B A Unit of Resistance - significado y definición. Qué es B A Unit of Resistance
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Qué (quién) es B A Unit of Resistance - definición

BRITISH STAY-BEHIND UNITS IN THE SECOND WORLD WAR
Home Guard Auxiliary Units; Secret Auxiliary Unit; Auxiliary unit; Auxiliary units; Auxiliary Unit; Auxunits; British Resistance Organisation; Auxunit; British Resistance; British resistance; Scallywags (Second World War)
  • Auxiliary Units, Operational Base, emergency exit
  • Operational base, reconstruction at [[Parham Airfield Museum]].

freedom fighter         
  • Ants "the Terrible" Kaljurand]], a famous Estonian freedom fighter and nazi-collaborator
  • A group of [[Afghan mujahideen]], who were considered to be freedom fighters by Western nations, October 1987
ORGANIZED EFFORT TO WITHSTAND A GOVERNMENT OR AN OCCUPYING POWER
Freedom fighter; Underground resistance movement; Resistance movements; Freedom Fighter; Resistance group; Resistance organization; Resistance fighter; Liberation armies; Khaadku; List of resistance movements; Liberation group; Muqawamah; Movement of resistance
<b>(freedom fighters)b>
If you refer to someone as a freedom fighter, you mean that they belong to a group that is trying to change the government of their country using violent methods, and you agree with or approve of this.
N-COUNT [approval]
A/B testing         
  • HTTP Router with A/B testing
USER EXPERIENCE RESEARCH METHODOLOGY, CONSISTING OF A RANDOMIZED EXPERIMENT WITH AT LEAST TWO VARIANTS, DENOTED AS A AND B
A/B Testing; Split testing; Ab testing; A/B test; A/B tests; Split test; A b test; A-b test; A/b experiments; A/b testing; AB testing; A or B testing; A-B testing
A/B testing (also known as bucket testing or split-run testing) is a user experience research methodology. A/B tests consist of a randomized experiment with two variants, A and B.
Resistance movement         
  • Ants "the Terrible" Kaljurand]], a famous Estonian freedom fighter and nazi-collaborator
  • A group of [[Afghan mujahideen]], who were considered to be freedom fighters by Western nations, October 1987
ORGANIZED EFFORT TO WITHSTAND A GOVERNMENT OR AN OCCUPYING POWER
Freedom fighter; Underground resistance movement; Resistance movements; Freedom Fighter; Resistance group; Resistance organization; Resistance fighter; Liberation armies; Khaadku; List of resistance movements; Liberation group; Muqawamah; Movement of resistance
A resistance movement is an organized effort by least portion of the civil population of a country to withstand the legally established government or an occupying power and to disrupt civil order and stability. It may seek to achieve its objectives through either the use of nonviolent resistance (sometimes called civil resistance), or the use of force, whether armed or unarmed.

Wikipedia

Auxiliary Units

The Auxiliary Units or GHQ Auxiliary Units were specially-trained, highly-secret quasi military units created by the British government during the Second World War with the aim of using irregular warfare in response to a possible invasion of the United Kingdom by Nazi Germany, "Operation Sea Lion". With the advantage of having witnessed the rapid fall of several Continental European nations, the United Kingdom was the only country during the war that was able to create a multilayered guerrilla force in anticipation of an invasion.

The Auxiliary Units would fight as uniformed guerrillas during the military campaign. In the event of an invasion, all Auxiliary Units would disappear into their operational bases and would not maintain contact with local Home Guard commanders, who were to be wholly unaware of their existence. Although the Auxiliaries were Home Guard volunteers and wore Home Guard uniforms, they would not participate in the conventional phase of their town's defence but would be activated once the local Home Guard defence had been ended to inflict maximum mayhem and disruption over a further brief but violent period. They were not envisaged as a continuing resistance force against long-term occupation. The secrecy surrounding the insurgent squads meant that members “had no military status, no uniforms and there are very few official records of their activities”.

Service in the Auxiliary Units was expected to be highly dangerous, with a projected life expectancy of just twelve days for its members, with orders to either shoot one another or use explosives to kill themselves if capture by an enemy force seemed likely.

Urged on by the War Office, Prime Minister Winston Churchill initiated the Auxiliary Units in the early summer of 1940. This was to counter the civilian Home Defence Scheme already established by SIS (MI6), but outside War Office control. The Auxiliary Units answered to GHQ Home Forces but were legally an integral part of the Home Guard.

In modern times, the Auxiliary Units have sometimes misleadingly been referred to as the "British Resistance Organisation". That is a title was never used by the organization officially but reflects a subsequent misunderstanding of what their role might have been. Colloquially, members of the Auxiliary Units were referred to as "scallywags" and their activities as "scallywagging".