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- Outline of the British Army at the end of the Cold War
The British Army of the Rhine (BAOR) was the United Kingdom's main contribution to NATO Headquartered at JHQ Rheindahlen in West Germany and commanded by a General it consisted in peacetime of British I Corps and support troops
- How did the British Army’s interventionist campaigns throughout the . . .
Throughout the 1990s and 2000s, the British Army engaged in multiple interventionist campaigns in several countries This website focuses on operations in Bosnia, Kosovo, Sierra Leone, and Iraq between 1992 and 2003, as these are the most influential campaigns of this time period and had the strongest effect upon the British Army’s public image
- The Dog that did not Bark: the British Army in Northern Ireland, 1990-94
most important one-for the British army The early 1990s, however, witnessed considerable changes to the army's roles in British defence policy In particular, two dynamics were at work The first was the post-Cold War defence review, which began but did not end with the Options for change exercise in 1990-1 The second
- Wars in Peace: British Military Operations since 1991
Since 1990, the UK has undertaken a series of signicant foreign military interventions of varying success in Iraq, Bosnia, Kosovo, Sierra Leone, Afghanistan and Libya
- The British Army in the 1990s - Aberystwyth University
The British Army in the 1990s In M Clarke, P A G Sabin (Eds ), British Defence Choices for the Twenty-First Century (pp 198-219) (Centre for Defence Studies) Integrated Books International
- British military doctrine in the 1980s and 1990s - Taylor Francis Online
Download a citation file in RIS format that can be imported by citation management software including EndNote, ProCite, RefWorks and Reference Manager (2003) British military doctrine in the 1980s and 1990s Defence Studies: Vol 3, No 3, pp 103-113
- Outline of the British Armed Forces at the end of the Cold War
The following is a hierarchical outline for the British Armed Forces at the end of the Cold War It is intended to convey the connections and relationships between units and formations In 1989 the British Armed Forces had a peacetime strength of 311,600 men, and defence expenditures were 4 09% of GDP [1]
- A brief look at the British Defence Budget in the 1990s
In the early 1990s, the end of the Cold War allegedly led to the 'Peace Dividend' in Britain and elsewhere The British Government adopted large and significant cuts to the defence budget
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