route reconnaissance patrol
1Route reconnaissance — is the intelligence assessment of the operational environment in reconnaissance operations of routes for military use, including methods of reconnoitering and classifying them for other troops. In a Tactical Area of Responsibility during combat… …
2Patrol (disambiguation) — Patrol may refer to: *Patrol magazine, an online culture magazine *Patrol, conducting reconnaissance of or providing security for a designated area or route * Roadside patrol in the UK, vehicle breakdown assistance services of The Automobile… …
3Patrol — In military tactics, a patrol is often a small tactical grouping sent out by land, sea or air to perform a specific task. The basic task of a patrol is to follow a known route at regular intervals looking out for anything out of the ordinary… …
4Route Trident — (known locally as the New or Big Road)[1] was built by the British Army s Royal Engineers in Helmand Province, Afghanistan. The construction of the road was codenamed Operation Lar Jarowel by the Ministry of Defence.[2] Route Trident replaced an… …
5patrol — pa•trol [[t]pəˈtroʊl[/t]] v. trolled, trol•ling, n. 1) (of a police officer, soldier, etc.) to pass regularly along (a specified route) or through (a specified area) in order to maintain order and security 2) to pass along or through such a route …
6Special reconnaissance — This article is a subset article under Human Intelligence. For a complete hierarchical list of articles, see the intelligence cycle management hierarchy. Special Reconnaissance (SR) is conducted by small units of highly trained military personnel …
7Civil Air Patrol — Active 1 December 1941 Present Country …
8111th Reconnaissance Squadron — Infobox Military Unit unit name= 111th Reconnaissance Squadron dates= 14 August 1917 19 August 1919 29 June 1923 present caption= Ace in the Hole country= United States allegiance= branch= Texas Air National Guard type= Squadron role=… …
9Battle of Hat Dich — Part of the Vietnam War …
10Axis naval activity in Australian waters — Although Australia was remote from the main battlefronts, there was considerable Axis naval activity in Australian waters during World War II. A total of 54 German and Japanese warships and submarines entered Australian waters between 1940 and… …