Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Dictionary
    war
    /wɔː/

    noun

    verb

    • 1. engage in a war: "small states warred against each another"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Feb 10, 2022 · Roland explains how some practitioners and commentators believe that technology defines war. Roland outlines how previous technology, such as air and nuclear power, may appear prevalent at different points in history, ‘…but it does not rule’ war and warfare. This same point is made by Van Creveld. See: Martin Van Creveld, Technology and War: From 2000BC to the Present, Revised and Expanded Kobo eBook ed. (New York, New York, USA: The Free Press, 1991). C-4 to C-5; Alex Roland to ...

  3. Sep 4, 2019 · Our enshrined, extant Principles of War will remain relevant to 2035 and beyond. Notwithstanding slight, esoteric variations in each representative military’s Principles of War, this conclusion was founded on a long-held, perhaps all-too-dearly-held, binary premise: the nature of war does not change, even if its character does.

  4. The work first defines what military theory is. Military theory is a field of study that seeks to understand the phenomena of war and its links to wider conflict; and provides a framework for the valid creation and dissemination of the knowledge of war and warfare. In other words, military theory is the epistemology of war.

  5. ective ‘military theory’, or merely ‘military notion’. The definition also indicates that the focus of military theory is the d. velopment of first principles knowledge about war and warfare. It is this knowledge that allows planners, commanders and senior decision makers to adapt their know-how of war fighting.

  6. May 15, 2020 · The notion of strategic readiness is one such mechanism. The Army is now two years into its most transformational change since the end of the Vietnam War. Army has prioritised its Strategic Readiness along four modernisation principles—Connected, Protected, Lethal and Enabled. The future network is how Army connects. Mission command and the ...

  7. Mar 29, 2022 · The Third World War: August 1985, as Hackett’s titled the book, saw the world go to the brink of nuclear destruction as conventional operations gave way to a limited exchange that resulted in the incineration of Birmingham and Minsk, and the Soviet Union ’s collapse. Hackett wrote the book as a cautionary tale, as well as to encourage Western Europeans and Americans to strengthen their nations’ conventional force.

  8. Borneo during World War II, the Montagnard and Army of the Republic of South Vietnam (ARVN) advisers during the Vietnam War, and the Pacific Islands Regiment (PIR). In the Australian context, special warfare is better defined as: … a combination of direct and indirect methods of achieving

  9. Sep 17, 2024 · Not-So Friendly Fire: An Australian Taxonomy For Fratricide. During the Vietnam War (1959–75), the euphemistic term ‘friendly fire' was first used to describe the infliction of casualties by the military's own forces. This paper explores this phenomenon by focusing on the Australian Army's decade-long involvement in Vietnam (1962–72).

  10. e the fundamental aspects of the nature and conduct of war.The use of the term ‘land power’ reflects the d. namism of the strategic environment over the past 15 years. Land power encompasses the employment of an array of land capability – from Army, the Australian Defence Forc.

  11. Asymmetry is sought by conventional, special and irregular forces in an attempt to avoid an enemy’s strengths and maximise their own advantages. All contemporary warfare is based on the search for an asymmetric advantage.20. Army’s journey to understand and cope with the complexities of asymmetry continues.