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Page 11
... Readiness and mobility can greatly reduce requirements for general purpose forces . This is simply the principle of getting there first with the most , before the military situation deteriorates and greater forces are required to ...
... Readiness and mobility can greatly reduce requirements for general purpose forces . This is simply the principle of getting there first with the most , before the military situation deteriorates and greater forces are required to ...
Page 52
... readiness and combat power of our forces . Because our general purpose forces must complement those of our allies , it is in our interest to assist them in supporting adequate forces when they cannot do the job alone . Thus , indirectly ...
... readiness and combat power of our forces . Because our general purpose forces must complement those of our allies , it is in our interest to assist them in supporting adequate forces when they cannot do the job alone . Thus , indirectly ...
Page 53
... readiness of the forces held in strategic reserve in the United States for quick deployment overseas ; ( 3 ) Adequate airlift and sealift to move additional forces to the place of need ; and ( 4 ) The prepositioning of equipment and ...
... readiness of the forces held in strategic reserve in the United States for quick deployment overseas ; ( 3 ) Adequate airlift and sealift to move additional forces to the place of need ; and ( 4 ) The prepositioning of equipment and ...
Page 54
... readiness and two new divisions were added . The two new divisions were organ- ized initially on the new ROAD concept , which is designed to increase organiza- tional flexibility , nonnuclear firepower , and tactical mobility . 54 ...
... readiness and two new divisions were added . The two new divisions were organ- ized initially on the new ROAD concept , which is designed to increase organiza- tional flexibility , nonnuclear firepower , and tactical mobility . 54 ...
Page 55
... readiness . The additional 20,000 spaces will permit the Army to begin training replacements for the men drafted in the late summer and fall of 1961 early in 1963 , instead of later in the year . This will spread the personnel intake ...
... readiness . The additional 20,000 spaces will permit the Army to begin training replacements for the men drafted in the late summer and fall of 1961 early in 1963 , instead of later in the year . This will spread the personnel intake ...
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Common terms and phrases
Active Army active duty additional Admiral ANDERSON Admiral SMEDBERG Admiral SYLVESTER agencies Air Force Air National Guard aircraft airlift amount appropriation Army National Guard Army Reserve bombers BOWSER budget plan capability Chairman civil defense civilian combat Command committee Congress cost Department of Defense divisions enlisted equipment estimate facilities family housing fiscal year 1964 fleet HACKETT HITCH Howze Board improve included increase inventory LEMAY major Marine Corps McGOWAN ment military assistance Military construction military personnel million missile mission mobilization NATO Naval Navy nuclear obligational authority officers Operation and maintenance percent POLARIS procurement proposed reduce reenlistment request requirements RICHARDSON ROTC Secretary KORTH Secretary MCNAMARA Secretary of Defense Secretary VANCE Secretary ZUCKERT Senator ALLOTT Senator ELLENDER Senator MONRONEY Senator ROBERTSON Senator RUSSELL Senator SALTONSTALL ships Soviet statement stock fund strategic submarines supply tactical tion transfer units weapons WHEELER
Popular passages
Page 71 - Includes those development programs being engineered for Service use but which have not yet been approved for procurement or operation. This area is characterized by major line item projects and program control will be exercised by review of individual projects.
Page 512 - Naval Operations and the Commandant of the Marine Corps in overseas areas on attache or mission aircraft.
Page 43 - Far more important: the effectiveness of an active ballistic missile defense system in saving lives depends in large part upon the existence of an adequate civil defense system. Indeed, in the absence of adequate fallout shelters, an active defense might not significantly increase the proportion of the population surviving an "all-out^ nuclear attack.
Page 30 - Congress has regularly underscored this limitation by explicitly forbidding in our annual appropriation act "the payment of a price differential on contracts * * * for the purpose of relieving economic dislocations.
Page 293 - DEFENSE AGENCIES For expenses of activities and agencies of the Department of Defense ( other than the military departments and the...
Page 256 - Appropriations of the executive departments and independent establishments of the Government shall be available for the expenses of committees, boards, or other interagency groups engaged in authorized activities of common interest to such departments and establishments and composed in whole or in part of representatives thereof who receive no additional compensation by virtue of such membership...
Page 292 - Defense available for research, development, test, and evaluation, or procurement or production related thereto, to be merged with and to be available for the same purposes, and for the same time period, as the appropriation to which transferred...
Page 45 - All of these considerations — the broad range of military capabilities required, the coordination of our efforts with those of our allies, the close relationship between our own military program and the assistance we give our allies, the abilities of our Reserve components, and the various alternatives we have for increasing our readiness — must be taken into account in determining the requirements for general purpose forces.
Page 357 - Training Corps, under the appropriation "Reserve personnel, Navy," which we call "RPN." The estimates presented for these appropriations are based upon projections for naval force objectives and policies approved by the Secretary of the Navy and the Chief of Naval Operations. I shall treat each of the two appropriations separately, beginning with "Military personnel, Navy.
Page 639 - Reserve, and 143,000 in the Retired Reserve. The Ready Reserve consists of those units and individuals available for immediate employment in the expansion of the Active Forces in the event of mobilization.