high command造句1 Such was the power of the High Command that they were able to install a parliamentary government by a few sharp memoranda.
2 Three weeks later the high command again said hands off, with a reminder that it could still mount a coup.
3 The military high command, led by coup leader and Armed Forces C.-in-C.
4 Now, though, the New Labour high command seems ready to drop the pretence.
5 The German High Command took the bait anyway.
6 The Republican high command attempted to repair this damage.
7 Almost as much as the laughed attheBritish High Command who just wasted those same Grunts bythehundred - thousand.
8 The high Command was jockeying its force into place for attack.
9 The Confederate army's high command had charged him with the task of defending western Virginia from an invasion by Union troops.
10 Word of this incredible phenomenon reached the High Command of both sides.
11 EXMP : the high command ordered a truce for the holidays.
12 Deprived of its underground in America,[www.] the German High Command resorted to audacious plans.
13 The German High Command now redirected its panzers south to smash the remaining French units defending Paris along the Somme.
14 On the next day, allied high command for the Chinese Theater of Operations was established.
15 They all went to Maeda's residence in Jakarta; he sent messages to the high command, but nobody turned up.
16 Foreign currency profits translated into tuition for the progeny of the high command.
17 Nevertheless the Tories did have established methods for ensuring co-ordination between the high command and the rank and file.
18 Because of her unique position she had been able to meet socially most of the members of Hitler's High Command.
19 This may be partly because neither the president nor the high command is confident that parts of the army might not rebel.
20 A hit squad of American Jewish soldiers and a French Jewess living in Paris converge in a pair of outlandish plots to kill the Nazi high command.
21 Unfortunately for the U-boat force, as with all other naval officers at that time, the German Naval High Command believed vehemently in the unsinkable battleship.