Examples of Heavy Bomber in a sentence
The Ex-hydrant Area – a series of four fuel hydrants and infrastructure (Heavy Bomber Hydrant, Medium Bomber Hydrant, Fighter Hydrant, and Transport Hydrant) formerly used for refuelling airplanes.
The DOD Heavy Bomber Force Study, completed in May 1995, is the most comprehensive of the DOD and Air Force studies to date.
The 1994 NPR acknowledged the B-52’s limited survivability in high-threat environments and relegated the aircraft in nuclear operations to a role of delivering standoff- ranged air-launched cruise missiles (ALCMs).68 1995 DOD Heavy Bomber Force StudyThe 1995 DOD Heavy Bomber Force Study was a classified study initiated by congressional direction.
DOD’s decision to keep 187 bombers in the force, a significantly larger number than required to meet nuclear requirements, was shaped largely by the conclusions of the Bottom-Up Review, the Air Force’s Bomber Roadmap, and the 1995 DOD Heavy Bomber Force Study, and reflects DOD’s view that long-range bombers are needed primarily to supplement the conventional capabilities of other ground-attack assets such as Air Force and Navy tactical fighters and missiles.
Memorandum of Understanding on Warhead Attribution and Heavy Bomber Data Relating to the Treaty Between the United States of America and the Russian Federation on Further Reduction and Limitation of Strategic Offensive Arms (1993).
Table 1.1. Existing Types of Accountable Air Force Weapons Systems* Minuteman III (MM III) ICBMPeacekeeper (PK) ICBMB-52H Heavy Bomber Equipped for Nuclear ArmamentsB-2A Heavy Bomber Equipped for Nuclear Armaments* The Minuteman II (MM II) ICBM, B-52G heavy bomber, and B-1B heavy bomber were initially listed as existing types, but are no longer accountable under the Treaty.
Galdi, Bomber Non-Nuclear Roles: Background to the Heavy Bomber Debate, Congressional Research Service Report for Congress, 8 June 1995, 22.
The teachers had some interesting differences in their evaluation of the game in terms of its age appropriateness.
Navy Department, Memo from CAPT Stroop to RADMs Duncan and Gardner, 31 May, 1945; Navy Department, Memo Stroop to F-1, Comments on JCS 1190/8 – Planned Deployment of Strategic Very Heavy Bomber Groups, 15 June, 1945, Box 76, Strategic Plans, War Plans Division (Series III), RG 38, NACP.
These reports include assessments of the Space Launch Vehicle, Conventional Ammunition, Heavy Bomber, Helicopter, Meal Ready-to-Eat, Torpedo, and Tracked Combat Vehicle industry sectors.