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i. Air resources should not be fragmented by being spread among ground organizations. They should be unified under a single commander who could concentrate them when and where they were needed. |
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i. Mitchell amassed a large force of various types of aircraft. The pursuit squadrons controlled the air, and the bombers and assault planes kept the enemy on the defense by striking vital areas |
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i. The key to victory is air supremacy |
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i. They increased US troop morale |
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i. The invasion would have very likely failed had we not first attained near absolute air superiority thru sustained air attacks on the German Air Force. |
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i. Heavy losses suffered by the Eighth AF bombers during missions against Germany indicated that escort planes would be required. |
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i. IN the European theater, air attacks were concentrated against industrial areas, so the commanders did not favor bombing attacks against cities. In the Pacific theater, cities were considered a substantial part of the enemy’s war production and were made targets. |
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i. B-29 attacks against priority iron and steel targets in Japan and Manchuria |
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i. The 5th Air Force dropping napalm within 50 yards of the UN frontlines. |
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i. Better trained US pilots were able to defeat the Chinese pilots in the air. |
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i. It was most effective when the enemy was forced into the open and forced to deplete their supplies |
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i. To gain victory with the least possible cost of lives and effort on your part ii. To inflict on the enemy the fewest possible causalities |
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i. The mind of the opposing commander |
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i. The Ch`i is encircling and strange ii. The Cheng is fixing and direct |
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i. The creation of a situation that assures victory over the enemy. |
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i. Government ii. People iii. Armed forces |
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i. The dangerous nature of the battlefield ii. The physical exertion required to survive the battlefield iii. The impact of ambiguous information on “fog” of war. |
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A military force simultaneously attacking multiple targets |
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i. A soldier requires first moral and physical courage to enable him to perform a task at the appropriate time. ii. The commander requires foremost sound judgment to penetrate the psychological fog of war. |
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i. The command was attacked thru the elimination of command and control centers ii. The infrastructure was attacked thru the destruction of key elements of the transportation system |
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i. Transportations ii. Military forces |
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i. Dynamic and unpredictable |
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i. Using a centralized command and control structure because of the varied nature of its capabilities ii. Protecting friendly forces and their operations from enemy actions that could provide the enemy with an advantage. |
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i. Flexibility / Versatility |
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i. Operation of GPS satellites ii. Weather forecasting iii. Warning of ballistic missile attack |
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i. Space Force enhancement |
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i. Space Force application |
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i. Space Force application |
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i. The capability of military space operations to support military theatre operations results from technological advances |
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Accurate intelligence is more important than ever |
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i. Decrease the amount of collateral damage to areas surrounding critical targets. ii. Decreases the manpower at risk in enemy areas |
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i. Air mobility brings the right people and the right equipment to the fighting force in a timely manner. |
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i. It is a guarantor of the US ability to apply force whenever and wherever in the world. |
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i. It expands the operational realm of US and Allied air forces |
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i. Demands will continue to increase because of the demand for quick and decisive response around the world. |
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i. Special operations employment |
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i. Combat Search and Rescue |
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