Yes, and it often does.
A military force that fights on land is the army for that is what they were first assigned to do.
Land held by the Department of Defense is operated and managed by the branch of the service which is the primary user of the land. Navy and Marine Corps bases are managed by the Naval facilities Engineering Command, and Air Force bases and stations are managed by the Air force Real Estate Office. Army bases and civil engineering works are administered by the Army Corps of Engineers.
Neither on their own is enough to justify coercive military force. The early railroads often used coercive efforts to get the land they needed.
The US Army is the oldest and biggest branch of military in service, they are also the largest land combat force.
Christina L. Nelson has written: 'Supporting defense communities' -- subject(s): Civil-military relations, Environmental aspects, Environmental aspects of Military bases, Land use, Military bases, Planning, States
The Army is one of the branches of the military. There is also the Navy which includes the Marine Corps, and the Air Force. The Coast Guard really falls under the Dept. of Transportation, not the Dept. of Defense but many include them in our military.
Appeasement
(Tobacco)
The Cayman Islands have no military force of their own. All military support is provided by England as it is a Bristish Overseas Territory. The Cayman Islands do however, have a police force the RCIPS or Royal Cayman Islands Police Force. The police force itself has marine and land based units.
Military Bases
Andersen Air Force Base on the island's northeastern plateau is a major United States defense base. This and all other military instalations are land structures.
Military flights land in Oxfordshire from many different commercial flights. An example of military flights that land in Oxfordshire include United Military Travel.