01328nam0 22003011i 450 UON0050465820231205105430.237978-15-275-4741-420210118d2020 |0itac50 baengGB||||e |||||Iconicity in languagean encyclopaedic dictionaryby Juan Carlos Moreno CabreraNewcastle Upon TyneCambridge Scholars Publishing2020xviii, 460 p.22 cmLinguisticaEnciclopedie e dizionariUONC018244FISemioticaUONC016512FIGBNewcastle upon TyneUONL005310413DIZIONARI (Linguistica)21Moreno Cabrera, Juan CarlosUONV285206481418Cambridge Scholars PublishingUONV277182650ITSOL20250606RICASIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOUONSIUON00504658SIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOSI 13 043 SI 36683 5 043 SIBA - SISTEMA BIBLIOTECARIO DI ATENEOSI2021479 1J 20210118 Iconicity in language1779273UNIOR03763nam 22004933 450 991016333010332120230803215331.09781782895237178289523X(CKB)3810000000097848(MiAaPQ)EBC4808590(Au-PeEL)EBL4808590(CaPaEBR)ebr11349727(OCoLC)974583986(Perlego)3018839(EXLCZ)99381000000009784820210901d2014 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierAttack Helicopter Operations In Urban Terrain1st ed.San Francisco :Tannenberg Publishing,2014.©2014.1 online resource (42 pages)Intro -- TABLE OF CONTENTS -- ABSTRACT -- Introduction -- Roots of Attack Aviation and Historical Precedence -- MOUT and Attack Helicopter Doctrine -- Urban Terrain and Its Impact on Attack Helicopter Operations -- Urban Attack Helicopter Operations -- Advantages of Attack Helicopters in MOUT -- Conclusion and Implications for Future Urban Conflicts -- Bibliography -- Books -- Articles -- Reports and Monographs -- Joint Publications and Field Manuals -- Unpublished Materials.Today's Army faces an environment much different from that which it prepared for in the Cold War. Massed armor battles on the plains of Europe, for which the Army was trained and equipped, have become much less likely while involvement in smaller and more limited conflict has become more probable. Future conflict is more likely to resemble Grenada, Panama, or Somalia than Desert Storm. As world demographics shift from rural to urban areas, the cities will increasingly become areas of potential conflict. They cannot be avoided as a likely battlefield, and have already played a prominent part in Army combat operations in the last decade. If the Army is to keep pace in this changing environment it must look to the cities when developing doctrine, technology, and force structure. The close battlefield of Mogadishu or Panama City is much different from the premier training areas of the National Training Center or Hohenfels. Yet aviators have been presented the dilemma of training for the latter environment and being deployed to the former. For most aviators facing urban combat, it is a matter of learning as they fight. To avoid the high casualties and collateral damage likely in an urban fight against a determined opponent, however. Army aviation must train and prepare before they fight. Attack helicopters are inextricably woven into the fabric of combined arms operations. But for the Army to operate effectively as a combined arms team in an urban environment, both aviators and the ground units they support must understand the capabilities and limitations attack helicopters bring to the battle. This paper presents an historical perspective of how attack helicopters have already been used in this environment. It also discusses the factors that make city fighting unique, and the advantages and disadvantages for attack helicopter employment in an urban environment, as well as implications for future urban conflicts. Urban warfareUnited States. ArmyAttack helicoptersUrban warfare.United States. Army.Attack helicopters.358.41829999999999Jones Major Timothy A1374127MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910163330103321Attack Helicopter Operations In Urban Terrain3407017UNINA