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Refugees moving westwards in 1945. During the later stages of World War II and the post-war period, Germans and Volksdeutsche fled and were expelled from various Eastern and Central European countries, including Czechoslovakia, and from the former German provinces of Lower and Upper Silesia, East Prussia, and the eastern parts of Brandenburg and Pomerania (Hinterpommern), which were annexed by ...
The book was known by the nickname "Tante Frieda" [1] or "T.F." [2] A modified form is still in use today by the Federal German Army (Deutsches Heer). [citation needed] The approximate equivalent U.S. Army field-manual was FM 100–5, now re-issued as FM 3–0, Operations (with later revisions) and available for download at the U.S. Army ...
The T4 section's job was to collect and review the committee outputs and to recommend changes to the committee structure, to military regulations and to doctrinal manuals. Seeing the intense effort being made by the army, the air service within the Truppenamt embarked on a similar programme and by mid-1920 the manpower that made up all these ...
George C. Marshall Kaserne Bad Kreuznach: closed 2001 Gerszewski Barracks Karlsruhe: closed 1995 Gibbs Kaserne Frankfurt: closed 1990s Giebelstadt Army Air Field Giebelstadt: closed 2006 Giessen Depot Giessen: closed 2008 Graves Kaserne Aschaffenburg: closed 1992 Grenadier Kaserne: Stuttgart: Griesheim Army Airfield/Stars and Stripes Kaserne ...
The principle of command and obedience in the Bundeswehr (German: Befehl und Gehorsam), along with the concept of "citizens in uniform" (German: Staatsbürger in Uniform), was central to the 1953 idea of "leadership development and civic education" (official translation of German: Innere Führung [1]).
The Northern Army Group (NORTHAG) was a NATO military formation comprising four Western European Army Corps, during the Cold War as part of NATO's forward defence in western Germany. The Army Group headquarters was established on 1 November 1952 in Bad Oeynhausen , but was relocated in 1954 to Rheindahlen .
Army Group C (German: Heeresgruppe C) was an army group of the German Wehrmacht during World War II.In its first deployment between 1939 and 1941, its main assignment was the defense of the Franco-German border during the Phony War and the Western Campaign, after which it was moved to East Prussia to become Army Group North.
Army Group Rear Area Command (German: Befehlshaber des rückwärtigen Heeresgebietes, abbreviated as Berück) was an area of military jurisdiction behind each of the three Wehrmacht army groups from 1941, the German invasion of the Soviet Union in Operation Barbarossa, through 1944 when the pre-war territories of the Soviet Union were recovered.