of the physical envir
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  • ...i, and the Army of the Guardians of the Islamic Revolution in English, the military and paramilitary force separate from the regular armed forces of Iran, with
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  • {{rpl|Operation (military)}}
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  • ...ment of other capabilities, and, at a broader strategic level, can use the military to solve virtually any world problem
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  • | cat2 = Military | cat2 = Military
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  • SISMI was officially a military organization. Now, in a purely military function like the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency, there is a ''Reparto in
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  • ...control]], [[ballistic missile defense]]; related intelligence programs, [[military applications of space|space programs]], [[information operations|informatio ==Military applications of space==
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  • ====Military focus====
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  • ...h Diem]] in November 1963, and ruled until they were overthrown by another military group in January 1964, some generals belonging to both the November and Jan
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  • *[[Strategic Defense Initiative]], a Reagan-era military program known as "Star Wars".
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  • ...Jul 1944); executed for war crimes in 1948 by order of the [[International Military Tribunal (Tokyo)]]
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  • ...on of an area previously outside its borders. This may involve a period of military conquest, actual occupation, or the acquiescence of its inhabitants to a ne Annexation is often associated with a military victory, as had happened when the [[German Empire]] took over [[Alsace-Lorr
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  • '''Oleg Penkovsky''' (1919-1963) was a colonel in Soviet military intelligence, the [[GRU]]. He became an ideological opponent of the regime ...of the [[Cold War]]. He had extensive access both to information on Soviet military technology and strategic thinking. In particular, he provided substantial i
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  • ==Military==
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  • Washington Editor of [[National Review]]; advisory board, Center for Military Readiness; former Vice President of Government Relations at the Heritage F
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  • ...r in 1755. He attended various military academies. Became a publisher of military journals. ...ry crimes was reformed, promotion was based on merit, the structure of the military administration was rationalized, and the army reserves (or [[Landwehr]]) wa
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  • ...on uniform. There may also be designation of honor, such as membership in military orders, which may themselves have their own insignia. There is a military custom of evaluating another soldiers by examining their award insignia. If
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  • {{r|Military Revolutionary Council}}
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  • A document that certifies the ultimate recipient of military or [[dual-use]] goods being sold, and attests to compliance with all releva
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  • ...at suppressed a 1960 coup against [[Ngo Dinh Diem]], participated in the [[Military Revolutionary Council]] (MRC) coup of November 1963, and then participating
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  • {{rpl|Train (military)}}
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  • One of the many military and commercial variants of the [[DC-3 (airliner)]], this was the designatio
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  • {{rpl|Ram (military)}}
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  • '''Lieutenant colonel''', abbreviated '''LTC''' in NATO usage, is a military rank, in the middle of the "field grade" system that divides officers into | title = NATO codes for grades of military personnel: Agreed English texts
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  • ...[[maritime patrol aircraft]], and has been adapted for a variety of other military applications, such as the "Wedgetail 737" airborne warning and control syst ==Military variants==
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  • A U.S. military satellite earth station and individual user access facility, carried on a [
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  • ...urisdiction of any U.S. civil court, were purely under the jurisdiction of military law and had no access to the U.S. judicial system
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  • ...t; [[major general]], [[U.S. Army]], retired; Council on Foreign Relations military fellow (2000-2001)
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  • ...nt but was interned; sentenced to life imprisonment by the [[International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)]] and died in [[Spandau Prison]]
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