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forces

n. 1 (plural of force English) 2 (context military English) troops (plural only). 3 (context music English) the orchestral instrumentation (and voices) used in a musical production (nearly always used in plural form only). vb. (en-third-person singular of: force)

Usage examples of "forces".

By and large, the strategy worked--only to leave American forces facing a new and more dangerous phase of the conflict.

The bitter insurgency American and British forces confront today was not preordained.

American and allied forces are still at risk in a war the president declared all but won on May 1, 2003.

Persian Gulf, Bush said in a 1999 speech at the Citadel, was an impressive accomplishment, but also one that had taken six months of planning, amassing of military forces and supplies, and preparation.

Soon after arriving at the Pentagon, Rumsfeld met with General Hugh Shelton, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, a former Special Operations Forces commander and an imposing physical presence.

He was also skeptical about the Army leadership, which he considered to be too old-fashioned, wedded to heavy forces, and too slow to change.

Citadel speech had spoken of developing land forces that were more mobile and easier to deploy.

Rumsfeld, the JCS chief told associates, had been a Navy fighter pilot, seemed partial to the Navy and the Marines, and was biased against the Army because it had mechanized forces and had taken on Balkan peacekeeping missions that the Bush administration considered to be a distraction.

Iraqi leader might be located and targeted the security forces, communications network, and Baath Party organizations that American intelligence believed he relied on to stay in power.

Iraqi forces from Kuwait and to deprive Saddam of the ability to threaten his southern neighbor again by destroying the Republican Guard divisions that had rolled into the tiny Gulf state and later taken up positions south of the Euphrates.

Beyond that, enough of his Republican Guard forces, including the critically important corps headquarters, had escaped during the Gulf conflict to help him contend with a spontaneous rebellion in the Shiite-dominated south and resistance in the Kurdish north.

The defense secretary was prepared to send fewer forces than even the White House was willing to dispatch, Shelton argued.

In the meantime, the American forces could sell oil and import food to the presumably grateful residents of southern Iraq.

If the Iraqis dispatched forces south to attack the Americans they would be destroyed by airpower.

Mikolashek was concerned by the V Corps plan, which took forces beyond the Euphrates so they could launch attacks near Baghdad and favored something more conservative.