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  2. Korps Commander - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korps_Commander

    Bruce Rea Taylor and Andy Ashton originally intended that Korps Commander would be the start of a family of rules, each covering a period and location, as can be seen by the quote from the Rules. Road to Berlin is a set of rules in the Korps Commander Series, which will eventually cover all periods of warfare at a level which will allow large ...

  3. Corps Commander - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corps_Commander

    Corps Commander, or "Corps Commander: Operational Manoeuvre Group" is a set of micro-armour Miniature wargaming rules designed by Bruce Rea Taylor and Andy Ashton and published in the UK by Tabletop games copyrighted by B. A. Rea Taylor, A. Ashton & Tabletop Games [1] July 1986.

  4. Komkor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Komkor

    Komkor (Russian: комкор) is the syllabic abbreviation for corps commander (Russian: командир корпуса, romanized: komandir korpusa; lit. ' commander of the corps / corps commander '). It was a military rank in the Red Army and Red Army Air Force of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics in the period from 1935 to 1940.

  5. Operations order - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operations_order

    An Operation Order, often abbreviated to OPORD, is a plan format meant to assist subordinate units with the conduct of military operations.An OPORD describes the situation the unit faces, the mission of the unit, and what supporting activities the unit will conduct in order to achieve their commander's desired end state.

  6. Change of command - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Change_of_Command

    The passing of colors, standards, or ensigns from an outgoing commander to an incoming one ensures that the unit and its soldiers is never without official leadership, a continuation of trust, and also signifies an allegiance of soldiers to their unit's commander. Great symbolism is attached to the ceremonial aspects of a change of command. [1]

  7. Command and obedience in the Bundeswehr - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Command_and_obedience_in...

    Note: Superiorship according to this paragraph - somewhat confusingly called "immediate" - is the entire chain of command known from other armies, and usually consists of a team (Trupp) leader, a squad (Gruppe) leader, a platoon (Zug) leader, a company "chief", a bataillon or regimental commander, a brigade commander, a division commander, a ...

  8. Commandant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commandant

    The commandant rank was equivalent to major [2] [3] or lieutenant-colonel, depending on the size of the commando. From 1950 to 1994 commandant (rank) was the rank equivalent of lieutenant colonel. [4] and commander of a battalion. The rank was used by both the Army and the Air Force. The naval equivalent was commander (Afrikaans: kommandeur). [5]

  9. Insubordination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insubordination

    Billy Mitchell – U.S. Army Air Corps commander during World War I and proponent of air power during the interwar years; Stanislav Petrov – Russian army officer who refused to report a detected missile strike averting nuclear war; Albert Pike – charged by the Confederate Army with insubordination