Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Washington, D.C.: U.S. Army Center of Military History: 1993. Combined Arms Research Library (CARL) Digital Collection.--"After Action Report, 746th Tank Battalion June – December 1944".--"After Action Report, 746th Tank Battalion January - February 1945".--"After Action Report, 746th Tank Battalion March – May 1945".
The U.S. Army has adopted the After Action Review (AAR) as the primary method for delivering feedback after unit training exercises. Likewise, the U.S. Army Research Institute (ARI) has supported the development and implementation of AAR procedures for over 20 years. The After Action Review Process is critical to forming an After Action Report.
The 24th Infantry Division was an infantry division of the United States Army that was inactivated in October 1996. Formed during World War II from the disbanding Hawaiian Division, the division saw action throughout the Pacific theater, first fighting in New Guinea before landing on the Philippine islands of Leyte and Luzon, driving Japanese forces from them.
The after action report for the 1st JASCO was critical of the Army component, stating that while the enlisted personnel were well trained, the officers provided were grounded pilots, and the qualifications of half of them "left much to be desired". The report also indicated a priority need for replacement personnel.
"Action Report, USS Enterprise Air Group 10, 16–17 February 1944". National Archives and Records Administration; Harrison, Harry (1944). Action Report, USS Intrepid Air Group 6, 16–17 February 1944. Series: World War II War Diaries, Other Operational Records and Histories, ca. 1/1/1942 - ca. 6/1/1946.
Surveys of after action reports conducted during WWII in the British and Soviet armies showed low firing rates were common in both [citation needed]; Russian officers suggested inspecting rifles after combat, and executing those found with clean barrels. [29]
World War II Tank Battalion Structure - November 1944. After the gruelling combat, the battalion was pulled out of the line along with the rest of the 1st Infantry Division to refit and reconstitute. However, it was pulled back into the vicinity of Hergenrath, Belgium, directly in the path of the attacking Germans when they launched their ...
The 752nd Tank Battalion was an American independent tank battalion that participated in the Mediterranean Theater of Operations with the US Fifth Army in World War II. [1] The 752nd Tank Battalion officially formed on 1 June 1941.