Department of Defense Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1979: Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations, United States Senate, Ninety-fifth Congress, Second SessionU.S. Government Printing Office, 1978 - United States |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 12
... combat forces , in large part relatively light ( though their actual configur- ation will depend on the nature of the forces they might be expected to encounter ) , consisting of both Marine and Army combat divisions with their support ...
... combat forces , in large part relatively light ( though their actual configur- ation will depend on the nature of the forces they might be expected to encounter ) , consisting of both Marine and Army combat divisions with their support ...
Page 34
... combat cap- abilities , such as tanks and aircraft , and the density of artillery and anti - tank weapons in our deployed units . By the end of FY 1979 , this will entail about 8,000 more U.S. soldiers in Europe than were there at the ...
... combat cap- abilities , such as tanks and aircraft , and the density of artillery and anti - tank weapons in our deployed units . By the end of FY 1979 , this will entail about 8,000 more U.S. soldiers in Europe than were there at the ...
Page 71
... combat consumables , including ammuni- tion , and war reserve materiel to sustain intense combat by NATO allies ; shortages in allied ready reserve units such that it would be difficult to match the Pact buildup in the early days of ...
... combat consumables , including ammuni- tion , and war reserve materiel to sustain intense combat by NATO allies ; shortages in allied ready reserve units such that it would be difficult to match the Pact buildup in the early days of ...
Page 71
... combat consumables , including ammuni- tion , and war reserve materiel to sustain intense combat by NATO allies ; shortages in allied ready reserve units such that it would be difficult to match the Pact buildup in the early days of ...
... combat consumables , including ammuni- tion , and war reserve materiel to sustain intense combat by NATO allies ; shortages in allied ready reserve units such that it would be difficult to match the Pact buildup in the early days of ...
Page 74
... combat posture in the Western Pacific , to prevent the war from spreading or to apply military pressure there . Thus , in the event of a major emergency , we would want to be able to provide sea control forces sufficient to maintain our ...
... combat posture in the Western Pacific , to prevent the war from spreading or to apply military pressure there . Thus , in the event of a major emergency , we would want to be able to provide sea control forces sufficient to maintain our ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
active addition air defense aircraft airlift allies amphibious areas Army assessment attack balance ballistic missile base bomber capability carrier CHART command and control communications continue conventional cost cruise missile DEFENSE BUDGET Department of Defense deployed deployment deterrence effective efforts enemy equipment Europe fiscal fleet force levels force structure funds helicopter ICBM improve increase initial launchers logistic maintain maintenance major manpower Marine Corps ment military million MINUTEMAN MINUTEMAN III mission mobility modernization NATO naval forces Navy's nuclear forces nuclear weapons operations percent personnel planned potential procurement production projected readiness reduce request requirements reserve satellites sea control Secretary BROWN Senator STENNIS shipbuilding ships SLBM Soviet Navy Soviet Union squadrons SSBNs strategic nuclear submarines surveillance TACFIRE targets theater nuclear theater nuclear forces threat TRIDENT U.S. forces U.S. Navy United USSR V/STOL warfare Warsaw Pact weapon systems