jungle warfare - translation to arabic
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jungle warfare - translation to arabic

SPECIAL TECHNIQUES NEEDED BY SOLDIERS TO FIGHT ON JUNGLE TERRAIN
Jungle Operations Training Center; Jungle combat; Combat tracking; Jungle Troops; Jungle Warfare; Jungle fighting
  • 2-pounder]] anti-tank gunners firing on Japanese tanks at the Muar-Parit Sulong Road.
  • Bougainville]], Solomon Islands.
  • [[Portuguese Army]] special ''[[caçadores]]'' advancing in the African jungle in the early 1960s during the Angola War of Independence
  • British troops in Burma, 1944
  • A U.S. soldier sets security while his team secures a riverbank during the waterborne operations phase of JOTC.

jungle warfare         
حرب / الأدغال / الأحراش
germ warfare         
  • Class III cabinet]]s at the [[U.S. Army Biological Warfare Laboratories]], [[Camp Detrick]], [[Maryland]] (1940s).
  • The international [[biological hazard]] symbol
  • The Biological Weapons Convention<ref>United Nations (1972). [https://front.un-arm.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/BWC-text-English.pdf Biological Weapons Convention].
</ref>
  • [[Shiro Ishii]], commander of [[Unit 731]], which performed human [[vivisection]]s and other biological experimentation
  • U.S. authorities granted [[Unit 731]] officials immunity from prosecution in return for access to their research.
USE OF BIOLOGICAL TOXINS OR INFECTIOUS AGENTS WITH THE INTENT TO KILL AS AN ACT OF WAR
Germ warfare; Biowar; Biological Warfare; Bioweapons; Biological war; Biowarfare; Bacteriological weapon; Microbiological warfare; Germ Warfare; Bacteriological war; Biological attack; Bacteriologic weapons; Biological weaponry; Bacteriological warfare; Weaponized virus; Bio warfare; Bio weapons; Bacteriological Warfare; Synthetic Biological Warfare; Bio-weapons; Bio-warfare; Bioweaponeer; Microbes in warfare; Bacteriological weapons; Disease warfare; Bio-Warfare; Captain Simeon Ecuyer
حرب / جرثومة / الجراثيم
bacteriological warfare         
  • Class III cabinet]]s at the [[U.S. Army Biological Warfare Laboratories]], [[Camp Detrick]], [[Maryland]] (1940s).
  • The international [[biological hazard]] symbol
  • The Biological Weapons Convention<ref>United Nations (1972). [https://front.un-arm.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/BWC-text-English.pdf Biological Weapons Convention].
</ref>
  • [[Shiro Ishii]], commander of [[Unit 731]], which performed human [[vivisection]]s and other biological experimentation
  • U.S. authorities granted [[Unit 731]] officials immunity from prosecution in return for access to their research.
USE OF BIOLOGICAL TOXINS OR INFECTIOUS AGENTS WITH THE INTENT TO KILL AS AN ACT OF WAR
Germ warfare; Biowar; Biological Warfare; Bioweapons; Biological war; Biowarfare; Bacteriological weapon; Microbiological warfare; Germ Warfare; Bacteriological war; Biological attack; Bacteriologic weapons; Biological weaponry; Bacteriological warfare; Weaponized virus; Bio warfare; Bio weapons; Bacteriological Warfare; Synthetic Biological Warfare; Bio-weapons; Bio-warfare; Bioweaponeer; Microbes in warfare; Bacteriological weapons; Disease warfare; Bio-Warfare; Captain Simeon Ecuyer
حرب / الجراثيم / جرثومية

Definition

germ warfare
Germ warfare is the use of germs in a war in order to cause disease in enemy troops, or to destroy crops that they might use as food.
...an international treaty banning germ warfare.
N-UNCOUNT

Wikipedia

Jungle warfare

Jungle warfare is a term used to cover the special techniques needed for military units to survive and fight in jungle terrain.

It has been the topic of extensive study by military strategists, and was an important part of the planning for both sides in many conflicts, including World War II and the Vietnam War.

The jungle has a variety of effects on military operations. Dense vegetation can limit lines of sight and arcs of fire, but can also provide ample opportunity for camouflage and plenty of material with which to build fortifications.

Jungle terrain, often without good roads, can be inaccessible to vehicles and so makes logistical supply and transport difficult, which in turn places a premium on air mobility. The problems of transport make engineering resources important as they are needed to improve roads, build bridges and airfields, and improve water supplies.

Jungle environments can also be inherently unhealthy, with various tropical diseases that have to be prevented or treated by medical services. Likewise the terrain can make it difficult to deploy armoured forces, or any other kind of forces on any large scale. Successful jungle fighting emphasises effective small unit tactics and leadership.

Examples of use of jungle warfare
1. Royal Marines became experts in jungle warfare and the avoidance of tropical diseases.
2. The Marine Corps is not training for amphibious, mountain or jungle warfare, nor conducting large–scale live–fire maneuvers, Conway said.
3. Brigadier BK Ponwar, a veteran counter–insurgency expert, has moved his Jungle Warfare Training College from the northeast state of Mizoram to train Chhattisgarh‘s police.
4. France is interested in Brazilian know–how on jungle warfare and "the use of electronic equipment in the humidity of tropical rain forests," he said.
5. Groups of police officers in the state are being trained at a jungle warfare school established to counter the Maoist threat.