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General Staff

A. 1 cannot judge the thought processes of the general staff I can speak only as a layman. Perhaps the general staff intended to rely on pure defense in the West, similar to that of the first World War, and to have mobile warfare in the East — a different type of defense. [Pg.251]

Notes on German Shells (second edition) General Staff (Intelligence) General Headquarters,... [Pg.268]

Tanks and Their Employment in Co-operation with Other Arms, pamphlet issued by General Staff, August 1918, War Office records, series 158, file 832 (WO 158/832), TNA. [Pg.62]

Cyril Falls, The First World War (London Longman Green, 1960), pp. 376-80. Robertson to Lt.-General G.F. Milne, 7 Nov. 1916, in The Military Correspondenee of Field Marshal Sir William Robertson, Chief of the Imperial General Staff, Deeember 1915-February 1918, ed. David Woodward (London Bodley Head for Army Records Society, 1989), p. 102. [Pg.89]

Gooch, John, The Plans of War The General Staff and British Military Strategy, c. 1900-16, New York Halstead Press, 1974. [Pg.358]

A training plan should be developed to identify the needs of the staff and affected functional areas required to support the successful implementation of a QMS. It is the responsibility of the corporation to adequately support staff with training and tools when staff is expected to take on new roles, responsibilities, or behaviors. The training plan should consist of targeted training for general staff, process owners, and functional management of the process owners. [Pg.275]

Major Charles E. Heller, USAR, Chemical Warfare in World War I The American Experience, 1917-1918, Combined Arms Research Library, Command and General Staff College, Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, Leavenworth Papers (hereafter cited as Leavenworth Papers), No. 10, p. 17. [Pg.168]

US Chemical Warfare Service, US Chemical Warfare Policy, Washington DC Operations Division, War Department General Staff, Strategy and Policy Group (14 June 1945), Draft. [Pg.173]

Feb. 29,1908, Sankt Petersburg, Russia - Nov. 19,2002, Sofia, Bulgaria) Kaishev was born in Russia where his father was at that time at the Russian General Staff Academy. He graduated with a diploma in chemistry from Sofia University in 1930. As a Humboldt fellow he was in Germany (Berlin and Breslau) and obtained his Ph.D. degree from Technische Hochschule zu Breslau under the supervision of Franz Simon (1893-1956) in 1932 [i, ii]. [Pg.379]

United States War Department General Staff (ed.), Rules of Land Warfare, Govt. Print. Off., Washington 1914-1915 2nd ed., ibid, 1917... [Pg.599]

Figure 2.2 NIMS incident command organization Command staff and general staff. Figure 2.2 NIMS incident command organization Command staff and general staff.

See other pages where General Staff is mentioned: [Pg.71]    [Pg.367]    [Pg.37]    [Pg.20]    [Pg.28]    [Pg.46]    [Pg.47]    [Pg.47]    [Pg.51]    [Pg.92]    [Pg.199]    [Pg.213]    [Pg.397]    [Pg.283]    [Pg.733]    [Pg.746]    [Pg.734]    [Pg.747]    [Pg.165]    [Pg.15]    [Pg.56]    [Pg.74]    [Pg.83]    [Pg.533]    [Pg.733]    [Pg.746]    [Pg.146]    [Pg.157]    [Pg.733]    [Pg.746]    [Pg.149]    [Pg.149]    [Pg.150]    [Pg.151]    [Pg.170]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.20 , Pg.28 ]




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Command and General Staff College

Command and General Staff School

General Staff Departments

Germany Army General Staff

Germany General Staff

War Department General Staff

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