"Island-Hopping" .
The term two-front war refers specifically to the European Theater of War. Up until D-Day, the only land front between the Axis and Allied powers was the eastern front between Russia and Germany. The strategy behind D-Day was to open a second front against the Germans and relieve pressure on the Russians. Allied leaders hoped a second front would put stress on Germany and strain their resources. After D-Day, Germany was essentially fighting agaisnt two armies, the Russians in the east and the other allied powers to the west. The strategy worked well and after opening the second front Germany was defeated about a year later. The term two-front war refers to these two fronts the Germans faced and the strategy devised to bring about the end of the war.
Short term strategy is a plan for the close future. Long term strategy would be planning for long run of a battle or war.
I believe it was known as "Island Hopping" where the U.S. tried to capture as many strategic islands as possible in an effort to push the Japanese back.
This term neans a worsening as described in the text
that strategy is long term and planning could be a short term.
This sounds like a test or HW question, they may be refering to Island Hopping, which was the American strategy designed to speed up the war, while reducing Casualties by bypassing many of the Islands the Japanese had occupied, taking only the ones needed to act as forward bases, or those which threatened the Allied advance. Rabaul is a good example of this. Though it was the Japanese command center for the south Pacific, the allies simply bypassed it, and instead of capturing it, subjected it to weekly air attacks, and blockade, to render it harmless, to their overall war effort.
What do you understand by the term Strategy in the context of Business Management andPolicy
yes
Please provide more context or specify which term you would like described.
Strategy is an overall plan to get to your long term goal. Tactics are small steps to advance your plan in the short term.
When one talks about strategy, it implies growth. Stability is necessary for growth, but without a growth strategy can lead to stagnation.
A Pacific blackberry is another term for the Douglas berry.