Combined arms: Difference between revisions

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'''Combined arms''' military actions are operations that involve the coordinated actions of different branches of types of ground troops (e.g., infantry, tanks, artillery), or multiple branches of service (e.g., Army, Marines, Navy, Air Force). Traditionally, a staff that dealt with multiple types of ground troops had "G" prefixes for its sections, while a staff that dealt with multiservice operations had "J" for "joint" branches.
'''Combined arms''' military actions (or '''combined arms warfare''') are, most generally, operations that involve the coordinated actions of different branches of types of ground troops (e.g., infantry, tanks, artillery). [[Joint warfare]], in contrast, involves the coordinated actions of services other than the ground arm, such as [[navy]], [[air force]] (other than air elements under direct army control) and [[special operations]]. [[Coalition warfare]] goes a step farther, in involving different arms of different countries, under a common command.


It is  a subset of:
In the [[Second World War]], the British term was "combined operations". German ''blitzkrieg'' worked at two levels: the high-speed breakthrough by coordinated tanks, motorized infantry, artillery, and [[close air support]]; followed by securing the flanks by conventional infantry. These German and British techniques were not fully joint, in that the strategic air forces operated independently, and indeed, the U.S. and British strategic bombing generals might complain bitterly if they were asked to carry out a mission for another service, such as the [[mine (naval warfare)|mining of Japanese waters]] or using heavy bombers in close support of an invasion or breakout.
{{r|Joint warfare}}
{{r|Coalition warfare}}


In the [[Second World War]], the British term was "combined operations". German ''blitzkrieg'' worked at two levels: the high-speed breakthrough by coordinated tanks, motorized infantry, artillery, and [[close air support]]; followed by securing the flanks by conventional infantry.
Traditionally, a staff that dealt with multiple types of ground troops had "G" prefixes for its sections, while a staff that dealt with multiservice operations had "J" for "joint" branches. While the term has been used to describe multinational operations, those are more commonly called "coalition" operations; a staff integrating multiple countries has "C" sections.
 
While the term has been used to describe multinational operations, those are more commonly called "coalition" operations; a staff integrating multiple countries has "C" sections.

Revision as of 10:28, 25 June 2009

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Combined arms military actions (or combined arms warfare) are, most generally, operations that involve the coordinated actions of different branches of types of ground troops (e.g., infantry, tanks, artillery). Joint warfare, in contrast, involves the coordinated actions of services other than the ground arm, such as navy, air force (other than air elements under direct army control) and special operations. Coalition warfare goes a step farther, in involving different arms of different countries, under a common command.

In the Second World War, the British term was "combined operations". German blitzkrieg worked at two levels: the high-speed breakthrough by coordinated tanks, motorized infantry, artillery, and close air support; followed by securing the flanks by conventional infantry. These German and British techniques were not fully joint, in that the strategic air forces operated independently, and indeed, the U.S. and British strategic bombing generals might complain bitterly if they were asked to carry out a mission for another service, such as the mining of Japanese waters or using heavy bombers in close support of an invasion or breakout.

Traditionally, a staff that dealt with multiple types of ground troops had "G" prefixes for its sections, while a staff that dealt with multiservice operations had "J" for "joint" branches. While the term has been used to describe multinational operations, those are more commonly called "coalition" operations; a staff integrating multiple countries has "C" sections.