Picture of author.

U.S. Department of Defense

Author of The Effects of Nuclear Weapons

531+ Works 1,953 Members 10 Reviews

About the Author

Disambiguation Notice:

The Department of Defense is not the same as the United States Army; please do not combine.

Image credit: By United States Department of Defense, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=1052956

Series

Works by U.S. Department of Defense

The Effects of Nuclear Weapons (1950) 203 copies, 1 review
The Armed Forces Officer (1949) 176 copies
U.S. Army Ranger Handbook (1993) 154 copies, 1 review
Soviet Military Power 1987 (1987) 29 copies
Soviet Military Power, 1990 (1990) 25 copies, 1 review
Soviet Military Power (1981) 18 copies
Soviet Military Power 1985 (1985) 16 copies
Soviet Military Power, 1986 (2017) 15 copies
Soviet Military Power 1983 (1983) 13 copies
Soviet Military Power 1984 (1984) 13 copies
Ranger Medic Handbook (2013) 11 copies
The Origins of NSA (1996) 5 copies
Sniper Training (2009) 2 copies
Combat Engineer (2009) 2 copies
Military Clipart (2007) 2 copies
Combatives: US Army (2007) 2 copies
SERDP 1 copy
Medical Evacuation (2009) 1 copy
Foot Marches (2009) 1 copy
Military Intelligence (2009) 1 copy
Our Flag 1 copy

Associated Works

Women in the Line of Fire: What You Should Know About Women in the Military (2006) — Cover photo, some editions — 33 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
U.S. Department of Defense
Other names
DOD
USDOD
Birthdate
n/a
Gender
n/a
Relationships
Armed Forces Information and Education (subordinate organization)
Department of War (predecessor)
Department of the Navy (predecessor)
Nationality
n/a
Map Location
USA
Disambiguation notice
The Department of Defense is not the same as the United States Army; please do not combine.

Members

Reviews

15 reviews
During one of my Army assignments as a Captain, I was on brigade staff at 4th Infantry Division in Colorado. As the Plans officer, I put together the brigade Operations Orders and managed the tactical map board in the TOC (tactical operations center) during field maneuvers. I remember dealing with all sorts of military symbols and markers. Bought this book as a capstone to that period service. Memories.
An interesting, completely random read. Not being a soldier, let alone a ranger, I cannot claim any level of usefulness, but it was interesting.
Just glad I kept this copy. Hard to believe the way we used to live -- with the threat of nuclear destruction hanging over our heads.
An early public summary of the scientific analysis of the devastation in Hiroshima and Nagasaki

Awards

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Associated Authors

Statistics

Works
531
Also by
1
Members
1,953
Popularity
#13,172
Rating
½ 3.6
Reviews
10
ISBNs
282
Languages
3

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