War: Difference between revisions
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'''''War''''' is a state of violent conflict which exists between or two or more independent groups, each seeking to impose its will on the other.<ref name=" | '''''War''''' is a state of violent conflict which exists between or two or more independent groups, each seeking to impose its will on the other.<ref name="War89"/> This is facilitated by the use of military force, or the organized application of violence toward the destruction of enemy's manpower and materiel, so as to disrupt their means of fighting and ultimately break their will to fight, thus leading to the cessation of hostilities. These conditions are generally defined as victory. | ||
==Cited references== | ==Cited references== | ||
<div class="references-small"> | <div class="references-small"> | ||
U. S. Marine Corps Staff. 1989. Marine Corps Doctrinal Publication 1: Warfighting. 114 pp. ISBN-10: 1557423091 ISBN-13: 978-1557423092 | |||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
</div> | </div> |
Revision as of 00:22, 15 February 2007
War is a state of violent conflict which exists between or two or more independent groups, each seeking to impose its will on the other.[1] This is facilitated by the use of military force, or the organized application of violence toward the destruction of enemy's manpower and materiel, so as to disrupt their means of fighting and ultimately break their will to fight, thus leading to the cessation of hostilities. These conditions are generally defined as victory.
Cited references
U. S. Marine Corps Staff. 1989. Marine Corps Doctrinal Publication 1: Warfighting. 114 pp. ISBN-10: 1557423091 ISBN-13: 978-1557423092
- ↑ Cite error: Invalid
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