Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
US Navy officers aboard the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln monitoring defense systems during maritime security operations.. Military operations other than war (MOOTW) are military operations that do not involve warfare, combat, or the threat or use of violence.
Persian payment of indemnity in Tabriz Treaty of Turkmenchay Cannon in Military Museum of Tehran. The terms of the treaty are as follow [12] [13]. Article 4: Persia ceded the Erivan Khanate (most of present-day central Armenia), the Nakhchivan Khanate (most of the present-day Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic of Azerbaijan), the Talysh Khanate (southeastern Azerbaijan), and the Ordubad and Mughan ...
Ryan Evans, a former think tanker and Defense Department civil servant, founded WOTR in 2013 as a podcast. It launched as a full fledged publication in July of that year. He sought to re-center experienced voices in a media landscape that was becoming increasingly dominated by more mass-media oriented content and ubiquitous clickbait.
The capitulation of Peter Stuyvesant in New Amsterdam (by Charles Hemstreet) Surrendering British troops held at gunpoint by Japanese infantry in the Battle of Singapore. Capitulation ( Latin : capitulum , a little head or division; capitulare , to treat upon terms) is an agreement in time of war for the surrender to a hostile armed force of a ...
Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Capitulation may have the following special meanings.
No to capitulation! ( Ukrainian : Ні капітуля́ції! , romanized : Ni kapitulyátsiyi! , IPA: [n⁽ʲ⁾i kɐp⁽ʲ⁾itʊˈlʲat͡s⁽ʲ⁾iji] ) was a series of protests in Ukraine against the policy of the President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyy in eastern Ukraine .
Soviet gains, mid-1943 to end of 1944. In Soviet historiography, Stalin's ten blows [a] (Russian: Десять сталинских ударов, romanized: Desyat' stalinskikh udarov) were the ten successful strategic offensives in Europe conducted by the Red Army in 1944 during World War II.
The English-French fleet at the bay of Moudros. World War I took a chaotic turn in 1918 for the Ottoman Empire. With Yudenich's Russian Caucasus Army deserting after the collapse of the Russian Empire, the Ottomans regained ground in Armenia and even pushed into formerly Russian-controlled Caucasus with, at first, Vehip Pasha's Ottoman 3rd Army and, later beginning in June 1918, with Nuri ...