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Definition of Deliberate defense
1. Noun. A defense organized before contact is made with the enemy and while time for organization is available; usually includes a fortified zone (with pillboxes) and communication systems.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Deliberate Defense
Literary usage of Deliberate defense
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Military Dictionary (1987)
"See also deliberate defense. hatch \ist—(DOD) A list showing, for each hold
section of a cargo ship, a description of the items stowed, their volume and ..."
2. Alliance Adrift by Yoichi Funabashi (1999)
"The result of a 20-meeting crash program to deliberate defense issues, its report
The Modality of the Security and Defense Capability of Japan: The Outlook ..."
3. Tactics by William Balck (1915)
"tions (deliberate defense), a battalion fighting as part of a larger force may
put all of its companies into the first line, a front of 200 m. being ..."
4. Your Inner Self by Louis Edward Bisch (1922)
"As an example of a conscious and deliberate defense reaction there comes to mind
the case of a married woman who became infatuated with a man who was not ..."
5. Lucky War: Third Army in Desert Storm by Richard M. Swain (1999)
"... deliberate defense in depth.19 Regular Iraqi infantry and growing numbers of
conscript units occupied fixed positions facing south and east (to sea) in ..."
6. Manual of Military Field Engineering for the Use of Officers and Troops of by William Dorrance Beach, Edwin Alvin Root, T. A. Slavens (1907)
"When a position is to be held for a considerable period and when time is available,
more deliberate defense than the Hasty or Battle Intrenchments (Chapter ..."