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24 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
What ADP covers Intelligence? |
ADP 2-0 |
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Why does the Army synchronize its intelligence efforts with unified action partners? |
To achieve unity of effort and to meet the commander's intent |
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How do multinational and interagency partners reinforce and complement Army intelligence capabilities? |
By providing cultural awareness, as well as unique perspectives and capabilities |
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What is ISR? |
Intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance |
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What is the purpose of ISR? |
To synchronized and integrate the planning and operation of sensors, assets, and processing, exploitation, and dissemination systems in direct support of current and future operations |
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What is the intelligence warfighting function? |
Related tasks and systems that facilitate understanding the enemy, terrain, and civil considerations |
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What are the information collection tasks? |
Plan requirements and assess collection Task and direct collection Execute collection |
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What is the intelligence enterprise? |
The sum total of the intelligence efforts of the entire U.S. intelligence community |
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What are the intelligence core competencies? |
Intelligence synchronization, operations, and analysis |
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What is intelligence synchronization? |
The art of integrating information, collection,and intelligence analysis with operations to effectively and efficiently support decision-making |
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What are the 4 primary means for information collection? |
Intelligence operations Reconnaissance Surveillance Security operations |
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What is the purpose of intelligence analysis? |
To describe the current -- and attempt to proactively assess -- threats, terrain, weather, and civil considerations |
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What ADP covers Unified Land Operations? |
ADP 3-0 |
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What is the description of Unified Land Operations? |
Describes how the Army seizes, retains, and exploits the initiative to gain and maintain a position of relative advantage in sustained land operations through simultaneous offensive, defensive, and stability operations in order to prevent or deter conflict, prevail in war, and create the conditions for favorable conflict resolution. |
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What are the operational variables? |
Consist of political, military, economic, social, information, infrastructure, physical environment, time (known as PMESII-PT). |
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What are the mission variables? |
Consist of mission, enemy, terrain, and weather, troops and support available, time available, civil considerations (known as METT-TC). |
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What is the Army's warfighting doctrine? |
Unified Land Operations |
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What is a series of related major operations aimed at achieving strategic and operational objectives within a given time and space? |
A campaign |
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What is a military action, consisting of two or more related tactical actions, designed to achieve a strategic objective, in whole or part? |
An operation |
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What is a battle or engagement, employing lethal or nonlethal actions, designed for a specific purpose relative to the enemy, the terrain, friendly forces, or other entity? |
A tactical action |
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How are Army operations characterized? |
By flexibility, integration, lethality, adaptability, depth, and synchronization
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What is Operational Art? |
The pursuit of strategic objectives, in whole or part, through the arrangement of tactical actions in time, space, and purpose |
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What is MDMP? |
The military decision making process |
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What is the purpose of MDMP? |
To integrate activities of the commander, staff, subordinate headquarters, and other partners to understand the situation and mission; develop, analyze, and compare courses of action; decide on a course of action that best accomplishes the mission; and produce an operation order or order for execution |