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Installation Antiterrorism Program and Planning Tool
Welcome to the Installation Antiterrorism Program and Planning
Tool. The purpose of this tool is to provide Installation Commanders
and DOD Antiterrorism Officers (ATOs) and other planners a tool to
educate and to assist in the development of Antiterrorism (AT) Plans. This Installation AT Program and Planning Tool is Version 2--an
expansion and update of the Joint Staff Installation AT Planning
Template, Version 1, initially published in September 1998, and the
Weapons of Mass Destruction Appendix to the template, published the
following year. The new version not only consolidates the template and
appendix into one planning document, but also includes a NEW series of
AT foundational information papers, suggestions on how to develop a
solid AT Program in a NEW programming section, an expanded Toolbox, and includes observations and improvements from field users worldwide.
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
2000
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JS Guide 5260: Service Member's Personal Protection Guide: A Self-Help Handbook to Combat Terrorism While Overseas
This guide is designed to assist in making families less vulnerable to terrorists while stationed or traveling overseas. Travelers, as well as people here at home, should become familiar with its contents and incorporate protective measures that are applicable to their particular situation. Terrorism is an indiscriminate crime that strikes in varying forms of threats and violence. Terrorists generate fear through intimidation, coercion, and acts of violence such as hijackings, bombings, or kidnappings, which usually occur more frequently in certain parts of the world, making travelers to foreign countries more likely potential victims. As past events have shown, terrorists have reached new levels of organization, sophistication, and violence. Their tactics and techniques are always changing and will continue to be a challenge to neutralize. Accordingly, we must remain diligent in applying the proper protective measures.
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
2000-04
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Joint Doctrine for Operations in Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical (NBC) Environments
This publication: describes the international security environment and the threat posed by adversaries armed with Nuclear, Biological,
and Chemical (NBC) Weapons; provides principles for planning and conducting operations in NBC environments across the range of military operations; describes the role of NBC defense and other offensive and defensive capabilities in sustained operations; provides considerations for sustaining logistic and health service support; and addresses requirements for conflict termination and military operations other than war.
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
2000-07-11
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Antiterrorism Personal Protection Guide: A Self-Help Guide to Antiterrorism
This guide is designed to assist in making you and your family less vulnerable to terrorists. You
should become familiar with its contents and incorporate those protective measures that are
applicable to your particular situation. Moreover, ensure every member of your family is made
aware of this valuable information so they can help protect themselves as well. Terrorism is an indiscriminate act that strikes in varying forms of threats and violence. Terrorists generate fear through intimidation, coercion and acts of violence such as hijackings, bombings or kidnappings. As past and more recent events have shown, however, terrorists have reached new
levels of organization, sophistication and violence -- their tactics and techniques are always
changing and will continue to be a challenge to predict and neutralize. Accordingly, we must remain diligent in applying the proper protective measures.
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
2002-10
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Doctrine for Joint Urban Operations
"This publication addresses the planning and conduct of joint urban operations and explains how they differ from other operations. It focuses on the operational level of war and addresses issues across the range of military operations. It provides doctrinal guidance focused on capabilities and tasks that are unique to, or significantly challenged by, the urban environment at the operational level of warfighting. It does not attempt to replace or reiterate doctrine in overlapping areas; instead, it examines the special considerations required when conducting operations in the complex modern urban environment. This document introduces the nature and challenges of military operations in urban areas; discusses the fundamentals for planning and conducting joint urban operations (JUOs); describes tasks and considerations for JUOs; and discusses the special considerations of noncombatants and infrastructure."
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
2002-09-16
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Joint Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures for Antiterrorism
"This publication sets forth the tactics, techniques, and procedures governing the joint conduct of US antiterrorism operations. It provides a basis for understanding US national policy and general objectives relating to antiterrorism and explains important Department of Defense and US Government agency command and control relationships. In addition, it outlines basic US military antiterrorism capabilities and provides commanders with guidance on how to organize, plan, and train for the employment of US forces in interagency and multinational antiterrorism operations. This document discusses US national policy and general objectives; explains important Department of Defense (DoD) and US government agency command and control relationships; outlines basic US military antiterrorism capabilities; provides guidance for the employment of US forces in antiterrorism operations; explains legal considerations affecting the implementation of successful programs; and describes sources of intelligence and counterintelligence."
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
1998-03-17
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Doctrine for Joint Theater Missile Defense
"This publication provides doctrine for the integration of theater missile defense capabilities to support execution of the joint force commander's operation order or campaign plan. The focus is to protect against theater missile attack through an appropriate integrated and coordinated mix of mutually supporting measures of passive defense, active defense, and attack operations with supporting command, control, communications, computers, and intelligence. This document addresses the operational environment and the threat; establishes responsibilities and command relationships; addresses the multinational operations responsibilities and organizational considerations; provides planning and preparation factors and considerations; discusses the transition to joint theater missile defense operations; and presents and discusses four mutually supporting operational elements for a successful defense."
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
1996-02-22
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JTTP for Joint Suppression of Enemy Defenses (J-SEAD)
"This publication focuses on the responsibilities and procedures for joint suppression of enemy air defenses (J-SEAD). This publication defines J-SEAD and describes J-SEAD planning, coordination, and command and control responsibilities. This document discusses the concepts for joint suppression of enemy air defenses (J-SEAD); provides guidance on command and control relationships during J-SEAD; and discusses concepts for planning and executing J-SEAD operations."
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
1995-07-25
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Joint Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures for Joint Intelligence Preparation of the Battlespace
This publication establishes doctrinal guidance and joint tactics, techniques, and procedures (JTTP) for use by joint intelligence organizations in preparing joint intelligence preparation of the battlespace (JIPB) products. The focus is on the JIPB process, in which analyses of the battlespace environment and adversary are combined in order to identify and analyze possible adversary courses of action (COAs). It describes how adversary and friendly COAs are evaluated and wargamed to support the joint force commander's (JFC's) decision making process. This publication is geared primarily towards preparatory intelligence analysis for operational level force-on-force confrontations. It also addresses how the JIPB process can be tailored to specific joint force planning activities and military operations other than war.
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
2000-05-24
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Joint Intelligence Support to Military Operations
This publication establishes doctrinal guidance on the provision of intelligence products, services, and support to joint operations. It provides the fundamentals of joint intelligence operations, addressing organization of joint intelligence forces, responsibilities, and command relationships. The focus will be joint intelligence support to combatant commanders revolving around the phases of the intelligence cycle: planning and direction, collection, processing and exploitation, production; dissemination and integration and evaluation. Finally, personnel, physical, operations and communications security considerations will be addressed.
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
1996-11-20
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Joint Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures for Intelligence Support to Targeting
This publication provides joint tactics, techniques, and procedures (JTTP) for joint intelligence organizations to implement the fundamental principles of Joint Publication (JP) 2-0, "Doctrine for Intelligence Support to Joint Operations", supporting the doctrinal guidance of JP 3-60, "Joint Doctrine for Targeting", across the range of military operations. This JTTP publication describes the relationships and procedures necessary for intelligence support to joint targeting (including the operations and intelligence relationships) and roles and responsibilities at the national, combatant command, subordinate joint force, and component levels. This publication describes intelligence processes and procedures supporting the joint force commander (JFC) throughout all phases of the targeting cycle.
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
2003-01-09
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National Intelligence Support to Joint Operations
This joint publication describes national intelligence organizations and their support to joint military operations. Also addressed is the special support and augmentation available for joint operations by national joint elements such as the Military Intelligence Board, the National Military Joint Intelligence Center, and National Intelligence Support Teams. This joint publication covers Service intelligence organizations and centers, as well as nonmilitary agencies and nongovernmental organizations. The recommended target audience for this joint publication is commanders and intelligence staffs of combatant commands, subordinate unified commands, joint task forces, combat support agencies, and supporting Service components.
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
1998-09-28
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Interagency Coordination during Joint Operations, Volume I
"This volume discusses the interagency environment and describes joint doctrine to best achieve coordination between the combatant commands of the Department of Defense and agencies of the US Government, nongovernmental and private voluntary organizations, and regional and international organizations during unified actions and joint operations. It provides potential methodologies to synchronize successful interagency operations. Volume II (located in the digital library at /homesec/docs/dod/jp3-08v2.pdf) describes the key US Government departments and agencies and nongovernmental and international organizations -- their core competencies, basic organizational structures, and relationship, or potential relationship, with the Armed Forces of the United States. Volume I outlines the interagency process and participants; explains the evolving role of the Armed Forces of the United States within the interagency process; describes interagency coordination; explains the role of the National Security Council System; discusses organizing for interagency operations at the operational level; and outlines Joint Task Force roles and responsibilities."
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
1996-10-09
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Joint Pub 3-13: Joint Doctrine for Information Operations, October 9, 1998
This publication provides the overarching operational guidance for information operations (IO) in the joint context (to include information warfare) throughout the range of military operations. It addresses IO principles relating to both offensive and defensive IO and describes responsibilities for planning, coordinating, integrating, and deconflicting joint IO. Guidance concerning intelligence support to IO, Defense and interagency relationships, and IO in training, exercises, and modeling and simulation also is provided. This document defines the objectives of information operations; addresses the details of offensive and defensive information operations; gives guidance concerning information operations planning; and discusses organizational and training issues.
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
1998-10-09
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Joint Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures for Base Defense
"This publication sets forth the joint tactics, techniques, and procedures (JTTP) necessary for the defense of joint and single-Service bases outside the continental United States (CONUS) and outside the states of Alaska and Hawaii. It expands upon the doctrine set forth in Joint Pub 3-10, 'Doctrine for Joint Rear Area Operations.' The focus is on establishing and maintaining security of joint and single-Service bases in a joint rear area and providing guidelines for base commanders for coordinating and integrating security and defense of their bases with their other responsibilities. This publication should be supplemented with Service manuals that provide more detail on the measures necessary to secure and defend bases. This publication prescribes the command and control arrangements between bases, base clusters, and their higher headquarters; describes the responsibilities of base and base cluster commanders and commanders of units and activities within such bases; and sets forth procedures for base defense and security from the standpoints of operational concepts, analysis, planning, command and control, intelligence, communications, and host-nation support (HNS)."
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
1996-07-23
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Joint Publication 3-14: Joint Doctrine for Space Operations, 9 August 2002
This publication provides guidelines for planning and conducting joint space operations. It provides space doctrine fundamentals for all warfighters -- air, land, sea, space, and special operations forces; describes the military operational principles associated with support from and through space, and operating in space; explains US Space Command relationships and responsibilities; and establishes a framework for the employment of space forces and space capabilities. This document provides and overview of military space operations; describes space organizations and missions; describes command and control of space forces; outlines military space operations mission areas; and outlines support to space planning.
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
2002-08-09
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Doctrine for Joint Theater Nuclear Operations
This publication provides guidance for nonstrategic nuclear force employment. It is written for those who provide strategic direction to joint forces such as the Secretary of Defense, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, normally in consultation with the other members of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and commanders of combatant command; and who employ joint forces such as commanders of unified commands, subunified commands, or joint task forces). This document provides guidance for nonstrategic nuclear force employment; defines the role of US theater nuclear operations; describes command and control of nuclear operations; discusses planning and employment of nuclear weapons; explains command responsibilities and staff procedures; and outlines support coordination.
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
1996-02-09
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Doctrine for Command, Control, Communications, and Computer (C4) Systems Support to Joint Operations
"This publication is the keystone document for the command, control, communications, and computer (C4) systems series of publications. Subordinate publications provide more detailed technical discussions of C4 systems. This publication identifies approved doctrine for C4 systems support to joint operations and outlines the responsibilities of Services, agencies, and combatant commands with respect to ensuring effective C4 support to commanders. It addresses how C4 systems support the commanders of joint forces in the conduct of joint operations, including, in general terms, how systems are to be configured, deployed, and employed. This document describes the role of command, control, communications, and computer (C4) systems; outlines the objectives and components; provides basic C4 systems principles; explains C4 systems configuration and infrastructure; discusses the planning process and employment responsibilities; outlines joint and multinational standardization and procedures; and covers the global C4 infrastructure."
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
1995-05-30
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Joint Doctrine for Employment of Operational/Tactical Command, Control, Communications, and Computer Systems
"This publication provides command, control, communications, and computer (C4) systems doctrinal guidance across the range of military operations for those who: a. Plan C4 systems support for joint operations; b. Employ C4 systems in support of joint operations; c. Provide operational and technical direction to C4 systems; and d. Plan, manage, and employ C4 systems normally unique to Service or non-US forces as part of joint operations. This document discusses the impact of Joint Force Commander's decisions on command, control, communications and computer (C4) systems; provides Joint C4 principles, planning, and management considerations; considers Joint Task Force C4 employment and modular C4 packaging; and discusses major related C4 systems and support."
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
1996-10-01
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Joint Doctrine for Operations Security
This publication describes the use of operations security (OPSEC) in the planning, preparation, and execution of joint operations. Additionally, it provides the procedures for the conduct of OPSEC surveys. This document discusses the characteristics of operations security; covers operations security planning; and details the operations security process.
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
1997-01-24
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Joint Doctrine for Military Deception
"Military deception operations are conducted by the commanders of combatant commands and subordinate joint forces in support of overall campaign objectives. This publication provides fundamental guidance and principles for the planning and execution of military deception at the combatant command and/or subordinate joint force level. This document discusses fundamental principles of military deception; covers military deception and command and control warfare; explains roles, coordination, and training; outlines the military deception planning process; and covers military deception planning and the joint planning process."
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
1996-05-31
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Doctrine for Joint Nuclear Operations
"This publication provides guidelines for the joint employment of forces in nuclear operations. This document discusses the objectives for nuclear forces; covers the employment of nuclear forces; and provides guidance on strategic force integrated operations."
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
1995-12-15
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Doctrine for Intelligence Support to Joint Operations
This publication is the keystone document of the intelligence support to joint operations series. It describes doctrine for intelligence support to interagency, joint, and multinational operations. It sets forth doctrine to govern the joint activities and performance of the Armed Forces of the United States in joint operations and provides the doctrinal basis for US military involvement in multinational and interagency operations. It provides military guidance for the exercise of authority by combatant commanders and other joint force commanders and prescribes doctrine for joint operations and training. It provides military guidance for use by the Armed Forces in preparing their appropriate plans. Included in this document are the following topics: role of intelligence in joint operations; the intelligence cycle; intelligence operations; joint intelligence architecture; and appendices on intelligence in multinational operations, references, and administrative instructions.
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
2000-03-09
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Joint Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures for Geospatial Information and Services Support to Joint Operations
This publication focuses on the responsibilities and procedures for geospatial information and services (GI&S) support to joint operations. This publication discusses GI&S planning, coordination, control, production, and dissemination responsibilities. The focus will be joint GI&S support to combatant commanders for both deliberate and crisis planning and execution. Communications architecture required for the dissemination of digital geospatial data will also be addressed. Topics discussed include: role of geospatial information in military operations; deliberate planning for GI&S support; crisis action planning for GI&S support; GI&S command, control, communications and computer support; and appendices on GI&S deliberate planning checklist; GI&S estimate; GI&S crisis action checklist; references; and administrative instructions.
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
1999-03-31
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Joint Doctrine for Countering Air and Missile Threats [October 19, 1999]
"This publication provides the guidance necessary to conceptualize, plan, coordinate, and conduct successful joint operations to counter air and missile threats throughout the range of military operations. This document discusses background and fundamentals of Joint Counterair Operations; provides Command and Control relationships and key considerations and requirements for Joint Counterair Operations; discusses fundamentals for planning and executing Offensive Counterair Operations; and discusses fundamentals for planning and executing Defensive Counterair Operations."
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
1999-10-19
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Aerospace Defense of North America
"This publication provides the guidance necessary to plan, coordinate, and execute joint aerospace defense of North America. It provides the doctrinal basis for how joint forces approach the air defense, ballistic missile defense, and space defense operations that support aerospace defense of North America. Topics covered include the following: Joint Doctrine for aerospace defense of North America; Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) Systems; and Aerospace Defense Operations for North America."
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
1996-11-04
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Joint Doctrine for Electronic Warfare
This publication establishes doctrinal guidance on the use of electronic warfare (EW) in joint operations. Specifically, the following areas are within the scope of this publication: the fundamentals of EW; the staff organization and command relationships of EW in joint operations; planning procedures for joint EW; coordination of joint EW during operations; training and exercise considerations for EW in joint operations; and allied and coalition considerations in planning and conducting joint EW. This document provides an overview of electronic warfare; covers organizing for joint electronic warfare; discusses planning and coordination requirements in joint exercises; and covers multinational aspects of electronic warfare.
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
2000-04-07
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Interagency Coordination during Joint Operations, Volume II
"This volume describes the key US Government departments and agencies and nongovernmental and international organizations -- their core competencies, basic organizational structures, and relationship, or potential relationship, with the Armed Forces of the United States. Volume I (located in the digital library at /homesec/docs/dod/jp3-08v1.pdf) discusses the interagency environment and describes joint doctrine to best achieve coordination between the combatant commands of the Department of Defense and agencies of the US Government, nongovernmental and private voluntary organizations, and regional and international organizations during unified actions and joint operations. It provides potential methodologies to synchronize successful interagency operations. Volume II contains the appendices and glossary."
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
1996-10-09
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Joint Doctrine for Civil Affairs
"This publication provides planning guidance and considerations for the use of designated civil affairs (CA) and the conduct of CA activities in support of the joint force commander (JFC) across the range of military operations. It identifies and describes civil affairs forces and organizations, the type of civil affairs activities they perform, and their employment in support of military operations and Department of Defense programs. Additionally, the publication addresses appropriate legal and regulatory civil affairs policy guidance. Joint Publication (JP) 3-57.1 also builds on the foundation of JP 3-57, Joint Doctrine for Civil-Military Operations. This document provides an overview of civil affairs; discusses civil affairs support to military operations; provides an overview of the responsibilities for civil affairs activities; discusses organization and command relationships; explains civil affairs functional specialties; highlights services' civil affairs; and defines civil affairs planning and coordination."
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
2003-04-14
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Joint Doctrine for Civil-Military Operations
The doctrinal concepts contained in this publication provide guidance for the planning and conduct of civil-military operations (CMO) by joint forces. Furthermore, these concepts should guide joint force commanders in the use of civil affairs assets and other specialized forces uniquely capable of contributing to the execution of CMO, refining CMO plans, and keeping US Government agencies informed of Department of Defense capabilities to support US objectives through carefully planned and executed CMO. This document provides an overview of civil-military operations (CMO); discusses organization and command relationships for CMO; provides an overview for the planning of CMO; and discusses interagency coordination as it relates to civil-military relations.
United States. Joint Chiefs of Staff
2001-02-08