The last military action to take place geographically (albeit not politically) in England, that I can think of is the storming of the Iranian Embassy in London, by the SAS, on May 8th 1980, which ended the Iranian Embassy Siege ... Of course, being a foreign embassy, it's not technically/politically English soil, hence the use of the term "geographically" ...
blackballed katiebaby
New Haven and Scattered Valley Settlements
A military action is an action carried out by armed forces. A military action could be just the National Guard helping flood victims or it could be the invasion of a city by military personnel.
The last military action of the American Revolutionary War was the siege of Yorktown, Virginia. Yorktown was a small village on the coast, held by the British and surrounded by Continental and French forces. Aside from some artillery bombardment, there was no battlein the village itself.
Welbeck College is a military school in England but its not in London
Modern military
What was the military hierarchy of England 17th century
No England is a not an action verb. England is a proper noun you can tell because it begins with a capitol letter.
The defeat of the Wampanoags in King Philip's War
For the simple reason that slaughtering defenceless civilians in order to commit genocide is not a military action.
Because the president said that the military would supply war materials to other countries in exchange for military bases in England
Depending on context, action can be translated as: Aktion Wirkung Action (film) Handlung Bewegung Klage (legal) Prozess (legal) Tätigkeit Einwirkung Gefecht (military) Einsatz (military) Kampfgeschehen (military)