Ok I guess this is American

No Worries, You see the disclaimer the numbers are under development, of the Symbols?
I Like them with the Little wheels Mechanise Infantry.
It would be nice to post or provide a link to the meaning of this Tactical Battle map Symbols.
I have the 2006 US Army Land Navigation & Map Text book and those symbols do not appear.
These are New Smybols
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/APP-6A
Ok NATO Military Symbols
http://www.historyofwar.org/articles...s_natomap.html
This is the definition of these Symbols US
http://www.history.army.mil/books/wwii/11-4/symbols.htm
This is for ARMY
The SNSCC APP-6A SymbolNameStrengthConstituent unitsCommander or leader. XXXXXX. Region, theater, or front 1,000,000+4+ army groupsgeneral, army general, or field marshel XXXXX. Army Group 250,000+2+ armiesgeneral, army general, or field marshal. XXXX. Army 60,000 100,000+2–4 corpsgeneral, army general, or colonel general XXX. Corps 30,000–80,0002+ divisionslieutenant general XX. Division 10,000–20,0002–4 brigades or regimentsmajor generalXbrigade2000–50002+ regiments, 3–6 battalions or Commonwealth regimentsbrigadie general, brigadier or colonel. III. Regiment or group 2000–30002+ battalions or U.S. Cavalry squadronscolonel II. Infantry Battalion, U.S. Cavalry squadron, or Commonwealth armoured regiment300–10002–6 companies, batteries, U.S. Cavalry troops, or Commonwealth squadronslieutenant colonel I. Infantry Company, artillery battery, U.S. Cavalry troop, or Commonwealth armour or combat engineering squadron70–2502–8 platoons or Commonwealth troopschief warrant officer, captain or major •••. Platoon or Commonwealth troop 25–602+ squads, sections, or vehicleswarrant officer, first or second lieutenant ••. Section or patrol 8–12+ fireteamscorporal to staff sergeant • . Squad or crew 8–16+ fireteams or 1+ cellcorporal to staff sergeant Ø. fireteam4–5n/alance corporal to sergeant Ø. fire and maneuver team2n/aany/private first class Rungs may be skipped in this ladder: for example, typically NATO forces skip from battalion to brigade. Likewise, only large military powers may have organizations at the top levels and different armies and countries may also use traditional names, creating considerable confusion: for example, a British or Canadian armored regiment (battalion) is divided into squadrons (companies) and troops (platoons), whereas an American cavalry squadron (battalion) is divided into troops (companies) and platoons. http://www.history.army.mil/books/korea/ebb/sym.htm 2001 US