Guadalcanal.
Chainsaw
There's no limit; you can create as many as you want: Neighborhood warfare, forest warfare, lake warfare, football warfare, etc. However, generally, when studying history, the traditional ones are: Aerial warfare, naval warfare, guerrilla warfare, conventional and unconventional warfare, urban warfare, jungle warfare, desert warfare, mountain warfare, etc.
America's first and only rifle developed specifically for jungle warfare in Vietnam.Then, unfortunately, the "jungle rifle" was adapted as the STANDARD US RIFLE world wide after the Vietnam War period; replacing the M14 US Rifle.Using the word "unfortunately" means, the M16 was intended for jungle warfare (spraying and praying-spitting out lead at an extremely high rate of fire); and not for long range conventional open field warfare. It's bullet is too small, and the rifle itself was not designed for long range accurate fire...as was the M14, M1, Springfield '03, etc. before it.Rule number 1: Use the "right tool" for the "right job." Jungle rifles are for jungle warfare!Chambered in 5.56mm
Jungle (heavily forested) is the terrain, like snow, mountains, or the desert (even the ocean is terrain, such as a naval war). You might mean "guerrilla warfare." From 1955 thru 1964 was guerrilla warfare restricted to South Vietnam. From the Tonkin Gulf incident (August '64) onward commenced conventional warfare against North Vietnam.
During World War II, the Pacific theater was characterized by intense jungle warfare, amphibious assaults, and naval engagements. Battles often took place on remote islands, where American and Allied forces faced entrenched Japanese troops, leading to brutal hand-to-hand combat. The use of aircraft carriers and naval power was crucial, as seen in pivotal battles like Midway and Leyte Gulf. Guerrilla tactics and close-quarters fighting in the dense jungles also defined many confrontations, making the conflict particularly grueling and challenging.
Chainsaw
Exactly as described - training for combat in a jungle environment.
Jungle Warfare College - 2013 was released on: USA: 4 October 2013 (Offshoot Film Festival)
something realy bad. Many monsters in there.
There aren't any movie theatres in the jungle.
There's no limit; you can create as many as you want: Neighborhood warfare, forest warfare, lake warfare, football warfare, etc. However, generally, when studying history, the traditional ones are: Aerial warfare, naval warfare, guerrilla warfare, conventional and unconventional warfare, urban warfare, jungle warfare, desert warfare, mountain warfare, etc.
Mystery Science Theater 3000 - 1988 Jungle Goddess 3-3 was released on: USA: 6 October 1990
The jungle
Jungle school was 2 weeks. First week was a training week and the second was tatical training.
Yes: Advisors, Green Beret, SEALs, Rangers, LRRPS, ARPs, Snipers. All were fairly good at jungle warfare.
America's first and only rifle developed specifically for jungle warfare in Vietnam.Then, unfortunately, the "jungle rifle" was adapted as the STANDARD US RIFLE world wide after the Vietnam War period; replacing the M14 US Rifle.Using the word "unfortunately" means, the M16 was intended for jungle warfare (spraying and praying-spitting out lead at an extremely high rate of fire); and not for long range conventional open field warfare. It's bullet is too small, and the rifle itself was not designed for long range accurate fire...as was the M14, M1, Springfield '03, etc. before it.Rule number 1: Use the "right tool" for the "right job." Jungle rifles are for jungle warfare!Chambered in 5.56mm
Jungle (heavily forested) is the terrain, like snow, mountains, or the desert (even the ocean is terrain, such as a naval war). You might mean "guerrilla warfare." From 1955 thru 1964 was guerrilla warfare restricted to South Vietnam. From the Tonkin Gulf incident (August '64) onward commenced conventional warfare against North Vietnam.