enemy
Three things were especially urged upon the officers, who were to see that the soldiers observed them scrupulously: the first, that the different corps should so march that cavalry and infantry should be on the same line and that each body should protect its gaps; the second, to go to the charge no faster than a walk; the third, to let the enemy fire first.
New Delhi, Oct 20 (ANI): The Union Cabinet today approved the proposal of Ministry of Home Affairs to introduce the Enemy Property (Amendment and Validation) Second Bill, 2010.
The subsequent exploitation of the engagement area suggested the enemy's objective was deep within eastern Afghanistan.
For example, if the enemy depends on horses and chariots, then we should identify the supply sources of grain for feed; metal for horseshoes, nails, chariots, and armor; and the blacksmiths who service the enemy's forces.
Lee agreed as long as Stuart was able to still perform his primary function of scouting enemy troop movements.
The act defines an enemy combatant as "a person who has engaged in hostilities or who has purposefully and materially supported hostilities against the United States" or anyone who "has been determined to be an unlawful enemy combatant" by a tribunal set up by the President or the Secretary of Defense.
Chapman called for, coordinated and controlled an evacuation helicopter for the team, limiting their exposure to enemy fire.
Or, to echo the logic some have used in defense of suspending key protections of the Bill of Rights, surely the just war tradition is not a "suicide pact," (7) rigidly binding us to a code of conduct in the face of a vicious enemy that does not share our moral vision of war?
Yet within pop culture, they urged their teenage weltschmerz constituency to regard pop as an enemy, "popularity" being nothing but a drab, imposed conformity.
"Under the president's directive," declared Gonzalez, "[Padilla] is no longer being detained by the Department of Defense as an 'enemy combatant.'" As is typical of high-ranking officials in the Bush administration, Gonzalez was not inclined to defend the constitutional basis for the president's assumed power to detain Padilla without trial.
When Public Enemy came to Philadelphia, the city declared it Public Enemy Day and gave them a parade.
It's the only way that a 50-year-old B-52, built to penetrate Soviet air defenses with a couple of B53 nuclear gravity bombs, could, in Afghanistan in 2001, provide immediate firepower to a special forces trooper charging an enemy position on horseback, Light Brigade-style.
He was losing blood so rapidly that he couldn't resist as the enemy soldiers dragged him to their bunker.
Temujin always made sure that no enemy could attack him from behind.
IF YOU WERE relying solely on media accounts for guidance, you would have gotten the impression that the Supreme Court's June 28 rulings on "enemy combatants" were a clean sweep for civil liberties.