battalion$7178$ - meaning and definition. What is battalion$7178$
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What (who) is battalion$7178$ - definition

U.S. MILITARY MEDICAL UNIT
Battalion Aid Stations; Battalion surgeon; Battalion aid station; Battalion Surgeon

Separate tank battalion         
  • World War II tank battalion structure, November 1944.
  • 746th Tank Battalion]]. The tank / infantry combination became an essential feature of US [[small unit tactics]] during the war in Western Europe.
MILITARY UNIT TYPE AND SIZE
Independent Tank Battalion; Independent tank battalion
Separate tank battalions were military formations used by the United States Army during World War II, especially in the European Theater of Operations. These battalions were temporarily attached to infantry, armored, or airborne divisions according to need, though at least one battalion (745th Tank Battalion) spent the entire war in Europe attached to one division.
The Sixth Battalion         
  • Soldiers of the Sixth Battalion in 1943
  • Soldiers of the Sixth Battalion summer 1943
1998 FILM
The 6th Battalion
The Sixth Battalion is a 1998 documentary film that examines the history of Jewish soldiers who fought for the Slovak Republic, a puppet state created by Nazi Germany, during World War II. The documentary combines interviews with archival footage and photographs of the Slovak Republic in order to provide a brief history of the state, exploring the rise of antisemitism and how it affected these Jewish soldiers.
10th Battalion (Australia)         
  • alt=A military band on parade as a group of soldiers marches past
  • alt=Soldiers with rifles, bush hates and service caps in the field
  • alt=A map depicting key locations around Anzac Cove including plateaus and ridges
  • alt=Portrait of a soldier wearing a slouch hat
  • alt=A military officer in service dress uniform
  • alt=Portrait of a military officer with a moustache
AUSTRALIAN ARMY INFANTRY BATTALION
Australian 10th Battalion; Adelaide Rifles; 10th Australian Infantry Battalion
The 10th Battalion was an infantry battalion of the Australian Army that served as part of the all-volunteer Australian Imperial Force during World War I. Among the first units raised in Australia during the war, the battalion was recruited from South Australia in August 1914 and formed part of the 3rd Brigade, 1st Division.

Wikipedia

Battalion Aid Station

In the United States Army and Marine Corps, a battalion aid station is a medical section within a battalion's support company. As such, it is the forwardmost medically staffed treatment location.

During peacetime, it is led by a medical operations officer, a first lieutenant in the Army Medical Service Corps or a lieutenant from the Navy Medical Corps. During combat, a commissioned medical doctor with the Army Medical Corps may assume leadership of the platoon and direct medical operations. However, in the Army, the medical service officer normally retains control of training, planning, and administration of the platoon while the doctor in charge directs medical care. The primary mission of the battalion aid station is to collect the sick and wounded from the battalion and stabilize the patients' condition.

The battalion aid station belongs to, and is an organic component of, the unit it supports. It may be split into two functional units for up to 24 hours, the main aid station consists of a medical doctor and three 68W combat medics or 8404 corpsmen and a forward aid station consisting of a physician assistant and three more 68Ws or corpsmen. This allows the section to support more than one unit or care as the unit advances or withdraws.

According to the Geneva Convention, military medical facilities, equipment and personnel are non-combatants and may not be attacked as long as they remain in a non combatant role. Medical personnel are allowed weapons for the purpose of self- and patient-defense.