Dual-purpose, improved conventional munitions were the munition of choice for killing tanks and personnel in the open. |
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At roughly the same time, military orders for depleted uranium munitions stopped too. |
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They have found and deactivated some tens of thousands of munitions and grenades. |
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It has more than a million munitions, armed with 31,000 tons of chemical weapons including mustard gas. |
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The gracious King Louis XVI signed over one million dollars in arms and munitions. |
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In their civilian jobs, they work for a contractor clearing weapons ranges of unexploded munitions. |
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The number two person ran the lanyards, swayed the munitions, and installed impulse carts in all the loaded stations. |
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Weapons, munitions, and other equipment were all produced to support naval operations. |
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The 1935 act banned munitions exports to belligerents and restricted American travel on belligerent ships. |
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During the war she worked at a munitions factory in Chorley and then in the signal box at Newhey railway station. |
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Yet the impact of war soon made the munitions centres fertile ground for militant trade unionism and socialist agitation. |
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I sort of had this vague recollection that it was used for munitions, but that was about it. |
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The field artillery could develop GPS munitions that could work in a similar fashion. |
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Finally, munitions must be able to destroy the target without causing undue collateral damage. |
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Officers combed surrounding counties for tear gas, sprays, concussion grenades, and munitions. |
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How many other divers have encountered live munitions while pursuing their sport. |
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The Army and other pyrophoric uranium munitions NRC licensees should admit the quantity of UO3 vapor produced by such weapons. |
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Nuclear warheads for a variety of tactical missiles, artillery shells, torpedoes, and other munitions also proliferated. |
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One was to deliver men and munitions to the front faster that the enemy could destroy them. |
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Wanna bet some junior grade officer takes the heat for losing the munitions? |
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They fought tanks, armored personnel carriers, jets and precision munitions with Datsun pickups. |
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It can be placed either on the ground next to the munitions or directed at the landmine mounted on a simple wire frame. |
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Mortars were originally developed for siege warfare to lob munitions over walls and other fortifications. |
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The accidental explosion of a fragmentation grenade in a munitions factory at St Marys injured four workers, two critically. |
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There's more to a chemical or biological weapons program than rusting drums and pieces of munitions. |
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Men in scarlet ran in every direction, some shouldering muskets, others munitions and like paraphernalia. |
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Clearly, the number of weapons and munitions of each type, which it is expedient to use against each possible enemy force, will be different too. |
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As a German possession during both world wars, it was an important naval base and munitions dump. |
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Mr Jake Swinson is from the armaments centre, which develops, tests, evaluates and acquires non-nuclear, air-dropped munitions. |
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As a complete surprise, except to those in the know, came the story of shortness of munitions. |
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Whenever we saw an anti-aircraft battery or munitions dump, we took it out. |
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One factory, which produced machines for making waffles and marzipan before the war, had been entirely converted to munitions. |
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America's precision munitions compensate to a degree for fewer ground units and air wings, no question about that. |
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The crew survived, but the aircraft exploded when its payload of munitions blew up breaking the windows of many local houses in the blast. |
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In the operation, 35,000 short tons of munitions were moved, but only 6,000 short tons were actually expended. |
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We do everything from respond to emergencies involving unsafe munitions on the flightline to disarming improvised explosive devices. |
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Terrorism works to eclipse military use of ultimate weapons like stealth aircraft, precision-guided munitions, and nukes. |
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This aircraft can carry up to 3,800 kg of air-to-air and air-to-surface missiles, bombs and munitions. |
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The munitions include light and heavy weapons, mines and other types of weaponry. |
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There are large urban areas contaminated by dangerous munitions, and daily reports of unattended children being injured and killed. |
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More important, the army was short on arms and munitions, particularly machine guns and heavy artillery. |
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Dated 13 May, it shows unexploded munitions covering large populated areas of Iraq. |
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Other predominantly male camps, such as Buchenwald, included female labour details employed on munitions work. |
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A Predator senses guard dogs and detects minefields in a swamp, or releases sample Hellfire munitions that neutralize their targets. |
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Misguided or unguided precision munitions can lead to significant collateral damage and fratricide. |
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This base will also serve as administrative headquarters and contain warehouses to store munitions. |
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Yet there is a danger that the use of cluster bombs and depleted uranium munitions will puncture all his talk of humanitarian action. |
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As far as business is concerned, a munitions order from the government is much like an order from a private customer. |
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Such systems require specialized support equipment and munitions uncommon in the Air Force. |
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If not handled properly, these munitions can kill Air Force personnel and destroy equipment. |
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About 28 percent of the United States Air Forces in Europe's munitions are stored at the site. |
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And he took some munitions workers, some women who worked in munition plants in the United States. |
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In reality we now know that the numbers of munitions was actually much higher. |
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By definition, explosive ordnance is any munitions, weapon delivery system, or ordnance item that contains explosives, propellants, and chemical agents. |
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Nobody is suggesting that munitions be raised to the surface. |
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Up to 200 members of the Masai and Samburu communities are seeking compensation for the deaths of as many as 50 people killed by unexploded munitions. |
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One of the caches was huge, with a number of surface to air missiles, grenade launchers, a thousand pounds of plastic explosive and other munitions. |
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He had heard that there was a great shortness in guns and munitions. |
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It was deemed too risky to try to disarm or move those chemical munitions, according to these officials. |
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These measures had a profound impact on some sectors which modernized their production methods to meet the war's limitless demand for arms and munitions. |
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Spotters were used to transport munitions and stores from storage areas to the flightline when equipment could not be pre-positioned prior to sunset. |
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As the rebels departed, they blew up an 81-car munitions train stranded on a siding. |
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Cargo helicopters are heavier models capable of carrying 60 troops, lightly armoured vehicles, or underslung loads such as artillery and munitions. |
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Precision munitions, mostly fired from air-or sea-based platforms, accounted for 7 percent of all ordnance expended during Operation Desert Storm. |
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Together, these functions will ensure that only serviceable munitions go to the front lines, thus keeping soldiers supplied and the logistics footprint minimized. |
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From the perspective of the customary rule as stated by the ICRC, it is not clear whether the WP munitions were being used to render insurgents hors de combat. |
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In contrast, drones cannot refuel in midair, conduct airdrops, or carry a meaningful amount of munitions. |
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Details of the locations of munitions dump sites are readily available. |
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Their last rounds detonated a hidden munitions dump, shaking the entire fortress and hurling artillery shells over the walls, while burning rockets shot in all directions. |
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Another crump sounded, and I was nearly shaken from my seat as the ship abruptly slid sideways, either a munitions dump had just been hit, or fuel. |
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Due to its high density, which is about twice that of lead, and other physical properties, depleted uranium is used in munitions designed to penetrate armour plate. |
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I don't own a munitions factory, nor do I have any interest in running for office. Uncle Sam has yet to ask me to plant a victory garden or sew blankets. |
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By December 1941, when the United States entered the war, it was already convoying munitions to Britain, making most neutrality legislation a dead letter. |
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An adapted version of the old Board of Ordnance flag has also been used, after it was left behind when munitions were removed from the isles. |
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From November 1886 to 1890, he was Director of Naval Ordnance, responsible for weapons and munitions. |
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Three chartered, prepositioned ships are assigned to transport and store backup munitions for combat operations around the globe. |
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Used in Area Attack munitions, the TMD contains precision submunitions such as the Sensor Fuzed Weapon. |
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The Great War saw a decline in civilian consumption, with a major reallocation to munitions. |
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Industry turned out munitions in large quantities, with many women taking factory jobs. |
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Has the shifting policy of win-win to win-hold-win and back to win-win had an impact on your munitions requirements determinations? |
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Portuguese imported armors and munitions, fine clothes and several manufactured products from Flanders and Italy. |
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To improve 40 mm grenade effectiveness against hidden targets numerous companies are developing air burst munitions. |
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George's evaded coastal blockades to provide supplies and munitions to the desperate Confederates. |
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The M4 entrance allows easier access for the large vehicles used to carry the munitions. |
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American rebels obtained some munitions through the Dutch Republic as well as French and Spanish ports in the West Indies. |
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The opening of 1915 saw growing division between Lloyd George and Kitchener over the supply of munitions for the army. |
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By 1854, the old Laboratory Square had been roofed over to serve as a vast machine shop at the heart of what was now a munitions factory. |
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However the enormous spending on munitions, ships, electronics, and uniforms during World War II caused a burst of prosperity in every sector. |
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During the Tudor period, a range of buildings for the storage of munitions was built along the inside of the north inner ward. |
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There was very little military action, and Orwell was shocked by the lack of munitions, food, and firewood, and other extreme deprivations. |
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Modern superheavy tanks with advanced passive and active armor are an RMA I response to the proliferation of early antitank-guided munitions. |
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Cluster munitions are weapons that include cargo containers and submunitions. |
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Neither Newhall Land nor county officials said the detection of perchlorate, a chemical compound used in manufacturing munitions, was a surprise. |
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Close to 70 people died in the blast in the underground munitions storage depot at RAF Fauld. |
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Exposures to trinitrotoluene and dinitrotoluene, used in explosives and munitions, also produce elevated levels of TDA in urine and blood. |
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How did Washington and his generals keep those men and munitions hidden? |
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On the night of April 18, 1775, General Gage sent 700 men to seize munitions stored by the colonial militia at Concord, Massachusetts. |
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We fighters were just one more way of delivering munitions and attritting the enemy forces. |
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Kitson discovered important new deposits of manganese, used in munitions production, in the Gold Coast. |
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One of the most important role of logistics is the supply of munitions as a primary type of consumable, their storage, and disposal. |
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Unable to go to the Front, he took a job with the Clyde Valley Electrical Power Company, which was engaged in munitions work. |
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The antirunway munitions are specifically designed to cause maximum destruction to airfield pavements. |
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The War saw a decline of civilian consumption, with a major reallocation to munitions. |
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Cluster munitions contain dozens or hundreds of small bomblets and can be fired in rockets or dropped from the air. |
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Capital from the expanded munitions industry moved south with the control of much Scottish business. |
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In the early part of the 20th century, a large munitions factory, Kynoch, was established on the north side of the town. |
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The deficit spending proved to be most profound and went into the purchase of munitions for the armed forces. |
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Departments of government also operate in the arms industry, buying and selling weapons, munitions and other military items. |
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For example, in February 1941, 345 West Indians came to work in factories in and around Liverpool, making munitions. |
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Two can play at destructive industrialism, and now we out-gun you. We are piling up munitions now faster than you. |
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The estimates vary widely but it seems to be clear that more than a hundred thousand tons of munitions were sunk. |
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Information dissemination about the destruction of the Khamisiyah munitions depot in Iraq is a case and point. |
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The Ministry of Defence estimates that there is well over a million tons of munitions at the bottom of Beaufort's Dyke. |
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Following the First World War, Hurd's Deep was used by the British Government as a dumping ground for both chemical and conventional munitions. |
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Between the Dances draws from interviews with more than 300 women who served as nurses, farmhands, munitions workers or members of the defence forces. |
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With those words, Seth Delaney commits himself to destroying his three half-brothers in order to gain control of their father's munitions company, Highbinders Industrial, Ltd. |
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Insensitive munitions are designed to resist unplanned detonation by fast or slow cook-of, bullet impact, fragment impact, shaped charge jet impact or sympathetic detonation. |
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It was intended for use in the making of munitions for the Great War. |
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During this period, naval warfare underwent a comprehensive transformation, brought about by steam propulsion, metal ship construction, and explosive munitions. |
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By September, Marshal Guillaume Brune completed the occupation of Swedish Pomerania, allowing the Swedish army to withdraw with all its munitions of war. |
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In 1886, Woolwich munitions workers founded the club as Dial Square. |
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On 1 December 1886, munitions workers in Woolwich, now South East London, formed Arsenal as Dial Square, with David Danskin as their first captain. |
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The Second World War severely crippled the railways as rolling stock was diverted to the Middle East, and the railway workshops were converted into munitions workshops. |
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These ships carry equipment and supplies to support a major armed force with tanks, armoured personnel carriers, munitions, fuel, spare parts and even a mobile field hospital. |
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The stalemate required an endless supply of men and munitions. |
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If something did erupt, staff did not have sublethal munitions or gas. |
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Following the Second World War, it was used to dump military equipment, munitions and weaponry left behind by the ousted German invaders of the Channel Islands. |
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Many cluster munitions rely on simple mechanical fuses that arm the submunition based on its rate of spin and explode on impact or after a time delay. |
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Kites have been used for signaling, for delivery of munitions, and for observation, by lifting an observer above the field of battle, and by using kite aerial photography. |
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His raid on Cherbourg in August 1758 proved to be the most successful of the descents, as he burnt ships and munitions and destroyed the fortifications of the town. |
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However, in 1943, 20 children died when their nursery school was bombed, and shortly after the war ended, an explosion at a local munitions storage site claimed many victims. |
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Had Bridgend been bombed it would have likely been a massive blow to munitions supplies to the allies and could have changed the course of the war in the Axis' favour. |
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Starting in 1776, the French secretly supplied the Americans with money, gunpowder, and munitions in order to weaken its arch enemy Great Britain. |
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On his first day in Milan, he was sent to the scene of a munitions factory explosion, where rescuers retrieved the shredded remains of female workers. |
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Since they all had a slightly yellow tinge to their skin, he assumed they were munitions workers. Munitionettes, as the newspapers liked to call them. |
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But by astonishing luck Lieb, his mother Chanah, brother David and sister Pesza, were included on Schindler's essential workers list for his munitions factory. |
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See the Anderson shelters being delivered and erected, the munitions factories and women doing their share to produce what the armed forces needed on the front line. |
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