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A singularly outstanding chronicle of the professional development of a senior British Army officer and an evaluation of his generalship while commanding multiple campaigns in the Middle East, 1939-1941. It also highlights the adage that "War is an option of difficulties," and that politics play a key role in the strategic direction and conduct of war. It also sheds great light on Churchill, his leadership, and his relationship with senior Army commanders.
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From its establishment during World War I to its closure at the end of the Cold War, the Army installation best known as Fort Ord made a significant contribution to our national defense. Founded as a training area for Presidio of Monterey troops in 1917, Fort Ord covered more than 28,000 acres near the city of Monterey in its heyday
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| |  | The Presidio of Monterey is best known as the home of the postWorld War II Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center, the Department of Defense's acknowledged leader in foreign language training.
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| |  | Capturing the strength of the British Army from 1815 to 1914, this groundbreaking reference presents the most recent research on the most significant wars, campaigns, battles, and leaders. This encyclopedia surveys the major wars, campaigns, battles and expeditions of the British Army, as well as its weaponry, tactics, and all other aspects of its operations from the end of the Napoleonic Wars to the dawn of World War One.
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| |  | This collection of essays examines the evolution of the British Army during the century-long Pax Britannica, from the time Wellington considered its soldiers the scum of the earth to the height of the imperial epoch, when they were highly-respected soldiers of the Queen. The British Army during this period was a microcosm and reflection of the larger British society. As a result, this study of the British Army focuses on its character and composition, its officers and men, efforts to improve its efficiency and effectiveness and its role and performance on active service while an instrument of British Government policy.
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The British Army's campaigns in Egypt and the Sudan from 1882 to 1899 were among the most dramatic and hard-fought in British military history. In 1882, the British sent an expeditionary force to Egypt to quell the Arabi Revolt and secure British control of the Suez Canal, its lifeline to India. The enigmatic British Major General Charles G. Gordon was sent to the Sudan in 1884 to study the possibility of evacuating Egyptian garrisons threatened by Muslim fanatics, the dervishes, in the Sudan. While the dervishes defeated the British forces on a number of occasions, the British eventually learned to combat the insurrection and ultimately, largely through superior technology and firepower, vanquished the insurgents in 1898.
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