ISTAR

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ISTAR
ISTAR stands for IntelligenceSurveillanceTarget Acquisition, and Reconnaissance. In its macroscopic sense, ISTAR is a practice that links several battlefield functions together to assist a combat force in employing its sensors and managing the information they gather.Information is collected on the battlefield through systematic observation by deployed soldiers and a variety of electronic sensors. Surveillance, Target Acquisition and Reconnaissance are methods of obtaining this information. The information is then passed to intelligence personnel for analysis, and then to the commander and his staff for the formulation of battle plans. Intelligence is processed information that is relevant and contributes to an understanding of the ground, and of enemy dispositions and intents.
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Istar
Istar can refer to:One of the Istari, the "wizards" in J. R. R. Tolkien's fictional world.Istar, a fictional city set in the fantasy world of Krynn in the Dragonlance setting of the Dungeons & Dragons game.ISTAR, an acronym for Intelligence, Surveillance, Target Acquisition, and Reconnaissance.I-star, a type of diagram (sometimes written as i*).
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Ishtar
Ishtar (DIŠTAR ) is the Assyrian and Babylonian counterpart to the Sumerian Inanna and to the cognate northwest Semitic goddess AstarteAnunitAtarsamain and Esther are alternative names for Ishtar.
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Rakefet DictionaryDownload this dictionary
Ishtar
Ishtar (Chaldean) Ancient Babylonian deity, eldest of heaven and earth, daughter of Anu (the lord of the heavens). Her worship was fervently pursued by the multitude both in Babylonia and Assyria, although she was known under various names in different localities -- Anunit, Nina, Nanna, Innanna, Atar -- even when represented as the consort of Marduk (Babylonia) and of Assur (Assyria). In popular conception, she was the bounteous nature goddess, queen of beauty and joyousness, equivalent to Aphrodite or Venus, however, rather than Ceres, although synthesizing certain attributes of both these goddesses. Her other aspect is as the grim, stern harvester, withdrawing the life-forces so that everything during this period shall have sleep and rest. This aspect was stressed by the warlike Assyrians, who represented her as armed with bow and arrows, and hence she becomes their chief goddess of battles; whereas the Babylonians stressed the mother and child idea. Her symbol was an eight-rayed star.
Ishtar, with Shamash and Sin (the life-force, the sun, and the moon), formed an important triad of divinities. In astronomy Ishtar was a name of the planet Venus -- the double aspect of the goddess being made to correspond to the morning and evening star.
Ishtar likewise is mystically the theogonic representation of the earth itself in its productive and fecund aspects as the mother of all, and hence essentially to be considered as prakriti emanating from mulaprakriti.



FOLDOC DictionaryDownload this dictionary
ISTAR
<programmingtool> An experimental IPSE from Imperial Software Technology.
(1995-10-12)


(c) Copyright 1993 by Denis Howe

European Defence Agency AcronymsDownload this dictionary
ISTAR
Intelligence, Surveillance, Target Acquisition and Reconnaissance
  

© 2005-2008 European Defence Agency. ( About )

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