Foreign outrage peaked anew in July, when Bosnian Serb television compared the NATO-led peace force to Nazi storm troops after British soldiers had captured one indicted Serb war crimes suspect and killed another.
32.
Supported with phosgene and mustard gas, storm troops and an infantry company of about 200 men from the 43rd Reserve Division's 201st Battalion, pierced the line in the 44th Battalion's sector around Wolfsberg.
33.
And the documents show that, at a time when Nazi organizations still were banned in Austria, a 21-year-old Harrer joined Adolf Hitler's underground SA ( Sturmabteilung ), or " storm troops, " in Austria in 1933.
34.
I told him how I watched when the Desert Storm troops returned home from the Persian Gulf to be greeted by their wives and children and how I wept because that had never happened for us.
35.
Men trained in these methods were known in German as " Sturmmann " ( literally " assault man " but usually translated as Stormtrooper ), formed into companies of " Sturmtruppen " ( Storm Troops ).
36.
The "'Stennes Revolt "'was a revolt within the Nazi Party in 1930-1931 led by Walter Stennes ( 1895 1989 ), the Berlin commandant of the " Sturmabteilung " ( SA ), the Nazi's " brownshirt " storm troops.
37.
The German defence quickly recovered and on 30 November began a counter-offensive, using a similar short bombardment, air attacks and storm troop infantry tactics, which was contained by the British, in some parts of the battlefield using the Hindenburg Line defences captured earlier.
38.
Early in 1931 the so-called Stennes Revolt represented a violent split within the Sander secured control over the local SA head office ( " " Gauhaus " " ) with his SA people, and Gehrke was given leadership of SA " Storm Troop 37 ".
39.
These organizations included the SS ( Schutzstaffel, " Defense Corps " ), the Gestapo ( Geheime Staatspolizei, " Secret State Police " ), and the SA ( Sturmabteilung, " Storm Troops " ), as well as the General Staff and High Command of the German armed forces.
40.
Men trained in these methods were known in Germany as " Sturmmann " ( literally " storm man " but usually translated as " stormtrooper " ), formed into companies of " Sturmtruppen " ( " assault troops ", more often and less exactly " storm troops " ).