Because it was very well planned and the troops were determined to fight and win.
The lack of planning on the Allied part. IF they would have planned it better, they probably would not have had as many losses.
He planned a protest march in front of the White House
The Normandy Invasion also popularly called D-Day was planned to bring forth the largest military invasion against the evil Nazi Germans in order to liberate the European nations which had been invaded and oppressed by the Nazi Germans.
In World War II (as distinct from World War I), the long-planned but often-delayed strike on Germany that finally opened a genuine Second (and Western) Front arrived on June the 6th of 1944. Often referred to as "D-Day", this invasion took place in the Normandy region of France and was successful in leading to the eventual overthrow of Nazi Germany.
Only they know. The military is a pretty tight lipped group of people.
because fate had it planned dont ask just do
The carefully planned and executed successful assault by Alexander the Great.
Yes, the attack was a planned military strike.
tojo
i think maybe george h.w. bush
When a State planned economy transitions toward a free market economy they engage in privatization of resources. For privatization to be successful what must the State also do?
Because it was very well planned and the troops were determined to fight and win.
if youve seen terminator you know too much already......
The carefully planned and executed successful assault by Alexander the great.
Chivalric orders are societies and fellowships of knights[1] that have been created by European monarchs in imitation of the military orders of the Crusades. After the crusades, the memory of these crusading military orders became idealised and romanticised, resulting in the late medieval notion of chivalry, and is reflected in the Arthurian romances of the time. Modern historiography tends to take the fall of Acre in 1291 as the final end of the age of the crusades. But in contemporary understanding, many further crusades against the Turks were planned and partly executed throughout the 14th century and well into the 15th century. The late medieval chivalric orders thus very much understood themselves as reflecting an ongoing military effort against Islam, even though such an effort with the rise of the Ottoman Empire and the fall of Constantinople in the 1450s was without realistic hope of success. During the 15th century, orders of chivalry became more and more a mere courtly fashion and could be created ad-hoc, some of them purely honorific, consisting of nothing but the badge. These institutions in turn gave rise to the modern-day orders of merit.
they allied the french and other countries in Europe and planned to attack the british... later on the british finally surrendered.