Oscar Mike to the glossary. Copy that.
Military phrase meaning actual troops physically present in an area. Politicians love using this phrase because it sounds way more dramatic than saying 'we sent some people there.' The boots themselves have no comment on the matter.
NATO signal meaning 'well done' or 'good job.' It is the military's way of giving you a gold star without actually giving you anything tangible. The fanciest pat on the back that requires zero paperwork.
A temporary camp without tents or cover, used by soldiers in the field. It is the most miserable form of camping that exists โ no tent, no s'mores, no fun campfire stories, just sleeping on the ground while pretending this is fine. Glamping's evil opposite.
The three-dimensional area where military forces operate, including land, sea, air, space, and increasingly cyberspace. The modern evolution from "battlefield" acknowledging that warfare no longer fits on flat maps.
Military uniform designed for combat operations rather than ceremony, optimized for functionality over looking sharp at parades. The practical outfit that prioritizes not dying over impressing generals.
To fail a qualification or test, particularly marksmanship qualification. From the lowest badge tier 'marksman' once resembling a bolo tie, though etymology debates rage on.
Standardized short phrases used in radio communications to convey complex information quickly, because spelling everything out when people are shooting at you is inefficient. It's military shorthand with life-or-death stakes.
A movement technique where one element advances while another provides cover, then the roles switchโessentially tactical leapfrogging with more firepower. The buddy system for people expecting to be shot at.
A concise informational session where decision-makers receive the essential facts about a situation, stripped of unnecessary details and optimally delivered in PowerPoint format. These meetings aim to bring people up to speed quickly, though they often devolve into death-by-slides marathons that could have been emails. Military and corporate environments love briefings because they create the illusion that everyone is informed and aligned.
Military acronym for "Bend Over Manchu, Here It Comes Again"โa variation of BOHICA used by U.S. soldiers stationed at Camp Hovey in Korea. Refers to the special kind of repetitive misery that comes with military assignments, now with geographically-specific flavor.
The complete combat gear a soldier wears, which makes an unmistakable rattling, clanking noise when walking. It's essentially turning yourself into a heavily armed Christmas tree that jingles with lethality instead of joy.
A tactical maneuver to disengage from the enemy and get the hell out of there in an organized manner, as opposed to running away in panic. It's retreating with style and covering fire.
Military slang for losing personnel, resources, or tactical advantage to enemy action. It's what happens when your position is being slowly destroyed but you're not allowed to say 'we're screwed' in official reports.
Slang for the U.S. Air Force, based on their blue uniforms. Used primarily by other service branches with varying degrees of affection and mockeryโmostly mockery.
The military act of relentlessly pounding a target with artillery shells, bombs, or missiles until it ceases to exist as originally structured. It's also used metaphorically for any overwhelming assault, whether of emails, questions, or particles in physics. When 'a lot' just doesn't capture the sheer volume of destructive force involved.
A GPS-enabled combat identification system that displays friendly troop positions in real-time on digital maps, theoretically preventing you from shooting your buddies. The military's answer to "Find My Friends" but with significantly higher stakes.
Not the caped crusader, but a military officer's personal servant or valet who handles everything from polishing boots to brewing tea. This Commonwealth military tradition assigns enlisted personnel to assist officers with daily tasks, because apparently commanding troops isn't exhausting enough. Think of it as having a professional adulting assistant in uniform.
Military slang for helicopters or other aircraft. Because 'rotary-wing aircraft' takes too long when you're requesting emergency extraction.
Covert operations not attributable to the sponsoring organization or nation, typically involving intelligence agencies or special forces. What happens in the black stays in the classified files.
The area where bullets from a machine gun or artillery will impact, forming a predictable pattern of death and destruction. Mathematically optimized mayhem.
Either a military aircraft designed to drop explosive payloads or a person who plants bombs, both equally unwelcome at parties. The aircraft version represents massive engineering achievement dedicated to destruction; the person version represents someone who's made very poor life choices. Also a style of jacket, which is considerably less threatening.
A polite military euphemism for when your own forces accidentally shoot at each other, because apparently 'we screwed up catastrophically' doesn't sound professional enough in an after-action report. The color coding refers to NATO's system where friendly forces are marked in blue on tactical maps.
The process of aligning a weapon's sights with its actual point of impact, because shooting in the general direction of the enemy is considered poor form. Think of it as calibrating your 'delete button' before using it.
Adorable-sounding mini-bombs released by cluster munitions, because apparently regular bombs weren't problematic enough. These cheerful little explosives scatter like deadly confetti, with the bonus feature that many fail to detonate immediately, becoming surprise gifts for civilians years later. The term makes wholesale destruction sound like a craft project.