| FAIRFAX | Thomas ?, English parliamentary general; Commander-in-Chief of the New Model Army from 1645 |
| SCHWARZKOPF | General, commander of the allied forces in the Gulf War (11) |
| OCHS | Adolph who was chief of The New York Times from 1896 to 1935 |
| PRIDESPURGE | The 1648 expulsion from the Long Parliament of members hostile to the New Model Army (6,5) |
| REDCOAT | Nickname for a British soldier, associated with the New Model Army of 1645 or the American Revolutionary War (7) |
| NASEBY | First major battle fought by the New Model Army |
| THOMASPRIDE | New Model Army officer who brought about the expulsion of Royalist and Presbyterian MPs from Parliament in 1648 (6,5) |
| ROBERTELEE | The Confederacy's bed general in the Civil War, commander of their strongest army from 1862-65 (6,1,3) |
| ABRAMS | Creighton, general and Chief of Staff of the United States Army from 1972 to 1974 (6) |
| HAIG | Douglas ---, commander in chief of the British forces in France during most of the First World War (4) |
| ANNA | The first name of the editor-in- chief of the US version of Vogue (4) |
| MITHRAIST | Follower of a religious cult popular in the Roman army from the lst to 4th Century AD (9) |
| LEE | Robert E. -, commander-in-chief of the Southern armies in the American Civil War (3) |
| DESERTSTORM | What codename was given to the military operation to eject the Iraqi army from Kuwait in 1991? (6,5) |
| BOWDLER | Thomas ?, English publisher of an 1818 expurgated version of The Family Shakespeare (7) |
| WADE | George ___ (1673 - 1748)Irish-born soldier who became Commander-in-chief of the Forces in 1745 (4) |
| DOUGLASHAIG | British field marshal; commander-in-chief of the British forces in France and Flanders (1915-18) |
| NIMITZ | Chester, Commander in Chief of the US Pacific Fleet during the Second World War (6) |
| TOURDEFORCE | Great success due to Republican's New Model Army (4,2,5) |
| ROTTENBOROUGH | English parliamentary constituency of a kind abolished by the 1832 Reform Act (6,7) |