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FM 7-0: Training
This June 2021 Field Manual 7-0 (FM 7-0) supersedes FM 7-0, dated 5 October 2016. From the Preface: "FM 7-0 prepares the Army to compete, respond to crisis, win in conflict, and consolidate gains during large-scale ground combat in a multi-domain environment. It provides the foundational procedures Army leaders use to train Soldiers and units. The principal audience for FM 7-0 is all members of the profession of arms. Commanders and staffs of Army headquarters serving as joint task force or multinational headquarters should also refer to applicable joint or multinational doctrine concerning the range of military operations and joint or multinational forces. Trainers and educators throughout the Army will also use this publication."
United States. Department of the Army
2021-06-14
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Army Multi-Domain Transformation: 'Ready to Win in Competition and Conflict'
From the Introduction: "In competition, the Army provides the Department of Defense (DoD) with foundational capabilities and capacity to shape the environment. Army forces pursue relative positional and capability advantage to support Joint and political objectives. The former is gained primarily through expanding the Global Landpower Network, in conjunction with Allies and partners. The latter is gained through the development of capabilities, force structure, doctrine and training to support multi-domain operations (MDO) at the speed of innovation. Demonstrations of joint assured power projection enhance the credibility of military deterrence, enabling policy makers to employ the right mix of diplomatic, economic, and information levers to prevent a conflict before it starts. 'Army Multi-Domain Transformation' describes why and how the U.S. Army must transform to enhance our core competencies and become a multi-domain force, with the right capabilities in the right place to enable the Joint Force to win, from competition through conflict. It further describes the application of the Multi-Domain Operations Concept, first published in 2018, across competition, crisis response, and conflict to support Joint All Domain Operations."
United States. Department of the Army
2021-03-16
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Army in Military Competition: Chief of Staff Paper #2
From the Executive Summary: "Military competition encompasses the range of activities and operations employed to achieve political objectives and to deny adversaries the ability to achieve objectives prejudicial to the United States. Armed conflict is one element of what is termed the 'competition continuum' in joint doctrine. The focus of this publication is the set of activities that occur outside of armed conflict. These might be taken to directly achieve objectives without fighting or they might be part of preparations for armed conflict meant to both deter adversaries and to ensure the Joint Force begins a conflict on the most favorable terms. In all instances, the Joint Force competes as part of a national strategy that integrates all instruments of power to accomplish U.S. objectives. The Army contributes to military competition by building and employing land force capability and capacity to support a broad range of policy choices."
United States. Department of the Army
2021-03-01
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'Regaining Arctic Dominance': The U.S. Army in the Arctic
From the Introduction: "The United States is an Arctic nation. As such, the Arctic security environment contributes directly to homeland defense and is of vital importance to our national interests. In 2019, the Department of Defense (DoD) published its most recent Arctic Strategy with the objective of an Arctic that 'is a secure and stable region in which U.S. national interests are safeguarded, the U.S. homeland is defended, and nations work cooperatively to address shared challenges.' The DOD directs the Department to defend the homeland, compete to maintain favorable regional balances of power, and ensure common domains remain free and open. This Army strategy builds on those objectives to identify the ways the Army will ensure land dominance and continue to complete its missions as part of the Joint Force. In order to do this, the Army must understand the Arctic's role in defending the homeland, the complicated geopolitical landscape within the context of great power competition, and how accelerated environmental change impacts future operations. With this understanding, the Army will be able to generate, project, and employ forces able to operate and compete in the Arctic as part of the joint force in support of Combatant Commands and in concert with allies and partners."
United States. Department of the Army
2021-01-19
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North Korea Tactics
From the Preface: "Army Training Publication (ATP) 7-100.2 describes North Korean tactics for use in Army training, professional education, and leader development. This document is part of the ATP 7-100 series that addresses a nation-state's military doctrine with a focus on army ground forces and tactical operations in offense, defense, and related mission sets. Other foundational topics include task organization, capabilities, and limitations related to military mission and support functions. ATP 7-100.2 serves as a foundation for understanding how North Korean ground forces think and act in tactical operations. This publication presents multiple examples of functional tactics in dynamic operational environment conditions. The tactics in this ATP are descriptive, and provide an orientation to tactics gathered from North Korean doctrine, translated literature, and observations from recent historical events."
United States. Department of the Army
2020-07
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Multi-Service Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures for Treatment of Biological Warfare Agent Casualties
From the Introduction: "ATP [Army techniques publication] 4-02.84/MCRP [Marine Corps reference publication] 3-40A.3/NTRP [Navy tactical reference publication] 4-02.23/AFMAN [Air Force manual] 44-156_IP [integrated policy] describes the classification and description of biological warfare agents associated with military operations; provides procedures for collecting, handling and labeling, shipping, and identifying potential biological warfare agents; describes procedures for medical diagnosis, treatment, and management of biological warfare casualties; and describes medical management and treatment in biological warfare operations. This revision reduces redundancies with principal operations process doctrinal publications and reflects recent changes in guidance, methodology, and terminology. The material in this publication is applicable to the full range of military operations to include major operations and campaigns (including combating terrorism; homeland defense; and chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear response). It also incorporates changes in the capabilities within each of the Services."
United States. Department of the Army
2019-11-21
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ADP 3-07: Stability
From the Introduction: "Throughout U.S. history, the U.S. Army has learned that military force alone cannot secure sustainable peace. U.S. forces can only achieve sustainable peace through a comprehensive approach in which military objectives nest in a larger cooperative effort of the departments and agencies of the U.S. Government, intergovernmental and nongovernmental organizations, multinational partners, the private sector, and the host nation. Stability operations outlined in this manual are necessary toward achieving sustained peace. The U.S. Army has devoted much of its time, over its history beginning in 1775, executing those tasks and on conducting operations focused on them."
United States. Department of the Army
2019-07-31
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Occupational Health and the Service Member
From the Preface: "Support for uniformed members is only one side of military occupational medicine. The other side is support for the military industrial base, which provides the warfighters with the equipment and supplies needed to complete their missions. [...] This volume contains essential information for the healthcare teams supporting the industrial base workforce. This volume of the Textbooks of Military Medicine, published in hardcopy and electronic formats, will be a valuable reference for providers who need to address unique hazards on military installations and during deployments, as well as the occupational hazards in our military industrial base. [...] The US Navy and Air Force occupational health programs have been included in this update. Additionally, the content has been significantly expanded to cover a wide range of topics, including beryllium, aerospace medicine, undersea medicine, diving and the physiology of divining, ergonomics, ionizing and non-ionizing radiation, respiratory protection, workers' compensation programs, deployment surveillance, and biomonitoring."
Borden Institute (U.S.); United States. Department of the Army. Office of the Surgeon General; US Army Medical Department Center and School
Mallon, Timothy M.
2019
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Fundamentals of Military Medicine
From the Preface: "Today's military medical practice and leadership curriculum relies heavily on self-directed and small-group based learning. We continually reevaluate aspects of military medical practice to ensure our curriculum remains current with the latest lessons learned on battlefields and deployed settings abroad, and on bases and military treatment facilities inside the United States. Based on ongoing feedback from senior leadership of the armed services, military medical practitioners, and patients, four major themes of emphasis in the curriculum have emerged: (1) professionalism and leadership; (2) system of care (health service support) in the deployed environment; (3) the importance of force health protection (both physical and psycho-social) in deployed environments; and (4) the challenging nature of forward medical care. Drawing on the insights and experience of hundreds of national faculty members as well as local members of USU's Department of Military and Emergency Medicine, the authors of this textbook have developed and expanded these themes."
Borden Institute (U.S.); United States. Department of the Army. Office of the Surgeon General; US Army Medical Department Center and School
O'Connor, Francis G.; Schoomaker, Eric B.; Smith, Dale C.
2019
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Joint Task Force Guantanamo: Mission and History
This report provides an overview of detention operations, treatment of detainees, services provided, and a brief history of the Joint Task Force Guantanamo (JTF-GTMO). "JTF-GTMO conducts safe, humane, and legal detention operations; collects, analyzes and reports intelligence; and supports legal and administrative proceedings in order to protect the United States and its interests."
United States. Joint Task Force Guantánamo; United States. Department of Defense; United States. Department of the Army . . .
2018-07
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US Army Physician Assistant Handbook
From the Foreword: "The Army's number one priority is readiness, and Army Medicine's primary mission is supporting the Warfighter. Since the first Army Physician Assistants (PAs) graduated in 1973 and became battalion surgeons, the PA has been a key healthcare link between the Warfighter and the Army Medical Department. [...] The Army began its PA program, known as the Medical Field Service Physician Assistant Program, in 1971. [...] This handbook also marks a first for Army PAs. It represents a collaboration of PAs past and present. It is unique in its effort to serve as a guide for PAs, new and old, as they develop a career plan. This book is an invaluable resource that describes PA roles, responsibilities, and opportunities."
Borden Institute (U.S.); United States. Department of the Army. Office of the Surgeon General; US Army Medical Department Center and School
2018
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Emergency War Surgery (Fifth United States Revision)
From the Preface: "Readiness is the one aspect of preparation for battle that we can control. A medical force that immediately delivers expert care, treats challenging injuries, improves combat practice among surgeons; a cadre of medical professionals who have relevant skills and knowledge, and can adapt and apply them to current military demands--this is the embodiment of readiness. Service subject matter experts in all medical subspecialty fields continue to shape and align the body of medical battlefield knowledge, as illustrated in this fifth edition of the Emergency War Surgery handbook. This edition reflects updates in Clinical Practice Guidelines and other new information accumulated since the 2013 edition's publication, especially in the areas of blood collection and transfusions. A new Tactical Combat Casualty Care (TCCC) chapter is included, and several new illustrations have been created as additional aids for users."
Borden Institute (U.S.); United States. Department of the Army. Office of the Surgeon General; US Army Medical Department Center and School
2018
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FM 3-0 Operations
"Adversaries have studied the manner in which U.S. forces deployed and conducted operations over the past three decades. Several have adapted, modernized, and developed capabilities to counter U.S. advantages in the air, land, maritime, space, and cyberspace domains. Military advances by Russia, China, North Korea, and Iran most clearly portray this changing threat. While the U.S. Army must be manned, equipped, and trained to operate across the range of military operations, large-scale ground combat against a peer threat represents the most significant readiness requirement. FM [Field Manual] 3-0 provides doctrine for how Army forces, as part of a joint team, and in conjunction with unified action partners, do this. FM 3-0 is concerned with operations using current Army capabilities, formations, and technology in today's operational environment (OE). It expands on the material in ADRP [Army Doctrine Reference Publication] 3-0 by providing tactics describing how theater armies, corps, divisions, and brigades work together and with unified action partners to successfully prosecute operations short of conflict, prevail in large-scale combat operations, and consolidate gains to win enduring strategic outcomes."
United States. Department of the Army
2017-10-06
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Joint Publication 4-01: The Defense Transportation System
"This publication provides joint doctrine to plan, command and control, and employ resources within the Defense Transportation System. This publication has been prepared under the direction of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (CJCS). It sets forth joint doctrine to govern the activities and performance of the Armed Forces of the United States in joint operations, and it provides considerations for military interaction with governmental and nongovernmental agencies, multinational forces, and other interorganizational partners. It provides military guidance for the exercise of authority by combatant commanders and other joint force commanders (JFCs), and prescribes joint doctrine for operations and training. It provides military guidance for use by the Armed Forces in preparing and executing their plans and orders. It is not the intent of this publication to restrict the authority of the JFC from organizing the force and executing the mission in a manner the JFC deems most appropriate to ensure unity of effort in the accomplishment of objectives."
United States. Department of the Army; United States. Department of the Navy; United States. Marine Corps . . .
2017-07-18
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Joint Publication 2-01: Joint and National Intelligence Support to Military Operations
"This publication provides doctrine for joint and national intelligence products, services, assessments, and support to joint military operations. This publication has been prepared under the direction of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (CJCS). It sets forth joint doctrine to govern the activities and performance of the Armed Forces of the United States in joint operations, and it provides considerations for military interaction with governmental and nongovernmental agencies, multinational forces, and other interorganizational partners. It provides military guidance for the exercise of authority by combatant commanders and other joint force commanders (JFCs), and prescribes joint doctrine for operations and training. It provides military guidance for use by the Armed Forces in preparing and executing their plans and orders. It is not the intent of this publication to restrict the authority of the JFC from organizing the force and executing the mission in a manner the JFC deems most appropriate to ensure unity of effort in the accomplishment of objectives."
United States. Department of the Army; United States. Department of the Navy; United States. Marine Corps . . .
2017-07-05
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Combined Arms Countering Weapons of Mass Destruction
"ATP [Army Techniques Publication] 3-90.40 provides doctrine on how to conduct the countering weapons of mass destruction (CWMD) mission as combined arms teams. It is primarily oriented on the brigade combat team (BCT) and below. This manual provides tactical-level commanders, staff, and key agencies with a primary reference for planning, synchronizing, integrating, and executing combined arms CWMD."
United States. Department of the Army
2017-06-29
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Network Engagement
"Humans are complex, social creatures. Attempting to analyze them to determine if we should engage them is a combination of art and science and often depends upon the purpose for that engagement and the paradigms from which we perceive them. The Army engages human networks through the range of military operations in order to achieve U.S. objectives. Network engagement provides staff orientation for unity of effort. 'Unity of effort' is coordination, and cooperation toward common objectives, even if the participants are not necessarily part of the same command or organization, which is the product of successful unified action. (JP 1) It is a different way of approaching challenges, but it is not separate from the Army operations process. Network engagement supports the overarching framework provided by mission command to guide the tailored application of current doctrinal processes, such as the Army design methodology, the military decisionmaking process (MDMP) and intelligence preparation of the battlefield/battlespace, targeting, or assessment. Network engagement helps to bind the staff together and introduces them to the networks that exist within their area of operation. As described in this publication, network engagement, can and should be applied in any operational environment (OE) and across the spectrum of conflict. Operations in the future will be more complex. We will have to work together to plan operations that meet the challenges and opportunities we will face. The last decade of war has shown us that our opponents are often difficult to detect and identify, and seek to blend into civilian populations. We have also learned that long-term solutions for peace and stability in contested regions often come from key allies originating from this same population."
United States. Department of the Army
2017-06
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Counter-Unmanned Aircraft System Techniques
"The focus of ATP 3-01.81 Counter-Unmanned Aircraft System (C-UAS) Techni ques is training and educating the force while assisting maneuver units in developing C-UAS Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures (TTP). It addresses exploitation of low, slow, small (LSS) UAS as an unconventional air threat and modifier to surveillance and targeting actions. Defending against UAS is a difficult task and no single solution exists to defeat all categories of the LSS threat. Collaborative and integrated planning of sensors and warning capabilities as well as shared intelligence between echelons is essential. Coordination with air-ground integration or airspace management personnel for updated intelligence and defense support can help minimize air threat effects reducing damage and protecting personnel and equipment as well as friendly UASs operating within the area of operation. This publication consists of four chapters and one appendix concentrating on planning for an unpredictable threat environment that has the potential of coordinated attack aided by LSS UASs."
United States. Department of the Army
2017-04
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Joint Publication 3-08: Interorganizational Cooperation
"This publication has been prepared under the direction of the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (CJCS). It sets forth joint doctrine to govern the activities and performance of the Armed Forces of the United States in joint operations, and it provides considerations for military interaction with governmental and nongovernmental agencies, multinational forces, and other interorganizational partners. It provides military guidance for the exercise of authority by combatant commanders and other joint force commanders (JFCs), and prescribes joint doctrine for ope rations and training. It provides military guidance for use by the Armed Forces in preparing and executing their plans and orders. It is not the intent of this publication to restrict the authority of the JFC from organizing the force and executing the mission in a manner the JFC deems most appropriate to ensure unity of effort in the accomplishment of objectives."
United States. Department of the Army; United States. Department of the Navy; United States. Marine Corps . . .
2016-10-12
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Multi-Service Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures for Treatment of Chemical Warfare Agent Casualties and Conventional Military Chemical Injuries
"This multi-Service publication provides tactics, techniques, and procedures and is designed for use as a reference for trained members of the Armed Forces Medical Services and other medically qualified personnel on the recognition and treatment of chemical warfare (CW) agent casualties and conventional military chemical injuries. Additionally, this publication provides information on first aid (self-aid and buddy aid) and enhanced first aid (combat lifesaver [United States (U.S.) Army and U.S. Marine Corps]) for these casualties."
United States. Department of the Army
2016-08
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Techniques for Combined Arms for Air Defense
"ATP [Army Techniques Publication] 3-01.8, focuses on how a combined arms force protects themselves from an adversary's air attack. Aerial threats include Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS); fixed- and rotary-wing aircraft; rockets, artillery, and mortars (RAM); ballistic missiles (BM) and cruise missiles (CM). Commanders at all levels face the challenge of being able counter the air threat and adversarial reconnaissance within their operational environment. Countering air threats is a shared joint and combined arms responsibility. Dedicated ADA [Air Defense Artillery] forces assigned within a theater are primarily responsible for detection and direct engagements of fixed and rotary wing aircraft, and missile threats to ground forces within an area of operations."
United States. Department of the Army
2016-07-29
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Techniques for Information Collection During Operations Among Populations
"This publication provides time-tested, coherent, and easily understood techniques for Soldiers and Department of the Army (DA) Civilians who collect information while interacting with the public during the conduct of their duties. Many of the techniques described are designed specifically for patrols, checkpoints, roadblocks, cordon and searches, and other missions in which Soldiers interact with the populace. This manual---- [1] Is a compilation of techniques to help all Soldiers collect information while interacting with the population through voluntary questioning, detainee handling, tactical questioning, and document and equipment handling. [2] Introduces the basics of interacting with the population and describes the reporting procedures while providing some tools for patrols and intelligence staffs (S-2s). [3] Provides the doctrinal framework for Soldiers and leaders at all echelons and forms the foundation for Soldier sensor mission curricula within the Army Education System. Its audience is broad, from Soldiers and leaders to civilians."
United States. Department of the Army
2016-04-05
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HQDA Execution Order 097-16 to the U.S. Army Implementation Plan 2016-01 (Army Gender Integration)
From the "Narrative": "This is an HQDA [Headquarters, Department of the Army] EXORD [Execution Order] (sequel to EXORD 112-13) directing Army efforts to improve readiness and combat performance while opening all occupational fields to women. A key element of this Integration Plan is the concept of 'leaders first,' which prescribes the placement of a female Armor or Infantry leader in a unit prior to assignment of female junior enlisted Soldiers of the same branch to that unit. This order assumes that 1) qualified women will volunteer to serve in Infantry and Armor occupations/AOCs, 2) the Army will initially not force branch currently contracted cadet cohort women into Infantry or Armor occupations/AOCs and 3) the Leaders First policy will not change if enlisted Infantry and Armor accessions far outpaces female leader recruiting and training."
United States. Department of the Army
2016-03-09
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Shaping the Army Network: 2025-2040
"Shaping the Army Network 2025-2040 is informed by an analysis of technology trends and forecasts, for a commander-focused Army network that is tailored to formation, echelon and mission in the 2025 to 2040 time frame. It supports the Army Strategy and the Army Campaign Plan, and builds upon the Army Operating Concept. It serves as a guiding document to provoke thought and a means to inform and shape research, development and experimentation by both government and industry entities to ensure that the Army maintains a technology edge in future conflict. The required capabilities described in Section 2, and the later discussions of potential solutions, apply to both tactical and institutional network operations. The projected technology developments described in this document may not all come to pass. In fact, given the rapid pace of scientific advancement, the technology Soldiers eventually employ likely will differ from what is presented here. Therefore, investment strategies will likely need to be adjusted in the future as they will be influenced by global economics and still-unforeseen leap-ahead discoveries. The Army has a significant task to shape research and investments to ensure that the proper capabilities are available for our Soldiers at the right place and time to enable mission success. Furthermore, a s a consequence of the development and deployment of these and other emerging capabilities, the Army will have to develop and implement new doctrine, policy and TTPs."
United States. Department of the Army. Chief Information Office/G-6
2016-03
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Pediatric Surgery and Medicine for Hostile Environments
From the Document: "Many lessons have been learned from the past decade regarding pediatric inpatient care in austere environments. Military MTFs [medical treatment facilities] and personnel must be prepared for the longer-term care of critically ill and injured children. This includes the transition from the MTF to the local medical facility and ultimately the patient's community. Unlike our injured soldiers, who are typically evacuated out of theater via critical care air transport teams in 12 to 24 hours, children generally must remain in the austere environments where they were injured. We have learned that embarking on treatment regimens that cannot be supported long term in these environments are ultimately not beneficial. [...] We hope that this text provides military physicians, often practicing in austere environments, with a current and concise reference for the basic medical, surgical, and critical care of children. It should be used as a pragmatic reference but not as a substitute for current peer-reviewed articles or reasoned judgment. Operative procedures performed on children require careful assessment of the available resources and equipment, experience of the operating room team, potential complications, nonoperative options, availability of follow-up care, and an honest overall assessment of the risk to the child from the procedure to be undertaken. Fortunately, the operative procedures done to care for these patients are largely within the scope of practice of well-trained general and orthopedic surgeons."
United States. Department of the Army. Office of the Surgeon General; US Army Medical Department Center and School
Fuenfer, Michael M.; Creamer, Kevin M.
2016
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ADRP 1-02: Terms and Military Symbols [December 2015]
"This publication supersedes ADRP 1-02, dated 2 February 2015." From the Introduction: "This revision of Army Doctrine Reference Publication (ADRP) 1-02 compiles definitions of all Army terms approved for use in Army doctrinal publications, including Army doctrine publications (ADPs), Army Doctrine Reference Publications (ADRPs), field manuals (FMs), and Army techniques publications (ATPs). It also includes joint terms appearing in the glossaries of Army doctrinal publications as of January 2014. ADRP 1-02 also lists shortened forms (whether considered acronyms or abbreviations) approved for use in Army doctrinal publications. In addition, unlike the 2013 edition of ADRP 1-02, this revision incorporates North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) terms appearing in the glossaries of Army doctrinal publications as of January 2014. […] ADRP 1-02 also provides a single standard for developing and depicting hand drawn and computer-generated military symbols for situation maps, overlays, and annotated aerial photographs for all types of military operations. It is the Army proponent publication for all military symbols and complies with Department of Defense (DOD) Military Standard (MIL-STD) 2525D. The symbology chapters of this ADRP focus primarily on military symbols applicable to Army land operations. When communicating instructions to subordinate units, commanders and staffs from company through corps echelons should use this publication as a dictionary of operational terms and military symbols."
United States. Department of the Army
2015-12
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Protection of Civilians
"As Army Professionals, we are servants of the Nation, morally committed by Oath to support and defend the Constitution. This Duty depends on Trust with the American people, reinforced through Military Expertise, Honorable Service, Esprit de Corps, and Stewardship. Within the Army Profession, we earn and sustain Trust by demonstrating our Character, Competence, and Commitment--making decisions and taking actions that are ethical, effective, and efficient. As Stewards of the Army Profession, we provide coaching, counseling, and mentoring while properly managing the Army's resources entrusted to our care. ATP [Army Techniques Publication] 3-07.6 discusses the importance of civilian protection during unified land operations and presents guidelines for Army units that must consider the protection of civilians during their operations. Protection of civilians refers to efforts to protect civilians from physical violence, secure their rights to access essential services and resources, and contribute to a secure, stable, and just environment for civilians over the long-term. ATP 3-07.6 describes different considerations including civilian casualty mitigation and mass atrocity response operations."
United States. Department of the Army
2015-10-29
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Maneuver Force in Battle 2005-2012
"Today's maneuver leaders face an unpredictable and complex operating environment against a spectrum of adaptable enemies, all while resources continue to diminish. The 2015 edition of 'Maneuver Forces in Battle' is a unique look at maneuver leaders and their Soldiers across the Range of Military Operations as they adapted to enemies during the surges in Iraq and Afghanistan and their transitions to national sovereignty. The lessons learned over the past decade of conflict are critical for our leaders to understand and internalize as we prepare for the increasing complexity on the future battlefields. The vignettes in this manual take the reader across the Warfighting Functions and the range of military operations through the eyes and actions of our company-grade leaders who often found themselves at the decisive point of military operations."
United States. Department of the Army. Maneuver Center of Excellence (MCoE)
2015-10
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Multi-Service Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures for Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear Consequence Management Operations
"This multi-Service publication incorporates the CM [Consequence Management] guidance and framework identified in JP 3-40 and JP 3-41.
The previous multi-Service tactics, techniques, and procedures (MTTP) also discussed the CBRN [Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear] aspects of CM
as it related to the Federal Response Plan, which was the current guidance at that time. This MTTP provides
information on the National Response Framework (NRF), which replaced the National Response Plan (now
obsolete) in 2008. The NRF aligns federal coordination structures, capabilities, and resources into a unified, all-discipline,
and all-hazards approach to domestic incident management. This manual now complies with the NRF,
as appropriate.
This publication is designed for use at the tactical level, but has implications at the operational and strategic level
for CBRN CM operations supporting strategic objectives. The document will support command and staff planning
in preparing for and conducting CBRN CM operations."
United States. Department of the Army
2015-07-30
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Army Regulation 34-1: Multinational Force Interoperability
"This regulation establishes Department of the Army policy for activities that contribute to multinational force interoperability and prescribes responsibilities for resourcing, implementing, managing, integrating, and assessing Army participation in those activities."
United States. Department of the Army
2015-07-10