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  • A military agency that operates [[Panama]]'s military aircraft and military watercraft
    122 bytes (15 words) - 15:24, 28 March 2022
  • ...ve but unclassified" traffic for military personnel, government employees, military contractors, and approved allies
    216 bytes (27 words) - 18:11, 14 September 2008
  • {{r|Logistics (military)}} {{r|Military doctrine}}
    527 bytes (65 words) - 19:25, 30 August 2008
  • ...ry theorist, whose classical ideas influenced all military strategists and military historians of the 19th and 20th century.
    207 bytes (27 words) - 11:40, 26 January 2009
  • ...itary transformation]] and [[revolution in military affairs|revolutions in military affairs]]; advised [[Donald Rumsfeld]] in [[Iraq War]] planning
    251 bytes (32 words) - 21:12, 25 May 2009
  • ...ary watercraft. Most nations large enough to not have a single integrated military agency have a separate [[air force]] and [[navy]].
    323 bytes (46 words) - 15:14, 28 March 2022
  • All the United States' military forces share a common set of [[military justice]] procedures.
    129 bytes (17 words) - 19:15, 22 April 2011
  • ...Fellows Program, Council on Foreign Relations; [[Colonel]], [[U.S. Army]]; Military Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations, 2001-2002
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  • ...area on which military troop-carrying helicopters, assault transports, or military gliders are expected to land
    151 bytes (19 words) - 20:42, 16 July 2008
  • ...y defined area in which a single military commander has authority over all military services
    143 bytes (19 words) - 21:50, 7 February 2009
  • ...entually absorbed into the Nazi party security apparatus other than purely military support
    208 bytes (26 words) - 15:23, 1 July 2009
  • Military air transportation within a [[theater of operations (military)]] that delivers cargoes to forward airbases, possibly under fire, or by pa
    185 bytes (27 words) - 10:24, 11 September 2009
  • ...n]] who specialized in [[American Studies]], especially [[military history|military]] and cultural history.
    198 bytes (20 words) - 19:17, 25 June 2009
  • {{r|Staff (military)}} {{r|School of Advanced Military Studies}}
    384 bytes (49 words) - 08:51, 24 June 2023
  • A U.S. military organization, larger than would be the military attache section of an embassy, which provides training, supplies and non-co
    204 bytes (30 words) - 08:09, 14 August 2009
  • ...d executed by military courts for the discipline, trial, and punishment of military personnel.
    184 bytes (24 words) - 11:37, 14 September 2009
  • * [[Society for Military History]] * [[American Revolution, military history]]
    389 bytes (45 words) - 13:19, 21 August 2010
  • ...pt to defeat each other; by extension any protracted argument likened to a military battle, whether physical or verbal.
    216 bytes (31 words) - 22:52, 28 April 2012
  • ...-military airport near the capital of Kyrgyzstan, from which U.S. and NATO military forces operate in support of the Afghanistan War
    183 bytes (26 words) - 08:11, 29 February 2024
  • ...obility of the adversary, such as disrupting transportation and creating [[military obstacles]] and reinforcing difficult terrain
    231 bytes (27 words) - 12:08, 24 April 2010
  • ...types of ground troops (e.g., infantry, artillery, engineers) or different military services (e.g., Army and Air Force)
    221 bytes (31 words) - 23:39, 2 August 2008
  • ...ters''' are made by France in commercial and medium military versions. The military version is primarily anti-tank, firing the [[Euromissile HOT]] [[air-to-sur
    205 bytes (25 words) - 20:08, 21 April 2009
  • ...y unit with authority to enforce political doctrine, sometimes overriding military orders
    214 bytes (28 words) - 16:27, 31 December 2010
  • ...Center for Military Readiness, which opposes social experimentation in the military and calls for conservative values
    182 bytes (24 words) - 11:45, 19 March 2024
  • ...ions; may be associated with [[peace operations]]; related term is [[civil-military operations]]
    233 bytes (31 words) - 20:40, 11 September 2009
  • In the U.S. military, the branch, in the Army, Navy or Air Force, in which military lawyers are commissioned
    144 bytes (23 words) - 04:55, 28 April 2011
  • #REDIRECT [[Military Commissions Act of 2006#Office of Military Commissions]]
    77 bytes (9 words) - 01:54, 17 March 2010
  • ...litary organization, which includes the noncombat support functions of a [[Military Assistance Advisory Group]], but can also combat U.S. and coalition troops
    213 bytes (31 words) - 08:10, 14 August 2009
  • ===Civil with military derivative=== ===Purpose-built military===
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  • ...a secure "don't kill me" signal to friendly forces, to avoid [[fratricide (military)|fratricide]], usually based on encrypted interaction with a [[transponder]
    234 bytes (30 words) - 19:14, 12 September 2009
  • {{r|Military Assistance Advisory Group}} {{r|Military Assistance Advisory Group, Indochina||**}}
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  • ===American and allied military leaders=== ===British military leaders===
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  • ...Generaloberst]]; noted innovator of mobile warfare and blitzkrieg; [[tank (military)|Panzer group commander]]; [[OKH]] Chief of Staff (21 Jul 42-28 Mar 45)
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  • {{r|Military doctrine}} {{r|Military history}}
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  • {{r|Military}} {{r|Military education}}
    398 bytes (52 words) - 13:58, 29 August 2009
  • {{rpl|International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)}} {{rpl|International Military Tribunal for the Far East}}
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  • {{r|German military forces}} {{r|Military doctrine}}
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  • ...s for training officers for entry to a military service; may also refer to military-themed schools below the college level
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  • {{r|Military law}} {{r|Military prison}}
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  • ...major staff leadership role, or, in some countries, commanding the entire military
    217 bytes (31 words) - 13:55, 24 August 2008
  • A civil-military organization, with a longer-term focus than traditional military [[civil affairs]], intended to rebuild infrastructure, local governance and
    284 bytes (32 words) - 01:40, 1 October 2009
  • ...al War College]] research paper in which the author challenges some of the military planning doctrines of the [[George W. Bush Administration]]
    245 bytes (32 words) - 17:08, 21 May 2010
  • ...itical Science]] at [[Canada]]'s [[Royal Military College of Canada|Royal Military College]] and [[Queen’s University]]
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  • ...]] providing medium-range transportation within a [[theater of operations (military)|theater of operations]], among established bases rather than the battlefie
    291 bytes (33 words) - 10:22, 11 September 2009
  • {{r|Military law}} {{r|International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)}}
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  • ==Modern military significance== ...shes. Their tactics have been described as an early version of [[swarming (military)| swarming]].
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  • ..., and often qualified as light infantry. The term may refer to a branch of military service, or units of that branch. ...re not within the scope of military police, and sentenced to imprisonment, military police personnel will manage the prison.
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  • ...fficer and adviser to General [[Stanley McChrystal]], senior U.S. and NATO military commander in the [[Afghanistan War (2001-2021)]]; Foreign Area Officer for
    270 bytes (36 words) - 16:53, 17 March 2024
  • ...nvariably stressed the European (and especially British) roots of American military ideas.
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  • ...cretary of State for Politico-Military Affairs]], 1986-89; [[Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change]] (2004)
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  • {{rpl|Tank (military)|Military tank}}
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  • ...; tried and executed, principally for planning war, by the [[International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)]]
    331 bytes (40 words) - 15:36, 24 February 2009
  • ...itary services, and national-level programs directly associated with joint military operational support rather than national strategic intelligence
    326 bytes (39 words) - 01:59, 1 October 2009
  • *America as a Military Power 1775-1882 (Praeger, 2002) *The English Seaborne Empire, Yale, 2004, and World War Two: A Military History (Routledge, 2003)
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  • ...rvising the individuals in performing the task, or an expert in a relevant military skill
    234 bytes (34 words) - 16:26, 18 August 2008
  • ...onjo Shigero]]; leader of [[Imperial Way Faction]]; [[Inspector General of Military Eduction]] forced to resign over his criticism of Palace decisionmaking
    323 bytes (40 words) - 02:42, 29 August 2010
  • {{r|Logistics (military)}} {{r|Swarming (military)}}
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  • ...l]] (C2), and interoperable firing systems, thereby reducing [[fratricide (military)|fratricide]] and [[collateral damage]]
    362 bytes (43 words) - 20:21, 16 September 2009
  • ...at Guantanamo Bay detention camp; first [[Military Commissions Act of 2006|Military Commission]] hearing rejected by convening authority [[Susan Crawford]] due
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  • ...ficer for implementation of the enrollment of women at the [[United States Military Academy]]
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  • {{r|Military law}} {{r|Military necessity}}
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Military history]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Centers of gravity (military)}}
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  • ...d by verdict of the [[Einsatzgruppen Case (NMT)]] trial in the [[Nuremberg Military Tribunals]]
    282 bytes (38 words) - 04:44, 17 November 2010
  • *[http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/library/report/1995/WJC.htm American military strategy during the Seminole War (Marine Command and Staff College)] ...er for Military History, Chapter 7, "Toward a professional army", American Military History ''Volume I, The United States Army and the Forging of a Nationm, 17
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  • ...ns, other government agencies, and allied nations; information is at the [[military strategy|strategic/theater]] and [[operational art|operational]], not [[tac
    367 bytes (44 words) - 09:19, 15 September 2009
  • ...inal commander of the base at [[Dien Bien Phu]]. A [[cavalry]] and [[tank (military)|tank]] specialist, it had been conceived that he might take the fight to t
    290 bytes (47 words) - 12:23, 26 November 2008
  • ...nct from the military [[kempetai]], [[Civilian Spy Service]], or naval and military intelligence; focused on subversion, especially left-wing
    355 bytes (42 words) - 14:15, 17 September 2010
  • {{r|Military}} {{r|Military education}}
    398 bytes (52 words) - 07:05, 21 March 2024
  • ...e later [[Toseiha]] ([[Control Faction]]); these groups contributed to the military dominance that led to the [[Pacific War]]
    330 bytes (45 words) - 18:30, 7 July 2010
  • ...Nazi Germany; testified against major war criminals at the [[International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)]]; later received a six-year sentence; commuted before
    397 bytes (51 words) - 01:03, 20 November 2010
  • ...rms Center, [[Command and General Staff College]] and [[School of Advanced Military Studies]] at [[Fort Leavenworth]], [[Kansas (U.S. state)|Kansas]]
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  • ...s, freezing assets, and buying up raw materials. It may be complemented by military means such as intercepting supply shipments or attacking factories.
    331 bytes (48 words) - 12:00, 6 November 2008
  • ...f formation for a land-based military force, or the entirety of a nation's military force responsible for its land defenses.
    185 bytes (27 words) - 19:47, 20 May 2008
  • {{rpl|U.S. foreign military assistance organizations|In Military}}
    233 bytes (31 words) - 05:44, 26 September 2013
  • ...ough the [[Iran-Iraq War]]; France and the Soviet Union were the leading military suppliers to Iraq
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  • ===Military===
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  • ...ay 1940 to 10 November 1943); testified extensively at the [[International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)]]; executed by a Polish court in 1947
    363 bytes (39 words) - 12:59, 24 November 2010
  • ...on Military Personnel]], [[U.S. House Committee on Education and Labor]]; military spouse; social worker; youth worker in [[kibbutz]]
    339 bytes (44 words) - 13:59, 20 March 2023
  • ...ainst Hitler]]; Bundeswehr Inspector General (1957-1961); Chairman,[[NATO Military Committee]] (1961-1964)
    328 bytes (37 words) - 01:44, 27 November 2010
  • {{r|Michitsura Nodzu}} Japanese [[Inspector General of Military Education]] {25 Apr 1900 - 14 Jan 1904) {{r|Hiroshi Nishii}} Japanese [[Inspector General of Military Education]] {9 May 1905 - 21 Dec 1908)
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  • ...er of [[Nuremberg Trials|Trial of Major War Criminals of the International Military Tribunal]]
    339 bytes (44 words) - 23:31, 1 January 2011
  • ...ll members of all elements of the United States Armed Services. It is the military equivalent of the laws in the civilian justice system. ...code that describes them. An [[article 32 hearing]], for instance, is the military equivalent to a civilian hearing to determine if there is sufficient eviden
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  • In current military organizations, the highest [[military rank]] (although the naval equivalent is admiral); also used in the sense o
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  • ...al reading list of all four U.S. military services, with its insights into military discipline, motivation and command. The movie version shares little besides
    440 bytes (64 words) - 23:24, 6 August 2009
  • {{r|Military strategy}} {{r|Swarming (military)}}
    648 bytes (86 words) - 09:00, 28 April 2024
  • ...ligence service, ''Servizio per le Informazioni e la Sicurezza Militare'' (Military Intelligence and Security Service). In a 2007 reorganization, it was replac
    337 bytes (47 words) - 06:24, 16 March 2024
  • ...the '''Center for Contemporary Conflict''' is a think tank within the U.S. military's academic research system. It conducts research with its own staff, suppo
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  • ===Military events===
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  • ===Military Operations===
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  • ===Terrorism and military issues===
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  • ...ientist manager of the [[Ahenerbe Society]], Director of its Institute for Military Scientific Research]] and Deputy Chairman of the Managing Board of Director
    334 bytes (46 words) - 02:17, 11 November 2010
  • ...tion under the [[Meiji Restoration]], but became a minority faction in the military politics of the 1930s and 1930s
    358 bytes (52 words) - 12:48, 28 August 2010
  • ...f the Republic of Vietnam]], who was 2nd vice chairman and of the 12-man [[Military Revolutionary Council]] (MRC) that overthrew [[Ngo Dinh Diem]] in November | title = Military Aspects of the Vietnam Conflict
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  • ===Military===
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  • ===American military=== ===Military operations===
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  • ...cide (military)]] A more modern usage, which is the inadvertent killing of military personnel by fellow troops
    282 bytes (39 words) - 22:33, 28 May 2009
  • ...ho taught law at the [[United States Military Academy]] as well as being a military and civilian prosecutor before returning to private practice
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  • ...crimes by the [[Medical Case (NMT)|Medical Case trial]] at the [[Nuremberg Military Tribunals]]
    300 bytes (43 words) - 02:18, 10 November 2010
  • ...lities, and where the civil courts were operating, could not be tried by a military tribunal
    298 bytes (51 words) - 13:01, 7 March 2009
  • ===Civil War military engagements=== ===Civil War military leaders===
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  • ...at war, including its government, politics, society, economy and culture. Military and diplomatic affairs are covered under the relevant war article.
    334 bytes (45 words) - 11:06, 23 February 2024
  • *''The Gamble: General Petraeus and the American Military Adventure in Iraq, 2006-08'', Penguin, 2009 *''FIASCO: The American Military Adventure in Iraq'', Penguin, 2007
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  • {{r|U.S. professional military education}} {{r|Military Review (journal)|''Military Review''|***}}
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  • ...Congress; [[vice admiral]], [[United States Navy]], retired: Commander, [[Military Sealift Command]], Deputy Commander, [[United States Southern Command]]; ad
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  • ...World War Two in the Pacific]]; defended the Throne at the [[International Military Tribunal for the Far East]].
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  • {{r|Military}} Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Military strategy]]. Needs checking by a human.
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  • ...oint Special Operations Command]] and [[75th Ranger Regiment]]; previously Military Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations
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  • ...e is one of the dimensions of grand strategy, rather than situations where military opinions control national strategy. ==Part 1, Military Institutions and the State==
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  • ...tary justice system; it is named after an article in the [[Uniform Code of Military Justice]].
    230 bytes (35 words) - 19:11, 22 April 2011
  • ...Nuremberg Trials, Nuremberg, Germany, 1945–1949] The Library of Congress, Military Legal Resources. ...y sectors of German society, were tried before the United States Nuremberg Military Tribunals in a series of 12 trials known as “Subsequent Nuremberg Proceed
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  • ...kids; Board, [[Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments]]; teaches [[military history]] at New York University ; Council on Foreign Relations
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  • ...in Ireland and Northern Ireland, long had the Irish Republican Army as its military side. Some countries have complex official relationships that involved politicized military forces. Traditionally, the Soviet Union was governed by a balance among thr
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  • {{r|Military strategy}} {{r|The Military Balance}}
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  • | title=Evolving Military Justice, | title=Annotated Guide: Procedures for Trials by Military Commissions of Certain Non-United States Citizens in the War Against Terror
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Society for Military History]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Military History}}
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  • {{r|Division (military)}} {{r|Military formation (ground)}}
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  • ...] that carries cargoes from the home country to a [[theater of operations (military)|theater of operations]], or among theaters; while usually among bases, spe
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Military award]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Military rank}}
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  • {{r|Military doctrine}} {{r|Preemption (military)}}
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  • * Qualified for military operations using [[parachute]]s. It also can refer to military units that either have, or historically have had, paratroop qualification:
    425 bytes (56 words) - 03:34, 10 March 2024
  • ...e}}SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Obersturmbannfuehrer]] SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Brigadefuehrer]]; member of the SD ; member of the Gestapo; Commandin ...raune}}[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Obersturmbannfuehrer]]SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Brigadefuehrer]] ; member of the SD ; member of the Gestapo ; Command
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  • {{r|Military law}} {{r|International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)}}
    534 bytes (70 words) - 20:08, 19 March 2009
  • ...French support for Iraq during the Iran-Iraq war|France]] were the leading military suppliers to Iraq
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  • ===Common civic and military rituals===
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  • ==Military== ...was a bank partner, the Superintendent at the Louisiana State Seminary and Military Academy, and president of the Fifth Street Railroad. He retired in 1883 an
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  • #REDIRECT [[Fratricide (military)]]
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  • [[Military History]]
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  • #REDIRECT [[Military rank]]
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  • * [[Military History]]
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  • #Redirect [[Military doctrine]]
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  • #redirect [[Staff (military)]]
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  • {{rpl|Formation (ground military forces)|In ground military forces}}
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  • ====Military====
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  • {{r|Littoral (military)}} {{r|Logistics (military)}}
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  • ...mandant of the [[Japanese Military Academy]], first [[Inspector General of Military Education]], and vice-chief of the General Staff Office, he successively se
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  • * Military intelligence Corps * Military police Corps
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  • U.S. military legal officer
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  • #REDIRECT [[Fratricide (military)/Definition]]
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  • Prior to 1975, the '''People's Army of Viet Nam (PAVN)''' was the regular military of the Communist [[Democratic Republic of Vietnam]] (DRV). It was also know ...), and forcibly reunified the countries, the PAVN remained the name of the military.
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  • * [http://tigger.uic.edu/~rjensen/military.html "Web Sources for Military History" by Richard Jensen] guide to web sources for from ancient history t * [http://www.h-net.org/~minerva/ H-MINERVA, discussions on women and the military]
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  • {{r|Historical examples of military swarming}} {{r|Fratricide (military)|Fratricide}}
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  • *[[/Military_leaders|Military leaders]] through history.
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  • #REDIRECT [[Military Assistance Command, Vietnam]]
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  • {{subgroup|Intelligence|Military|Politics|Economics}}
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  • #redirect [[Military Assistance Command, Vietnam]]
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  • {{subgroup|United States Army|Military}}
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  • {{r|Square (military organization)|A four-component military organization}}
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  • {{r|Military strategy}} {{r|School of Advanced Military Studies||**}}
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  • * Gat, Azar. ''The Origins of Military Thought from the Enlightenment to Clausewitz'' (1989) * Gat, Azar. ''The Development of Military Thought: The Nineteenth Century (1992), influential survey
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  • *[http://www.smh-hq.org/ Society for Military History website]
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  • A multinational European military manufacturer
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  • {{subgroup|Pacific War|Military|History|Politics}}
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  • The bringing together of military forces.
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  • {{subgroup|United States Navy|Military|History}}
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  • #REDIRECT [[Nazi military and SS ranks]]
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  • {{r|Logistics (military)}} {{r|Military doctrine}}
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  • ...rm Code of Military Justice; First-ever Chief Defense Counsel, [[Office of Military Commissions]], 2003-2005; Executive Officer, Judge Advocate General, 2002-2
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  • {{r|International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)}} {{r|Nuremberg Military Tribunals}}
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  • '''Thomas Henriksen''' is a foreign and military policy specialist in failed states, [[rogue state]]s, and also concentrates He received his B.A. in 1962 from Virginia Military Institute, his M.A. in 1966 and his Ph.D. in 1969, both from Michigan State
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  • ...my sea commerce, protection of vital sea lanes, and establishment of local military superiority in areas of naval operations." (U.S. [[Joint Chiefs of Staff]])
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  • {{Subgroup|Imagery intelligence|Military|Engineering|Geography|Physics}}
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  • ...nment before [[World War Two in the Pacific]], the '''Inspector General of Military Education''' was one of the three most important officials in the [[Imperia | title = Japanese Army: Inspector General of Military Education
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  • ===Military radio and related systems===
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Senior military leader in Papua New Guinea
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  • U.S. Senate committee responsible for the military
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  • #REDIRECT Authorization for the Use of Military Force
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  • ...Minister of War under the Nazi government. He was the first [[Nazi SS and military ranks|Generalfeldmarschall]] named by Hitler, and had long been pro-Nazi in As commander-in-chief of the [[German military forces]], he was the target of rivalry from [[Hermann Goering]] and [[Heinr
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  • A [[classics|classicist]], [[military history|military historian]], and [[American conservatism|conservative]], concerned that nat
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  • In the contex of military context, '''surveillance''' is the process of observation of aerospace, sur Another usage of surveillance, in law enforcement or non-military security, is the monitoring of people and their communications and activiti
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>a military vehicle which carries or launches missiles with warheads
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  • #REDIRECT [[American Revolution, military history#Final victory: Yorktown, 1781]]
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  • * [http://tigger.uic.edu/~rjensen/military.html#J. "Web Sources for Military History"] * [http://www.military.com/Resources/HistorySubmittedFileView?file=History_Maps.htm ''West Point A
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  • A large U.S. military and high-technology manufacturer
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  • *U.S. Air War College links on military law, http://www.au.af.mil/au/awc/awcgate/awc-law.htm
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  • An annual military exercise in the Canadian Arctic
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Military order founded in the late 12th century.
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>An annual military exercise in the Canadian Arctic
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  • ...vel command and staff jobs, or people with equivalent responsibilities and military knowledge.
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  • ...es, as well as reports on new software, datasets, or Web sites relevant to military history. ...roups, including H-CivWar (on U.S. Civil War), H-Minerva (on women and the military), and H-Diplo (on diplomatic history).
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  • | title = Joint Publication 1-02 Department of Defense Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms ...ry medicine, ordnance, Maintenance, supply (military), and transportation (military).
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  • ...e U.S. Army/Marine Corps Counterinsurgency Center at [[Fort Leavenworth]]; military fellow, Council on Foreign Relations
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  • ...[Heinz Guderian]], and [[Erich von Manstein]] have contributed much to the military art.
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  • {{rpl|Unit (military)|In military}}
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  • ...y, complementing the [[Military Intelligence Company (Brigade Combat Team)|Military Intelligence Company]]'s analytic tools and access to higher-echelon system
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  • ...[military attache]], he was one of the [[Three Crows]], or the core of the military modernization movement, attaches who met in Germany. Born to a doctor who was able to recommend him for the Military Academy, he was second in his class, and graduated from the Staff College w
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  • A prosecutor and spokesperson for the [[Guantanamo military commissions]]
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  • military history of the [[American Revolution]] from 1775 to 1781
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  • Roman military officer and engineer who served under Julius Caesar.
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  • Originally Italian, and now a multinational European military manufacturer
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Military [[helicopter]] used by the [[United States Special Operations Command]]
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  • Operational line-of-commands for United States military groups.
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  • French military and political leader who died in 1970.
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  • Generically, '''civil affairs (CA)''' are those parts of military organizations intended to deal with the needs of civilians in an area of op Another related term is '''civil-military operations (CMO)''', which are considered part of information operations.
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  • A military lawyer who defended an individual held at Guantanamo
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  • A regularly constituted military formation that combines infantry, artillery and cavalry.
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  • A French heavy-lift helicopter, primarily military but with some civilian roles
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  • A '''private''' is the lowest military rank in most [[army|armies]].
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  • {{r|Military economics}} {{r|Logistics (military)}}
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  • ...ourt of the United States ruling that the petitioner could not be tried by military tribunal because the civil courts were operating where he lived, and:<ref n *He was not a member of the military of the United States
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  • ...ilitary version of the [[DC-3 (airliner)]]. See the main article for other military as well as civilian versions.
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  • ...ailable explosive with reduced sensitivity but power comparable to several military explosives
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  • An influential military historical novel dealing with different officer styles: careerist vs. field
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  • 2010 book by [[Victor Davis Hanson]], on [[military history]] and [[historiography]]
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  • Highest German [[military valor award]] through WWI; no direct replacement under the Nazis
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  • Military targeting doctrine, historically associated with nuclear warfare and now wi
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  • One of the largest U.S. [[aerospace]] and military manufacturing & services firms
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  • {{r|Fratricide (military)}} {{r|Centers of gravity (military)}}
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  • {{r|International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)}} {{r|International Military Tribunal for the Far East}}
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  • ...licy)|"realistic"]] foreign policy that seeks to gain specific economic or military benefits for the nation
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  • A manufacturer of military equipment, bicycles and motor vehicles founded in 1861.
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  • [[Shi'a]] political and military movement in Iraq led by [[Muqtada al-Sadr]]
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  • ...ing to several different kinds of mines, including resource extraction and military
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  • U.S. quasi-public organization that sets policy for official, non-military international broadcasting
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  • A military force organized primarily for missions on, under, or above bodies of water
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>(1880-1945) German [[SS and military ranks |Generalfeldmarschall]] who commanded [[army group
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  • Designation for a manned military reconnaissance satellite program, which was never launched; code name DORIA
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  • ...-1982) was a [[Nazi SS and military ranks|Generalleutnant]] in the wartime military, and later General of the [[Bundeswehr]]. He was Bundeswehr Inspector General (1957-1961), then Chairman,[[NATO Military Committee]] (1961-1964).
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  • ...]], and a training ground for young military officers from [[United States Military Academy|West Point]] who would face each other during the [[American Civil
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  • {{r|Military doctrine}} {{r|Military strategy}}
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  • ==Military and intelligence== In a military and intelligence context, '''reconnaissance''' involves dissimilar concepts
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  • [[U.S. Ambassador to Nigeria]], 1975-79; [[Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change]] (2004)
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  • [[Italy|Italian]] national military intelligence, comparable to the Russian [[GRU]] or U.S. [[DIA]]
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  • U.S. military personnel who notify the families of service members that their relative ha
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  • ...]s, specifically by Japanese aircraft in the [[Second World War]], against military targets
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  • ...ion, largely personal assistants, which served [[Napoleon Bonaparte]] as a military commander
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  • Effects of military systems that cause damage by physical forces such as impact, explosion or h
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>German military traditions and organization from pre-19th century unification, through the
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  • Noted military commander, world historic figure and dictator of [[France]] from 1799 to 18
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  • ...}}</noinclude>Background for, and direct decisions of, [[Adolf Hitler]] in military matters, 1938-1945
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  • ===Military===
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  • ...general]] in the [[United States Army]], and a writer and theoretician of military doctrine, especially of [[operational art]].<ref>{{citation ...AirLand Battle]]. He was the founding director of the [[School of Advanced Military Studies]] at the [[Command and General Staff College]]. After retirement, h
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Unit (military)]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Military formation (ground)}}
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  • ...y-state]] of [[Ancient Greece]], located in [[Laconia]] and famous for its military prowess.
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  • A military device that can provide surveillance of ground areas, sending alerts back b
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  • The area on which military personnel or equipment, dropped by parachute, are expected to land
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  • ...mum decisionmaking, often with uncertainty, which were first used to solve military operational problems
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  • ...Air Force]], retired intelligence specialist; advisory board, [[Center for Military Readiness}}
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  • The senior Coalition military headquarters in Iraq, commanded by GEN [[Ray Odierno]], [[U.S. Army]]
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  • {{r|Fratricide (military)}} {{r|Centers of gravity (military)}}
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  • {{r|Military}} * [[Military award]]
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  • ...ed email-based discussion group and bulletin board discussing the field of military history.
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  • ...high-technology firm, with British origins, active worldwide in aerospace, military and security markets
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  • Annual military exercise, in Canada's Arctic
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  • #REDIRECT [[Sovereign Military Order of the Temple of Jerusalem]]
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  • Annual military exercise, in Canada's Arctic
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  • ''This is the Discussion Page for the '''[[CZ:Military Workgroup]]'''''
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  • In engineering, especially military, a '''portable''' device or system is a [[mobile (engineering)|mobile]] pie ...ty of standard [[form factor]]s or shapes. They may also, as with a larger military radio such as the [[PRC-117|AN/PRC-117]], be packaged as a backpack. There
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  • Military aircraft which are essentially used in air-to-air combat.
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  • The title of the officer commanding non-military vessels.
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  • Former [[al-Qaeda]] military commander; probably in house arrest in Iran
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  • ...'''countermining''' is the set of techniques for defeating enemy mines, by military forces, by detonating them or disabling them with kinetic shock. This is mo
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  • As part of its broad scope, the United States has several types of '''foreign military assistance organizations''' that are established, on a case-by-case basis, ==Foreign Military Sales==
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  • ...n Russia: history of revival. http://www.thefreelibrary.com/Fifty+years+of+military+sociology+in+Russia:+history+of+revival.-a0194154604
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  • A large US technology company, much of whose market is military, but also provides products, especially electronics, to the civilian sector
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  • ...r-driven [[transport aircraft]] design, used in civilian service, and with military variants, for over 60 years
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  • ...the [[Falklands War]], of chartering civilian ships to provide additional military sealift
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>[[Nuremberg Military Tribunals]] case against the leadership of mobile killing units that conduc
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  • A Congressionally mandated military strategy periodic review to be prepared by the [[U.S. Department of Defens
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  • {{r|Military}} {{r|Military history}}
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  • Military concepts and techniques used to fight a battle once battle is joined.
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>A colonial British military arsenal near the town of Dum Dum, India.
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  • *Military Operational Research Society [[http://www.mors.org/]]
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  • A French medium [[helicopter]], used in civilian, military transport, and [[attack helicopter]] configurations
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  • The French code name for all of their military participation in the [[Gulf War]]
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  • ...Greek philosopher, historian and soldier; often considered the first true military historian
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  • * [http://tigger.uic.edu/~rjensen/military.html#F. ''Web Sources for Military History'' ed. by Richard Jensen]
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  • The part of the Japanese military responsible for [[naval warfare]], 1868-1945
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  • The lowest or next-to-lowest [[military rank]] of admiral in Naval service
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  • ...in]], was the first to make the professional reading list of all four U.S. military services. The movie version shares little besides the title; there are no s From the professional military education view, the valuable lessons are in military ethics, motivation and, above all, responsibility. The combat technologies
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  • ===Military and terror operations===
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  • ...ow an influential yet [[Highly Indebted Poor Country]] with diplomatic and military impact well beyond its borders
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  • The non-military actions of a nation at war, including its government, politics, society, ec
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  • The provision of meteorological information to military and strategic personnel, in a manner that assists their mission-oriented de
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  • An agent in military ammunition, which generates heat and possibly flame, with the intention of
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  • * Coffman, Edward M. ''The War to End All Wars: The American Military Experience in World War I'' (1968) * White, Lonnie J. "The Combat History of the 36th Division in World War I" ''Military History of Texas and the Southwest'' 1982 17(4): 123-179. Issn: 0047-7389
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  • ...w widely generalized in industrialized management &mdash; the commander of military logistics in the [[Gulf War]], LTG [[Gus Pagonis]], retired from the [[U.S.
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  • ...as well as overriding principles of international war. Generally respected military law is formulated within the context of [[just war theory]]. ...he enemy are certain to suffer extremely high casualties. Alternatively, a military commander may order selected troops to make a deceptive action which is int
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  • German military establishment after West German rearmament (i.e., [[Wiederbewaffnung]]) and
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  • The British code name for their military participation in all phases of the [[Gulf War]]
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  • ...</noinclude>Wrote about the bullying she received as one of Canada's first military officers
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  • [[Al-Qaeda]] military commander, killed by an air strike in Afghanistan in 2001
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  • U.S. imaging satellites with wide view and low resolution, used for military mapping and [[geodesy]]
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  • ...s trade''' is the international business of buying and selling weapons for military and conflict purposes. ...r undermine democracy; or (c) threaten social welfare through the level of military spending; (2) to end all government political and financial support for ar
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  • ...specializing in armored warfare. After World War I service, he remained in military and staff roles, with a final assignment, in 1943, of commanding 4th Panzer | title = In pursuit of military excellence: the evolution of operational theory
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  • He was a Council on Foreign Relations military fellow from August 2007 to June 2008. military operations while drawing down forces in an attempt to control spiraling nat
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  • ===Military Construction, VA===
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  • ...force. While they were uniformed and had ranks, they were never a serious military force, although [[Ernst Roehm]], their commander, saw them as a "revolution ...ame the primary Party force. As opposed to the SA, the SS did develop true military units as well as security forces.
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  • ===Military and security===
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  • ...unterintelligence organization of the [[Imperial Japanese Army]]. In their military police role, they reported directly to the [[Army Minister (Japan)]] rather ...vilian Spy Service]] and the [[Thought Police (Japan)]] were separate, non-military organizations, the kempetai was also known as the Special Service Organ, an
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  • ...1947) An Australian author and historian, specializing in space flight and military history.
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  • Libyan military officer and politician, ''de facto'' leader of Libya from 1969 until 2011 (
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  • A military weapon, fired or dropped from another weapon, that releases smaller submuni
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  • (USFOR-A) is the senior U.S. military headquarters for the [[Afghanistan War (2001-2021)]]
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  • Usually the second-highest [[military rank]] of admiral in Naval service, often called "three-star", equivalent t
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  • ...hich the internment of Japanese-Americans was deemed constitutional due to military necessity
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  • [[Strategic strike]] attacks against the homeland military forces, population and industry of a nation, conducted by manned [[bomber a
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  • ...retired, [[Director of Central Intelligence]], 1977-1981; [[Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change]] (2004)
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Historical examples of military swarming]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Swarming (military)}}
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  • {{r|International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)}} {{r|Nuremberg Military Tribunals}}
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  • ==Police and military== * [[Texas Rangers (military)]]
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  • ...xts/secondary/journals/CJ/28/9/Ancient_Military_Writers*.html "The Ancient Military Writers"], ''The Classical Journal'' Vol. 28, No. 9, June 1933, pp. 657‑6
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  • ...ry Council''' was the leadership of the [[Vietnam War, Buddhist crisis and military coup of 1963|coup]] that overthrew [[Ngo Dinh Diem]]. <ref name=Hixson>{{ci | title = Military Aspects of the Vietnam Conflict
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  • A non-democratic government led by military personnel, who frequently seized power from the civilian government
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  • ...], currently [[Michael Michalak]]; during the [[Vietnam War]], headed both military and civilian organizations
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  • ...act specifying explicit standards for prisoners in the custody of the U.S. military
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  • Military vehicles that either transport a [[mortar]] to be fired from the ground, or
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  • A wide-ranging replacement of conventional military [[radio]] and [[communications security]] equipment with [[software-defined
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  • ...ll three were military attaches. They intended to modernize the Japanese military, purging it of [[samurai]] traditions and the [[Chosu Clan]]. The rival [[S ...ven reliable men" selected by the Crows, all non-Chosu, all members of the Military Academy classes of 1904 and 1905. Tojo, [[Kenji Doihara]], and [[Seishiro
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  • ...opment Analyst, Principal at Lockheed Martin; Captain, U.S. Navy, retired; Military Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations, 2001-2002
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  • A currently operational U.S. system of military communications satellites, providing worldwide coverage among fixed and sem
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  • {{r|American Revolution, military history}} {{r|Military rank}}
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  • ...hat indicates the most forward positions of friendly forces in any kind of military operation at a specific time. The forward line of own troops (FLOT) normall ...FLOT must have be [[deconfliction|deconflicted]] to prevent [[fratricide (military)|fratricide]].
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  • {{r|Military award}} {{r|Military}}
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  • ...llection of 23 separate electronic communications networks over which U.S. military orders would flow under conditions of nuclear war
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Was a senior military officer of Papua New Guinea, who helped thwart a coup, in 1990
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  • The joint Canada-U.S. military organization responsible for aerospace threat warning and defense for North
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  • U.S. [[Unified Combatant Command]] responsible for military operations in the Caribbean, Central America, and South America
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  • Medium military transport aircraft of late WWII and the 1950s; derivative of four-engined [
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  • A general term for a [[sailor]], in military usage a junior enlisted rank.
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  • {{r|Fratricide (military)}} {{r|Vietnam War military technology}}
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  • From 1868 to 1945, the ground component of the Japanese military, with great autonomy and political influence from 1900 onwards
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  • Executive officer, [[WVHA Amtsgruppe W]], SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Oberfuehrer]]; convicted in [[Pohl Case (NMT)]]
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  • A military weapon, which, as long as its trigger or other actuating mechanism is activ
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  • ...ginia (U.S. state)|Virginia]], known functions including earth station for military satellites.
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  • ...ciples and customs of knighthood. More general usage encompasses honorable military conduct
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  • ...ands Air Force]], a NATO partner and small but experienced high-technology military air arm
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  • ...of demolishing and clearing structures that are no longer needed, in both military and civilian contexts
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  • SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Sturmbannfueher]]; Third commandant of [[Auschwitz Concentration Camp
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  • A [[corps]]-sized [[European Union]] military force, which is normally part of [[NATO]] but can act independently of it
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  • (1912-2006) [[Paraguay|Paraguayan]] general who took control of Paraguay in a military coup; dictator from 1954 to 1989.
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  • A [[firearm]], for sporting or military use, intended to be carried and operated by a single person
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  • SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Obersturmfuhrer]]; fourth [[Lagerfuhrer]] of [[Auschwitz Concentratio
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  • The combined regular military, paramilitary, intelligence and police services of [[Pakistan]], operating
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  • {{r|Military necessity}} {{r|Nuremberg Military Tribunals}}
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  • {{r|German military forces}} {{r|International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)}}
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  • Auto-populated based on [[Special:WhatLinksHere/Military formation (ground)]]. Needs checking by a human. {{r|Unit (military)}}
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  • '''Major general''' is a senior military rank, in the middle to bottom range the top of the "general officer " syste | title = NATO codes for grades of military personnel: Agreed English texts
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  • ...roughly equates to the grade of major. It is accredited to grant Master of Military Art and Science (MMAS) degrees on completion of a thesis. It prepares offic ...ates Army]] officers, a typical class will have officers from all the U.S. military services; civilians from organizations such as civilian members of the [[Un
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  • The senior headquarters for foreign regular military forces in Iraq, led by a U.S. general commanding an organization with eleme
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  • Military science fiction real-time strategy multiplayer video game for PC and Mac fr
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  • The capability to deploy military forces, even if limited to air and special operations, on short notice over
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  • [[Republic of Vietnam]] Air Force general, active in military coups, who served as Premier and member of several juntas
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  • SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Obersturmbannfuhrer]]; Second commandant of [[Auschwitz Concentration
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  • ...with diverse maritime safety, [[search and rescue]], law enforcement, and military responsibilities
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  • Policies and practices relevant to detention in intelligence and military facilities, the latter when no [[prisoner of war]] status was granted
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  • The basic unit of infantry military tactics, composed of 7-13 soldiers, and subdivided into two or more [[fire
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  • U.S. military helicopters with many variants, the Army and Air Force ones being special o
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  • A term first popularized by [[Dwight D. Eisenhower]], suggesting that military and industrial sectors may have a disproportionate effect on American polic
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  • A military movement probing for enemy troops at unknown locations, reporting on their
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  • * [[Military animals]]
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  • ...o]]'s four brothers; generally sympathetic to reform movements; [[Japanese Military Academy]] graduate who also studied at [[Oxford University]]
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  • ...a wide, all-encompassing view of a particular subject, often a landscape, military battle, or historical event.
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  • {{r|Military Intelligence Company (Brigade Combat Team)||**}} {{r|Military police}}
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  • A military explosive mixture of [[RDX (explosive)|RDX]] granules covered in wax
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  • Self-powered 40mm [[grenade launcher]] capable of [[full-automatic (military)|full automatic fire]]
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  • ...ly for state functions, as well as the foundings of temples, or to honor a military victory. Being asked to participate was seen as a huge mark of [[honor]] fo
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  • {{r|Division (military)}} {{r|Military Assistance Command, Vietnam}}
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  • ...signed to launch and recover [[combat aircraft]] and aircraft that support military operations
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  • (1893–1976) Former Chairman of the [[People's Republic of China]]; military theorist most associated with [[protracted war]]
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  • SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Untersturmfuehrer]]; officer of Einsatzkommando 6 of [[Einsatzgruppe]
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  • ...y''' was the land forces military of Japan. In a culture that regarded its military highly, the Army and [[Imperial Japanese Navy]] gained increasing political ...[Chief of Staff (Imperial Japanese Army)]], and the [[Inspector General of Military Education]]. Under the Cabinet Law of 1900, the Army Minister had to be a
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  • ...erkommando der Wehrmacht]]; executed for war crimes by the [[International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)]]
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  • An [[small arms|individual weapon]] used in sport, police, or military applications, generally firing multiple small projectiles ("shot") rather t
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  • Chief of Office 5 (Transport), [[WVHA Amtsgruppe B]], SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Standartenfuehrer]]; acquitted in [[Pohl Case (NMT)]]
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  • An obsolescent U.S. military tactical communications architecture of the 1980s, providing analog and dig
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  • Chief of Office 4 (audits), [[WVHA Amtsgruppe A]], SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Standartenfuehrer]]; acquitted in [[Pohl Case (NMT)]]
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  • A fairly senior military rank, typically commanding the largest tactical unit such as a brigade or r
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  • Chief of Office 6 (maintenance), [[WVHA Amtsgruppe C]], SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Standartenfuehrer]]; convicted in [[Pohl Case (NMT)]]
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  • Intergovernmental military alliance based on the North Atlantic Treaty which was signed on 4 April 194
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  • Chief of Office 1 (Budgets) [[WVHA Amtsgruppe A]], SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Oberfuehrer]]; convicted in [[Pohl Case (NMT)]]
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  • (1945-) U.S. attorney specializing in [[military law]]; member of the Liberty and Justice Committee, Constitution Project; s
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  • ...es Navy]], appointed the third [[Convening authority]] for the [[Office of Military Commissions]].
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  • ...and]] (i.e., the [[Generalgouvernement]]); executed by the [[International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)]]
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  • U.S. military specification for a general-purpose mounting rail for [[small arms]] access
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  • Chief, [[WVHA Amtsgruppe A]], SS [[Nazi military and SS ranks|Brigadefuehrer]], [[Waffen SS]]; convicted in [[Pohl Case (NMT
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  • Military forces of the Coalition side of the [[Gulf War]]
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  • ...often SISMI, the former external intelligence service of [[Italy]], under military control, now replaced by the AISE (AISE).
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  • (1744-1822) American military leader and politician; one of the Founding Fathers of the U.S.A.
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  • ...include>Wrote of the bullying she received as one of Canada's first female military officers.
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  • The most prestigious American military cemetery, across the [[Potomac River]] from [[Washington, D.C.]]; the [[Tom
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  • ...individual responsible for setting in motion [[Courts martial]] in the US military justice system.
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  • A system of mutual and reciprocal by which the U.S. gave its allies in military aid to help win World War II, with no repayment required
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  • ...ef of Staff for Strategic Plans and Programs, Headquarters U.S. Air Force; Military Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations, 2001-2002
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  • {{r|United States Military Academy}} {{r|School of Advanced Military Studies}}
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  • '''Mine warfare''' is an area of military technology and doctrine, which deals with the use of, defense against, and ...untermining]] covers the neutralization and removal of mines that threaten military forces. A classical naval term is "minesweeping", although that is somewhat
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  • The non-military activities of the nations involved in World War II, including politics, soc
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  • SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Brigadefuehrer]]; member of the [[SD]]; Commanding Officer of Einsatz
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  • ...resentatives]], the body concerned with legislation for, and oversight of, military forces
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  • ...nt of Veterans Affairs]] that provides health care to honorably discharged military veterans.
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  • The policy of forming alliances in order to counter the military power of a dominant country.
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  • ...starting from [[COTS|commercial-off-the-shelf-technology]], that the U.S. military began to operate in 2007
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  • A short, formal military ceremony in which the guard, or official watch guarding an edifice or monum
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  • ...]s, with four engines not as efficient as modern types; still used in many military variants
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  • ...A. Heinlein]], ''[[Starship Trooper]]''; science fiction but on every U.S. military service's professional reading list
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  • Chief of Office 2 (Minerals-East), [[WVHA Amtsgruppe W]], SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Obersturmbannfuehrer]]; convicted in [[Pohl Case (NMT)]]
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>(1919-1963) Colonel in Soviet military intelligence ([[GRU]]), possibly the most important [[Cold War]] defector,
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  • ...icer, who also leads [[United States European Command]], and is the senior military officer of [[NATO]]; currently Admiral [[James Stavridis]]
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  • A 12-gauge [[shotgun]] that attaches to the [[Picatinny rail]] of military rifles and carbines, although it can be adapted into a standalone weapon
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  • .... Army]], who was the senior U.S. and NATO commander in Afghanistan; now a military analyst with [[Human Rights Watch]]
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  • Chief of Office 8 (special projects), [[WVHA Amtsgruppe W]], SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Obersturmbannfuehrer]]; convicted in [[Pohl Case (NMT)]]
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  • {{r|Military Assistance Command, Vietnam}} {{r|Staff (military)}}
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  • The third-highest (in its [[Pyramid of Honor]]) [[military award]] the United States grants for valor, which must take place in combat
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  • The multiple diplomatic, economic, environmental, legal, military, political, and social issues facing former Soviet satellite states after t
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Term used by the [[International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)]] to try the senior leadership of the [[Nazi Party]] a
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  • ...territory by state declaration of sovereignty and possession; may involve military conquest, occupation, or agreement of inhabitants.
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  • ...ubcommittee on Military Construction and Veterans Affairs|Subcommittees on Military Construction and Veterans Affairs]], [[Subcommittee on Energy and Water|Ene
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  • According to the [[RuSHA Case (NMT)|RuSHA Case]] in the [[Nuremberg Military Tribunals]], the '''Main Staff Office of the Reichscommissioner for the Str | title = Trial of Ulrich Greifelt and Others, United States Military Tribunal, Nuremberg, 10th October 1947-10th March 1948}}, pp. 4-5</ref> The
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  • {{r|Waldemar Klingelhoefer}}SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Sturmbannfuehrer]]; member of the [[SD]]; member of Sonderkommando 7b {{r|Gustav Nosske}}[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Obersturmbannfuehrer]]; member of the [[Gestapo]]; Commanding Officer
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  • (1890-1958 ), was an Americans military pilot and leader of the "Flying Tigers" in World War II, an American operat
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  • ...stant secretary of State for inter-American affairs, 1996; [[Diplomats and Military Commanders for Change]] (2004)
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  • ...ernal power struggle between Buddhist politicians and the South Vietnamese military in 1966, with some pressure to end the war on neutralist terms
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  • [[SS]]-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Sturmbannfuehrer]] ;Deputy Chief of Office 2 (inmate labor), [[WVHA A
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  • A nuclear weapon used deep enemy territory, affecting military forces in the homeland, or population, industry, and infrastructure; often
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>Japanese military officer, statesman, and Prime Minister in 1929; cabinet resigned to protest
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  • SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Obersturmfuhrer]]; fifth and final [[Lagerfuhrer]] of [[Auschwitz Con
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  • A Dutch design for patrol vessels used for military, constabulary duties, search and rescue, fishery protection, or environment
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  • A Dutch design for patrol vessels used for military, constabulary duties, search and rescue, fishery protection, or environment
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  • ...nds in the [[Indian Ocean]], of which only [[Diego Garcia]], a major UK-US military base, is inhabited.
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  • Vehicle-mounted amplifier for U.S. military [[SINCGARS]] radios; allows low-power units to substitute during shortages
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  • A Dutch design for patrol vessels used for military, constabulary duties, search and rescue, fishery protection, or environment
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  • Military and intelligence means of protecting Israel and Palestine from one another'
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  • Military rank used in many navies for officers whose position exceeds that of a navy
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>German military officer and academic, who popularized the discipline of [[geopolitics]]; su
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  • {{r|Armor (military unit)}} {{r|Tank (military)}}
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  • ...d was the only defendant explicitly condemned for [[war crime]]s by a U.S. military tribunal
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  • ...e Perry Expedition to Japan in 1859, followed by the acceptance of foreign military training during the late [[Tokugawa Shogunate]]. It does not include the po
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  • A military attack intended to neutralize an attack imminently being prepared by one's
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  • Military preparations and defense of Australia proper during the Second World War, a
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  • SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Untersturmfuehrer]] and [[Gestapo]] officer; First Chief of the Polit
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  • Highly classified military test site near Groom Lake, in the [[Nellis Air Force Base]] complex in [[Ne
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  • An obsolescent synthetic [[antimalarial]] used by the U.S. military in WWII; still the preferred drug for [[Giardia]] and used for female steri
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  • Roman military officer who commanded Legio VIIII ''Hispana'' in Britain, and defeated the
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  • ...and civilian government official; supportive of constitutional rather than military government, who served as Prime Minister between 1924 and 1926
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  • ...nited States Navy]], 60th Superintendent, [[United States Naval Academy]]; military fellow, Council on Foreign Relations, 2002-2003
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  • (1780-1831) German military theorist who stressed the moral and political aspects of war, posthumous au
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  • * [[Famous military writers]]
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  • ...r-admission.html; ''an opinion piece about an alleged "Mahmoud Ahmadinejad military-mafia" infiltrating the Islamic Revolution.''
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  • A U.S. military communications system for handling the most highly classified intelligence
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  • <noinclude>{{Subpages}}</noinclude>(1839-1876) U.S. military officer whose 7th Cavalry troops were massacred by combined Lakota, Norther
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  • ...hink tank, of which the chairman of the board is [[Liz Cheney]]. She is a military historian, and a current member of the Strategic Assessment Group advising She has taught at the [[United States Military Academy]], [[Yale University]], the [[Center for Peace and Security Studies
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  • SS-[[Nazi SS and military ranks|Obersturmfuehrer]]; member of the [[SD]]; officer of Einsatzgruppe D;
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  • In a military context, the supply and maintenance of explosives, chemicals, pyrotechnics,
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  • More commonly called FN, this is a worldwide manufacturer of firearms, both military and civilian, with the sporting versions under the Browning and Winchester
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  • ...for the Propaganda Ministry of Nazi Germany; tried by the [[International Military Tribunal (Nuremberg)]] and acquitted of all charges
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  • The most powerful political and military organization in the [[Occupied Territories]], especially the [[Gaza Strip]]
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  • Military technology in support of ground operations, including [[helicopter]]s and [
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  • ...l, [[United States Army]], retired; former [[Chief of Staff of the Army]]; Military Senior Advisor Panel, [[Iraq Study Group]]
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  • A military term of art for symbolically referring to the starting day of an operation;
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