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  • 24 bytes (3 words) - 13:28, 16 July 2008
  • #REDIRECT [[Vice admiral]]
    26 bytes (3 words) - 20:21, 19 December 2009
  • #REDIRECT [[Admiral Lee (disambiguation)]]
    42 bytes (4 words) - 20:13, 23 September 2008
  • #REDIRECT [[Rear admiral]]
    26 bytes (3 words) - 16:13, 20 December 2009
  • ...-to-lowest [[military rank]] of admiral in Naval service, the term '''rear admiral''' derives from the position commanding the rear squadron in a fleet action [[Vice admiral]] is the next higher rank. Depending on the navy involved, the next lower r
    2 KB (268 words) - 17:29, 17 March 2024
  • #REDIRECT Admiral
    17 bytes (2 words) - 17:28, 17 March 2024
  • ...nd-highest [[military rank]] of admiral in Naval service, the term '''vice admiral''' derives from the position commanding the forward, or van, squadron in a
    1 KB (175 words) - 17:29, 17 March 2024
  • 47 bytes (7 words) - 20:13, 23 September 2008
  • The lowest or next-to-lowest [[military rank]] of admiral in Naval service
    110 bytes (14 words) - 17:29, 17 March 2024
  • 25 bytes (2 words) - 14:46, 16 April 2011
  • Sir '''William Penn''' (1621 - 1670) rose to the rank of Admiral under the English Commonwealth, but was dismissed from command by [[Oliver
    626 bytes (101 words) - 16:49, 25 November 2013
  • Usually the second-highest [[military rank]] of admiral in Naval service, often called "three-star", equivalent to ground/air force
    190 bytes (23 words) - 17:28, 17 March 2024
  • An exceptionally high grade of admiral, assigned to the four most senior admirals of the [[United States Navy]] in
    271 bytes (42 words) - 17:29, 17 March 2024
  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Sir William Penn rose to the rank of Admiral under the English Commonwealth, and retained it under Charles II, also serv
    176 bytes (28 words) - 16:50, 22 January 2013
  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Vice admiral]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Admiral}}
    845 bytes (117 words) - 13:52, 6 April 2024
  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Rear admiral]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Vice admiral}}
    819 bytes (111 words) - 19:55, 11 January 2010
  • ...v DVM 10 Bild-23-63-06, Panzerschiff "Admiral Graf Spee".jpg|thumb|500px|''Admiral Graf Spee'' in 1936]] '''KMS<ref>KMS = navy Schiff</ref> ''Admiral Graf Spee''''' was a German ''Panzerschiff'' (heavy armed cruiser) that was
    4 KB (567 words) - 09:26, 5 April 2024
  • 75 bytes (12 words) - 09:26, 5 April 2024
  • #REDIRECT [[KMS Admiral Graf Spee/Definition]]
    46 bytes (6 words) - 08:06, 25 July 2023
  • #REDIRECT [[KMS Admiral Graf Spee/Related Articles]]
    52 bytes (7 words) - 08:06, 25 July 2023

Page text matches

  • ...ing [[Fast Carriers Pacific Fleet]] in the [[Second World War]]; father of Admiral [[John McCain Jr.]]
    259 bytes (35 words) - 17:28, 17 March 2024
  • |Statue of Admiral Yi at Busan.jpg| |Statue of Admiral Yi at Seoul.jpg|
    204 bytes (31 words) - 02:01, 30 November 2011
  • [[Vice admiral|Vice Admiral]], [[Imperial Japanese Navy]]; commanded [[First Striking Force (Leyte)]] a
    254 bytes (33 words) - 20:31, 17 June 2010
  • {{r|Admiral}} {{r|Vice admiral}}
    342 bytes (45 words) - 08:39, 23 April 2011
  • Frederick Sherman (1888-1957) was an admiral of the U.S. Navy, who became Commander, [[United States Fifth Fleet]] befor Do not confuse him with Admiral [[Forrest Sherman]], [[Chief of Naval Operations]] (1949-1951).
    398 bytes (59 words) - 15:41, 8 April 2024
  • ...s to be a significant force; operated as a decoy under [[vice admiral|Vice Admiral]] [[Jisaburo Ozawa]]; designated the [[Northern Force (Leyte)]] by the U.S.
    385 bytes (57 words) - 20:36, 17 June 2010
  • U.S. designation for Japanese battleship force, under [[Vice admiral|Vice Admiral]] [[Takeo Kurita]], which, in the [[Battle of Leyte Gulf]], fought in the [
    362 bytes (53 words) - 14:39, 17 June 2010
  • #REDIRECT Admiral
    17 bytes (2 words) - 17:28, 17 March 2024
  • ...lebrating Empire on the Home Front: New York City's Welcome-home Party for Admiral Dewey." ''Prospects'' 2000 25: 391-424. Issn: 0361-2333 * Spector, Ronald. ''Admiral of the New Empire: The Life and Career of George Dewey.'' 1974. 220 pp.
    980 bytes (136 words) - 02:14, 29 October 2013
  • #REDIRECT [[Vice admiral]]
    26 bytes (3 words) - 20:21, 19 December 2009
  • #REDIRECT [[Rear admiral]]
    26 bytes (3 words) - 16:13, 20 December 2009
  • #REDIRECT [[vice admiral]]
    26 bytes (3 words) - 16:50, 12 April 2009
  • #REDIRECT [[rear admiral]]
    26 bytes (3 words) - 16:50, 12 April 2009
  • Principal, [[Chertoff Group]]; retired [[Rear admiral|Rear Admiral]], [[United States Navy]]; Under Secretary for Science and Technology, U.S
    373 bytes (46 words) - 10:06, 10 February 2023
  • #REDIRECT [[Admiral Lee (disambiguation)]]
    42 bytes (4 words) - 20:13, 23 September 2008
  • #REDIRECT [[KMS Admiral Graf Spee/Definition]]
    46 bytes (6 words) - 08:06, 25 July 2023
  • #REDIRECT [[KMS Admiral Graf Spee/Definition]]
    46 bytes (6 words) - 09:18, 25 July 2023
  • #REDIRECT [[KMS Admiral Graf Spee/Related Articles]]
    52 bytes (7 words) - 08:06, 25 July 2023
  • #REDIRECT [[KMS Admiral Graf Spee/Related Articles]]
    52 bytes (7 words) - 09:17, 25 July 2023
  • *general and admiral grades, sometimes called "flag officers" as the rank entitles them to fly a 10. Admiral of the (Navy or Coast Guard) <br />
    1 KB (166 words) - 17:29, 17 March 2024
  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Vice admiral]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Admiral}}
    845 bytes (117 words) - 13:52, 6 April 2024
  • (circa 495-429 BCE) Athenian Statesman, General and Admiral.
    96 bytes (11 words) - 08:34, 3 June 2009
  • U.S. admiral commanding [[aircraft carrier]] task forces in the [[Pacific War]]
    115 bytes (15 words) - 12:24, 20 August 2010
  • ...[Norman Scott]] against an armed "Tokyo Express" convoy commanded by Vice Admiral [[Gunichi Mikawa]]. They operated near the northernmost part of [[Guadalcan
    530 bytes (81 words) - 23:53, 3 July 2010
  • [[Fleet Admiral]], [[United States Navy]], [[Chief of Naval Operations]] during the [[Secon
    140 bytes (17 words) - 16:49, 22 June 2010
  • | [[Fleet Admiral]] [[William Leahy]] | [[Fleet Admiral]] [[Ernest J. King]]
    975 bytes (138 words) - 17:34, 17 March 2024
  • *Harris, Brayton, ''Admiral Nimitz: The Commander of the Pacific Ocean Theater''. Basingstoke: Palgrave |title=Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, A Five Star Submariner
    1 KB (193 words) - 01:32, 25 October 2013
  • Only the ninth US Mavy [[JAG]] to be promoted to [[Rear Admiral]]
    101 bytes (15 words) - 15:25, 3 January 2024
  • The lowest or next-to-lowest [[military rank]] of admiral in Naval service
    110 bytes (14 words) - 17:29, 17 March 2024
  • British admiral (1841-1920), considered the creator of the industrialized [[Royal Navy]]
    125 bytes (14 words) - 17:29, 17 March 2024
  • U.S. Navy [[vice admiral]] who commanded Service Force Pacific, the [[underway replenishment]] organ
    186 bytes (22 words) - 19:04, 31 January 2011
  • Usually the second-highest [[military rank]] of admiral in Naval service, often called "three-star", equivalent to ground/air force
    190 bytes (23 words) - 17:28, 17 March 2024
  • Admiral, [[United States Navy]], retired, [[Director of Central Intelligence]], 197
    182 bytes (19 words) - 17:28, 17 March 2024
  • Admiral, [[Imperial Japanese Navy]]; [[Commander-in-Chief, Combined Fleet]], May 19
    147 bytes (15 words) - 22:40, 4 June 2010
  • ...scientist specializing in programming languages and interoperability; rear admiral in the U.S. Navy
    155 bytes (19 words) - 06:07, 13 August 2010
  • Admiral, retired, [[United States Navy]], successor to [[Hyman Rickover]] as Direct
    176 bytes (22 words) - 13:52, 6 April 2024
  • Admiral, [[United States Navy]]; a gunnery specialist best known as the victorious
    164 bytes (22 words) - 17:28, 17 March 2024
  • [[Vice admiral]] of the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]], respected by both sides for getting th
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  • [[Vice admiral]], [[United States Navy]], commanding [[Third United States Fleet]] since J
    134 bytes (15 words) - 19:26, 18 July 2009
  • ...I [[Burke-class]] destroyer of the [[United States Navy]], named for Rear Admiral [[Grace Murray Hopper]]; nicknamed "Amazing Grace"
    175 bytes (22 words) - 10:08, 10 February 2023
  • Admiral, [[United States Navy]] and [[Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff]], reti
    183 bytes (23 words) - 17:28, 17 March 2024
  • Admiral, [[United States Navy]], and Commander, [[United States Pacific Command]] a
    137 bytes (16 words) - 10:08, 10 February 2023
  • Admiral, [[Imperial Japanese Navy]]; [[Commander-in-Chief, Combined Fleet]] March 1
    168 bytes (18 words) - 17:45, 2 June 2010
  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Imperial Japanese Navy]] admiral, principally an intelligence specialist on Russia, who opposed war with the
    188 bytes (26 words) - 13:07, 10 September 2010
  • ...opean Command]], and is the senior military officer of [[NATO]]; currently Admiral [[James Stavridis]]
    198 bytes (27 words) - 17:28, 17 March 2024
  • A Korean admiral renowned for his naval victories against the Japanese invaders during the K
    151 bytes (21 words) - 13:35, 16 July 2008
  • President of [[Massachusetts Maritime Academy]]; [[rear admiral]], [[U.S. Maritime Service]]; U.S. Navy [[P-3 Orion]] instructor pilot
    170 bytes (21 words) - 12:53, 11 November 2009
  • ...e position exceeds that of a navy captain, but is less than that of a rear admiral.
    171 bytes (28 words) - 22:16, 11 September 2009
  • [[Second World War]] German admiral who headed the Naval Staff; acquitted of war crimes in the [[High Command C
    158 bytes (23 words) - 17:29, 17 March 2024
  • [[Vice admiral]], [[United States Navy]], 60th Superintendent, [[United States Naval Acade
    188 bytes (21 words) - 12:01, 19 March 2024
  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>(1889-1941) Admiral Commanding Heavy Ships in the WWII German Navy, killed in action with the s
    160 bytes (24 words) - 08:49, 25 July 2023
  • ...dmiral Chuichi Nagumo hoisted, on December 7, 1941, the same "Z" flag that Admiral Heihachiro Togo had hoisted to start the Battle of Tsushima in 1905. ...especially in the days of sail, an organizational identifier (e.g., [[rear admiral]] of the red [squadron]).
    2 KB (395 words) - 20:45, 2 April 2024
  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Sir William Penn rose to the rank of Admiral under the English Commonwealth, and retained it under Charles II, also serv
    176 bytes (28 words) - 16:50, 22 January 2013
  • [[Vice admiral]], [[United States Navy]]; President, [[National Defense University]]; Boar
    217 bytes (25 words) - 12:01, 19 March 2024
  • ...es Navy]] operations in the [[Second World War]], rising to reserve [[rear admiral]]
    201 bytes (26 words) - 10:06, 10 February 2023
  • French admiral, Carmelite priest, ally of [[Charles DeGaulle]] and High Commissioner of [[
    222 bytes (26 words) - 10:00, 31 December 2008
  • (1924-2009) Retired admiral in the [[United States Navy]], who was Supreme Allied Commander, Atlantic;
    217 bytes (28 words) - 13:52, 6 April 2024
  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Rear admiral]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Vice admiral}}
    819 bytes (111 words) - 19:55, 11 January 2010
  • An American admiral and the naval hero of the [[Spanish-American War of 1898]].
    115 bytes (15 words) - 00:00, 8 June 2008
  • U.S. Navy [[destroyer]] of Flight I of the [[Burke-class]], named for [[Vice Admiral]] [[Lawson Ramage|Lawson "Red" Ramage]]
    160 bytes (22 words) - 17:13, 14 July 2010
  • [[United States Navy]] admiral of WWII, who specialized in [[naval guns and gunnery|"big gun"]] ships such
    218 bytes (31 words) - 15:08, 21 August 2010
  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Prime Minister of Japan]] and Admiral in the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]] who, while serving as Lord Privy Seal, wa
    202 bytes (27 words) - 20:05, 1 September 2010
  • Admiral '''Timothy J. Keating''' is the Commander, [[United States Pacific Command ...Arabian Gulf. He assumed command of CVW-9 in July 1993. In November 1994, Admiral Keating reported to [[Naval Air Station Fallon]], Nevada, as Commander, [[N
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  • (1891-1945) [[Vice Admiral]], [[Imperial Japanese Navy]]; aviation officer regarded as the father of t
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Retired [[Imperial Japanese Navy]] admiral, who was the Japanese Ambassador to the U.S. in 1941, generally accepted to
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  • [[Rear admiral]] in the [[United States Navy]], commanding multinational [[Task Force 151]
    193 bytes (23 words) - 17:10, 12 April 2009
  • There can be naval and air equivalents, such as Admiral of the Fleet/Fleet Admiral or Marshal of the Royal Air Force/General of the Air Force.
    792 bytes (126 words) - 04:13, 7 June 2009
  • ...ange [[anti-shipping missile]] carried by Russian/Soviet [[Kirov-class]]/[[Admiral Ushakov-class]] large cruisers and [[OSCAR-class]] cruise missile submarine
    228 bytes (23 words) - 22:30, 23 June 2009
  • [[Admiral], [[United States Navy]], retired; Former Commander in Chief, U.S. Navy For
    211 bytes (28 words) - 13:52, 6 April 2024
  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[United States Navy]] admiral who held key staff positions before WWII, and commanded amphibious forces i
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  • Renamed the [[Admiral Ushakov-class]] under the [[Russian Federation]], a Soviet class of large m
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  • ...future, from the [[1983 Beirut barracks bombing]], under the direction of Admiral (retired) Robert L.J. Long, [[United States Navy]]
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  • Rear Admiral in the German Navy during WWII; commanded [[Abwehr]] military intelligence
    277 bytes (34 words) - 12:27, 18 November 2010
  • An admiral of the [[French Navy]], who provided decisive support to the Colonial side
    195 bytes (27 words) - 17:29, 17 March 2024
  • {{r|Admiral Hornblower in the West Indies|''Admiral Hornblower in the West Indies''}}
    760 bytes (103 words) - 23:52, 18 March 2009
  • '''Gunichi Mikawa''' (1880-1981) was a [[vice admiral]] of the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]], a specialist in torpedoes and gunnery ...d air and submarine forces, as well as the some naval units including Vice Admiral [[Kiyohide Shima]]'s cruiser-destroyer force. He was reassigned to Japan on
    847 bytes (131 words) - 23:48, 27 August 2010
  • Admiral, [[United States Navy]], who commanded carrier task forces in 1942, but was
    263 bytes (37 words) - 17:28, 17 March 2024
  • ...and Guiding Coalition, [[Project for National Security Reform]]; retired Admiral, [[United States Navy]]; only [[destroyer]] captain known to have water-ski
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  • Director, Atlantic Council; Admiral, retired, [[United States Navy]] and [[Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
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  • U.S. Navy Vice Admiral who commanded naval forces in the South Pacific Area at the beginning of [[
    195 bytes (31 words) - 05:00, 31 January 2011
  • [[Vice admiral]], [[United States Navy]], whose career was marked by great success in crea
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  • ...-to-lowest [[military rank]] of admiral in Naval service, the term '''rear admiral''' derives from the position commanding the rear squadron in a fleet action [[Vice admiral]] is the next higher rank. Depending on the navy involved, the next lower r
    2 KB (268 words) - 17:29, 17 March 2024
  • Chairman of the Center for Security Policy; retired admiral, [[United States Navy]] and commander of the U.S. Pacific Fleet; known as a
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  • [[Vice admiral]], [[United States Navy]], retired; adviser to the Center for Military Read
    239 bytes (32 words) - 11:45, 19 March 2024
  • [[United States Navy]] admiral (1885-1966) who was [[United States Pacific Command|Commander in Chief, Pac
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  • Admiral, [[United States Navy]]; commander of [[United States Seventh Fleet]], [[So
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Imperial Japanese Navy]] admiral, involved in the [[London Naval Conference]] and supporting the [[Strike-So
    249 bytes (30 words) - 13:03, 6 September 2010
  • Greatest Admiral of Dutch naval history, among the greatest naval leaders of the 17th centur
    152 bytes (23 words) - 17:28, 17 March 2024
  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Rear admiral]] of the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]],(1892-1942) an aviation specialist a
    263 bytes (37 words) - 05:56, 3 September 2010
  • [[Battleship]]-centric task force under Vice Admiral [[Takeo Kurita]] at the [[Battle of Leyte Gulf]]; Kurita commanded Force A
    254 bytes (34 words) - 20:35, 17 June 2010
  • Admiral [[United States Navy]], retired, and [[Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
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  • Board Member, [[Defense Forum Foundation]]; Admiral, retired, [[United States Navy]]; twentieth [[Chief of Naval Operations]];
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  • ...ral of the Fleet''', '''Admirals '''Vice admiral|Vice Admirals''', '''rear admiral|Rear Admirals''' and '''commodore|Commodores''', | Fleet admiral or Admiral of the Fleet
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  • Admiral, [[United States Navy]], who is [[Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff]] o
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  • (1880-1948) Admiral, [[Imperial Japanese Navy]];[[Commander-in-Chief, Combined Fleet]] 1936-193
    262 bytes (29 words) - 22:38, 4 June 2010
  • ...miral]], which may be a wartime-only temporary rank or the lowest level of admiral.
    841 bytes (140 words) - 18:30, 31 January 2009
  • ...ung age, was made a [[Post Captain]] in his twenties, and retired as Fleet admiral, the highest possible rank
    265 bytes (40 words) - 17:34, 17 March 2024
  • Admiral and [[Chief of Naval Operations]] of the [[United States Navy]], 1953-1957;
    254 bytes (37 words) - 17:28, 17 March 2024
  • '''Frank Jack Fletcher''' (1887-1973) was an Admiral in the [[United States Navy]], and a recipient of the [[Medal of Honor]]. H | title = Black shoe carrier admiral: Frank Jack Fletcher at Coral Sea, Midway, and Guadalcanal
    2 KB (287 words) - 15:42, 8 April 2024
  • {{r|Rear admiral}} {{r|Vice admiral}}
    974 bytes (133 words) - 12:08, 1 May 2024
  • Admiral, [[Imperial Japanese Navy]], [[Commander-in-Chief, Combined Fleet]]; planne
    259 bytes (34 words) - 20:46, 2 April 2024
  • Former [[vice admiral]] of the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]], a specialist in torpedoes and gunnery
    263 bytes (37 words) - 15:56, 15 May 2011
  • ...[Battle of Surigao Strait]]. He is known, then, as the last [[battleship]] admiral to win a combat engagement; Surigao Strait was the last fight between force
    964 bytes (153 words) - 15:42, 8 April 2024
  • ...an Army; Deputy Chief of the [[Abwehr]] military organization reporting to Admiral [[Wilhelm Canaris]]; active member of the [[German Resistance]]; eventually
    265 bytes (33 words) - 13:55, 28 November 2010
  • '''Günther Lütjens''' (1899-1941) was an admiral in the German Navy (navy) of the [[Second World War]], a specialist in [[ba | title = Admiral Günther Lütjens
    3 KB (536 words) - 09:26, 5 April 2024
  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Rear Admiral of the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]], principally a staff officer and research
    245 bytes (36 words) - 19:32, 11 September 2010
  • ...d of the [[American Security Project]]; signed "Beyond Guantanamo"; [[Vice Admiral]] (Ret.) U.S. Navy and former [[Inspector General]]; commanded Amphibious
    348 bytes (46 words) - 10:57, 19 March 2024
  • Vice Admiral of the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]], who commanded surface forces through the
    252 bytes (38 words) - 23:09, 11 July 2010
  • Admiral in the [[United States Navy]], Commander, U.S. Naval Forces Europe/U.S. Nav
    212 bytes (31 words) - 17:28, 17 March 2024
  • ...Guadalcanal Campaign]], in which a U.S. cruiser-destroyer force under Rear Admiral [[Robert Giffen|"Ike" Giffen]], concerned with meeting a schedule, sped ahe
    304 bytes (44 words) - 23:43, 3 September 2010
  • An exceptionally high grade of admiral, assigned to the four most senior admirals of the [[United States Navy]] in
    271 bytes (42 words) - 17:29, 17 March 2024
  • ...ages}}</noinclude>William Penn (1644-1718), the son of Sir [[William Penn (Admiral)|William Penn]], was a prominent English Quaker, prolific writer, and the f
    228 bytes (31 words) - 14:38, 5 August 2023
  • ...board, [[Lockheed Martin]], [[Level 3 Communications]], and [[Inmarsat]]; Admiral, [[United States Navy]], Retired; former commander, [[United States Strateg
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  • ...Heritage Foundation; Member of the board of [[Northrop Grumman]]; Retired admiral and Vice Chief of Naval Operations, U.S. Navy
    311 bytes (42 words) - 22:24, 25 March 2024
  • ...a [[Post Captain]] in his twenties, died on a foreign station as a [[Rear Admiral]]
    251 bytes (37 words) - 00:35, 23 July 2022
  • A German [[armored cruiser]] of the [[First World War]], flagship of Admiral [[Maximilian von Spee]]. She led the victory at the [[Battle of Coronel]],
    200 bytes (33 words) - 02:41, 1 October 2009
  • [[Rear admiral]] (selected), [[United States Navy]]; director, [[White House Situation Ro
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  • [[Vice admiral]] of the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]], killed in action while leading [[Battl
    197 bytes (29 words) - 13:01, 21 June 2010
  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[United States Navy]] admiral in direct command of the most threatened, and hardest-fighting task group i
    320 bytes (46 words) - 10:05, 10 February 2023
  • Admiral of the [[United States Navy]] in the Pacific theater of World War II, comma
    262 bytes (39 words) - 17:28, 17 March 2024
  • ...''Comte de Grasse''' and later '''Marquis de Grasse-Tilly''', was a French admiral who commanded the French fleet that decisively assisted the colonial forces ...iral Hood. Shortly afterwards, in April 1782, he was defeated and captured Admiral Lord Rodney at the [[Battle of the Saintes]]. Returning to France, he was a
    2 KB (250 words) - 15:41, 8 April 2024
  • ...ubrey Fitch''' (1883-1978) was a U.S. Navy vice admiral, given the rank of admiral on his retirement. He was to have commanded the air cover for the actual [[ He did not command the Wake operation because rear admiral [[Frank Jack Fletcher]], commanding the cruiser force, was senior. <ref na
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  • ...YMCA]], World Board of Governors of the [[United Services Organization]]; Admiral, [[United States Navy]], retired [[Chief of Naval Operations]]
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  • ...och]]. While Bloch was expected to coordinate with Pacific Fleet commander Admiral [[Husband Kimmel]], Bloch did not report to Kimmel. Both reported to the [[
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  • ...as the military counterintelligence unit of Nazi Germany. It was headed by Admiral [[Wilhelm Canaris]], who was executed, along with a deputy, [[Hans Oster]],
    295 bytes (41 words) - 04:31, 21 March 2024
  • ...r II]], however, there was one main U.S. Pacific Fleet, reporting to Fleet Admiral [[Chester Nimitz]]. When it was under the command of Adm. [[William Halsey] [[Vice admiral|Vice Admiral]] [[Samuel Locklear III|Samuel J. Locklear III]] took command of Third Flee
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  • (1890-1973) [[Vice admiral]], [[Imperial Japanese Navy]]; commanded the [[Battle of Leyte Gulf#Second
    293 bytes (39 words) - 14:40, 21 June 2010
  • ...nior military adviser to the President and Secretary of Defense; currently Admiral [[Mike Mullen]]; policy developer and adviser not in the operational chain
    282 bytes (40 words) - 17:28, 17 March 2024
  • The phrase ''turn a blind eye'' is attributed to an incident in the life of Admiral [[Horatio Nelson]].<ref name=Phrases/> During the [[Battle of Copenhagen]] cautious Admiral Sir [[Hyde Parker]], in overall command of the [[United Kingdom|British]] f
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  • Admiral, [[United States Navy]], retired; chairman, [[President's Foreign Intellige
    309 bytes (37 words) - 17:28, 17 March 2024
  • ...resident of Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC); retired Admiral, [[United States Navy]] and commander of [[United States Strategic Command]
    272 bytes (35 words) - 17:28, 17 March 2024
  • Fleet admiral of the [[United States Navy]] in the Pacific theater of World War II, comma
    268 bytes (39 words) - 17:32, 17 March 2024
  • [[rear admiral|Rear Admiral]] '''Bruce Grooms''' is Vice Director of the U.S. [[Joint Staff]], and is a
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  • ...nizations, the highest [[military rank]] (although the naval equivalent is admiral); also used in the sense of '''general officer''', the highest '''grade'''
    255 bytes (36 words) - 17:29, 17 March 2024
  • ...mmanded by a [[rear admiral]] senior to the [[commodore]] of the ARG. This admiral may be from the surface, submarine, or aviation communities, as opposed to
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  • '''Michiel de Ruyter''' (1607-1676) is the [[Netherlands]]' greatest admiral, and one of the most distinguished naval leaders of the 17th century, and i
    293 bytes (43 words) - 17:29, 17 March 2024
  • ...</noinclude>Last [[Prime Minister of Japan]] before its surrender in 1945; Admiral in the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]] including [[Commander-in-Chief, Combined
    368 bytes (48 words) - 20:28, 7 September 2010
  • ...nd-highest [[military rank]] of admiral in Naval service, the term '''vice admiral''' derives from the position commanding the forward, or van, squadron in a
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  • '''HMS ''Hood''''' was a [[Royal Navy]] [[Admiral-class]] [[battlecruiser]] that exploded and sank on 24 May 1941 after being
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  • [[Fleet Admiral]], [[United States Navy]]; Chief of Staff to the President in the Second Wo
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  • {{r|Vice admiral}}
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  • '''Norton C. Joerg''' is a lawyer and retired Rear Admiral in the United States Navy. He is only the ninth naval attorney to reach fla
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  • ...at must take place before a [[captain (naval)]] can take on the role of an admiral in a diplomatic and political context
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  • ...ration; Senior Military Advisor for the American Maritime Congress; [[vice admiral]], [[United States Navy]], retired: Commander, [[Military Sealift Command]]
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  • (1911–1981} Called "Jack", Admiral, [[United States Navy]]; father was [[John McCain Sr.]] (the only father-so
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  • ...igence]](1992-1995); former Director, [[National Security Agency]]; [[vice admiral]], retired, [[United States Navy]]
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  • '''John "Slew" McCain Sr.''' (1884-1945) was an admiral in the [[United States Navy]]. He had a long career in naval aviation, eve He was the father of Admiral [[John McCain Jr.]] and grandfather of presidential candidate and Navy Capt
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  • ...ater (1:4), and adding lime or lemon, was first introduced in the 1740s by Admiral [[Edward Vernon]] who was known as Old Grog, because of his habitual [[grog ===Admiral Nelson===
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  • ...int Ocean Commission Initiative; [[U.S. Secretary of Energy]] (1989-1993); Admiral, [[United States Navy]], retired, and the 22nd [[Chief of Naval Operations]
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  • ...d record before and during the [[Second World War]]; often the flagship of Admiral [[Raymond Spruance]]; sunk by a Japanese submarine in 1945 with a long dela
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  • ...signatory of the surrender of Japanese forces in Korea; brother-in-law of Admiral [[Shigeyoshi Inoue]]
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  • '''Matome Ugaki''' was a vice admiral in the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]]. He commanded battleships through the [[ ...a [[battleship]] division, and Force "A" of the First Striking Force while Admiral [[Takeo Kurita]] transferred from sinking flagships. Aboard ''[[IJN Yamato]
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  • Formed in 1962 by David M. Abshire and Admiral Arleigh Burke, the '''Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS)
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>U.S. Navy admiral, who was to have commanded the carrier support force for the cancelled [[Fi
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  • ...commanding a cruiser, a battleship, and an air division. Promoted to vice admiral in 1940, he began to receive increasingly critical assignments in late 1942 | title = Interrogation of Admiral Ozawa, Jisaburo, task force commander in the Leyte operation
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  • ...Navy as a modern force. Prime Minister Admiral Yamamoto was not related to Admiral [[Isoroku Yamamoto]]. ...Ito]] cabinet and first [[Taro Katsura|Katsura cabinet]], and became navy admiral in 1904. He was thus the Navy Minister during the [[Russo-Japanese War]].
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  • '''Mitsusmasu Yonai''' (1880-1948) was an Admiral in the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]], with experience both as a commander at s In September 1944, he assigned Rear Admiral [[Sokichi Takagi‎]] to a broad-ranging staff post in the Navy Ministry, n
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  • '''Thomas C. Kinkaid''' (1888-1972) was an admiral in the [[United States Navy]], best known for commanding the [[United State ...inforcement of Wake Island]], and believed it was the correct decision for Admiral Pye to recall it. and was present as prospective commanding officer with F
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  • ...s mission, has always been a major command headed by a three- or four-star admiral, its role in the [[Second World War]] was totally different than its role t ...ponent of [[United States Central Command]]. Its current commander is Vice Admiral [[Mark Fox]], who succeeded [[William Gortney]].
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  • Admiral '''Gary Roughead''' became the 29th Chief of Naval Operations, the senior p ...give them such, planned for other classes, would not be ready for a year. Admiral Roughead ordered that the Zumwalt production be slowed for a year and a sli
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  • '''Raymond A. Spruance''' was an Admiral in the United States Navy. During [[World War Two in the Pacific]], he was In the first months of World War II in the Pacific, Rear Admiral Spruance commanded a cruiser division.
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  • ...v DVM 10 Bild-23-63-06, Panzerschiff "Admiral Graf Spee".jpg|thumb|500px|''Admiral Graf Spee'' in 1936]] '''KMS<ref>KMS = navy Schiff</ref> ''Admiral Graf Spee''''' was a German ''Panzerschiff'' (heavy armed cruiser) that was
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  • Sir '''William Penn''' (1621 - 1670) rose to the rank of Admiral under the English Commonwealth, but was dismissed from command by [[Oliver
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  • ...out of a rain squall and confronted a German [[cruiser|heavy cruiser]], ''Admiral von Hipper''. Glowworm tried to hit with guns and torpedoes, but did little ...ve the order to abandon her. Shortly afterwards she capsized and sank. The Admiral Hipper hove to for at least an hour picking up survivors but the loss of li
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  • ...command the naval formation for the state funeral of [[Horatio Nelson|Vice Admiral Lord Nelson]], England's greatest naval hero, killed in action at the momen ...head of the Royal Navy, Admiral the Right Honorable Earl St. Vincent. The Admiral presents the young officer, describing him as "his protege", to the King.
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  • [[Admiral Moffett]], then the most ardent proponent of airships in the US Navy was on
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  • ...Advisory Board]], [[United States Department of State]]; retired as [[vice admiral]] (entered the [[United States Naval Academy]] as an enlisted man in WWII),
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  • ...], selected by the CJCS and reporting directly to him. In July 2010, Vice Admiral [[William Gortney]] took command; Austin was promoted to head U.S. forces i ...Staff, and a lower-level body, made up of the [[major general]] or [[rear admiral]] operations deputy directors of the individual services. When matters are
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  • | title=The Danish Chief of Defence, Admiral Jørgensen, pays a visit to Nunavut and Greenland to plan for future defenc On August 23, 2009 Natynczyk met in [[Iqaluit]] with Admiral [[Tim Sloth Jørgensen]] Chief of [[Denmark]]'s Defence staff.
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  • '''William E. Gortney''' is a [[vice admiral]] in the [[United States Navy]], who became director of the [[Joint Staff]] Admiral Gortney was the Department of Defense spokesman for the initial [[Operation
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  • '''Shoji Nishimura''' (1889-1944) was a [[vice admiral]] of the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]], who was killed in action, on his [[bat ...have put up a real fight. Rear Admiral Tomiji Koniyagi, chief of staff to Admiral [[Kurita]], said Nishimur was a "sunshine and lively person with a smiling
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  • ...under Admiral [[Maximilian von Spee]], against a weaker British unit under Admiral [[Christopher Cradock]]. The British intended to stop the [[commerce raidin
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  • ...n Jaluit and [[Makin]], such as the planned diversionary operation by Vice Admiral [[Wilson Brown]]'s task group in the [[First Battle of Wake Island]].
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  • * Buell, Thomas. ''The Quiet Warrior: A Biography of Admiral Raymond Spruance''. (1974).
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  • '''John Byron''' (8 November 1723 &ndash; 10 April 1786) was an English vice-admiral who had a distinguished career in the [[Royal Navy]],<ref name=SesWager2006 Promoted rear admiral in 1775 and vice-admiral in 1778, Byron was commander-in-chief of the Royal Navy's [[West Indies Squ
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  • '''Richmond Kelly "Terrible" Turner''' (1885-1961) was a U.S. Navy admiral, who was in key staff positions shortly before the outbreak of [[World War | title = Admiral Richmond K. Turner, USN (1885-1961)
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  • ...the approaching Japanese and made attacks, as General Wavell left Java and Admiral Helfrich took upon his shoulders the naval defense of the remnants of the D **ABDA Combined Striking Force, Rear Admiral [[Karel Doorman]], [[Royal Netherlands Navy]]
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  • ...ally after the 20th of July [[1944 assassination attempt against Hitler]]. Admiral [[Wilhelm Canaris]] and Major-General [[Hans Oster]], of the [[Abwehr]], an
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  • ...mand the United States First Fleet after the war, and retiring as a [[vice admiral]] after the [[Revolt of the Admirals]]. ...e [[Battle of Leyte Gulf]], as part of [[United States Third Fleet]] under Admiral [[William Halsey]].
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  • ...isher of Kilverstone''' was a colorful and controversial British [[admiral|admiral of the fleet]], considered to be the builder of the modern [[Royal Navy]].<
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  • ...urrently for a four-year term, and usually retires after that single term. Admiral [[Arleigh Burke]], however, served three two-year terms. The incumbent is A ...en tracing to a tradition. At the start of [[World War II]], for example, Admiral [[Chester Nimitz]] took over the Pacific Command, coming from heading the "
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  • | title = Rear Admiral Samuel Eliot Morison}}</ref> ...nd examining all the shores visited by Columbus in the Caribbean, he wrote Admiral of the Ocean Sea, an outstanding biography of Columbus, which won a Pulitze
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  • Admiral '''Mike Mullen''' became the 17th [[Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff]]
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  • The Pearl Harbor commanders, Admiral [[Husband Kimmel]] (Navy) and [[lieutenant general|Lieutenant General]] [[W
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  • ...ng previously been Duke of York. Under Charles he was an active Lord High Admiral of England until legislation prevented him, as a [[Catholic church|Roman Ca
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  • '''Isoroku Yamamoto''' (1884-1943) was an admiral of the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]], whose final assignment was [[Commander-i ...as the Naval Attache. Returning to Japan in 1928, he was promoted to Rear Admiral, in the Naval Affairs Bureau, and was a delegate to the [[1930 London Naval
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  • ...ern Land of the Holy Spirit (''La Austrialia del Espiritu Santo''). French admiral Louis Antoine de Bougainville, 'rediscovered' the islands in 1768. Captain
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  • ...rsity Press. ISBN 978-0195102338.</ref> In A.D. 79 [[Pliny the Elder]] was admiral of the Roman fleet at Misenum when [[Vesuvius]] erupted. He died while taki
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  • ...etherlands and Spain. As of the beginning of 2010, [[French Navy]] [[Rear Admiral]] [[Alain Hinden]] commands CTF 150. The [[United States Central Command]]
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  • ...ish [[battleship]] of a radically new fast, "all-big-gun" design, urged by Admiral [[John Arbuthnot Fisher|"Jacky" Fisher]]. By having the speed to pick her e
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  • Do not confuse him with Admiral [[Admiral Togo Heihachiro]] of the [[Russo-Japanese War]], General and Prime Minister
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  • '''Willis Augustus "Ching" Lee''' (1888-1945) was a [[United States Navy]] admiral who specialized in gunnery, and commanded the Battle Force of the Pacific F On the Spring of 1944 he and Admiral Marc A. Mitscher directed attacks on Truk Islands and the Japanese strongho
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  • ...a, and in 1768, the islands were named the Navigator Islands by [[French]] admiral Louis-Antoine de Bougainville. Following the Tripartite Convention of 1899,
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  • ...rvice. On 1 March 1963, the International Balzan Foundation announced that Admiral Morison was winner of its cultural prize ($51,750) for his 15-volume histor *''Admiral of the Ocean Sea'''' (1942) (awarded Pulitzer Prize for biography)
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  • [[Image:Grace Hopper.jpg|left|thumb|350px|Rear Admiral Grace Murray Hopper]] ...992) was a pioneering [[computer science|computer scientist]] and a [[rear admiral]] in the [[United States Navy]]. In the technical area, she is best known f
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  • ...om [[Naval Station Norfolk]], and after training, broke the flag of [[Rear Admiral]] [[William H. P. Blandy]], Commander, Amphibious Group One. She sailed fr ...ed island, she sailed on [[20 April]] to replenish at [[Saipan]] and carry Admiral Blandy to [[Pearl Harbor]], where he and his staff disembarked on [[19 May]
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  • ...Treaty]], but Hirohito had his chief aide, [[Tajeki Nara]] pressure Fleet Admiral Togo into agreeing to the treaty, and his Grand Chamberlain, [[Kantaro Suzu ...d Fleet]], who had operational but not policy responsibility. For example, Admiral [[Isoroku Yamamoto]] had been Navy Vice-Minister during the policy discussi
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  • ...ns by the [[Maya]]ns. European contact was first made with the [[Spanish]] admiral Andrés Niño in 1522 who led an expedition to the region. Spanish Conquist
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  • '''Wilson Brown''' (1882-1959) was a U.S. Navy admiral, specializing in surface warshis, who was one of the oldest combat commande
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  • ...rst major British loss of the war, she was scuttled due to concern by Rear Admiral [[Sandy Woodward]] that she would draw Argentineans to the rescue forces.
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  • ...rado'' sailed to [[Pearl Harbor]] and there became [[flagship]] for [[Vice Admiral]] [[Richmond K. Turner]], Commander, Amphibious Forces, [[Pacific]]. ...apanese home islands]]. She returned to [[Pearl Harbor]] in October where Admiral Turner and his staff debarked.
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  • ...i]] to the first [[Gonbee Yamamoto|Yamamoto Cabinet]]. He was promoted to Admiral in 1912.
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  • ...eral of the Fleet Control Department, and vice navy minister, he became an admiral and commander-in-chief of the Combined Fleet in 1924. In 1927, he assumed t
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  • ...ediately after the surrender of Lord Cornwallis's army, the consequence of Admiral Greaves's unsuccessful rencounter with the French fleet off the mouth of th ...ships and attacking the rear with the whole force of the attacking fleet). Admiral [[Horatio Nelson]] used Clerk's work in the [[Battle of Trafalgar]] in 1805
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  • ...long range, at least 550 km (300 nm). They are carried by [[Kirov-class|''Admiral Ushakov''-class (formerly Kirov-class)]] large [[cruiser]]s and [[OSCAR-cla
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  • ...[[Franklin D. Roosevelt]], and, during the war, would be the flagship of Admiral [[Raymond Spruance]] and the [[United States Fifth Fleet]].
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  • ...ed States Marine Corps general. With Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral [Mike Mullen and Army General David Petraeus, they are the closes senior mi
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  • {{r|George Anderson}} chair, 1970–1976 ; Admiral, [[United States Navy]], retired
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  • 55. ''Admiral Hornblower in the West Indies'' (1958) 63. ''Admiral Hornblower'' (1966)
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  • Just before Pearl Harbor, Task Force 2, under [[Vice Admiral]] [[William Halsey]], reinforced Wake. Once they were clear of the local ar ...officer, William Buracker, confirmed he authorized it, and said "Goddamit, Admiral, you can't start a private war of your own! Who's going to take the respons
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  • ...ntelligence]] and [[intelligence analysis]] office he headed, reporting to Admiral [[Reginald Hall]]. <ref>Wallach, p. 145</ref>
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  • ...military officer, normally of three-star rank (lieutenant general or vice admiral). Occupying the same physical body is the '''Chief, Central Security Servic
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  • ...also done the same thing. Kranzbuehler sent an interrogatory to U.S. Fleet Admiral [[Chester W. Nimitz]], who essentially confirmed that U.S. submrines in the <blockquote>Through the interrogatory to Admiral Nimitz, I want to establish that the American Admiralty in practice interpr
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  • ...Vice Admiral Shoji Nishimura and the the Second Striking Force under Vice Admiral Shima. It was the last engagement in which battleships fought directly, alt ...impossible; and so while en route to Manila he was given orders to follow Admiral Nishimura's force in an attempt on Leyte Gulf. This was truly an appendix t
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  • ...National Intelligence]] for the United States, retiring as an four star [[Admiral]] in the [[United States Navy]].<ref name=KansasState2023-08-02/> Before hi | quote = During his 34-year career, Admiral Blair served on guided missile destroyers in both the Atlantic and Pacific
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  • ...}</ref> it is level OF-7, which is equivalent to the naval rank of '''rear admiral'''. The next lower rank is "brigadier general". The next higher, again d
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  • ...hed [[Milne Bay]] at 1725 on [[31 July]] and, 10 days later, embarked Rear Admiral [[William Fechteler|William M. Fechteler]] from [[USS Blue Ridge (AGC-2)]]. On [[7 September]], Rear Admiral [[Daniel Barbey|Daniel E. "Uncle Dan" Barbey]], who commanded Task Force (T
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  • *[[United States Seventh Fleet]] under Admiral [[Thomas Kinkaid]]
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  • ...iral, also is the NATO Supreme Allied Commander Europe. The inclumbent is Admiral James Stavridis|James G. Stavridis.
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  • '''Tamon Yamaguchi''' (1892-1942) was a [[rear admiral]] of the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]], an aviation specialist and diplomat,
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  • ...amint'', part of the Northern Attack Force, served as [[flagship]] of Rear Admiral L. F. Reifsnider, Commander Amphibious Group 4. Going in under plane attack On 10 April Admiral Richmond K. Turner designated Commander Amphibious Group 4, on board ''Pana
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  • ...e Brothers and the American Revolution'' (1975), the standard biography of Admiral Howe and his brother Gemneral Howe * Syrett, David. "'This Penurious Old Reptile': Rear-Admiral James Gambier and the American War." ''Historical Research'' 2001 74(183):
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  • ...oined the Pacific Fleet and embarker Air Group 11,"flying the flag of Rear Admiral Harold L. Martin, Commander of Task Force 38—got underway for Hawaii on 9 ...y Forge'' was in the Philippines, as part of Carrier Division 3 under Rear Admiral [[J.M. Hoskins]]. The ships initially, a light cruiser and eight destroyers
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  • ...Italian fleet growing stronger than the British Mediterranean Fleet under Admiral [[Andrew Cunningham]], Cunningham and [[Winston Churchill]] urgently wanted ...ng the Munich Crisis of 1938. These were reactivated when the author, Rear Admiral [[Lumley Lyster]], arrived in September 1940 aboard the new fleet carrier [
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  • ...from his midshipman days, to a story in his retirement as [[Field marshal|Admiral of the Fleet]]. Forester also wrote ''The Hornblower Companion'', a guide t | ''[[Admiral Hornblower in the West Indies]]''
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  • '''Sokichi Takagi''' was a Rear Admiral of the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]], principally a staff officer and research * -- Rear admiral.
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  • ...the Navy's [[Judge Advocate General Corps]], retiring in 2006 as a [[vice admiral]]. MacDonald's last job in the military was as the Navy's top lawyer. [[Car
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  • ...iroyuki. ''The Reluctant Admiral'' (1982) [http://www.amazon.com/Reluctant-Admiral-Hiroyuki-Agawa/dp/087011512X/ref=pd_bbs_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1214102779&sr * Buell, Thomas. ''Master of Seapower: A Biography of Admiral Ernest J. King'' (1976).
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  • | Becomes Admiral, Grayson Space Navy (GSN) | [[Commodore]], RMN; Admiral, GSN; on Haven prison planet
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  • ...Prien. Britain lost [[HMS Royal Oak]] at Scapa Flow and Germany lost [[KMS Admiral Graf Spee]] at the River Plate.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.scapaflowwre
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  • The route was named after Admiral [[Chester Nimitz]], a celebrated commander of the [[United States Navy]] in
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  • ...by the Navy. Multiple sources indicate that the following was said to Vice Admiral Seiichi Ito, commanding Second Fleet, who would lead the final and futile m Admiral [[Matome Ugaki]] commanding the battleship division, wrote in his diary <b
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  • ...ommenced at about 8 a.m., carried out by a fleet of German warships led by Admiral Franz von Hipper. Over a period of around 90 minutes, the fleet unleashed 1
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  • | title = Rear Admiral Michael F. Lohr, Judge Advocate General Corps, United States Navy | title = Rear Admiral Michael F. Lohr, JAGC, USN
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  • ...]]; the [[Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe]] is a British general or admiral. Britain provides a substantial number of the ground troops in the [[Intern
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  • ...with her were the task force commander of British forces in the Far East, Admiral [[Thomas Phillips|"Tom Thumb" Phillips]]. [[Winston Churchill]] wrote of l
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  • | General, Admiral
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  • ...36-gun [[frigate (sail)|frigates]] (''[[Hornblower in the West Indies]]'', Admiral and Commander-in-Chief)
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  • ...coup government. He preferred a Prime Minister of stern character, such as Admiral [[Makoto Saito]], rather than a party politician such as [[Kisaburo Suzuki]
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  • '''George Dewey''' (1837-1917) was an American admiral, and the naval hero of the [[Spanish-American War]] of 1898. ...ssigned as executive officer of the side-wheeler ''Mississippi'' a unit of Admiral [[David G. Farragut]]'s squadron in the New Orleans campaign. While navigat
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  • ...en Grand Chamberlain Chinda died in 1929, Makino replaced him with retired Admiral [[Kantaro Suzuki]]. Makino's key rule for Court involvement in a political
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  • ...first of the service’s new 153-foot patrol cutters. Coast Guard Commandant Admiral Thad Allen approved the change of the cutter’s name '''''to allow this cl
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  • The group is commanded by a rear admiral or commodore, usually with the carrier as [[flagship]]. Group air defense c
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  • When the reinforcements, led by Admiral Seymour, attempted to make their way to [[Peking]] (then the capital) they
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  • Admiral [[Isoroko Yamamoto]], commander-in-chief of the Mobile Fleet, had originall ...TC) [[James Doolittle]] was selected to lead the actual air attack. [[Vice Admiral]] [[William Halsey]] commanded the overall task force, which included the
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  • ...coup government. He preferred a Prime Minister of stern character, such as Admiral [[Makoto Saito]], rather than a party politician such as Suzuki, whom he co
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  • ....htm}}</ref> it is level OF-9, which is equivalent to the naval rank of '''admiral'''. The next lower rank is "lieutenant general". While some militaries h
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  • ...part of the more aggressive strategy introduced when von Scheer replaced Admiral Hugo von Pohl in February 1916, as chief of the German High Seas Fleet. S [[Royal Navy]] Admiral [[John Jellicoe]], commanding the British Grand Fleet, received reports and
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  • [[Vice admiral]] '''Ann Rondeau''', [[United States Navy]], is President of the [[National
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  • ...(CINCPAC) in [[World War II]], [[Chief of Naval Operations]], and [[Fleet Admiral]]. As overall commander of the Central Pacific forces during World War Two | title = Fleet Admiral Chester William Nimitz
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  • '''Michelle Howard''' is a [[rear admiral]] of the [[United States Navy]], who, as of July 2010, is Director of Strat
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  • ...leet was supposed to be withdrawn from the [[West Indies]], but the French admiral, [[Comte d'Estaing]], briefly occupied Grand Turk. In 1770, when the Britis ...ed in 1783, seizing the Turks Islands and holding out against an attack by Admiral Hood's West India Squadron, but the islands were returned to Britain later
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  • ...Technology'', pp. 7, 37&ndash;38, 40.</ref> In A.D. 79 Pliny the Elder was admiral of the Roman fleet of [[Misenum]], on Italy's west coast. The city was situ
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  • ...of British warships. With help from Vernon Kell and [[Admiral William Hall|Admiral William (Blinker) Hall]], soon to be the real-life head of Naval Intelligen
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  • The program was managed with great success by [[Rear admiral|Rear Admiral]] [[William Raborn|"Red" Raborn]], a brilliant engineering manager who was
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  • ...politician [[Sergei Mironovich Kirov]], the class has been renamed the '''Admiral Ushakov''' class by the Russian Federation.
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  • ...anila]]. As a bold, risky, and expensive plan, it had lots of detractors; Admiral King, and even MacArthur's air commander, General Kinney, criticized it. ...rthur. Roosevelt traveled to Honolulu, accompanied by his chief of staff, Admiral Leahy, and met with MacArthur in July.<ref name=Morison>{{citation
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  • ...the early part of World War Two in the Pacific, including serving as Rear Admiral Frank Jack Fletcher's flagship at the Battle of Midway, after he had to aba
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  • Vice Admiral Jean Decoux, who commanded French naval forces in the Far East, and was bas ...PA47,M1}} pp. 47 </ref> Ducoux had additional worries. The senior British admiral in the area, on the way from Hong Kong to Singapore, visited Ducoux and tol
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  • ...dal to Richard D. Dixon | date=2 February 1981 |author=[[John Briggs Hayes|Admiral J. B. Hayes]]}}</ref>and needed to seek sheltered waters, but wave conditio
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  • ...}</ref> it is level OF-8, which is equivalent to the naval rank of '''vice admiral'''. The next lower rank is "major general". The next higher, again depen
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  • {{r|Joseph Prueher}} Admiral, U.S Navy, retired; Former U.S. Ambassador to China {{r|James Loy}} Senior Counselor, [[The Cohen Group]]; Admiral, [[United States Coast Guard]], retired
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  • ...[three-star rank|three-star]] officer ([[Vice admiral (United States)|vice admiral]]).<ref>{{cite web|access-date = February 17, 2019|url = http://www.jmarpro
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  • {{r|Vice admiral}}
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  • Kantaro Suzuki was a Japanese admiral and political leader. He was the last [[Prime Minister of Japan]] before it
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  • | quote=The appointment of retired Admiral Bruce MacDonald, who formerly served as the chief Judge Advocate of the Nav
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  • ...e years. Congress formally thanked him, but refused to promote him to rear-admiral. As a compromise Jones was given command of the ''America,'' the first and In 1787 Jones joined the Russian navy as a rear admiral. In 1788, the Russian navy sent Jones to join a flotilla of long boats fitt
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  • ...compelled to come forward after hearing his former boss, rear admiral|Rear Admiral James McGarrah call the Tribunal process "fair". He, however, compared the
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  • ...on [[Iwo Jima]] with Amphibious [[Task Force 51|TF&nbsp;51]] under [[Vice Admiral]] [[Richmond K. Turner|Richmond Kelly Turner]]. After brief calls at [[Eni ...epared for the Okinawa landing. She departed Saipan on 27 March with Rear Admiral Wright's Demonstration Force for simulated landings on the southeastern bea
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  • ...m [[Newfoundland]] to [[Trinidad]]. Early in 1948, she was [[flagship]] of Admiral W. H. P. Blandy, Commander Atlantic Fleet. ...ion there. She provided the platform from which [[John S. McCain, Jr.|Vice Admiral John S. McCain]] directed the naval forces’ support of this operation.
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  • Timoji met [[Vasco da Gama]]'s fleet off Anjediva in 1498, but the Portuguese admiral suspected him of being a spy and refused his advances. In 1505, he attracte
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  • ...se Naval Officers'' (1993) Naval Institute, Annapolis (ISBN 0-87021-316-4) Admiral Tanaka was the commander of many runs of the 'Tokyo Express' down 'The Slot ..., 1941-1945'' (1991) University of Pittsburgh 731 pp. (ISBN 0-8229-3665-8) Admiral Ugaki's extensive diary provides a detailed view of how things appeared to
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  • ...ommissioner for Indochina as of August 17, 1945. Prior to that assignment, Admiral d'Argenlieu, as he was generally known, had an exceptionally diverse career ...sufficiently that they jailed him. Nevertheless, he was promoted to rear admiral in 1942, and recalled to London via Washington, DC. A consistent man, he wa
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  • ...er with some sixty galleys. The right and left, under Gianandrea Doria and Admiral Barbarigo respectively, each had about sixty ships. Two reserve flotillas s The Turkish admiral Ali Pasha split his fleet into three wings and commanded the center himself
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  • ...e in 1936, he rose to the rank of naval captain, and was a close friend of Admiral [[Isoroku Yamamoto]]. <ref name=Berg1101>{{citation
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  • ...cretary of Defense Robert Gates and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Mike Mullen, the charges to be dropped. <ref name=Burton>{{citation...
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  • Admiral [[Thomas Kinkaid]] was its primary commander.
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  • Saionji helped the Throne save face by making Admiral [[Gonbee Yamamoto]] the new prime minister, and cut naval spending. Yamamot
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  • ...n operation in 1940, in which German forces occupied part of Vichy France. Admiral [[Erich Raeder]] assured Hitler that the French would protect their fleet,
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  • ...1896 after forty years of service. A decade later he was promoted to rear admiral on the retired list, but signed his many books and articles, "Captain Alfre ...man navy, as Kaiser [[William II]] ordered his officers to read Mahan, and Admiral [[Alfred von Tirpitz]] (1849-1930) used Mahan's reputation to finance a pow
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  • ...leet. Kennedy resigns from the Commission and is replaced as chair by Rear Admiral [[Emory S. Land]], USN.
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  • "Admiral Crutchley's instructions were that in case of a night attack each cruiser g
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  • '''Horatio Nelson''' (1758 - 1805), later [[vice admiral]] '''Horatio, Viscount Nelson''', was a distinguished officer of the [[Roya
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  • ...ed in January 2010. ''Newsweek'' reported her replacement will be retired Admiral [[Bruce MacDonald]], previously chief Judge Advocate General of the Navy.<r
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  • ...ry of Defense]] (November 2001-June 2003). The office was headed by [[vice admiral|VADM]] [[Arthur K. Cebrowski]] (USN, ret.), but was visible to the Secretar
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  • ...who was half-Irish, half-Dutch. His father, who rose to the rank of Vice-Admiral, was given an estate in [[Munster]], and William was brought up partly in [
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  • *[[John McCain Jr.]] admiral and successor to Greene as commander, [[United States Pacific Command]]
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  • ...ild aircraft for its new carrier, the '''INS Vikramaditya''' (ex-Russian ''Admiral Gorshkov'').
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  • *Commander of the Israel Navy: Admiral Eliezer Marom
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  • ...big-gun" design formalized in [[HMS Dreadnought (1905)]], urged by British Admiral [[John Arbuthnot Fisher|"Jacky" Fisher]].<ref name=Massey>{{citation
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  • ...th water and rum, which was introduced into the Royal Navy by British Vice Admiral Edward Vernon on August 21, 1740. Vernon himself had been nicknamed "Old Gr
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  • French naval forces under Admiral de la Grandiere, the governor of [[Cochin China]] (as the French renamed Na
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  • {{Image|Admiral Yi Sunshin.jpg|right|250px|Portrait of Admiral Yi, drawn in 1952.}} ...Yi Sunshin was born on March 8 and died on November 19.</ref> was a Korean admiral renowned for his naval victories against the invading [[Japan]]ese during t
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  • '''Kichisaburo Nomura''' was an [[Imperial Japanese Navy]] admiral, who became Japanese Ambassador to the U.S. in 1941, following service as F
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  • ...übung]] in May 1941, accompanied by the light cruiser [[KMS Prinz Eugen]]. Admiral [[Günther Lütjens]] was in tactical command of the task force; Captain [[
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  • ...f Australia. Nimitz rushed the carrier ''[[USS Lexington (CV-2)]]'', under Admiral [[Frank Fletcher]], to join ''[[USS Yorktown (CV-5)]]'' and a U.S.-Australi
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  • As Dohanyi's safe was being searched in the presence of Oster and his chief, Admiral [[Wilhelm Canaris]], with poor [[tradecraft]] they fumbled papers that Roed
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  • ...nfirmed that GEN Petraeus requested Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen, to transfer the State of Israel and the Occupied Territories t Following the March 2008 resignation of Admiral William Fallon as commander of CENTCOM, General David Petraeus became the n
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  • '''Stansfield Turner''' (1923-) is a retired admiral in the [[United States Navy]], who served as [[Director of Central Intellig
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  • ...2004}}, p.1</ref> It is commanded by James Stavridis|James G. Stavridis, Admiral, United States Navy.
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  • |[[Portuguese people|Portuguese]] Admiral [[Pedro Álvares Cabral]], lands at Kochi. ...t to Kochi in the 15<sup>th</sup> century as part of the treasure fleet of Admiral [[Zheng He]].<ref>
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  • ..."full" admiral (four stars). His protégé, David Dixon Porter, became vice admiral, heading ten rear admirals. Following the deaths of Farragut and Porter, t ...for flag officers but commissioned only Admiral Franklin Buchanan and Rear Admiral Raphael Semmes.
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  • ...vessels. The term Admiral first appeared in English in 1295, but the Lord Admiral was an administrator, and most importantly, head of the [[Admiralty court]] Driven by [[First Sea Lord]] Admiral [[John Arbuthnot Fisher|John Arbuthnot "Jacky" Fisher]], the Royal Navy int
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  • ...'' meaning 'achievement, a success, procession for a victorious general or admiral,' and earlier ''triumpus'', probably via [[Etruscan]] from the original [[G
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  • ...to as the [[White Army]] (white being a color of [[Monarchism]]) led by [[Admiral Kolchak]], who now declared himself the Supreme Ruler of Russia with his fo
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  • ...anes, plus 28 battleships and cruisers, and 69 destroyers. Tokyo sent Vice Admiral [[Jisaburo Ozawa]] with nine-tenths of Japan's fighting fleet--it was about ...a had the correct insight that the unaggressive Spruance would not attack. Admiral Mitscher, in tactical command of the Task Force 58, with its 15 carriers, w
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  • ...the Navy's carriers; coordination depended on personalities and politics. Admiral [[William Halsey]], in his autobiography, was critical of Kenney in the Ley | title = Admiral Halsey's Story
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  • ...officers later earned [[flag rank]] as Navy [[Rear Admiral|Rear]], [[Vice Admiral|Vice]], and full Admirals. .../viewtopic.php?t=148 James D. Ferguson] on 20 July 1955, by Captain (later Admiral) [http://www.ussrankin.org/forum/viewtopic.php?t=40 W.F.A. Wendt]on 4 Octob
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  • ...he Hollywood actor turned naval officer, was assigned to duty with British Admiral Lord [[Louis Mountbatten]]’s [[Commando]] in England. Fairbanks not only ...deception on raids against the Nazis and Fairbanks' concept of operations, Admiral [[Ernest J. King]], Commander-in-Chief, U. S. Fleet, and Chief of Naval Ope
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  • ...ed by several countries, is most associated with the [[Royal Navy]], where Admiral [[John Arbuthnot Fisher|"Jacky" Fisher]], was its champion. <ref name=Masse
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  • [[Image:Halsey FADM Color.jpg|right|thumb|250px|Halsey as Fleet Admiral]] '''William F. "Bull" Halsey''' (1882-1959) was a admiral of the [[United States Navy]], a colorful and inspirational combat leader i
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  • ...e of [[Okinawa]] in 1945. His father John S. McCain, Jr., was a four-star admiral who headed the [[Pacific Command]], with overall responsibility for the [[V
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  • ...rman [[destroyer]] ''Lutjens'', ironically named for [[Gunther Lutjens|the admiral]] who commanded the ''[[KMS Bismarck]]'' on its final voyage against the [[
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  • ...ict of [[Pennsylvania (U.S. state)|Pennsylvania]]. He is a retired [[vice admiral]] in the [[United States Navy]], the highest-ranking officer to serve in Co
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  • ...increasing altitude after take-off. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral William Crowe said, on the ABC News show ''Nightline'', that the Vincennes
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  • ...ds under Philip's commander, the Duke of Parma. He first chose a competent admiral, Don Álvaro de Bazán, but he died and Philip turned to Alonso Pérez de G ...Parma's army with the Armada, Charles, Lord Howard of Effingham, the Lord Admiral, had sent small squadrons to patrol the Dutch coast. After much debate, How
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  • ...ontract; sponsored by Mrs. A. W. Radford, wife of [[Arthur W. Radford|Rear Admiral Radford]]; transferred to the Navy 30 November 1944; and commissioned the s
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  • | The Admiral Richard E. Byrd Memorial
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  • ...f the Admiralty Commission, which took over the functions of the Lord High Admiral when the [[James VII and II|Duke of York]] was obliged to resign this offic
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  • ...d a courtesy promotion to [[rear admiral]] on retirement, but was never an admiral while on active duty, perhaps been too controversial for senior commanders. ...for the fleet intelligence billet might provide him with a direct line to Admiral Kimmel. If he entertained such a notion, it was dashed after his one and on
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  • ...as also involved in attacks on supposed enemies, including the murder of [[Admiral Henry Somerville]] in 1936. In the same year he was appointed chief of staf
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  • ...Abraham felt compelled to come forward after hearing his former boss, Rear Admiral James M. McGarrah call the Tribunal process "fair".
    6 KB (857 words) - 12:06, 13 March 2024
  • ...ions officers rising to Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. As of 2007, Admiral Eric Olson is the first United States Navy SEAL] to head USSOCOM.
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  • '''William Raborn''' (1905-1990), who retired as a [[vice admiral]] in the [[United States Navy]], had both brilliant achievement and embarra
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  • Art Cerebrowski, a retired admiral and Rumsfeld's head of transferormation planning, introduced Macgregor to N
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  • ...ded the Coast Guard Commendation Medal, Nov. 11, 2008, by Coast Guard Vice Admiral Robert Papp, at the U.S.S. Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum, for his brav
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  • ...ack, the German [[destroyer]] ''Lutjens'', named for [[Gunther Lutjens|the admiral]] who commanded the ''[[KMS Bismarck]]'' on its final voyage against Britai
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  • ...l Security Adviser [[Robert MacFarlane]], Deputy National Security Adviser Admiral [[John Poindexter]], National Security Council staffer Col. [[Oliver North]
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  • ...nged to the [[Chosu Clan]]. "His older brother, Ichiro Sato, became a rear admiral; his younger brother, [[Eisaku Sato]], became prime minister in 1965; and a
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  • ..."full" admiral (four stars). His protégé, David Dixon Porter, became vice admiral, heading ten rear admirals. Following the deaths of Farragut and Porter, t ...for flag officers but commissioned only Admiral Franklin Buchanan and Rear Admiral Raphael Semmes.
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  • * Admiral Lord Nelson
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  • ...Moran}}Chief Operating Officer of the Investor Relations Group, Inc., Vice Admiral, retired, [[United States Navy]]; board of directors, [[Federation of Ameri
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  • ...its lead ship, the USS'' Nimitz''. That ship, in turn, memorializes Fleet Admiral [[Chester W. Nimitz]].
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  • ...ghter Squadron 10 (VF-10), the "Grim Reapers," under the command of [[Vice Admiral]] [[James H. Flatley]] aboard the [[aircraft carrier]] [[USS Enterprise (CV ...chosen by Lieutenant Commander [[Edward O'Hare|Edward "Butch" O'Hare]] and Admiral Arthur W. Radford as one of four "Bat Team" fighter pilots to conduct exper
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  • The commanding officer of NORAD is a U.S. general or admiral who is also the head of United States Northern Command. The deputy commande
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  • ...with the transports and escorts of "Cent" force under [[Alan G. Kirk|Rear Admiral Alan G. Kirk]]. By [[8 July]], the convoy was underway for [[Scoglitti]], [ ...underway with TF.81, the Southern Attack Force, under the command of Rear Admiral John L. Hall. In spite of repeated enemy air attacks, the convoys arrived o
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  • ...ty secretary since 1984, and established close relationships with Chairman Admiral [[William Crowe, Jr.]], and other members of the [[Joint Chiefs of Staff]]. ...ng SDI systems. State Department arms control negotiator Paul H. Nitze and Admiral Crowe, among others, thought that it might be possible, in the interests of
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  • Both sides suffered from divided command. In his autobiography, Fleet Admiral [[William Halsey]] wrote, <blockquote>If we had been under the same command | title = Admiral Halsey's Story
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  • ...in exile, The British sent a fleet on December 13, 1814, commanded by Vice Admiral Sir Alexander Cochrane. It arrived off the Louisiana coast with 14,000 men. ...British Eyewitness at the Battle of New Orleans: The Memoir of Royal Navy Admiral Robert Aitchison, 1808-1827.'' (Gene A. Smith, ed.) Historical New Orleans
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  • He replaced Admiral William Fallon, who resigned as CENTCOM commander in March 2008. While ther
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  • *''The Admiral'', page 99
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  • ...first of the service's new 153-foot patrol cutters. Coast Guard Commandant Admiral Thad Allen approved the change of the cutter's name to allow this class of
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  • ...first of the service’s new 153-foot patrol cutters. Coast Guard Commandant Admiral Thad Allen approved the change of the cutter’s name to allow this class o
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  • ...eliberate interception and shooting down of the aircraft carrying Japanese Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto.
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  • ...es during the campaign, when Vice Admiral [[William Halsey]] replaced Vice Admiral [[Robert Ghormley]] as head of the [[Pacific Ocean Areas|South Pacific Area ...e. While their major territorial goals were in Southeast Asia and Oceania, Admiral [[Isoroku Yamamoto]], [[Commander-in-Chief, Combined Fleet]], who opposed t
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  • ...trol boats for the Venezuelan Navy in Puerto Cabello (Carabobo), announced Admiral [[Diego Alfredo Molero Bellavia]] (Commander General, Venezuela Navy).
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  • ...s, and for a fleet. Commerce raiding was also a mission, notably by German Admiral [[Maximilian von Spee]]'s squadron, which also destroyed an inferior Britis | title = Admiral of the Fleet Sir David Beatty, 1st Earl Beatty 1871-1936
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  • ...ion|assassination of John F. Kennedy, Helms was made Deputy Director under Admiral William Raborn. A year later, in 1966, he was appointed Director.
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  • Vice Admiral Jean Decoux, who commanded French naval forces in the Far East, and was bas ...PA47,M1}} pp. 47 </ref> Ducoux had additional worries. The senior British admiral in the area, on the way from Hong Kong to Singapore, visited Ducoux and tol
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  • ...rs involved were. General H. Imamura, commanding the Eighth Area Army, and Admiral J. Kusaka, Commander South East Area Fleet.<ref>{{citation
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  • ...first of the service's new 153-foot patrol cutters. Coast Guard Commandant Admiral Thad Allen approved the change of the cutter's name to allow this class of
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  • ...first of the service's new 153-foot patrol cutters. Coast Guard Commandant Admiral Thad Allen approved the change of the cutter's name to allow this class of
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  • ...lessons that most naval officers must learn before moving from captain to admiral. It has the least in-space action of any of the books.
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  • ...ould provide emergency landing fields for stricken [[Superfortress]]es, so Admiral [[Chester Nimitz]] decided to take it; the invasion was code named "Operat
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  • ...first of the service's new 153-foot patrol cutters. Coast Guard Commandant Admiral Thad Allen approved the change of the cutter's name to allow this class of
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  • ...the CBI theater into two theaters&emsp;China and India-Burma. The British Admiral Lord [[Louis Mountbatten]] (1900-79) became supreme commander of the India- ...British India Command, under Wavell. In October 1943, Churchill appointed Admiral Lord [[Louis Mountbatten]] as Supreme Allied Commander, SEAC. General [[Wil
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  • ...ber 1 meeting, even as the coup leaders were mobilizing troops, Lodge, and Admiral Felt (commander, [[United States Pacific Command]]) met with Diem; Diem cal
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  • ...first of the service's new 153-foot patrol cutters. Coast Guard Commandant Admiral Thad Allen approved the change of the cutter's name to allow this class of
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  • ...orth Africa]]. She sailed [[24 October]] with the Southern Attack Group of Admiral [[H. Kent Hewitt]]’s Western Naval Task Force, which gathered at midnight
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  • * Coletta, Paolo. ''Admiral Bradley A. Fiske and the American Navy'' (1979)
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  • | title =HOPELESSLY OUTFORCED."; Admiral Mahan Prophesies Plight of Nation Without More Battleships. ...made every other battleship in existence, or under construction, obsolete. Admiral [[John Arbuthnot Fisher|Jacky Fisher]] can fairly consider himself her fath
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  • ...news.ca/imprudence-not-malice-led-to-alleged-military-security-breach-rear-admiral-1.2723881 ...= Imprudence, not malice, led to alleged military security breach: rear admiral
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  • On December 7, the Japanese carrier-based [[Mobile Fleet]], led by Vice Admiral [[Chuichi Nagumo]] under the direction of [[Commander-in-Chief, Combined Fl ...ese Navy inflicted a resounding defeat on the main ABDA naval force, under Admiral Karel Doorman. The Netherlands East Indies campaign subsequently ended with
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  • ...re legitimate military targets under the rules in force at the time. Fleet Admiral [[Chester Nimitz]], U.S. commander of Pacific forces, wrote to the tribunal
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  • ...tes of America|U.S. President]] [[Harry Truman]] on 23 January 1946 with Admiral [[Sidney Souers]] occupying the position. The term Director of Central Inte |[[Rear admiral|RADM]] Sidney Souers
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  • A study group, headed by Rear Admiral [[Sokichi Takagi]] of the [[Imperial Japanese Navy]] general staff, a close Navy Minister Yonai assigned Rear Admiral [[Sokichi Takagi‎]] to a broad-ranging staff post in the Navy Ministry, n
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  • ...y of Edinburgh]] in 2011. The Queen then transferred her post of Lord High Admiral to him. In particular, he devoted himself to raising public awareness of th ...the Duke was given the rank and titles [[Admiral of the Fleet (Royal Navy)|Admiral of the Fleet]], [[Field Marshal (UK)|Field Marshal]], and [[Marshal of the
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  • ...hile in those cold southern latitudes, she served as the flagship for Rear Admiral [[Richard E. Byrd]], officer-in-charge of the Antarctic programs.
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  • The British navy's victory, under Admiral [[Horatio Nelson]] over the French fleet in the [[Battle of the Nile]] in 1
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  • ...was less relevant to the naval and "island hopping" operations in [[Fleet Admiral]] [[Chester Nimitz]]'s [[Pacific Ocean Areas (command)|Pacific Ocean Area]] ...$175 million and the Japanese government made the former prisoner a [[rear admiral]]. .<ref name=KodamaEncyc>{{citation
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  • * Buell, Thomas. ''Master of Seapower: A Biography of Admiral Ernest J. King'' (1976).
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  • ...first of the service's new 153-foot patrol cutters. Coast Guard Commandant Admiral Thad Allen approved the change of the cutter's name to allow this class of
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  • In February 1942, after air raids on [[Darwin, Australia]], Admiral [[Isoroku Yamamoto]] wanted to land a force of one or more divisions on the
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  • ...Charles II, in payment of a longs-standing debt to Admiral [[William Penn (Admiral)|William Penn]] granted a land tract to his son [[William Penn (Quaker)|Wil
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  • ...ly from [[Romania]], the Republic was overthrown by a White Revolution and Admiral [[Miklós Horthy]] was installed in power. Another unsuccessful attempt to
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  • At this time, [[Rear Admiral]] [[William Moffett]], Chief of the [[Bureau of Aeronautics]] and staunch a
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  • ...a foothold on high ground. It was to be a combined naval-land effort with Admiral Porter cooperating with General Grant. To the difficult engineering feat we Passing Vicksburg was a challenge accepted by the Navy's Acting Rear Admiral [[David Porter]]. The heart of his fleet, six "City-class" Eads ironclads,
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  • ...first of the service's new 153-foot patrol cutters. Coast Guard Commandant Admiral Thad Allen approved the change of the cutter's name to allow this class of
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  • ...antisubmarine warfare, coupled with excessive radio reporting to and from Admiral [[Karl Doenitz]], commanding the German submarine arm. The Germans never re When Admiral [[Chester Nimitz]] took over the Pacific command at [[Pearl Harbor]], his c
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  • Pericles strategic ideas were clear. He was an admiral rather than a general, and Athens’ naval resources were much superior to
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  • ...made possible the interception and death of the Combined Fleet commander, Admiral [[Isoroku Yamamoto]], by BEADWINDOW 5 and 7 violations. They identified a k
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  • Many of the attacks on the sea line of communication came from Malta. Grand Admiral [[Erich Raeder]] initially convinced Hitler to support Rommel's western pus
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  • ...; Trinity House (1817), which contains Sir [[Henry Raeburn]]'s portrait of Admiral Lord Duncan, David Scott's "Vasco da Gama Rounding the Cape" and other pain
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  • [[Image:US Navy Tiger Woods poses in admiral chair.jpg|thumb|left|alt=Picture of people posing for a camera on a US navy
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  • ...t during a dinner banquet at Mercer's Hall, Cheapside in 1740 in honour of Admiral [[Edward Vernon]] who had captured the [[Spain|Spanish]] harbour of [[Porto
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  • ...e became deputy supreme allied commander in Southeast Asia under Britain's Admiral Mountbatten.
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  • ...ring explosive shells from their long guns. In 1788, the Russian navy sent Admiral [[John Paul Jones]] with a flotilla of long boats fitted with brass ordnanc ...a Biography of Admiral Sir Percy Scott'' (1965); Elting Elmore Morison, ''Admiral Sims and the Modern American Navy'' (1968) </ref>
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  • From her position off the beach immediately to starboard of Rear Admiral [[John L. Hall]]'s [[flagship]] [[USS Samuel Chase (AP-56)|''Samuel Chase''
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  • ...arrisons. Early in February 1955, ''Washburn'' and the other ships of Rear Admiral Sabin's Amphibious Evacuation Force, TF&nbsp;76, brought 15,627 civilians a
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  • ...ts name in honour of the [[Horatio Nelson|1st Viscount Nelson]], a British admiral that defeated both the French and Spanish fleets at the [[Battle of Trafalg
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  • ...first of the service's new 153-foot patrol cutters. Coast Guard Commandant Admiral Thad Allen approved the change of the cutter's name to allow this class of
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  • ...Pyeongyang]]. Within a few days of the Chinese defeat, however, the Korean admiral [[Yi Sunshin]] annihilated the Japanese fleet tasked with securing the supp ...f their possession of arquebuses), were winning the war until [[Yi Sunshin|Admiral Yi]] developed the (possibly iron-clad) [[turtle ship]]s, and the Chinese c
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  • Vice Admiral Jean Decoux, who commanded French naval forces in the Far East, and was bas ...PA47,M1}} pp. 47 </ref> Ducoux had additional worries. The senior British admiral in the area, on the way from Hong Kong to Singapore, visited Ducoux and tol
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  • ...d service ministers were usually joined by the CoS who were [[Dudley Pound|Admiral Sir Dudley Pound]], the [[First Sea Lord]]; [[Cyril Newall, 1st Baron Newal [[File:SirDudleyPound.jpg|thumb|right|upright=0.68|Admiral of the Fleet<br />Sir Dudley Pound]]
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  • ...h guns. In endorsing CDR Cooley's report on [[19 December]], [[Ernest King|Admiral Ernest J. King]], Commander in Chief, United States Atlantic Fleet, agreed ...rried out in "an outstanding manner." Commander, 3d Amphibious Force, Vice Admiral [[Theodore S. Wilkinson]], considered Almaack's unloading, an overall avera
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  • ...tic Blockading Squadron in 1863. Mobile Bay was captured in August 1864 by Admiral [[David Farragut]] (tied to the rigging of his flagship, he cried out, "Dam
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  • ...distrusted the military intelligence service, the [[Abwehr]], which under Admiral [[Wilhelm Canaris]] was indeed a hotbed of activity for the [[German Resist
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  • ...called '''CINCPAC''' after the historic name for its commander, currently Admiral [[Timothy Keating]], is a [[Unified Combatant Command]] (UCC) responsible f
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  • ...litician)|Melissa Price]] the [[Minister for Defence Industry]] and [[Rear Admiral]] [[Wendy Malcolm]], representing Australia.<ref name=ADoD2020-10-29/><ref | quote = At a press conference announcing the program, Rear Admiral Mark Purcell, the head of Maritime Systems Division at Australia's Defence
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  • ...circular tower with viewing gallery overlooking the city. It commemorates Admiral Lord Nelson's victory and death at the battle of [[Trafalgar]] on 21 Octobe
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  • ...any plan to prevent an invasion of Great Britain. A Conservative MP, Vice Admiral [[Ernest Taylor (Royal Navy officer)|Ernest Taylor]], interrupted and asked Moments later, Admiral of the Fleet Sir [[Roger John Brownlow Keyes, 1st Baron Keyes|Roger Keyes]]
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  • ...ground, he had a relationship of both friendship and competition with Rear Admiral [[Wilhelm Canaris]], head of the military [[Abwehr]] counterintelligence se
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  • ...was modified to prepare her for polar operations. Equipped to become Rear Admiral [[Richard E. Byrd]]'s flagship for a planned [[Antarctic]] cruise, she was
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  • ...nalysts and direction finders, the wrong question. In World War I, British Admiral [[John Jellicoe]], knew a little too much detail about SIGINT without fully
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  • ...itle of ''Dom'' (Lord). He was also nominated to the newly created post of Admiral of the Indian Ocean and was promised the title of Count. In 1500 or 1501 Va
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  • ...HenleyandRlStevenson/chap1.html ''Three Plays: Deacon Brodie, Beau Austin, Admiral Guinea''], by Stevenson and W. E. Henley (London: Nutt, 1892; New York: Scr
    20 KB (2,785 words) - 19:43, 1 May 2008
  • ...e Brothers and the American Revolution'' (1975), the standard biography of Admiral Howe and his brother General Howe
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  • ...and naval commanders, General Robert Venables and Admiral [[William Penn (Admiral)|William Penn]], the use of troops whom military commanders wanted removed
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  • ...tried to arrive early from Europe each season in an attempt to become the admiral; soon merchant companies left crewmen behind at the prime shoreline locatio
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  • *[[Franklin Buchanan]] (Maryland) - Admiral *[[Raphael Semmes]] (Maryland) - Rear Admiral
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  • ...The Germans also considered a blockade. "England wants to starve us," said Admiral [[Alfred von Tirpitz]], the man who built the German fleet and who remained ...g the Navy in the dark about the success of the German submarine campaign. Admiral William Sims charged after the war that in April, 1917, only ten percent of
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  • ''' 23. Libya'''. US Rear Admiral Gerard Hueber, chief of staff of Joint Task Force Odyssey Dawn, reports tha
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  • ...relationship between France and America had come into jeopardy when French Admiral d'Estaing called off the attack because his ships needed to be repaired. Th
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  • ...relationship between France and America had come into jeopardy when French Admiral d'Estaing called off the attack because his ships needed to be repaired. Th
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  • ...the Navy as a counterforce. The commander of the Yokusuka Naval Base, Rear Admiral [[Mitsumasa Yonai]], guarded the Navy Ministry and gathered warships and la
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  • ...l Hellers shared, sometimes to ludicrous effect, as when a battle-hardened Admiral Heller is depicted issuing orders while absorbed in needlework. The real-li
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  • Grand Admiral [[Erich Raeder]] ordered ''[[KMS Bismarck]]'' and ''[[KMS Prinz Eugen]]'' t ..., was already underway, and was principally a submarine campaign headed by Admiral [[Karl Doenitz]]. Doenitz replaced [[Erich Raeder]] as head of the navy in
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  • ...ker]] under the Reich Chancellery building in central Berlin. He told Vice-Admiral [[Hans-Erich Voss]] that he would not entertain the idea of either surrende ...eader of the Nazi Party, but appointed Goebbels Reich Chancellor and Grand Admiral [[Karl Dönitz]], who was at [[Flensburg]] near the Danish border, Reich Pr
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  • }}</ref> yielded information that gave Chester Nimitz|Admiral Nimitz the upper hand in the ambush that resulted in the Japanese Navy's de
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  • ...tate without national territory, constitutes war. As with the WWII case of Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto, commander of the Combined Fleet of the Imperial Japanese ...hat submarines cannot rescue survivors; his position was supported by U.S. Admiral Chester W. Nimitz.
    62 KB (9,765 words) - 16:34, 24 March 2024
  • ...ough Bavaria is completely landlocked and had no navy, it did have a great admiral. The common soldiers were mainly conscripted, unwilling, underpaid, and unt
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  • ...prosecution of [[Karl Doenitz]] as head of the German [[submarine]] force. Admiral [[Chester W. Nimitz]] submitted a statement that German submarines had not
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  • ...l Hellers shared, sometimes to ludicrous effect, as when a battle-hardened Admiral Heller is depicted issuing orders while absorbed in needlework. The real-li
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  • When Captain Newport, his Admiral, Sir [[George Somers]], and the new governor, Sir [[Thomas Gates]], finally ...d a large naval force under the [[Admiral de Grasse]]. On [[September 5]], Admiral de Grasse defeated British navy at the [[Battle of the Virginia Capes]]. Th
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  • ..., 1940, came out of a rain squall and confronted a German heavy cruiser, ''Admiral von Hipper''. Glowworm tried to hit with guns and torpedoes, but did little ...latimes.com/news/la-na-navy31-2008aug31,0,1738142.story?track=rss}}</ref>. Admiral Gary Roughead, Chief of Naval Operations, explained that while the Zumwalts
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  • ...rank of general, most notably Lieutenant General [[James Longstreet]] and Admiral [[Raphael Semmes]]. [[Josiah Gorgas]] who came to Alabama from Pennsylvani
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  • ...he Navy never saw action during the war. Benson's doctrine was faulty, but Admiral [[William Sims]], US naval commander in London, grasped the situation. In c
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  • .... It was commanded by Major General [[William Howe]] and his older brother Admiral Richard Howe. Fortunately for the American cause, the Howes were trying to ...land]], was poorly guarded. Clinton decided on a surprise attack, but both Admiral Graves and General [[Charles Cornwallis]] refused to follow his orders, and
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  • ...e voyager Ma Huan during his visit to Kochi in the 15th century as part of Admiral Zheng He's treasure fleet.
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  • ...la of ships under the command of the unfortunate (and unfortunately-named) Admiral Belcher in 1853-54, found no further traces. Belcher, panicked when most o
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  • ...wn in 1979, it was by extreme Islamic fundamentalists. Former CIA director Admiral Stansfield Turner had poor intelligence of the Islamist revolution of 1979
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  • ...la of ships under the command of the unfortunate (and unfortunately-named) Admiral Belcher in 1853-54, found no further traces. Belcher, panicked when most o
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  • ...un duel in history. Battle of Leyte Gulf#Force "C"|A Japanese force, under Admiral Shoji Nishimura, consisting of two battleships, a cruiser, and several dest Before battleships became obsolete, their designers, such as Admiral of the Fleet John Arbuthnot Fisher|Jacky Fisher, 1st Baron Fisher, constant
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  • ...oted in this experience. The Hungarian communists were soon ousted by Rear Admiral [[Miklós Horthy]] who headed a fascist regime until the end of [[World War
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  • ...at the Battle of Tsushima Strait might have been prevented had the Russian admiral given permission for EW. Perhaps this can better be described as the first
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  • }}</ref> Ely obtained greater support from Admiral [[Arthur Radford]], [[Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff]]. <ref> Karnow
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  • ...loud that caught the attention of Pliny the Elder at Misenum 30km away. As admiral of the fleet at Misenum, he readied a single ship to investigate, but on re
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  • ...loud that caught the attention of Pliny the Elder at Misenum 30km away. As admiral of the fleet at Misenum, he readied a single ship to investigate, but on re
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  • ...es in a Savoia-Marchetti flying boat. Late in June, four Americans, led by Admiral Richard E. Byrd, attempted to emulate Lindbergh’s flight path in a Fokker
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  • ...y in that region. A secure source of oil had to be ensured above all else. Admiral Sir John (Jacky) Fisher called himself an "oil maniac" as early as 1886, an
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  • Hogarth had urged Admiral [[Reginald Hall|Reginald "Blinker" Hall]], head of British military intelli
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  • Rear Admiral Sir '''John Franklin''' [[Royal Geographical Society|FRGS]] ([[April 15]],
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  • ...general public. The weak governments of [[General Dámaso Berenguer]] and [[Admiral Juan Bautista Aznar]] struggled to maintain order. At [[San Sebastián]] (
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  • Rear Admiral Sir '''John Franklin''' [[Royal Geographical Society|FRGS]] ([[April 15]],
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  • ...rene A. Bierman, ed., ''Napoleon in Egypt'' (2003)</ref> The British under Admiral [[Horatio Nelson]] sank Napoleon's entire fleet at the [[Battle of the Nile
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  • ...en across the United States on prototype color receivers. A few days later Admiral brought out the first commercially made color television set using the RCA
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  • ...inistration, some officials, such as Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Arthur Radford had recommended U.S. military intervention to help the Frenc
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  • ...rget intelligence and battle damage assessments. At the initiative of Rear Admiral John Michael McConnell|"Mike" McConnell, JS-J2 [then Intelligence Director
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  • ...n]] (second left) and [[Harry Truman|Truman]] (centre). [[William D. Leahy|Admiral Leahy]] is fourth left.]]
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  • }}</ref> Rear Admiral [[Director of Central Intelligence#Roscoe Hillenkoetter|Roscoe H. Hillenkoe
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  • ...merican counterparts might be more blunt. A destroyer captain, knowing the admiral's eyes were upon him, decided to dock at high speed, showing mastery of shi
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  • Admiral [[Georges d'Argenlieu]], the High Commissioner was the senior official, wit
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  • ...l protected by the world's strongest navy. By 1914 under the leadership of Admiral [[Alfred von Tirpitz]], Germany had a good fleet, but the Royal Navy remain
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  • | publisher = Office of the Historian, [[U.S. Department of State]]}}</ref> Admiral [[Thomas Moorer]], [[Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff]]; [[Director of
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  • ...(CV-45)]] was in the Philippines, as part of Carrier Division 3 under Rear Admiral [[J.M. Hoskins]]. The ships initially, a light cruiser and eight destroyers
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  • ...onvinced anti-Nazi as early as 1934. He was protected by the Abwehr chief, Admiral [[Wilhelm Canaris]]. Oster was able to build up an extensive clandestine ne
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  • ...ng closely with his aide [[Harry Hopkins]] and his chief of staff, [[Fleet Admiral]] [[William Leahy]], provided decisive leadership against [[National Social
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  • * Weddle, Kevin J. ''Lincoln's Tragic Admiral: The Life of Samuel Francis Du Pont.'' (2005). 269 pp.
    82 KB (11,425 words) - 14:08, 10 February 2023
  • ...Bulloch]], "Uncle Jimmy", was a U.S. Navy officer who became a Confederate admiral and naval procurement agent in Britain. Another uncle Irvine Bulloch was a
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  • ...eyed aviator had ever imagined. He gave command of the Navy to an aviator, Admiral Ernest King, with a mandate for an aviation-oriented war in the Pacific.<re
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  • ...British merchant seamen who had been captured by the pocket battleship <i>Admiral Graf Spee</i>. These actions, supplemented by his speeches, considerably en
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