What does defense mean?

What does defense mean?

: the act of defending someone or something from attack. : something that is used to protect yourself, your country, etc. : the act of speaking or writing in support of someone or something that is being attacked or criticized.

What is defense law?

For example, in a case of assault self defence may be a defence but provocation may only be mitigation. By contrast, a defence is an explanation for the accused’s actions that legally excuse or justify their conduct.

What does the defense have to prove?

The prosecutor must convince the fact-finder of the defendant’s guilt “beyond a reasonable doubt.” This heavy burden of proof requires that the jury (in some cases, the judge) have a moral certainty that the defendant is guilty.

What are the three forms of defense?

There are three basic defensive tasks—area defense, mobile defense, and retrograde.

What is area defense?

The area defense is a type of defensive operation that concentrates on denying enemy forces access to designated terrain for a specific time rather than destroying the enemy outright (FM 3-0). An area defense capitalizes on the strength inherent in closely integrated defensive organization on the ground.

What are the 8 battle drills?

There are eight different battle drills: squad attack, react to contact, break contact, react to ambush, knock out bunkers, clear a room, clear a trench and breach a mined wire obstacle.

What are the 4 platoon battle drills?

There are Four Platoon Battle Drills: 1. Preparation for Battle. 2. Reaction to the point section coming under effective enemy fire.

How many battle drills are there?

14 battle drills

How many warrior tasks are there?

65 warrior tasks

What is break contact?

The platoon/squad leader orders the platoon/squad to break contact. STANDARDS. The unit moves to where the enemy cannot observe or place direct fire on it. PERFORMANCE MEASURES. The platoon/squad leader directs one squad/fire team in contact to support the disengagement of the remainder of the unit.

Andrew

Andrey is a coach, sports writer and editor. He is mainly involved in weightlifting. He also edits and writes articles for the IronSet blog where he shares his experiences. Andrey knows everything from warm-up to hard workout.