Support troops, perhaps? Essentially, anything in the military which isn't infantry is infantry support, whether directly or indirectly. And support ranges from paper pushing admin clerks and finance personnel to truck drivers to helicopter pilots to Civil Affairs and PsyOps personnel, etc.
Pathos
The American Military pulled the troops out of Vietnam because of political pressure on the home front.
pathos(example of which element of rhetoric)
In terms of military offensive actions, no, veterinary officers are typically not on the front lines. They are support staff who are charged with ensuring a safe and wholesome food supply for the troops as well as humanitarian and goodwill missions to provide veterinary medical care to the local livestock and animal populations. Having said this, veterinary officers can find themselves in the middle of a firefight, particularly since warfare has shifted from defined lines of combat to embedded guerilla tactics.
ruby picked the dirt from underneath her fingernails, and military commanders ordered more troops to the front.
Russia's withdrawal from the war allowed Germans to move thousands of troops from the Eastern Front to the Western Front in France.
The fighter leader concept is essentially the idea of a leader leading his troops from the front. Thus a fighter leader does not try to 'push' his troops forward, but 'pulls' them-- a subordinate in combat will not let his unit leader move into danger without support.
The Romans road are famous because they were paved. This had a military purpose. Their roads were not paved from the beginning. The first paved road, the Appian way, was built in 312 BC to speed up movement of troops to the front in the Second Samnite War. They also made the movement of supplies to the troops at the front or in garrisons easier and quicker.
by providing important raw materials, by building military bases, and by sending troops to the european front
Yes
He was successful and led from the front.
The Via Appia, named after Censor Appius Claudius Caecus, stretched from Rome to Brindisi, the embarkation port for the Greek east. It signified Rome's roadbuilding activity to support its control of empire, giving rapid access for movement of troops and messengers. This was multiplied by its other roads throughout the empire.