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  • A '''navy''' is a military organization with the principal mission of fighting from, ...ns they can conduct, and the types of ships and weapons they employ; see [[Navy/Related Articles]] for a detailed list.
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Navy]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Navy]]
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  • {{Image|Navy Grog.jpg|right|200px|A Navy Grog with a Don the Beachcomber-type snow cone of shaved ice.}} ...customer. Reportedly, [[Phil Spector]] consumed at least two Trader Vic’s Navy Grogs at the Beverly Hilton restaurant, without eating any food, the night
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Navy SEAL]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Navy Grog]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Royal Navy]]
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  • The merchant navy (''marine marchande'' in French, ''Handelsmarine'' in German) does the tran ...In the past, one's nation navy was not that specialised, and there was no navy permanently dedicated to war or defense.
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  • The '''Royal Navy''' is the official name of the [[United Kingdom]]'s [[navy]]. Its history goes back hundreds of years. To most people today, England a | title = To Rule the Waves: How the British Navy shaped the Modern World
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Navy]]
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  • ...[[Canada]]'s [[Navy]]. Founded in 1910, the [[United Kingdom]]'s [[Royal Navy]] provided a few vessels, and some officers, to help guide the new service. The Royal Canadian Navy was small during the interwar years, but rapidly expanded during [[World Wa
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  • By long naval tradition, when there is no qualifier but "Royal", the navy being discussed is that of the United Kingdom.
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  • [[Image:US_Navy_Seal.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Seal of the United States Navy]] ...n and maintaining freedom of the seas."<ref name="Navy Mission">http://www.navy.mil/navydata/organization/org-top.asp</ref></blockquote>
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Navy SEAL]]
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  • The [[United States Navy]], for both maintenance and increasing its capability, annually '''procures ...hter]]s.<ref> [http://www.news.navy.mil/search/display.asp?story_id=28095 Navy News Service, "DoN Budget Request for FY08 Addresses Near and Long-term Nee
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Navy SEAL]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Navy/Catalogs]]
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  • {{r|Royal Navy}} {{r|United States Navy}}
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  • |name= Don the Beachcomber's Navy Grog
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  • ...in 1869, to its [[World War II]] defeat in 1945, the '''Imperial Japanese Navy''' (''Nihon Kaigun'') was the branch of the Japanese military responsible f ...th the only check on them being the attitudes of Emperor [[Hirohito]]. The Navy opposed the [[1930 London Naval Treaty]], but Hirohito had his chief aide,
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  • | title = To rule the waves : how the British Navy shaped the modern world | title = The Oxford illustrated history of the Royal Navy
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Navy/Gallery]]
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  • ...SEALs''' are a [[special operations]] organization of the [[United States Navy]], reporting to the [[Naval Special Warfare Command]], part of the [[United ...form a standard SEAL Team, headed by a [[commander (naval)|commander, U.S. Navy]].
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Merchant navy]]. Needs checking by a human.
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  • ...artment of the Navy may not conflict with, alter or amend any provision of Navy Regulations. Navy Regulations are issued by the [[Secretary of the Navy]] (SECNAV), and are permanent regulations of general applicability, as oppo
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Royal Navy]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Navy}}
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  • [[U.S. Navy/Catalogs/Ship Classes]] [[U.S. Navy/Catalogs/Aircraft types]]
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  • Canada's navy, founded in 1910
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  • * Baer, George W. ''One Hundred Years of Sea Power: The U.S. Navy, 1890-1990'' (1994), 553pp * Coletta, Paolo E., ed. ''American Secretaries of the Navy'' (2 vol 1980) 1028 pp; essays by scholars on each secretary down to 1972
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  • Budgeting, Congressional appropriations, and contracting by the U.S. Navy for goods and services
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Navy SEAL]]
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  • (British) [[Royal Navy]] [[jargon]] for [[chocolate]]; the chocolate need not contain [[nut (botan
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  • |US Navy container.jpg|US Navy container
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  • #REDIRECT [[Secretary of the Navy (U.S.)]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Navy/Catalogs/Electronics]]
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Navy Grog]]. Needs checking by a human.
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Navy/Catalogs/Weapons]]
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  • #redirect [[Secretary of the Navy (U.S.)]]
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  • *[http://www.royal-navy.org/ The Institute of Naval History]
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Navy/Related Articles]]
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  • {{r|Navy Ministry (Japan)}}
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Navy/Catalogs/Aircraft types]]
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  • ...er]sea-air-land [[special operations]] organization of the [[United States Navy]], specializing in direct action, [[special reconnaissance]], [[combat sear
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  • ...ee currently have control over the operating forces of the [[United States Navy]] or [[United States Marine Corps]]. ...irs. As a result of the [[National Security Act of 1947]], as amended, the Navy department was merged into the "National Military Establishment," which was
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  • principal regulatory document of the [[U.S. Department of the Navy]], endowed with the sanction of administrative law, as to duty, responsibil
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  • #REDIRECT [[Department of the Navy (United States)]]
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  • {{r|Department of the Navy (United States)}} {{r|Secretary of the Navy (U.S.)}}
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  • {{r|Royal Navy}}
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  • ...coast and moved the British army from point to point at will. The American Navy's role was to attack British shipping, while avoiding direct combat. The [[United States Marine Corps]] was formed to support the Navy. The Navy was briefly out of service after the Revolution, but the needs of trade pro
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  • {{subgroup|United States Navy|Military|History}}
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  • ...istant Secretary of Defense]] rank, who heads the [[U.S. Department of the Navy]] and to whom the [[Chief of Naval Operations]] and the Commandant of the M
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  • During the Cold War, the U.S. Navy went through numerous renamings of cruiser-like ship types, eventually stab
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  • ...ee currently have control over the operating forces of the [[United States Navy]] or [[United States Marine Corps]]. ...War. As a result of the [[National Security Act of 1947]], as amended, the Navy department was merged into the "National Military Establishment," which was
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  • #REDIRECT [[Secretary of the Navy (U.S.)]]
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  • Donald C. Winter is the 74th Secretary of the Navy, sworn into office on Jan. 3, 2006. Prior to joining the Department, he was [[Image:SecNavDonald Winter.jpg|left|thumb|Donald C. Winter, Secretary of the Navy]]
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/United States Navy Regulations]]. Needs checking by a human.
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  • History of operations of the [[United States Navy]], 1775 to the present
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  • * Coletta, Paolo Enrico, ed. ''American Secretaries of the Navy'' (2 vol 1980) 1028 pp; essays on each secretary down to 1972
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  • ...hives Branch, Naval Historical Center, Washington, D.C. http://www.history.navy.mil/ar/lima/lehman.htm *[http://www.news.navy.mil/search/display.asp?story_id=28095 Navy News Service, "DoN Budget Request for FY08 Addresses Near and Long-term Nee
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  • {{r|U.S. Department of the Navy||**}} {{r|United States Navy}}
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  • {{r|United States Navy}}
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Department of the Navy (United States)]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|United States Navy}}
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Page text matches

  • ...0-page memo in 2004 to the Navy's Inspector General advocating against the Navy allowing itself to become involved in torture.
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  • ...ith a posthumous [[Navy Cross]] for heroism at [[Guadalcanal]]; three U.S. Navy ships have been named for him
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  • ...tions by the [[Royal Navy]], [[French Navy]] and fledgling [[United States Navy]] during the [[American Revolution]], along with minor participation by oth
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  • [[U.S. Navy/Catalogs/Ship Classes]] [[U.S. Navy/Catalogs/Aircraft types]]
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  • ...Navy's QDR Integration Group; [[Captain (naval)|Captain]], [[United States Navy]], retired; commander, Submarine Squadron 3; former CO, USS Santa Fe (SSN-7
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  • ...Fleet]] 1936-1937; briefly Prime Minister in 1940; [[Navy Minister (Japan)|Navy Minister]] and associated with peace faction July 1944 to surrender
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  • Atjeh-class unprotected cruiser of the [[Royal Netherlands Navy|Dutch Navy]]
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  • (OKM) Highest-level headquarters of the navy (i.e., Navy) under the [[Third Reich]]
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  • ...ntelligence specialist on Russia, who opposed war with the U.S. but became Navy Minister in 1944-1945
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  • ...A naval aviator, World War II flying ace, and founder of the United States Navy's flight demonstration squadron, the "Blue Angels."
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  • A major defeat of the Japanese Navy in [[World War II]] by the U. S. Navy in June 1944.
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  • [[Admiral], [[United States Navy]], retired; Former Commander in Chief, U.S. Navy Forces Europe and NATO [[Allied Forces Southern Europe]]; adviser, Center f
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  • ...er and slower [[SBD Dauntless]]; effective but not especially popular with Navy crews; used as Air Force [[A-25 Shrike]]
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  • ...792) Officer in the Continental Navy, known as the "Father of the American Navy."
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  • ...3) [[Imperial Japanese Navy]] officer, who created the Naval Staff and was Navy Minister during the [[Russo-Japanese War]]; twice [[Prime Minister of Japan
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  • ...nth Fleet]], [[Southwest Pacific Area]] ("[[Douglas MacArthur|"MacArthur's Navy"]]) in the [[Second World War]]
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  • ...Naval Research]], [[U.S. Department of the Navy]] (2000 – 2006); Director, Navy Y2K Office (1999-2000)
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  • ...t base for the E-3 Sentry, [[C-135]] series, [[B-52]] and [[B-1]], and the Navy's E-6 TACAMO
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  • ...anese surrender was signed; last class of battleships that operated in any navy. She is now a museum ship in [[Pearl Harbor]], [[Hawaii (U.S. state)]].
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  • ...tions group, comprising 15 ships with several attached [[U.S. Marine]] and Navy units, commanded by [[RADM]] [[Michelle Howard]] and operating in the [[Uni
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  • ...or officers of the [[Imperial Japanese Army]] and [[Imperial Japanese Navy|Navy]]; trials gave light sentences
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  • ...class of [[battleship]]s deployed by any navy; these were [[United States Navy]] vessels launched during WWII and played a role in [[anti-air warfare]] an
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  • ...ces ([[Oberkommando der Wehrmacht]]), including the Army ([[Heer]]), Navy (navy) and Air Force ([[Luftwaffe]])
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  • ...ired from the U.S. Navy in the 1990s and retired from the Royal Australian Navy in 2001; replaced by the [[Burke-class]]
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  • ...epartment at Naval War College; Deputy Director for Strategy and Policy at Navy Staff;; Council on Foreign Relations military fellow 2006-2007
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  • ...ced by [[Shigetaro Shigimada]]; became [[Chief of Staff (Imperial Japanese Navy)]] in 1944
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  • ...mmanding officer, [[USS Milius (DDG-69)|''USS Milius'' (DDG-69)]]; entered Navy as enlisted electronics technician
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  • ...rmed Forces (Oberkommando der Wehrmacht), including the Army (Heer), Navy (navy) and Air Force (Luftwaffe).
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  • ===Japanese Navy=== ===U.S. Navy===
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  • ...but never modernized and did not return to first-line service; struck from Navy List in 1964
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  • ...hives Branch, Naval Historical Center, Washington, D.C. http://www.history.navy.mil/ar/lima/lehman.htm *[http://www.news.navy.mil/search/display.asp?story_id=28095 Navy News Service, "DoN Budget Request for FY08 Addresses Near and Long-term Nee
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  • {{r|Imperial Japanese Navy}} {{r|Royal Navy}}
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  • {{r|Department of the Navy (United States)}} {{r|Secretary of the Navy (U.S.)}}
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  • ...n the Bureau of Naval Personnel, Chief of Naval Personnel, and Director of Navy Staff
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  • *[http://www.sublant.navy.mil/VirginiaClass.htm Virginia class submarine page, from Submarine Force A ...vyleague.org/seapower/aip_alternative.htm Air-independent propulsion, from Navy League of the U.S.]
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  • ...artment of the Navy may not conflict with, alter or amend any provision of Navy Regulations. Navy Regulations are issued by the [[Secretary of the Navy]] (SECNAV), and are permanent regulations of general applicability, as oppo
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  • ==U.S. Navy== ...a tour of duty at sea on the battleship [[USS Oklahoma]], then back to the Navy dirigible service, and finally to sea as executive officer of the battleshi
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  • *[http://www.blueangels.navy.mil/ Explore the Navy: Blue Angels] official website. *[http://www.blueangels.org/FBlue.htm U.S. Navy Blue Angels Alumni Association] official website.
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  • The merchant navy (''marine marchande'' in French, ''Handelsmarine'' in German) does the tran ...In the past, one's nation navy was not that specialised, and there was no navy permanently dedicated to war or defense.
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  • *Navy: [http://www.npc.navy.mil/CommandSupport/CasualtyAssistance/ Navy Casualty Assistance]
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  • ...S Akron (ZRS-4)''' was a [[rigid airship]] operated by the [[United States Navy]] during the 1930's. [[Admiral Moffett]], then the most ardent proponent of airships in the US Navy was onboard and was killed.
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  • ...her was [[John McCain Sr.]] (the only father-son four-star admirals in the Navy); submarine officer in [[World War II]]; commander-in-chief of the Pacific
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  • ...oined the [[United States Navy]] in the First World War, spent a career in Navy meteorology (called aerology at the time), and then retired to become the l
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  • ...t]], which is actually the umbrella term for all of the Heer (army), navy (navy), and [[Luftwaffe]] (air force) combined.
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  • ...of life of any single-ship disaster in the history of the [[United States Navy]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Royal Navy]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Navy Grog]]
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  • ...]], of this class, sunk with greatest single-ship loss of life in the U.S. Navy
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  • {{r|Imperial Japanese Navy}} {{r|Navy Ministry (Japan)}}
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  • {{r|United States Navy}} {{r|Secretary of the Navy}}
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  • *[http://www.nwc.navy.mil/press/Review/1998/autumn/art5-a98.htm ''The Union Navy's Blockade Reconsidered'']
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Navy SEAL]]
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  • Small Senegalese Navy vessel
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Navy/Catalogs]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Navy SEAL]]
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  • ...//www.royalnavy.mod.uk/history/ships/hms-furious-1917/ HMS Glorious, Royal Navy page]
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  • #redirect [[Secretary of the Navy (U.S.)]]
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  • {{subgroup|United States Navy|Military|History}}
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Navy/Catalogs/Electronics]]
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  • [[Swedish Navy]] [[corvette]] with [[stealth]] features
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Navy/Catalogs/Weapons]]
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  • ...ee currently have control over the operating forces of the [[United States Navy]] or [[United States Marine Corps]]. ...War. As a result of the [[National Security Act of 1947]], as amended, the Navy department was merged into the "National Military Establishment," which was
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  • #REDIRECT [[United States Navy/Catalogs/Aircraft types]]
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  • .../operations-and-support/submarine-service/ballistic-submarines-ssbn/ Royal Navy] page on Vanguard-class
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  • An experimental United States Navy vessel.
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  • Tugboat of the [[South African Navy]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Department of the Navy (United States)]]
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  • The first of four United States Navy rigid airships.
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  • U.S. Navy [[Andromeda-class]] [[attack cargo ship]]
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  • A Royal Navy officer and Pacific explorer.
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  • U.S. Navy WWII [[Tolland-class]] [[attack cargo ship]]
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  • U.S. Navy WWII [[Artemis-class]] [[attack cargo ship]]
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  • U.S. Navy WWII [[Arcturus-class]] [[attack cargo ship]]
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  • [[Royal Navy]] 106-gun first-rate launched in 1820
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  • U.S. Navy WWII [[Artemis-class]] [[attack cargo ship]]
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  • U.S. Navy WWII [[Tolland-class]] [[attack cargo ship]]
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  • U.S. Navy WWII [[Artemis-class]] [[attack cargo ship]]
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  • {{r|Department of the Navy (United States)}} {{r|Secretary of the Navy (U.S.)}}
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  • [[Image:USN C-40A Clipper.jpg|thumb|[[United States Navy]] [[C-40A]] -- a derivative of the [[Boeing 737]].]] | title=Boeing Delivers Ninth C-40A Aircraft to U. S. Navy
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  • Sail training ship operated by the Royal Australian Navy
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  • U.S. Navy shipboard [[CLASSIC OUTBOARD]] electronic detection finding system
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  • [[Royal Navy]] WWII [[Battle-class]] [[destroyer]] launched in 1944
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  • First nuclear-propelled [[aircraft carrier]] of the [[United States Navy]]
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  • ...ply Depot Oakland''' was a supply facility operated by the [[United States Navy]] in [[Oakland, California]]. During [[World War II]], it was a major sourc ...strial Supply Center Oakland'''. During the [[Cold War]] it was one of the Navy's most important supply facilities.
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  • {{r|United States Navy}} {{r|Navy Staff}}
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  • [[United States Navy]] missile-armed [[destroyer]] of the [[Adams-class]]
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  • [[Trafalgar-class battleship]] launched in 1887 by the [[Royal Navy]
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  • A ''Schlachtschiff'' (battleship) of the navy in [[World War II]].
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  • an Arcturus-class attack cargo ship of the U.S. Navy
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  • An obsolete class of [[United States Navy]] amphibious warfare cargo ships.
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  • [[Forrestal-class]] U.S. Navy [[aircraft carrier]], in service 1957-1998
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  • *[http://www.navy.mil/navydata/fact_display.asp?cid=1200&tid=800&ct=1 Navy Data Fact Sheet] *[http://www.navair.navy.mil/v22/?fuseaction=aircraft.main NAVAIR]
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  • Warship specially configured to carry ammunition, usually for Navy ships and aircraft.
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  • Modern [[Navy|Navies]] all use similar schema of command and seniority.
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  • Town-class light [[cruiser]] of the [[Royal Navy]]; served 1937-1964
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>A [[United States Navy]] [[light cruiser]] that served in [[World War II]]
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  • A ''Panzerschiff'' (heavily armed cruiser) of the navy in [[World War II]].
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  • U.S. Navy WWII and Korean War [[Andromeda-class]] [[attack cargo ship]]
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  • {{r|Navy}} {{r|Royal Navy}}
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  • ! Navy and Marines | [[Navy Cross]]
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  • ...erations, the [[Oklahoma City Air Logistics Center]], and a critical joint Navy-Air Force strategic communications task force. The base is "owned" by the [ ...enter for the E-3 Sentry, [[C-135]] series, [[B-52]] and [[B-1]], and the Navy's E-6 TACAMO
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  • [[Fleet Admiral]], [[United States Navy]], [[Chief of Naval Operations]] during the [[Second World War]]
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  • Trustee, [[Regent University]]; Admiral, [[United States Navy]], retired; [[Chief of Naval Operations]]
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  • A [[United States Navy]] [[destroyer]] of the [[Burke-class]], Flight IIA version
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  • First [[Royal Navy]] [[attack submarine]] of the [[Trafalgar-class]]; launched 1981; decommiss
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  • [[Fighter aircraft]] deployed by the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]] in [[World War II]].
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  • ...the Cabinet, as Navy Minister, between July 1944 and December 1945, as the Navy was crushed. ...gned Rear Admiral [[Sokichi Takagi‎]] to a broad-ranging staff post in the Navy Ministry, not dealing with the lessons of battle but how to extricate Japan
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  • ...ime Minister of Japan]]. He is often considered the father of the Imperial Navy as a modern force. Prime Minister Admiral Yamamoto was not related to Admir ...ommand, he naval posts such as chief officer of the Navy Ministry and vice navy minister in the Imperial Headquarters. In 1893, he created a Naval Staff, i
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  • a Suffolk County class LST that served in the U.S. Navy from 1956 to 1972
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>U.S. Navy family of low-frequency analysis and recording (LOFAR) passive [[sonobuoy]]
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  • Imperial Japanese Navy battleships which were the last class of capital ships not built in Japan i
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  • ...ly, the United States had a separate Secretary of War and Secretary of the Navy, heading separate cabinet-level departments. ...ted the Office of the Secretary of Defense, moved the heads of the War and Navy Departments to rank equivalent to Assistant Secretary of Defense, and creat
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  • ...ly optimized for [[anti-submarine warfare]], in service with the [[Russian Navy]]
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  • [[Landing Ship Tank]] of the [[Singapore Navy]], operating with [[Task Force 151]] in April 2009
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  • Experimental midget [[submarine]] used for U.S. Navy research into the threat of such underwater vehicles, 1955-1973
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  • Competent but not outstanding [[United States Navy]] [[carrier-capable]] fighter of the [[Second World War]]
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  • {{rpl|USS Independence (1776 brig)}} Brig of Massachusetts State Navy; captured by British in 1777 ...SS Independence (1814)}} First [[ship of the line]] in the [[United States Navy]]
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  • * [[USS Montgomery|USS ''Montgomery'']], several US Navy ships ...Montgomery County (LST-1041)|USS ''Montgomery County'' (LST-1041)]], a US Navy Landing Ship, Tank
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  • An obsolete class of [[United States Navy]] [[attack cargo ship]]s, primarily for the Second World War
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  • Land-based, twin-engine Japanese Navy bomber with good performance and armament, but poor survivability when hit
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  • ...ecording (DIFAR) passive [[sonobuoy]] family built for the [[United States Navy]]
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  • The naval aviation component of the [[Royal Navy]]
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  • The former home of the U.S. Navy SeaBees.
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  • == US Navy & US Coast Guard Officer Ranks == 10. Admiral of the (Navy or Coast Guard) <br />
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  • ...de>A type of [[Submarine|submarine]] currently in service with the [[Royal Navy]]
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  • [[United States Navy]] nuclear-powered [[attack submarine]] of the [[Sturgeon-class]], who serve
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  • ...organization for [[signals intelligence]] in the [[Second World War]]; its Navy counterpart was [[OP-20G]]
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  • ...is knowledge of naval warfare, and when the position of Comptroller of the Navy seemed to be about to become vacant, wrote that he thought him "the ablest
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  • ...e>A type of British [[Submarine|attack submarine]] operated by the [[Royal Navy]].
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  • ...admiral (1841-1920), considered the creator of the industrialized [[Royal Navy]]
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  • (British) [[Royal Navy]] [[jargon]] for [[chocolate]]; the chocolate need not contain [[nut (botan
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  • [[United States Navy]] [[battleship]] of the [[Iowa-class]]; served in [[Vietnam War]] and 1983-
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  • U.S. Navy [[vice admiral]] who commanded Service Force Pacific, the [[underway replen
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  • The 74th Secretary of the U.S. Navy, sworn into office on Jan. 3, 2006.
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  • ...ontrol links, stability and buoyancy links: http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/navy/docs/swos/dca/index.html
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  • Budgeting, Congressional appropriations, and contracting by the U.S. Navy for goods and services
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  • ''navy Schiff'', the prefix for the names of German warships in World War II.
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  • In the [[United States Navy]], the group of ships centered around a large [[aircraft carrier]]
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  • ...newest [[Burke-class]] [[destroyer]] commissioned into the [[United States Navy]]
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  • Awarded by the [[United States Navy]] to ships or units that demonstrate high battle readiness over a year-lon
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Among the earliest purpose-built [[Royal Navy]] ships, ordered by King [[Henry VIII]]; preserved, as a wreck, in Portsmou
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  • undergraduate college of the [[United States Navy]], accepting two senator-selected freshmen annually from each U.S. state; l
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  • [[United States Navy]] version of the [[V-22 Osprey]] tilt-rotor aircraft, principally intended
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  • ...ses, originating in the Caribbean and having a historic association with [[navy|navies]]
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  • With the Allied nickname "Kate", an [[Imperial Japanese Navy]] [[torpedo bomber]], also used for high-level horizontal bombing from [[ai
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  • Admiral, [[United States Navy]], retired, [[Director of Central Intelligence]], 1977-1981; [[Diplomats an
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  • A component of the U.S. [[Navy Expeditionary Combat Command]] formed to provide integrated at-sea and coas
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  • {{r|Royal Navy||**}} {{r|German Navy||**}}
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  • ...Keisuke''; January 20, 1868 – October 7, 1952) was an [[Imperial Japanese Navy]] officer and [[Prime Minister of Japan]] from 1934 to 1936, wounded in the ...-in-chief of the Combined Fleet in 1924. In 1927, he assumed the office of navy minister in the [[Giichi Tanaka ]] cabinet, but in 1929 resigned from that
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  • ...ng in programming languages and interoperability; rear admiral in the U.S. Navy
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  • ...[mine warfare|mine countermeasures]] vessels built for the [[United States Navy]]
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  • ...ial airliner, a utility [[transport aircraft]] used by the [[United States Navy]]
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  • ...s, with armament similar to the [[Belknap-class]] but nuclear powered U.S. Navy [[cruiser]]
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  • Business Development Analyst, Principal at Lockheed Martin; Captain, U.S. Navy, retired; Military Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations, 2001-2002
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  • * Coletta, Paolo Enrico, ed. ''American Secretaries of the Navy'' (2 vol 1980) 1028 pp; essays on each secretary down to 1972
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  • Admiral, retired, [[United States Navy]], successor to [[Hyman Rickover]] as Director of Naval Reactors; advisor,
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  • A [[United States Navy]] [[Landing Platform Helicopter]] homeported at [[San Diego, California]];
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  • ...rst class of [[fleet ballistic missile submarine]]s in the [[United States Navy]], now all decommisioned.
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  • U.S. Navy rigid airship that was built in 1923-1924 by the Zeppelin factory in Friedr
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Main class, in the [[United States Navy]], of large [[aircraft carrier]]s with [[nuclear power|nuclear propulsion]]
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  • ...x was used for ships operated by the [[Canadian government]], that weren't Navy ships, no longer in use
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  • [[Vice admiral]] of the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]], respected by both sides for getting the best possible results in extreme
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  • Admiral, [[United States Navy]]; a gunnery specialist best known as the victorious commander at the [[Bat
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  • [[Royal Navy]] 74-gun [[ship of the line]], retired from sea duty in 1818 and scrapped i
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  • The '''Yangtze Patrol''' was part of the [[United States Navy|US Navy]]'s [[Asiatic Squadron]].<ref name=KempTolley> | title=Yangtze Patrol: The U.S. Navy in China
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  • The closing of Confederate ports by the Union Navy 1861-1865, during the American Civil War.
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  • ...] of the [[Ticonderoga (carrier)-class]]; after major overhaul, first U.S. Navy carrier with an [[angled deck]]
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  • A Danish Navy "flexible combat ship", combining light [[destroyer]] armament with cargo o
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  • ...form fishery patrols, in 1904, she was transferred to the [[Royal Canadian Navy]] during [[World War I]]
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  • Two-ship class of U.S. Navy [[light cruiser]]s, derived from the [[Cleveland-class]] with better supers
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  • The largest [[amphibious warfare]] ships in the [[United States Navy]], which carry a Marine Expeditionary Unit and supporting aircraft
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  • The first [[Royal Navy]] steam-propelled, [[armored warship]], a revolutionary advance in technolo
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Destroyer]] of the [[Royal Navy]]'s [[Type 42-class]], sunk by an [[Exocet]] missile in the [[Falklands War
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  • ...et oilers built during [[World War II]] for service in the [[United States Navy]].
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  • A two-ship U.S. Navy destroyer class, built during the 1930s to experiment with a new high-speed
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  • ...ee currently have control over the operating forces of the [[United States Navy]] or [[United States Marine Corps]]. ...irs. As a result of the [[National Security Act of 1947]], as amended, the Navy department was merged into the "National Military Establishment," which was
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  • ...vers a very wide range of ship types, with the definition dependent on the navy and time. ==Royal Navy==
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  • ...s, the first operational ship-borne [[surface-to-air missile]] of the U.S. Navy
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  • ...006 as a [[vice admiral]]. MacDonald's last job in the military was as the Navy's top lawyer. [[Carol Rosenberg]] reported he had repeatedly testified at C MacDonald joined the Navy in 1978.<ref name=McClatchy-2010-03-25/>
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  • ...any variants, the Army and Air Force ones being special operations but the Navy versions fill general helicopter roles
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  • [[Royal Navy]] 65,000 ton [[aircraft carrier]] of the [[Queen Elizabeth (carrier)-class]
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  • ...who established the [[United States Naval Academy]] as [[Secretary of the Navy]] in 1845.
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  • *[http://www.fas.org/man/dod-101/navy/docs/es310/warheads/Warheads.htm U.S. Navy ES101 course on weapons engineering, Chapter 31, Warheads] strong discussio
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  • U.S. Navy version of the [[V-22 Osprey]]; missions include [[combat search and rescue
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  • History of operations of the [[United States Navy]], 1775 to the present
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  • [[Vice admiral]], [[United States Navy]], commanding [[Third United States Fleet]] since June 2009
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  • Effectively, the current Japanese [[navy]], with a name consistent with the Japanese constitutional prohibition agai
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  • ...een director of the [[Defense Nuclear Agency]] (1977-1980) and Director of Navy Research, Development, Test and Evaluation (RDT&E) (1980-1983); he then spe
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  • ==United States Navy==
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  • ...ulture that regarded its military highly, the Army and [[Imperial Japanese Navy]] gained increasing political power from 1900 onwards. The Army tended to ...be a serving general nominated by the Army, giving it, and comparably the Navy, veto power over forming a government.
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  • ...imission patrol frigate" of [[destroyer]] size, assigned by the [[Canadian Navy]] to marine interdiction in the Persian Gulf
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  • Flight I [[Burke-class]] destroyer of the [[United States Navy]], named for Rear Admiral [[Grace Murray Hopper]]; nicknamed "Amazing Grace
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  • Admiral, [[United States Navy]] and [[Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff]], retired; advisor, [[Jewish
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  • Distinguished officer of the [[Royal Navy]] during the [[Napoleonic Wars]], who set a standard for both real-world an
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  • A [[United States Navy]] [[amphibious assault ship]], homeported in [[San Diego, California]]; fla
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  • ...[[Guadalcanal Campaign]], among the worst defeats for the [[United States Navy]], which lost four cruisers
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  • A retired officer in the [[United States Navy]], appointed the third [[Convening authority]] for the [[Office of Military
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  • Admiral, [[United States Navy]], and Commander, [[United States Pacific Command]] as of 27 March 2007
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  • in the United States Navy, one commissioned ship and one commissioned submarine; see [[Wikipedia:USS
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  • Admiral, [[Imperial Japanese Navy]]; [[Commander-in-Chief, Combined Fleet]] March 1943-May 1944 (died in airc
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  • An American warship that fought against elements of the Royal Navy on Lake Erie during the War of 1812.
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  • A class of [[attack cargo ship]]s of the [[United States Navy]], primarily in the Second World War
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  • Largest naval base in the world, a [[United States Navy]] facility in the [[Norfolk, Virginia]] area
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Royal Netherlands Navy|Dutch]] Admiralen-class [[destroyer]], renamed ''HNLMS Van Ghent'' to make
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  • ...wn as SEAL Team 6, a specialized and highly secret unit of [[United States Navy SEAL]]s, within the [[Joint Special Operations Command]]
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  • First World War attack by the German Navy on English seaports on the morning of 16th December 1914.
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  • By long naval tradition, when there is no qualifier but "Royal", the navy being discussed is that of the United Kingdom.
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  • [[United States Navy]] [[Burke-class]] destroyer, part of the [[United States Pacific Command]],
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  • ...etts Maritime Academy]]; [[rear admiral]], [[U.S. Maritime Service]]; U.S. Navy [[P-3 Orion]] instructor pilot
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  • ...USS Wakefield (AP-21) which was a troop transport that served with the US Navy during World War II.
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  • [[Imperial Japanese Navy]] raid on United States' naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, which took pla
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  • ...hip class of [[aircraft carrier]]s, the first built by the [[United States Navy]] for operations rather than experimentation; converted from cancelled [[ba
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  • ...ary rank used in many navies for officers whose position exceeds that of a navy captain, but is less than that of a rear admiral.
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  • {{r|Navy}} {{r|United States Navy}}
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