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T OF T H
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Joint Operations
17 January 2017
This revised edition of Joint Publication 3-0, Joint Operations, reflects the current
guidance for conducting joint activities across the range of military operations and is the
basis for US participation in multinational operations where the US has not ratified specific
doctrine or procedures. This keystone publication forms the core of joint warfighting
doctrine and establishes the framework for our forces ability to fight as a joint team.
Often called the linchpin of the joint doctrine publication hierarchy, the overarching
constructs and principles contained in this publication provide a common perspective from
which to plan and execute joint operations independently or in cooperation with our
multinational partners, other US Government departments and agencies, and international
and nongovernmental organizations.
As our nation continues into the 21st century, the guidance in this publication will
enable current and future leaders of the Armed Forces of the United States to design, plan,
organize, train for, and execute worldwide missions as our forces transform to meet
emerging challenges. To succeed, we need adaptive, agile, and timely doctrine for thinking
professionals who understand the capabilities their Service brings to joint operations; how
to integrate those capabilities with those of the other Services and interorganizational
partners to optimize the strength of unified action; and how to organize, employ, and
sustain joint forces to provide national leaders with multiple options for addressing various
security threats. The focus is to improve joint warfighting, enhance readiness, and continue
development of leaders for the joint force. Above all, we need professionals imbued with
a sense of commitment and honor who will act decisively in the absence of specific
guidance.
I ask all commanders to ensure the widest distribution of this keystone joint
publication and actively promote the use of joint publications at every opportunity. I
further ask you to study and understand the guidance contained in this publication and teach
these principles to your subordinates. Only then will we be able to fully exploit the
remarkable military potential inherent in our joint teams.
KEVIN D. SCOTT
Vice Admiral, USN
Director, Joint Force Development
PREFACE
1. Scope
This publication is the keystone document of the joint operations series. It provides
the doctrinal foundation and fundamental principles that guide the Armed Forces of the
United States in all joint operations.
2. Purpose
This publication has been prepared under the direction of the Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff. 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.
3. Application
a. Joint doctrine established in this publication applies to the Joint Staff, commanders
of combatant commands, subordinate unified commands, joint task forces, subordinate
components of these commands, the Services, and combat support agencies.
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Preface
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ii JP 3-0
SUMMARY OF CHANGES
REVISION OF JOINT PUBLICATION 3-0
DATED 11 AUGUST 2011
iii
Summary of Changes
Intentionally Blank
iv JP 3-0
TABLE OF CONTENTS
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ............................................................................................... ix
CHAPTER I
FUNDAMENTALS OF JOINT OPERATIONS
CHAPTER II
THE ART OF JOINT COMMAND
Introduction ................................................................................................................II-1
Commander-Centric Leadership ................................................................................II-1
Operational Art ..........................................................................................................II-3
Operational Design ....................................................................................................II-4
Joint Planning.............................................................................................................II-5
Assessment .................................................................................................................II-8
CHAPTER III
JOINT FUNCTIONS
CHAPTER IV
ORGANIZING FOR JOINT OPERATIONS
v
Table of Contents
CHAPTER V
JOINT OPERATIONS ACROSS THE CONFLICT CONTINUUM
CHAPTER VI
MILITARY ENGAGEMENT, SECURITY COOPERATION, AND
DETERRENCE
CHAPTER VII
CRISIS RESPONSE AND LIMITED CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS
CHAPTER VIII
LARGE-SCALE COMBAT OPERATIONS
APPENDIX
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Table of Contents
GLOSSARY
FIGURE
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Table of Contents
Intentionally Blank
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
COMMANDERS OVERVIEW
Joint operations are military Joint Publication (JP) 3-0 is the keystone document
actions conducted by joint forces in the joint operations series and is a companion to
and those Service forces joint doctrines capstone JP 1, Doctrine for the
employed in specified command Armed Forces of the United States. It provides
relationships with each other, guidance to joint force commanders (JFCs) and
which of themselves do not their subordinates to plan, execute, and assess joint
establish joint forces. A joint military operations. It also informs interagency
force is one composed of and multinational partners, international
significant elements, assigned or organizations, nongovernmental organizations
attached, of two or more Military (NGOs), and other civilian decision makers of
Departments operating under a fundamental principles, precepts, and philosophies
single joint force commander. that guide the employment of the Armed Forces of
the United States.
Principles of Joint Operations Joint doctrine recognizes the nine principles of war
(objective, offensive, mass, maneuver, economy of
force, unity of command, security, surprise, and
simplicity). Experience gained in a variety of
irregular warfare situations has reinforced the
value of three additional principlesrestraint,
perseverance, and legitimacy.
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Executive Summary
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Executive Summary
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Executive Summary
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Executive Summary
Joint Functions
Introduction Joint functions are related capabilities and
activities grouped together to help JFCs integrate,
synchronize, and direct joint operations. Functions
that are common to joint operations at all levels of
warfare fall into six basic groupsC2,
intelligence, fires, movement and maneuver,
protection, and sustainment.
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Executive Summary
xiv JP 3-0
Executive Summary
Organizing the Joint Force The JFCs mission and operational approach, as
well as the principle of unity of command and a
mission command philosophy, are guiding
principles to organize the joint force for
operations. Joint forces can be established on a
geographic or functional basis. When JFCs
organize their forces, they should also consider the
degree of interoperability among Service
components, with multinational forces and other
potential participants. Joint force options include
combatant commands (CCMDs), subordinate
unified commands, and joint task forces. All JFCs
may conduct operations through their Service
component commanders, lower-echelon Service
force commanders, and functional component
commanders. Commander, US Special Operations
Command, exercises combatant command
(command authority) of all special operations
forces (SOF). Geographic combatant commanders
(GCCs) exercise operational control (OPCON) of
their supporting theater special operations
commands and most often exercise OPCON of
SOF deployed in their areas of responsibility
(AORs).
Organizing Operational Areas Except for AORs, which are assigned in the
Unified Command Plan (UCP), GCCs and other
JFCs designate smaller OAs (e.g., joint operational
area [JOA] and area of operations [AO]) on a
temporary basis. OAs have physical dimensions
comprised of some combination of air, land,
maritime, and space domains. GCCs conduct
operations in their assigned AORs. When
warranted, the President, Secretary of Defense
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Executive Summary
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Executive Summary
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Executive Summary
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Executive Summary
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Executive Summary
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Executive Summary
Setting Conditions for Theater CCDRs and JFCs execute their campaigns and
Operations operations in pursuit of US national objectives and
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Executive Summary
Considerations for Seizing the As operations commence, the JFC needs to exploit
Initiative friendly advantages and capabilities to shock,
demoralize, and disrupt the enemy immediately.
The JFC seeks decisive advantage through the use
of all available elements of combat power to seize
and maintain the initiative, deny the enemy the
opportunity to achieve its objectives, and generate
in the enemy a sense of inevitable failure and
defeat. Considerations for seizing the initiative
include: force protection, unit integrity during
deployment, entry operations, attack of enemys
COGs, full-spectrum superiority, C2 in littoral
areas, SOF-conventional force integration,
stability activities, protection, and prevention of
friendly fire incidents.
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Executive Summary
Considerations for Enabling In this phase, the joint operation is assessed and
Civil Authority enabling objectives are established for
transitioning from large-scale combat operations to
FID and security cooperation. The new
government obtains legitimacy, and authority is
transitioned from an interim civilian authority or
transitional military authority to the new
indigenous government. This situation may
require a change in the joint operation as a result of
an extension of the required stability activities in
support of US diplomatic, HN, international
organization, and/or NGO stabilization efforts.
Considerations for enabling civil authority include:
peace building, transfer to civil authority, and
redeployment.
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Executive Summary
CONCLUSION
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CHAPTER I
FUNDAMENTALS OF JOINT OPERATIONS
The US militarys purpose is to protect our Nation and win our wars. We do this
through military operations to defend the homeland, build security globally, and
project power and win decisively.
1. Introduction
a. Joint Publication (JP) 3-0 is the keystone document in the joint operations series
and is a companion to joint doctrines capstone JP 1, Doctrine for the Armed Forces of the
United States. It provides guidance to joint force commanders (JFCs) and their
subordinates to plan, execute, and assess joint military operations. It also informs
interagency and multinational partners, international organizations, nongovernmental
organizations (NGOs), and other civilian decision makers of fundamental principles,
precepts, and philosophies that guide the employment of the Armed Forces of the United
States. This publication describes fundamental keystone constructssuch as unified
action and joint functionsthat apply regardless of the nature or circumstances of a
specific joint operation. This publication provides context not only for the joint operations
series, but also for other keystone doctrine publications that describe supporting functions
and processes.
b. The primary way the Department of Defense (DOD) employs two or more Services
(from at least two Military Departments) in a single operation is through joint operations.
Joint operations are military actions conducted by joint forces and those Service forces
employed in specified command relationships with each other, which of themselves do not
establish joint forces. A joint force is one composed of significant elements, assigned or
attached, of two or more Military Departments operating under a single JFC.
Refer to JP 1, Doctrine for the Armed Forces of the United States, for more information
on traditional warfare and irregular warfare (IW) and the instruments of national power.
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Chapter I
d. Joint Warfare is Team Warfare. The Armed Forces of the United Statesevery
military organization at all levelsare a team. The capacity of our Armed Forces to
operate as a cohesive joint team is a key advantage in any operational environment (OE).
Success depends on well-integrated command headquarters (HQ), supporting
organizations, and forces that operate as a team. Integrating Service components
capabilities under a single JFC maximizes the effectiveness and efficiency of the force.
However, a joint operation does not require that all forces participate merely because they
are available; the JFC has the authority and responsibility to tailor forces to the mission.
Objective Security
Offensive Surprise
Mass Simplicity
Maneuver Restraint
Economy of force Perseverance
Unity of command Legitimacy
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Fundamentals of Joint Operations
Achieve and maintain unity of effort within the joint force and between the joint force and
US Government, international, and other partners.
Leverage the benefits of operating indirectly through partners when strategic and
operational circumstances dictate or permit.
Integrate joint capabilities to be complementary rather than merely additive.
Focus on objectives whose achievement suggests the broadest and most enduring
results.
Ensure freedom of action.
Avoid combining capabilities where doing so adds complexity without compensating
advantage.
Inform domestic audiences and shape the perceptions and attitudes of key foreign
audiences as an explicit and continuous operational requirement.
Maintain operational and organizational flexibility.
Drive synergy to the lowest echelon at which it can be managed effectively.
Plan for and manage operational transitions over time and space.
missile, strike, cyber, and space capabilities. The strategic environment is fluid, with
continually changing alliances, partnerships, and national and transnational threats that
rapidly emerge, disaggregate, and reemerge. While it is impossible to predict precisely
how challenges will emerge and what form they might take, we can expect that uncertainty,
ambiguity, and surprise will persist. The commanders OE is influenced by the strategic
environment.
c. These challenges are not specific to any single theater of operations and create
problematic consequences for international security. Such an environment induces
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Chapter I
d. Enemies who attack the US homeland and US interests are likely to use asymmetric
tactics and techniques. They will avoid hard (well-secured and heavily defended) targets
and attack vulnerable ones. Vulnerable targets may include US and partner nations (PNs)
lines of communications (LOCs), ports, airports, staging areas, civilian populations, critical
infrastructure, information centers, economic centers, and military and police personnel
and facilities. Advances in information technology increase the tempo, lethality, and depth
of warfare. Developments in cyberspace can provide the US military, its allies, and PNs
leverage to improve economic and physical security. However, this also provides
adversaries increased access to open-source information and intelligence, Department of
Defense information network (DODIN), critical infrastructure and key resources, and a
limitless propaganda platform with global reach. Asymmetric attacks can be countered
with well-planned joint operations synchronized with actions of interagency partners,
international organizations, NGOs, multinational forces, and elements of the private sector.
Achieving unity of effort with these partners requires coordination, cooperation, and a
comprehensive approach to achieve common objectives.
Refer to JP 1, Doctrine for the Armed Forces of the United States, and the Defense Strategy
Review (DSR) for more information on the strategic security environment. Refer to
JP 3-08, Interorganizational Cooperation, for more information on interorganizational
coordination.
b. The ability of the US to advance its national interests depends on how the United
States Government (USG) employs the instruments of national power to achieve national
strategic objectives based on global security priorities. USG officials, with National
Security Council (NSC) advice and presidential direction, coordinate the instruments of
national power. The USG routinely uses the instruments of national power to advance
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Fundamentals of Joint Operations
national interests. Interactions between the various instruments of national power can
enhance results as US culture, industry, science and technology, academic institutions,
geography, and national will combine to deliver synergistic benefit.
c. The ultimate purpose of the US Armed Forces is to fight and win the nations wars.
Although much of DODs focus is on war and war preparation, opportunities also exist to
prevent or mitigate the severity of conflict, legitimize US positions, reward PNs, provide
expertise to multinational operations, and enhance the positive perception of the US. US
national leaders can use military capabilities in a wide variety of activities, tasks, missions,
and operations that vary in purpose, scale, risk, and combat intensity along the conflict
continuum. The militarys role increases relative to the other instruments as the need to
compel an adversary through force increases. The potential range of military activities
and operations extends from military engagement, security cooperation, and deterrence
in times of relative peace up through major operations and campaigns that typically involve
large-scale combat. For more information on the range of military activities and operations
across the conflict continuum, see Chapter V, Joint Operations Across the Conflict
Continuum, paragraph 2, The Range of Military Operations.
d. Acting alone in the strategic environment, the USG cannot resolve all crises or
achieve all national objectives with just US resources. Under an umbrella of security
cooperation, DOD supports USG strategic objectives by developing security relationships,
building partner capacity and capability, and assuring access with selected PNs that enable
them to act alongside, in support of, or in lieu of US forces around the globe. These
strategic initiatives help advance national security objectives, promote stability, prevent
conflicts, and reduce the risk of employing US military forces in a conflict. Security
cooperation activities comprise an essential element of a geographic combatant
commanders (GCCs) theater campaign plan (TCP).
Refer to JP 1, Doctrine for the Armed Forces of the United States, for more information
on the instruments of national power. Refer to JP 3-20, Security Cooperation, for more
information about a GCCs role in security cooperation. Refer to Chapter V, Joint
Operations Across the Conflict Continuum, for more information on the conflict
continuum and range of military operations.
4. Strategic Direction
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Chapter I
(1) In general, the President frames the strategic context by defining national
interests and goals in documents such as the National Security Strategy (NSS), Presidential
policy directives, executive orders, and other national strategic documents, in conjunction
with the NSC and Homeland Security Council.
(2) DOD derives its strategic-level documents from guidance in the NSS. The
documents outline how DOD will support NSS objectives and provide a framework for
other DOD policy and planning guidance, such as the Guidance for Employment of the
Force (GEF), Defense Planning Guidance, Global Force Management Guidance, and the
Joint Strategic Capabilities Plan (JSCP).
(3) The President approves the contingency planning guidance contained in the
GEF, which is developed by the Office of the Secretary of Defense. The GEF provides
policy guidance and priorities to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (CJCS) and
combatant commanders (CCDRs) for global force management and the preparation and
review of campaign and contingency plans. The CJCS translates guidance from the GEF
and publishes the JSCP, which implements campaign, contingency, and posture planning
guidance reflected in the GEF. The President also signs the Unified Command Plan (UCP),
which is developed by the Office of the Secretary of Defense and the Joint Staff in
coordination with the NSC. The UCP establishes combatant command (CCMD) missions,
responsibilities, and areas of responsibility (AORs).
b. From this broad strategic guidance, more specific national, functional, and theater-
strategic and supporting objectives help focus and refine the context and guide the militarys
joint planning and execution related to these objectives or a specific crisis. Integrated
planning, coordination, and guidance among the Joint Staff, CCMD staffs, Service chiefs,
and USG departments and agencies translate strategic priorities into clear planning guidance,
tailored force packages, operational-level objectives, joint operation plans (OPLANs), and
logistical support for the joint force to accomplish its mission.
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Fundamentals of Joint Operations
Refer to JP 1, Doctrine for the Armed Forces of the United States; JP 3-61, Public Affairs;
JP 5-0, Joint Planning; and Joint Doctrine Note (JDN) 2-13, Commanders
Communication Synchronization, for more information on CCS.
(1) Based on guidance from the President and the Secretary of Defense (SecDef),
GCCs and functional combatant commanders (FCCs) translate national security policy,
strategy, and available military forces into theater and functional strategies to achieve
national and theater strategic objectives. CCMD strategies are broad statements of the
GCCs long-term vision for the AOR and the FCCs long-term vision for the global
employment of functional capabilities guided by and prepared in the context of the
SecDefs priorities outlined in the GEF and the CJCSs objectives articulated in the
National Military Strategy (NMS). A prerequisite to preparing the theater strategy is
development of a strategic estimate. It contains factors and trends that influence the
CCMDs strategic environment and inform the ends, ways, means, and risk involved in
pursuit of GEF-directed objectives.
(2) Using their strategic estimates and theater or functional strategies, GCCs and
FCCs develop TCPs and functional campaign plans (FCPs) respectively, consistent with
guidance in the UCP, GEF, and JSCP, as well as in accordance with (IAW) planning
architecture described in the Adaptive Planning and Execution (APEX) enterprise. In some
cases, a CCDR may be required to develop a global campaign plan. FCCs develop
operational support plans based on guidance in the UCP and their priorities and objectives
in the GEF. FCCs may be responsible for developing functional-related global or
subordinate campaign plans or both. As required, both GCCs and FCCs develop
contingency plans, which are branch plans to the overarching TCP or FCP.
(3) In joint operations, the supported CCDR will often have a role in achieving
more than one national strategic objective. Some national strategic objectives will be the
primary responsibility of the supported CCDR. Others may require a more balanced use
of many or all instruments of national power, with the CCDR in support of another CCDR
or other agencies. Supporting CCDRs coordinate and synchronize their supporting plans
with the supported commanders plan. CCDRs provide planning guidance; assign missions
and tasks; organize forces and resources; designate objectives; may establish operational
limitations, such as rules of engagement (ROE), constraints, and restraints; and implement
policies and the concept of operations (CONOPS) to be integrated into plans and operation
orders (OPORDs). In applying military power, CCDRs use the capabilities of assigned,
attached, and supporting military forces. They also integrate other instruments of national
power and the capabilities of multinational partners to gain and maintain strategic
advantage. Supporting and supported CCDRs coordinate with each other across
geographic and functional boundaries to facilitate mission accomplishment within the
capabilities of assigned, attached, and supporting military forces.
Refer to JP 1, Doctrine for the Armed Forces of the United States, for more information
on the strategic environment, strategic guidance, strategy and estimates, and the role of
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Chapter I
CCDRs. For more information on APEX and joint planning, refer to CJCS Guide 3130,
Adaptive Planning and Execution Overview and Policy Framework.
(4) Termination
(b) Creating the conditions for lasting stability extends beyond the large-
scale combat that dominates over the enemys will to resist. Often, overmatching the
enemys capabilities at critical times and places does not lead to the resolution of the drivers
of conflict, nor initiate the transformation to eliminate the root causes of conflict. The
Armed Forces often remain engaged in a supporting role to assist in reducing the means
and motives for violence, focusing on the sources of instability, developing opportunities
to promote stability. Strategic- and operational-level commanders plan for the termination
of operations to enable civil authority as part of the initial planning process. Understanding
transitions is key to operational design and planning.
For more information on end state and termination, refer to JP 5-0, Joint Planning.
5. Unified Action
a. General
(1) Whereas the term joint operation focuses on the integrated actions of the
Armed Forces of the United States, the term unified action has a broader connotation.
Unified action refers to the synchronization, coordination, and integration of the activities
of governmental and nongovernmental entities to achieve unity of effort. Failure to
achieve unity of effort can cost lives, create conditions that enhance instability, and
jeopardize mission accomplishment.
Achieve and maintain unity of effort between the joint force and
interorganizational participants.
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Fundamentals of Joint Operations
Unified Action
US Joint Forces
Unified
Action
Nongovernmental International
Organizations Organizations
Private Sector
and Others
The joint force commander plans, coordinates, synchronizes, and, when appropriate, integrates
military operations with the activities of other governmental and nongovernmental entities to achieve
unity of effort.
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Chapter I
The basis is the necessity of each agencys efforts to be in harmony with the short- and
long-range goals of the mission.
b. The JFCs Role. JFCs are challenged to achieve and maintain operational
coherence given the requirement to operate in conjunction with interorganizational
partners. CCDRs play a pivotal role in unifying joint force actions, since all of the elements
and actions that compose unified action normally are present at their level. However,
subordinate JFCs also integrate and synchronize their operations directly with the
operations of other military forces and the activities of nonmilitary organizations in the
operational area to promote unified action.
(1) General. Joint forces must be prepared to plan and execute operations with
forces from PNs within the framework of an alliance or coalition under US or other-than-
US leadership. US military leaders often are expected to play a central leadership role
regardless of the US Armed Forces predominance, capability, or capacity. Commanders
should expect the military leaders of contributing member nations to emphasize common
objectives as well as to expect mutual support and respect. Although individual nations
may place greater emphasis on some objectives than on others, the key is to find
commonality within the objectives to promote synchronized progress to achieving the
objectives. Cultivation and maintenance of personal relationships among counterparts
enable success. Language and communication differences, cultural diversity, historical
animosities, and the varying capabilities of allies and multinational partners are factors that
complicate the integration and synchronization of activities during multinational
operations. Likewise, differing national obligations derived from international treaties,
agreements, and national legislation complicate multinational operations. Regardless of
whether other members participate in their treaty or agreement obligations, US forces will
remain bound by US treaties and agreements.
(2) Command and Control (C2) of US Forces. By law, the President retains
command authority over US forces. This includes the authority and responsibility to
effectively plan for, organize, coordinate, control, employ, and protect these forces.
Nevertheless, the President may deem it prudent or advantageous (for reasons such as
maximizing military effectiveness and ensuring unified action) to place specific US forces
under the control of a foreign commander to achieve specified military objectives. Even
when operating under the operational control (OPCON) of a foreign commander, US
Armed Forces remain in the chain of command of US military authorities.
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Fundamentals of Joint Operations
in a lead nation command construct, the PN providing the preponderance of forces and
resources typically provides the commander of the coalition force. These command
structures can also exist simultaneously within a coalition.
For more information on unified action with respect to multinational participation, refer
to JP 1, Doctrine for the Armed Forces of the United States. For more information on all
aspects of multinational operations, refer to JP 3-16, Multinational Operations. For more
information on multinational logistics, refer to JP 4-08, Logistics in Support of
Multinational Operations. For North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)-specific
doctrine ratified by the US, see Allied Joint Publication (AJP)-01, Allied Joint Doctrine,
and AJP-3, Allied Joint Doctrine for the Conduct of Operations.
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Chapter I
organizations may have policies that conflict with those of the USG, particularly those of
the US military. Formal agreements, robust liaison, and information sharing through
disciplined interorganizational coordination should facilitate common understanding,
informed decision making, and unity of effort. Information sharing with NGOs and the
private sector may be more restrictive, but options such as the CCMD-level joint
interagency coordination group (JIACG) and operational-level civil-military operations
center (CMOC) are available to the commanders to facilitate interorganizational
coordination and information sharing. DOD, in collaboration with federal, state, local,
territorial, and tribal governments, uses the structures and procedures provided by the
National Response Framework (NRF) and the National Incident Management System to
prepare for, plan, coordinate, and respond to disasters within the US and its territories.
Similar structures and processes, incorporating the capabilities and interests of foreign
partners, can be incorporated into disaster-response and civil-military operations (CMO)
in connection with US operations in foreign countries.
e. The US has neither the capacity nor responsibility to directly lead the response to
every crisis. US military operations abroad invite diplomatic repercussions from enemies,
adversaries, and even allies with whom our objectives do not precisely align. In some
circumstances, friendly surrogates assisted by US military support may be able to
conduct operations and achieve mutually agreeable objectives when the direct
employment of US forces would be objectionable or infeasible. In other instances, such
as counterinsurgency (COIN), success depends on the indigenous government
demonstrating its own sovereignty; the overt exercise of force by the US military may
ultimately be counterproductive. JFCs may increasingly find it advantageous or necessary
to pursue objectives by enabling and supporting one or more interorganizational partners.
6. Levels of Warfare
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Fundamentals of Joint Operations
Unified Action
Operational art links tactical action to strategic purpose. Operational art governs the deployment of
forces and the arrangement of operations to achieve operational and strategic objectives.
level actions and objectives to strategic objectives, and highlights leaders who typically
focus at these levels.
c. Operational Level
(1) The operational level of warfare links the tactical employment of forces to
national strategic objectives. The focus at this level is on the planning and execution of
operations using operational art: the cognitive approach by commanders and staffs
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Chapter I
supported by their skill, knowledge, and experienceto plan and execute (when required)
strategies, campaigns, and operations to organize and employ military capabilities by
integrating ends, ways, and available means. JFCs and component commanders use
operational art to determine how, when, where, and for what purpose military forces will
be employed, to influence the adversarys disposition before combat, to deter adversaries
from supporting enemy activities, and to assure our multinational partners to achieve
operational and strategic objectives.
(2) Many factors affect relationships among leaders at these levels. Service and
functional component commanders of a joint force do not plan the actions of their forces
in a vacuum; they and their staffs collaborate with the operational-level JFC to plan the
joint operation. This collaboration facilitates the components planning and execution.
Likewise, the operational-level JFC and staff typically collaborate with the CCDR to frame
theater strategic objectives, as well as tasks the CCDR will eventually assign to the
subordinate joint force.
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CHAPTER II
THE ART OF JOINT COMMAND
When all is said and done, it is really the commanders coup doeil, his ability to
see things simply, to identify the whole business of war completely with himself,
that is the essence of good generalship.
1. Introduction
a. Command is the authority that a commander in the armed forces lawfully exercises
over subordinates by virtue of rank or assignment. Accompanying this authority is the
responsibility to effectively organize, direct, coordinate, and control military forces to
accomplish assigned missions. Command includes responsibility for health, welfare,
morale, and discipline of assigned personnel.
b. While command authority stems from orders and other directives, the art of
command resides in the commanders ability to use leadership to maximize
performance. The combination of courage, ethical leadership, judgment, intuition,
situational awareness, and the capacity to consider contrary views, helps commanders
make insightful decisions in complex situations. These attributes can be gained over time
through training, education, and experience. Joint training and joint doctrine are designed
to enable the conscious and skillful exercise of command authority through visualization,
decision making, and leadership. Effective commanders combine judgment and
visualization with information to determine whether a decision is required, when to decide,
and what to decide with sufficient speed to maintain the initiative. Information
management (IM), situational awareness, and a sound battle rhythm facilitate decision
making.
2. Commander-Centric Leadership
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Chapter II
c. Commanders should interact with other leaders to build personal relationships and
develop trust and confidence. Developing these associations is a conscious, collaborative
act. Commanders build trust through words and actions, and continue to reinforce it not
only during operations, but also during training, education, and practice. Trust and
confidence are essential to synergy and harmony, both within the joint force and with our
interagency and multinational partners and other interorganizational stakeholders.
Commanders may also interact with other political, societal, and economic leaders and
other influential people who may influence joint operations. This interaction supports
mission accomplishment and CCS themes and messages. The JFC emphasizes the
importance of key leader engagement (KLE) to subordinate commanders and encourages
them to extend the process to lower levels, based on mission requirements.
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f. An essential skill of a JFC is the ability to assign missions and tasks that integrate
the components capabilities consistent with the JFCs envisioned CONOPS. Each
components mission should complement the others. This enables each component to
enhance the capabilities and limit the vulnerabilities of the others. Achieving this synergy
requires more than just understanding the capabilities and limitations of each component.
The JFC should also visualize operations holistically, identify the preconditions that enable
each component to optimize its own contribution, and then determine how the other
components might help to produce them. The JFC should compare alternative component
missions and mixes solely from the perspective of combined effectiveness, unhampered by
Service parochialism. This approach also requires mutual trust among commanders that
the missions assigned to components will be consistent with their capabilities and
limitations, those capabilities will not be risked for insufficient overall return, and
components will execute their assignments.
h. The JFC leads using operational art and operational design, joint planning, rigorous
assessment of progress, and timely decision making.
3. Operational Art
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mission and reach the desired military end state in support of national objectives. Without
operational art, campaigns and operations could be sets of disconnected events.
Operational art informs the deployment of forces and the arrangement of operations to
achieve military operational and strategic objectives.
c. The commander is the central figure in operational art, not only due to education
and experience, but also because the commanders judgment and decisions guide the staff
throughout joint planning and execution. Commanders leverage their knowledge,
experience, judgment, and intuition to focus effort and achieve success. Operational art
helps broaden perspectives to deepen understanding and enable visualization.
Commanders compare similarities of the existing situation with their own experiences or
history to distinguish unique features and then tailor innovative and adaptive solutions to
each situation.
(1) What are the objectives and desired military end state? (Ends)
(2) What sequence of actions is most likely to achieve those objectives and
military end state? (Ways)
4. Operational Design
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Using these elements helps the commander and staff analyze the questions posed in
paragraph 3.d. For example, properly framing strategic- and operational-level objectives
is essential to mission accomplishment. Identifying critical objectives will depend more
on judgment than on calculation, because framing objectives to achieve broad and enduring
results is more art than science.
d. Commanders and their staffs blend operational art, operational design, and JPP to
produce plans and orders that drive joint operations. Effective operational design results
in more efficient detailed planning and increases the chances of mission accomplishment.
5. Joint Planning
b. Joint planning consists of planning activities that help CCDRs and their subordinate
commanders transform national objectives into actions that mobilize, deploy, employ,
sustain, redeploy, and demobilize joint forces. It ties the employment of the Armed Forces
to the achievement of national objectives during peacetime and war.
d. JPP underpins planning at all levels and for missions across the range of
military operations. It applies to both supported and supporting JFCs and to component
and subordinate commands when they participate in joint planning. Together with
operational design, JPP facilitates interaction between the commander, staff, and their HQ
throughout planning. JPP helps commanders and their staffs organize their planning
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activities, share a common understanding of the mission and commanders intent, and
develop effective plans and orders. Figure II-1 shows the primary steps of JPP.
(2) Mission Statement. The joint forces mission is what the joint force must
accomplish. It is described in the mission statement, which is a sentence or short paragraph
that describes the organizations essential task (or set of tasks) and purposea clear
statement of the action to be taken and the reason for doing so. The mission statement
approved by the commandercontains the elements of who, what, when, where, and why
of the operation. The eventual CONOPS will specify how the joint force will accomplish
the mission. The mission statement forms the basis for planning and is included in the
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(3) Commanders Planning Guidance. JFCs guide the joint forces actions
throughout planning and execution. However, the staff and component commanders
typically expect the JFC to issue initial guidance soon after receipt of a mission or tasks
from higher authority and provide more detailed planning guidance after the JFC approves
an operational approach. This guidance is an important input to subsequent mission
analysis, but the completion of mission analysis is another point at which the JFC may
provide updated planning guidance that affects COA development.
(5) CCIRs. CCIRs are elements of friendly and enemy information the
commander identifies as critical to timely decision making. They focus IM and help the
JFC and staff assess the OE. The CCIR list is normally a product of mission analysis, and
JFCs add, delete, and update CCIRs throughout an operation.
f. Freedom of Action. The JFC should maintain freedom of action throughout the
operation. Freedom of action in the OA is linked to freedom to act beyond the OA. For
example, operational reachthe distance and duration across which a joint force can
successfully employ military capabilitiescan extend far beyond the limits of a JFCs joint
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operations area (JOA), and is inextricably tied to LOOs and the capacity and ability to
throughput logistics to the point of destination. Consequently, the joint force must protect
LOOs to ensure freedom of action. Attaining operational reach requires gaining and
maintaining operational access in the face of enemy A2/AD capabilities and actions.
Likewise, the C2 and intelligence functions depend on operations within the EMS and
cyberspace. Losing the capability to operate effectively in the EMS and cyberspace can
greatly diminish the JFCs freedom of action. While various actions (e.g., cybersecurity,
cyberspace defense, joint electromagnetic spectrum operations [JEMSO], and the
consideration of branches to current operations) contribute individually to freedom of
action, operational design and joint planning are the processes that coherently link these
actions. The JFC and staff should consider freedom of action from the outset of operational
design and remain alert to indicators during operations that freedom of action is in
jeopardy.
Refer to JP 5-0, Joint Planning, for more information on JPP. Refer to JP 3-09, Joint Fire
Support; JP 3-09.3, Close Air Support; and JP 3-60, Joint Targeting, for more information
on fires and joint fire support planning. Refer to JP 2-0, Joint Intelligence, and other
intelligence series publications for more information on intelligence support and planning.
Refer to JP 4-0, Joint Logistics, and other logistics series publications for more
information on logistic planning. Refer to JP 3-12, Cyberspace Operations, for more
information on cyberspace operations (CO). Refer to the National Military Strategic Plan
for Electronic Warfare, DOD Electromagnetic Spectrum (EMS) Strategy, and JDN 3-16,
Joint Electromagnetic Spectrum Operations, for more information on JEMSO/EMS
superiority. Refer to JP 3-05, Special Operations, for more information on special
operations planning.
6. Assessment
b. DOD and its components use a wide range of assessment tools and methods. In
peacetime and periods of conflict, assessments gauge the ability of the military instrument
of national power to prepare for and respond to national security challenges described in
Chapter I, Fundamentals of Joint Operations. Leaders assess operations and activities
across the levels of warfare and in all joint functions. At the strategic level, the CJCS
conducts deliberate and continuous assessments such as the Comprehensive Joint
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Refer to CJCSI 3100.01, Joint Strategic Planning System, for more information on CJCS
assessments. Refer to JP 5-0, Joint Planning, for more information on staff estimates,
integration of assessment during planning, and conducting operation assessment during
execution.
c. Operation assessment refers specifically to the process the JFC and staff use
during planning and execution to measure progress toward accomplishing tasks, creating
conditions or effects, and achieving objectives. Commanders continuously observe the OE
and the progress of operations; compare the results to their initial visualization,
understanding, and intent; and adjust planning and operations based on this analysis. Staffs
monitor key factors that can influence operations and provide the commander information
needed for decisions. Without mistaking level of activity for progress, commanders devise
ways to update their understanding of the OE and assess their progress toward mission
accomplishment. The fundamental aspects of assessment apply in all types of joint
operations, although commanders and staffs may need to adjust the assessment process to
fit the nature and requirements of a specific operation. In operations that do not include
combat, assessments can be more complex.
d. Assessment begins during mission analysis when the commander and staff consider
what to measure and how to measure it. During further planning and preparation, the staff
assesses the joint forces ability to execute the plan based on COAs that can meet planning
objectives, available resources, and changing conditions in the OE. Throughout COA
development, analysis, comparison, approval, and CONOPS finalization, the commander
and staff devise the assessment process to incorporate in the plan and order. They will
follow this process during plan development, subsequent refinement, adaptation, and
execution. Key assessment indicators can be included in the CCIR process to provide
timely support to the commanders planning and execution decisions.
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g. Actions by a wide variety of entities affect military actions and objectives. These
actors include interorganizational participants, the civilian population, neutral non-partner
organizations in the JOA, and other countries outside the JOA in the GCCs AOR. Since
assessment resources are limited, the commander must prioritize assessment activities.
This typically requires collaboration with interorganizational participantspreferably
in a common, accepted processin the interest of unified action. Since most of these
organizations are outside the JFCs authority, the JFC is responsible only for assessments
of the activities of assigned, attached, and supporting military forces. Nevertheless, the
JFC should grant some joint force organizations (e.g., civil affairs [CA] directorate or
CMOC) authority to coordinate directly with organizations, such as DOS and Department
of Homeland Security (DHS), and other CCMDs to facilitate effective integration and
synchronization of assigned, attached, and supporting military forces, as well as timely and
effective assessments by participants not under the JFCs authority.
(2) Operation assessment is most effective when supported and supporting plans
and their assessments are linked. As Figure II-2 depicts, each level of assessment should
be linked with adjacent levels, both to provide a conduit for guidance and provide
information. For instance, assessment plans at the tactical level should delineate how they
link to or support operational-level assessments. Similarly, guidance from the operational-
level JFC should specify the relationship and mechanisms (e.g., tasks to subordinate
organizations) by which tactical-level assessment data can be gathered and synthesized into
the operational-level assessment.
(3) JFCs and their staffs consider assessment ways, means, and measures during
planning, preparation, and execution. To optimize the assessment process given the
scarcity of intelligence collection assets, JFCs and their staffs can include key assessment
indicators in the CCIRs. This focuses assessment and collection at each level, reduces
redundancy, and enhances the efficiency of the assessment process. At all levels,
commanders and staffs develop operation assessment indicators to track progress toward
mission accomplishment. An optimal method for developing indicators is to identify key
assessment indicators associated with tasks, effects, objectives, and end states for inclusion
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The Art of Joint Command
Assessment Interaction
Levels of
Warfare Guidance
Legend
operations and intelligence report flow assessment report flow
in the assessment design. The most critical indicators of progress or regression should also
be included in CCIRs to guide the collection and assessment activity. These indicators
include measures of effectiveness (MOEs) and measures of performance (MOPs).
MOEs help answer the question, Are we creating the effect(s) or conditions in the OE that
we desire? MOPs help answer the question, Are we accomplishing tasks to standard?
(4) Tactical-level assessment also uses MOEs and MOPs. Tactical tasks are often
physical activities, but they can affect higher-level functions and systems. Tactical
assessment may evaluate progress by phase lines; destruction of enemy forces; control of
key terrain, peoples, or resources; and other tasks. Combat assessment evaluates the results
of weapons engagement (of both lethal and nonlethal capabilities), and thus provides data
for joint fires and the joint targeting processes at all levels. Combat assessment is
composed of three related elements: battle damage assessment, munitions effectiveness
assessment, and reattack recommendations or future targeting. Assessment of tactical
results helps commanders determine progress at the operational and strategic levels and
can affect operational and strategic targeting and engagement decisions. Tactical-level
results provide JFCs comprehensive, integrated information to link tactical actions to
operational and strategic objectives.
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Refer to JP 5-0, Joint Planning, for more information on operation assessment (e.g.,
integration of assessment design during the planning effort, roles and responsibilities,
tenets of an effective assessment, the assessment process, and development and use of
assessment indicators). Refer to JP 3-60, Joint Targeting, for more information on combat
assessment.
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CHAPTER III
JOINT FUNCTIONS
Joint Publication 1, Doctrine for the Armed Forces of the United States
1. Introduction
a. This chapter discusses joint functions, related tasks, and key considerations. Joint
functions are related capabilities and activities grouped together to help JFCs
integrate, synchronize, and direct joint operations. Functions that are common to joint
operations at all levels of warfare fall into six basic groupsC2, intelligence, fires,
movement and maneuver, protection, and sustainment. Some functions, such as C2
and intelligence, apply to all operations. Others, such as fires, apply as the JFCs mission
requires. A number of subordinate tasks, missions, and related capabilities help define
each function, and some could apply to more than one joint function.
b. The joint functions reinforce and complement one another, and integration across
the functions is essential to mission accomplishment. For example, joint fires can
enhance the protection of a joint security area (JSA) by dispersing or disrupting enemy
assets threatening the JSA. In any joint operation, the JFC can choose from a wide variety
of joint and Service capabilities and combine them in various ways to perform joint
functions and accomplish the mission. Plans describe how the JFC uses military
capabilities (i.e., organizations, people, and systems) to perform tasks associated with each
joint function. However, forces and other assets are not characterized by the functions for
which the JFC is employing them. Individual Service capabilities can often support
multiple functions simultaneously or sequentially while the joint force is executing a single
task. For example, aviation assets routinely support all six functions in a single combat
operation. Just as component commanders integrate activities across functions to
accomplish tasks and missions, the JFC and staff do likewise for the joint force. Various
factors complicate the JFCs integration challenge, such as competing demands for high-
priority capabilities and the fact that joint force components have different function-
oriented approaches, procedures, and perspectives. JFCs and USG interagency partners
synchronize, coordinate, and integrate military operations with the activities of
interorganizational participants to achieve unity of effort toward US objectives. Military
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forces support the USG lead agency, department, or organization, which is usually DOS
for overseas operations, and DHS for domestic operations.
c. JFCs and staffs integrate, synchronize, employ, and assess a wide variety of
information-related capabilities (IRCs) within and across joint functions, in concert with
other actions to influence a target audiences decision making while protecting our own.
IRCs constitute tools, techniques, or activities employed through the information
environment that can be used to create effects, accomplish tasks, or achieve specific
objectives at a specific time and place. IRCs reinforce and complement one another, and
their integration is essential to mission accomplishment. Integration and synchronization
of and across IRCs enables many aspects of joint operations. The JFC should ensure the
staff coordinates between IO, CA, public affairs (PA), and defense support to public
diplomacy (DSPD) to enable effective CCS efforts. The JFCs objectives require early
detailed IO staff planning, coordination, and deconfliction between the USG and PN efforts
within the OA and affected areas, in order to effectively synchronize and integrate IRCs to
create coordinated effects. Information is a foundational element of joint operations and
these related capabilities and activities help JFCs integrate, synchronize, and direct joint
operations. Coupled with the requirements of the current operational environment, JFCs
use information more as a joint function. For this reasons, the joint force is considering
adding information as a seventh joint function.
(5) Assign tasks, prescribe task performance standards, and designate OAs.
(8) Communicate and maintain the status of information across the staff, joint
force, and with the public as appropriate.
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Joint Functions
(10) Coordinate and control the employment of joint lethal and nonlethal
capabilities.
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(2) OPCON is inherent in COCOM and may be delegated within the command.
OPCON is command authority that may be exercised by commanders at any echelon at or
below the level of CCMD to perform those functions of command over subordinate forces.
It involves organizing and employing commands and forces, assigning tasks, designating
objectives, and giving authoritative direction necessary to accomplish the mission.
OPCON includes authoritative direction over all aspects of military operations and joint
training necessary to accomplish missions assigned to the command. This authority should
be exercised through the commanders of subordinate organizations, normally through
subordinate JFCs and Service and/or functional component commanders. OPCON
normally provides full authority to organize commands and forces and to employ those
forces as the commander exercising OPCON considers necessary to accomplish assigned
missions; it does not, in and of itself, include DAFL or matters of administration, discipline,
internal organization, or unit training.
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Discussions over the potential options for organizing the OIF operational
area led to an agreement not to request a temporary change in the UCP
modifying the AORs, but to rely on the establishment of appropriate
command relationships between the two combatant commanders (CCDRs).
Discussions over the potential command and control options led to the
decision to establish a support relationship between USCENTCOM
(supported) and USEUCOM (supporting). This relationship was
established by the Secretary of Defense. It enabled the development of
coherent and supporting campaign plans.
Various Sources
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(6) The perceived benefits of operations by joint forces do not occur naturally
just by virtue of command relationships. The integration necessary for effective joint
operations requires explicit effort; can increase operational complexity; and will require
additional training, technical and technological interoperability, liaison, and planning.
Although effectiveness is typically more important than efficiency in joint operations, the
JFC and component commanders must determine when the potential benefits of joint
integration cannot compensate for the additional complicating factors. Synergy is a means
to greater operational effectiveness, not an end in itself. The joint operations principle of
simplicity is always a key consideration.
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and develop specific instructions from general guidance. Control provides the means for
commanders to maintain freedom of action, delegate authority, direct operations from any
location, and integrate and synchronize actions throughout the OA. Ultimately, it provides
commanders a means to measure, report, and correct performance.
(1) C2 in an AO. The land and maritime force commanders are the
supported commanders within their designated AOs. Through C2, JFLCCs and
JFMCCs integrate and synchronize movement and maneuver with intelligence, fires,
protection, and sustainment and the supporting IRCs. To facilitate this integration and
synchronization, they have the authority to designate target priority, effects, and timing of
fires within their AOs.
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prioritizing the JFCs day-to-day space force enhancement requirements. The SCA gathers
operational requirements that may be satisfied by space capabilities and facilitates the use
of established processes by joint force staff to plan and conduct space operations.
Following coordination, the SCA provides the JFC a prioritized list of recommended space
requirements based on joint force objectives. To ensure prompt and timely support, the
supported CCDR and Commander, United States Strategic Command
(CDRUSSTRATCOM), may authorize direct liaison between the SCA and applicable
United States Strategic Command (USSTRATCOM) component(s). Joint force
component commands should communicate their requirements to the SCA or designated
representative to ensure all space activities are properly integrated and synchronized.
(a) ACA. The JFC is ultimately responsible for airspace control within the
OA, but normally delegates the authority to the ACA. The ACA, in conjunction with the
Service and functional components, coordinates and integrates the use of the airspace and
develops guidance, techniques, and procedures for airspace control and for units operating
within the OA. The ACA establishes an airspace control system (ACS) that is responsive
to the JFCs needs, integrates the ACS with the HN, and coordinates and deconflicts user
requirements. The airspace control plan (ACP) and airspace control order (ACO) express
how the airspace will be used to support mission accomplishment. The ACA develops the
ACP, coordinates it with other joint force component commanders, and, after JFC
approval, distributes it throughout the OA and to all supporting airspace users. The ACP
establishes guidance for the development of the ACS and distribution of the ACO. The
ACA publishes the ACO to maximize the combat effectiveness of the joint force and to
support mission accomplishment IAW JFC priorities. See JP 3-52, Joint Airspace Control,
and JP 3-30, Command and Control of Joint Air Operations, for more information.
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(5) C2 of Joint CO
(b) The CCDR will organize a staff capable of planning, synchronizing, and
controlling CO in support of their assigned mission. Each CCMD supports subordinate
JFCs through their CO supporting staff and assigned United States Cyber Command
(USCYBERCOM) cyberspace support element (CSE). Clearly established command
relationships are crucial for ensuring timely and effective employment of cyberspace
capabilities. While USCYBERCOM exercises directive authority for CO, it coordinates
all actions with the affected CCMDs through their CSEs to facilitate unity of effort and
mission accomplishment. The CCMD coordinates and deconflicts all cyberspace missions
in the AOR with other operations, including nationally tasked actions and the cyberspace
actions initiated in the CCMD. The CCMD coordinates and integrates cyberspace
capabilities in the AOR and has primary responsibility for joint CO planning, to include
determining cyberspace requirements within the joint force.
(c) Leveraging USCYBERCOM capacity, through the CSE, the CCMD will
integrate cyberspace capabilities into plans, deconflict and synchronize supporting
cyberspace fires, prepare the OE, and conduct operational assessments and readiness
functions. Additionally, in partnership with USCYBERCOM, the CCMD will coordinate
regionally with interagency and allied participants as necessary. They will integrate
cyberspace command, planning, operations, intelligence, targeting, and readiness
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processes for creating cyberspace effects with the CCDRs plans and operations through
the three CO missions: offensive CO, defensive cyberspace operations (DCO), and DODIN
operations. The CCMD may be supported by assigned or attached embedded cyberspace
forces. CCMDs will collaborate with their counterparts in the other CCMDs and with
USCYBERCOM when initiating cyberspace actions with possible effects outside their
AOR.
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For additional guidance on the communications and intelligence systems support and
JEMSO, refer to JP 2-01, Joint and National Intelligence Support to Military Operations;
JP 6-0, Joint Communications System; JP 6-01, Joint Electromagnetic Spectrum
Management Operations; JDN 3-13, Joint Electromagnetic Spectrum Operations, and JP
3-13.1, Electronic Warfare.
(1) The joint force staff is the linchpin of the C2 system, since the JFC
understands, plans, directs, and controls most aspects of operations through the staffs
expertise and efforts.
(3) Control and Coordination Measures. JFCs establish various maneuver and
movement control, airspace coordinating, and fire support coordination measures to
facilitate effective joint operations. These measures include boundaries, phase lines,
objectives, coordinating altitudes to deconflict air operations, air defense areas, OAs,
submarine operating patrol areas, no-fire areas, and others as required.
For additional guidance on C2 of air operations, refer to JP 3-30, Command and Control
of Joint Air Operations. For additional guidance on control and coordination measures,
refer to JP 3-09, Joint Fire Support, and JP 3-52, Joint Airspace Control. See Military
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Typically, the combined system will provide voice, data, and video communications.
Building the communications system to support the JFC requires knowledge of the joint
force organization, the commanders CONOPS, communications available, and how they
are employed. The ability to command, control, and communicate with globally deployed
forces is a key enabler for protection of US national interests and, as such, is also a key
target for adversaries. Thus, it is essential to consider risk and mitigation measures when
developing the plan. Key planning considerations include protecting the DODIN, which
requires cybersecurity and cyberspace defense measures to protect, detect, respond to,
restore, and react to shield and preserve information and information systems. A related
consideration is to ensure the aggregation of data within the communications systems does
not compile information that must be protected at a higher level of security than the system
provides (e.g., classified information on an unclassified system).
(d) The communications system being planned is the primary means through
which intelligence flows to the JFC and throughout the OE. Communications system
planning must be conducted in close coordination with the intelligence community to
identify specialized equipment and dissemination requirements for some types of
information.
g. CCIRs
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make decisions. At a minimum, CCIRs should be reviewed and updated throughout plan
development, refinement, and adaptation, and during each phase of order execution.
(b) FFIRs focus on information the JFC must have to assess the status of the
friendly force and supporting capabilities. All staff sections can recommend potential
FFIRs that meet the JFCs guidance. The J-5 typically consolidates FFIR nominations and
provides staff recommendation to the commander during planning prior to execution.
During execution, the joint force J-3 consolidates these nominations and provides the
recommendation for FFIRs that relate to current operations. The J-5 consolidates
nominations and recommends FFIRs related to the future plans effort. JFC-approved
FFIRs are automatically CCIRs.
h. Battle Rhythm. The HQ battle rhythm is its daily operations cycle of briefings,
meetings, and report requirements. A stable battle rhythm facilitates effective decision
making, efficient staff actions, and management of information within the HQ and with
higher, supporting, and subordinate HQ. The commander and staff should develop a battle
rhythm that minimizes meeting requirements while providing venues for command and
staff interaction internal to the joint force HQ and with subordinate commands. Joint and
component HQs battle rhythms should be synchronized to accommodate operations in
multiple time zones and the battle rhythm of higher, subordinate, and adjacent commands.
Other factors such as planning, decision making, and operating cycles (i.e., intelligence
collection, targeting, and joint air tasking cycle) influence the battle rhythm. Further,
meetings of the staff organizations must be synchronized. The chief of staff normally
manages the joint force HQs battle rhythm. When coordinating with other USG
departments and agencies, the joint force HQ should consider that those organizations often
have limited capabilities and restricted access to some information.
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Joint Functions
Making Decisions
Wisdom
Experience
Insight
Shared
Understanding
Sharing Knowledge to Art and
Create Shared Team Leadership
Understanding Learning
Knowledge
Individual
Learning
Managing
Information Information Science
and
Systems
Processing
Data
(1) IM. IM is an essential process that receives, organizes, stores, controls, and
secures an organizations wide range of data and information. It facilitates availability to
relevant users to develop understanding through knowledge sharing, while concurrently
preventing inadvertent disclosure of sensitive or proprietary information. IM is more than
an information technology process; IM involves numerous decision support tools
intimately integrated with the CCIRs. IM includes hard-copy decision support matrixes
for the chief of staff and staff officers, wall-charts with PIR and FFIR statuses, report logs,
call logs, video feeds, and information storage directives. IM is important for the
commanders battle rhythm and the development and sharing of information to increase
both individual and collective knowledge. Effective IM improves the speed and accuracy
of information flow and supports execution through reliable communications. The process
is used to manage the organizations information resources and optimize access to
information by all who need it. As the key joint force staff integrator, the chief of staff
may be responsible for managing the IM process, while the communications system
directorate of a joint staff ensures the operation and connectivity of the supporting C2
communications systems and processes. Many joint HQ will also have an IM officer and
an IM plan. HQ may also form a joint IM board to serve as a focal point for information
oversight and coordination. HQs standard operating procedures (SOPs) will normally
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For further guidance on IM, refer to JP 6-0, Joint Communications System, and JP 3-33,
Joint Task Force Headquarters.
(a) The free exchange of ideas between the commander and staff that should
typify early operational design is an activity that shares the individual knowledge of
numerous functional experts, modifies and increases their collective knowledge, and
promotes shared understanding. In a similar way, the after action sessions that a
commander conducts with subordinate commanders and staff during and following an
operation create an environment of learning in which participants share knowledge and
increase their collective understanding. Knowledge and understanding occur better
through interaction, whether in person or virtual, than through reading and assimilating
various products.
(4) Collaboration
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vulnerability that an enemy or adversary can exploit. These capabilities not only can
improve efficiency and common understanding during routine, peacetime interaction
among participants, they can also enhance combat effectiveness during time-compressed
operations associated with both combat and noncombat operations.
For additional guidance on collaboration and related capabilities, refer to JP 6-0, Joint
Communications System. For additional information on intelligence sharing, refer to JP
2-0, Joint Intelligence, and JP 2-01, Joint and National Intelligence Support to Military
Operations.
j. CCS
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Inform domestic audiences and shape the perception and attitudes of key
foreign audiences as an explicit and continuous operational requirement.
with the other instruments of national power. Commanders must address and mitigate
real or perceived differences between actions and words (the say-do gap), since this
divergence can reduce our credibility and negatively affect planned operations.
Synchronization of IRCs, PA, and other actions is essential for successful CCS.
(2) Integral to joint planning, CCDRs and subordinate JFCs should ensure their
CCS efforts support higher-level CCS plans, programs, and actions aimed at key audiences.
One approach to accomplish this is to develop a CCS LOE and related plans that provide
intent, objectives, thematic guidance, and the process to coordinate and integrate CCS-
related ways and means. This approach can ensure consistency of messages, activities, and
operations to the lowest level with supporting commands, interagency partners, and other
relevant stakeholders.
(3) The JFC and staff should include the CCS approach or LOE as part of the
commanders intent and operational approach. Plans and orders provide additional
guidance and tasks to synchronize the JFCs primary supporting capabilities and actions of
PA, IO, and DSPD. CCS products should include a narrative, themes, and messages, as
well as visual products, supporting activities, and identification of key audiences.
These products and activities help guide and regulate joint force actions when
communicating and interacting with the local populace, interorganizational participants,
and the media, and ensure joint force actions support, align with, and complement other
relevant objectives.
(b) Themes. Strategic themes are developed by the NSC staff, DOS, DOD,
and other USG departments and agencies. JFCs support strategic themes by developing
operational-level themes appropriate to their mission and authority. Themes at each level
of command should support the themes of the next higher level, while also supporting USG
strategic themes to ensure consistent communication to local and international.
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more enduring themes up and down the chain of command. The more dynamic nature and
leeway inherent in messages provide joint force communicators and planners more agility
in reaching key audiences.
For additional guidance on PA and IO support to CCS, refer to JP 3-61, Public Affairs,
and JP 3-13, Information Operations. Also see JP 5-0, Joint Planning, for information on
communication synchronization planning. For more information on CCS, see JDN 2-13,
Commanders Communication Synchronization.
k. KLE. Most operations require commanders and other leaders to engage key local
and regional leaders to affect their attitudes and gain their support. Building relationships
to the point of effective engagement and influence usually takes time. Commanders
can be challenged to identify key leaders, develop messages, establish dialogue, and
determine other ways and means of delivery, especially in societies where interpersonal
relationships are paramount. Commanders use CCS processes to manage messages,
delivery, and impacts to ensure deconfliction of messaging efforts. Interaction
opportunities with friendly and neutral leaders could include face-to-face meetings, town
meetings, and community events. Understanding cultural context, cognitive orientation
patterns, and communication methods is essential. The J-2s joint intelligence preparation
of the operational environment (JIPOE) should identify key enemy and neutral leaders, as
well as key friendly leaders who are not in the commanders sphere of influence. However,
the entire staff should identify leaders relative to their functional areas as part of JIPOE.
l. Risk Management
(1) Risk management is the process to identify, assess, and control hazards
arising from operational factors and make decisions that balance risk cost with mission
benefits. It assists organizations and individuals in making informed decisions to reduce
or offset risk, thereby increasing operational effectiveness and the probability of mission
success. The commander determines the level of risk that is acceptable with respect to
aspects of operations and should state this determination in commanders intent. The
operation assessment process provides a common method to identify and review risks
during planning and execution. Risk is one of the review deliverables of the overall
operation assessment activity. The assessment of risk to mission includes an overall risk
to mission analysis (e.g., low, moderate, significant, and high) along multiple criteria (e.g.,
authorities and permissions; policy; forces, basing, and agreements; resources; capabilities;
PN contributions; and other USG support). To assist in risk management, commanders
and their staffs may develop or institute a risk management process tailored to their mission
or OA. Figure III-3 is a generic model that contains the likely elements of a risk
management process.
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Identify Hazards
Implement Develop
Controls Controls
mindset), dictate a go/no-go decision to take a specific action, sanction or justify violating
the law, or remove the necessity for SOPs. Risk management is relevant at all levels, across
the range of military operations, and through all phases of an operation and its branches
and sequels. To alleviate or reduce risk, commanders may take a variety of actions, such
as changing the CONOPS, changing the plan for employment of fires, executing a branch
to the original plan, or employing countermeasures.
(3) Safety preserves military power. High-tempo operations may increase the
risk of injury and death due to mishaps. Command interest, discipline, risk mitigation
measures, education, and training lessen those risks. The JFC reduces the chance of mishap
by conducting risk assessments, assigning a safety officer and staff, implementing a safety
program, and seeking advice from local personnel. Safety planning factors could include
geospatial and weather data, local road conditions and driving habits, identifying uncharted
or uncleared mine fields, and special equipment hazards.
m. PA. PA are communication activities with external and internal audiences. Joint
PA plans, coordinates, and synchronizes US military public information activities and
resources to support the CCS and operational objectives through the distribution of truthful,
timely, and factual information about joint military activities. PA contributes to the
achievement of military objectives by countering incorrect information and adversary and
enemy propaganda through the dissemination of accurate information. PA also observes
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(1) The speed and methods with which people and organizations can collect and
convey information makes it probable that incidents will be quickly publicized worldwide.
Internet sites, social media, text messages, and mobile smartphones are some of the means
through which adversaries communicate. This instantaneous, unfiltered and often
incomplete, intentionally biased, or factually incorrect information provided via satellite
and the Internet makes planning and effective execution of PA essential.
For additional guidance on PA, refer to JP 3-61, Public Affairs. For additional guidance
on IO, refer to JP 3-13, Information Operations.
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intelligence collection assets; and fail to employ their combat or support units to best
advantage. As executed by JFCs, MILDEC targets enemy leaders and decision makers
through the manipulation of their intelligence collection, analysis, and dissemination
systems. MILDEC depends on intelligence to identify deception targets, assist in
developing credible stories, identify and orient on appropriate receivers (the readers of the
story), and assess the effectiveness of the deception effort. Deception requires a thorough
knowledge of the enemy and their decision-making processes. During the formulation of
the CONOPS, planners determine how the JFC wants the enemy to act at critical points in
the operation. Those desired enemy actions then become the MILDEC objective.
MILDEC is focused on causing the enemy to act in a desired manner, not simply to be
misled in their thinking.
On 6 October 1973, the Egyptian 3rd Army surprised the Israeli Defense
Force by attacking across the Suez Canal. Egyptian forces gained a
significant foothold in the Sinai and began to drive deeper until a
determined defense and counterattack drove them back.
For their part, Israeli forces were overconfident and indecisive at the
operational and strategic levels. In spite of the deception, tactical
observers reported with increasing urgency that the Egyptian buildup and
activity were significant. Their reports caused concern, but no action.
Egyptian forces exploited these vulnerabilities and timed the attack to
occur on Yom Kippur, the Jewish Day of Atonement, when they perceived
the response of Israeli forces would be reduced. The Israeli Defense Force
intelligence convinced itself that the Arabs would be unable to attack for a
number of years, and they ignored warnings intelligence.
Various Sources
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For specific planning guidance and procedures regarding language and regional
expertise, refer to CJCSI 3126.01, Language, Regional Expertise, and Culture (LREC)
Capability Identification, Planning, and Sourcing.
For additional and more detailed guidance on C2 of joint forces, refer to JP 1, Doctrine
for the Armed Forces of the United States.
3. Intelligence
b. Tailored continuous JIPOE products support JPP steps 2-7 and the four planning
functions starting with an OE baseline characterization to facilitate planning. Throughout
execution, tailored continuous JIPOE products capture the dynamic OE in support of the
assessment process to facilitate risk management and operations adjustments, and to
identify new opportunities. Because joint forces can suffer casualties due to various health
threats such as disease and combat or noncombat injuries, medical intelligence preparation
of the operational environment (MIPOE) products help decision makers devise protection
measures to mitigate these threats.
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c. People and organizations other than the enemy may positively or negatively affect
the friendly mission. These actors may include the population, HN government, and
potential opposition leaders. Other relevant actors may include international organizations,
non-state actors, and NGOs. By first identifying the relevant actors and learning as much
as possible about them and their interrelationships, the JFC can develop an approach that
will facilitate decision making and behavior (active or passive) among relevant actors that
is consistent with the desired end state of the operation. Sociocultural analysis and identity
intelligence (I2) activities enable a better understanding of the relevant actors. Individuals
may fit into more than one category of actor. For example, a tribal leader may also work
as a district governor, while also working behind the scenes to provide financial and
material support to an insurgency.
d. JIPOE
(1) JFCs use assigned and attached intelligence forces and coordinate supporting
interagency intelligence capabilities to develop a current intelligence picture and analyze
the OE. These supporting capabilities include combat support agencies (e.g., National
Security Agency, Defense Intelligence Agency, and National Geospatial-Intelligence
Agency [NGA]) and national intelligence agencies (e.g., Central Intelligence Agency).
National intelligence support may be provided to the J-2 as requested to integrate national
intelligence capabilities into a comprehensive intelligence effort designed to support the
joint force. J-2 should integrate these supporting capabilities with the efforts of the
assigned and attached intelligence forces. Liaison personnel from the various agencies
provide access to the entire range of capabilities resident in their agencies and can focus
those capabilities on the JFCs intelligence requirements.
(2) As crises emerge that potentially require military action, JFCs examine
available intelligence estimates. As part of the JIPOE process, JFCs focus intelligence
efforts to determine or confirm enemy COGs and refine estimates of enemy capabilities,
dispositions, intentions, and probable COAs within the context of the current situation.
They look for specific warning intelligence of imminent enemy activity that may require
an immediate response or an acceleration of friendly decision cycles.
e. The intelligence function encompasses the joint intelligence process. The joint
intelligence process consists of six interrelated categories of intelligence operations:
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f. Key Considerations
(1) Responsibilities. JFCs and their component commanders are the key
players in planning and conducting intelligence tasks. Commanders are more than just
consumers of intelligence. They are responsible for fully integrating intelligence into their
plans and operations. They are also responsible for distributing intelligence and
information to subordinate commands, and when appropriate, to relevant participants
through established protocols and systems. Commanders establish operational and
intelligence requirements and continuous feedback to ensure optimum intelligence support
to planning and operations. This interface supports the commander and operational
planning and execution. It also mitigates surprise, assists friendly deception efforts, and
enables joint operation assessment.
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For additional guidance on the intelligence function, refer to JP 2-0, Joint Intelligence; JP
2-01, Joint and National Intelligence Support to Military Operations; and other subordinate
JPs that address intelligence support to targeting, CI, HUMINT, geospatial intelligence
(GEOINT), and JIPOE.
4. Fires
a. To employ fires is to use available weapons and other systems to create a specific
effect on a target. Joint fires are those delivered during the employment of forces from two
or more components in coordinated action to produce desired results in support of a
common objective. Fires typically produce destructive effects, but various other ways and
means can be employed with little or no associated physical destruction. This function
encompasses the fires associated with a number of tasks, missions, and processes,
including:
(1) Conduct Joint Targeting. This is the process of selecting and prioritizing
targets and matching the appropriate response to them, taking account of command
objectives, operational requirements, and capabilities.
(2) Provide Joint Fire Support. This task includes joint fires that assist joint
forces to move, maneuver, and control territory, populations, space, cyberspace, airspace,
and key waters.
(3) Countering Air and Missile Threats. This task integrates offensive and
defensive operations and capabilities to attain and maintain a desired degree of air
superiority and force protection. These operations are planned to destroy or negate enemy
manned and unmanned aircraft and missiles, both before and after launch.
(5) Conduct Strategic Attack. This task includes offensive action against
targetswhether military, political, economic, or otherwhich are selected specifically
in order to achieve national or military strategic objectives.
(6) Employ IRCs. IRCs are tools, techniques, or activities employed within the
information environment to create effects and operationally desirable conditions. In the
context of the fires function, this task focuses on the integrated employment of IRCs in
concert with other LOOs and LOEs, to influence, disrupt, corrupt, or usurp an enemys
decision making.
(7) Assess the Results of Employing Fires. This task includes assessing the
effectiveness and performance of fires as well as their contribution to the larger operation
or objective.
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b. Key Considerations. The following are key considerations associated with the
above tasks.
(1) Targeting supports the process of linking the desired effects of fires to actions
and tasks at the component level. Commanders and their staffs must consider strategic and
operational-level objectives, the potential for friendly fire incidents and other undesired
fires effects, and operational limitations (e.g., constraints and restraints) when making
targeting decisions. Impact on all systems in the OE should be considered during this
process. Successful integration of nonlethal engagement options through cyberspace into
the targeting process is important to mission accomplishment in many operations.
(a) Oversight. JFCs may task their staff to accomplish broad targeting
oversight functions or may delegate the responsibility to a subordinate commander.
Typically, JFCs organize joint targeting coordination boards (JTCBs). If the JFC so
designates, a JTCB may be either an integrating center for this effort or a JFC-level review
mechanism. In either case, it should be composed of representatives from the staff, all
components and, if required, their subordinate units. The primary focus of the JTCB is to
ensure target priorities, guidance, and the associated desired results link to the JFCs
objectives. Briefings conducted at the JTCB should ensure that all components and
applicable staff elements coordinate and synchronize targeting efforts with intelligence and
operations.
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For additional guidance on air apportionment, refer to JP 3-30, Command and Control of
Joint Air Operations.
(2) Joint fire support includes joint fires that assist air, land, maritime,
cyberspace, and special operations forces to move, maneuver, and control territory,
populations, airspace, cyberspace, EMS, and key waters. Joint fire support may include,
but is not limited to, manned and unmanned fixed-wing, rotary-wing, and tiltrotor aircraft
capabilities; naval surface fire support; artillery, mortars, rockets, and missiles; and other
effects of some cyberspace attack, space control operations, EA, and other nonlethal
capabilities. Close air support is a critical element of joint fire support that requires detailed
planning, coordination, and training of ground and supporting air forces for safe and
effective execution. Integration and synchronization of joint fires and joint fire support
with the fire and maneuver of the supported force are essential.
For additional guidance on joint fire support, refer to JP 3-09, Joint Fire Support. For
more information on close air support, see JP 3-09.3, Close Air Support.
(a) The JFC counters air and missile threats to ensure friendly freedom of
action, provide protection, and deny enemy freedom of action. Counterair integrates
offensive and defensive operations to attain and maintain a desired degree of air superiority
and protection by neutralizing or destroying enemy aircraft and missiles, both before and
after launch. The counterair mission is inherently a joint and interdependent endeavor.
Each component of the joint force contributes capabilities necessary for mission success.
In addition, Service capability and force structure development reflect a purposeful reliance
on all components to maximize complementary and reinforcing effects while minimizing
relative vulnerabilities. Due to the joint and interdependent nature, all components of the
joint force normally are tasked to conduct operations in support of the counterair mission.
The JFC will normally designate an AADC and a JFACC to enhance unity of command
(or unity of effort), centralized planning and direction, and decentralized execution for
countering air and missile threats.
(c) Control of the Air. Control of the air is a prerequisite to success for
modern operations or campaigns because it prevents enemy air and missile threats from
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effectively interfering with operations thus facilitating freedom of action and movement.
Control of the air cannot be assumed. In the air, the degree of control can range from no
control, to parity where neither opponent can claim any level of control over the other, to
local air superiority to air supremacy over the entire OA. Control of the air may vary over
time. It is important to remember that the degree of control of the air is scalable and can
be localized geographically (horizontally and vertically) or defined in the context of an
entire theater. The desired degree of control will be at the direction of the JFC and based
on the JFCs CONOPS, and will typically be an initial priority objective of joint air
operations. Air superiority is that degree of control of the air by one force that permits the
conduct of its operations at a given time and place without prohibitive interference from
air and missile threats. Air supremacy is that degree of control of the air wherein the
opposing force is incapable of effective interference within the OA using air and missile
threats. Counterair operations usually begin early in the conduct of an operation or
campaign to produce the desired degree of control of the air at the times and places chosen
by the JFC.
(d) Integrating Air and Missile Defense. While joint combat focuses on
operations within one or more OAs, threats to joint forces can come from well outside
assigned JOAs, and even outside a GCCs AOR. In particular, an enemys ballistic and
cruise missiles and long-range aircraft can pose significant challenges that require
integration of defensive capabilities from both within and beyond a GCCs AOR. The
GCC integrates air and missile defense capabilities and activities within the theater. In
support, SecDef establishes command relationships for global missile defense, global
strike, and other cross-AOR operations. CDRUSSTRATCOM synchronizes planning for
global missile defense. The intended result is integration of OCA attack operations, DCA
operations, and other capabilities as required to create the JFCs desired effects.
Refer to JP 3-01, Countering Air and Missile Threats, for additional guidance on air
superiority and countering air and missile threats.
(4) Interdiction
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President. These activities include actions to divert, disrupt, delay, intercept, board, detain,
or destroy, as appropriate, suspect vessels, vehicles, aircraft, people, and cargo.
Counterproliferation interdiction is a proactive USG mission intended to deter, make more
costly, inhibit, disrupt, and prevent trafficking in shipments of proliferation concern. All
such DOD operations and activities shall be consistent with US domestic law and
international law, applicable DOD policy and SecDef-approved execution orders. Federal
law and DOD policy impose limitations on the types of support that the US military may
provide and what type of military mission (e.g., HD or DSCA) is being conducted.
(c) Many elements of the joint force can conduct interdiction operations.
Air, land, maritime, space, cyberspace, and special operations forces can conduct
interdiction operations as part of their larger or overall mission. For example, naval
expeditionary forces charged with seizing and securing a lodgment along a coast may
include the interdiction of opposing land and maritime forces inside the amphibious
objective area (AOA) as part of the overall amphibious plan.
(e) Counter threat finance (CTF) incorporates efforts to interdict money that
funds terrorism, illegal narcotics networks, weapons proliferation, espionage, and other
activities that generate revenue through trafficking networks. Illicit finance networks are
a critical vulnerability of state and non-state adversaries threatening US national security.
Employing CTF activities are the means to detect, counter, contain, disrupt, deter, or
dismantle these illicit financial networks. Monitoring, assessing, analyzing, and exploiting
financial information are key support functions for CTF activities.
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During Operation IRAQI FREEDOM, most of the effort against Iraqi ground
troops was focused on Republican Guard divisions and on a handful of
stalwart regular divisions that formed part of the defensive ring south of
Baghdad.
One prominent air interdiction success story involved the Iraqi Republican
Guards redeployment of elements of the Hammurabi, Nebuchadnezzar,
and Al Nida divisions after 25 March 2003 to the south of Baghdad toward
Karbala, Hillah, and Al Kut. Their road movements were steadily bombed
by US Air Force A-10s and B-52s (dropping 500-pound bombs) and British
Tornados. An Iraqi commander concluded that their movement south had
been one of the Iraqi regimes major errors because it exposed the
Republican Guard to coalition air power and resulted in large casualty
figures.
Refer to JP 3-03, Joint Interdiction, for more guidance on joint interdiction operations.
Refer to JP 3-25, Countering Threat Networks, for more information on counter threat
finance.
(a) Global strike is the capability to rapidly plan and deliver extended-range
attacks, limited in duration and scope, to create precision effects against enemy assets in
support of national and theater commander objectives. Global strike missions employ
lethal and non-lethal capabilities against a wide variety of targets.
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(8) Nonlethal Capabilities. Nonlethal capabilities can generate effects that limit
collateral damage, reduce risk to civilians, and may reduce opportunities for enemy or
adversary propaganda. They may also reduce the number of casualties associated with
excessive use of force, limit reconstruction costs, and maintain the good will of the local
populace. Some capabilities are nonlethal by design, and include, but are not limited to,
blunt impact and warning munitions, acoustic and optical warning devices, and vehicle and
vessel stopping systems.
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approval authorities for MISO during planning to ensure integration and unity of effort
between MISO, DSCA, and other IRCs.
(1) Deploy, shift, regroup, or move joint and/or component force formations
within the OA by any means or mode (i.e., air, land, or sea).
(3) Provide mobility for joint forces to facilitate their movement and maneuver
without delays caused by terrain or obstacles.
(4) Delay, channel, or stop movement and maneuver by enemy formations. This
includes operations that employ obstacles (i.e., countermobility), enforce sanctions and
embargoes, and conduct blockades.
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from the continental United States (CONUS) or other theaters to redress any unfavorable
balance of forces and to achieve decisive force at the appropriate time and place.
(2) JFCs must carefully consider the movement of forces and whether to
recommend the formation and/or movement of multinational forces. They must be aware
of A2/AD threats which may slow or disrupt the deployment of friendly forces. At times,
movement of forces can contribute to the escalation of tension, while at other times its
deterrent effect can reduce those tensions. Movement of forces may deter adversary
aggression or movement.
Refer to JP 3-35, Deployment and Redeployment Operations, for more information on the
deployment process.
(2) There are multiple ways to attain positional advantage. A naval expeditionary
force with airpower, cruise missiles, and amphibious assault capability, within operational
reach of an enemys COG, has positional advantage. In like manner, land and air
expeditionary forces that are within operational reach of an enemys COG and have the
means and opportunity to strike and maneuver on such a COG also have positional
advantage. Maintaining full-spectrum superiority contributes to positional advantage by
facilitating freedom of action. See Chapter VIII, Major Operations and Campaigns,
paragraph 5.g, Full-Spectrum Superiority.
(3) At all levels of warfare, successful maneuver requires not only fire and
movement but also agility and versatility of thought, plans, operations, and organizations.
It requires designating and then, if necessary, shifting the main effort and applying the
principles of mass and economy of force.
(a) At the strategic level, deploying units to and positioning units within an
operational area are forms of maneuver if such movements seek to gain positional
advantage. Strategic maneuver should place forces in position to begin the phases or major
operations of a campaign.
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(b) At the operational level, maneuver is a means by which JFCs set the
terms of battle by time and location, decline battle, or exploit existing situations.
Operational maneuver usually takes large forces from a base of operations to an area where
they are in position of operational reach from which to achieve operational objectives. The
enemy may use AD actions to impede friendly operations when A2 actions fail. The
objective for operational maneuver is usually a COG or decisive point.
(4) Force posture (forces, footprints, and agreements) affects operational reach
and is an essential maneuver-related consideration during theater strategy development and
adaptive planning. Force posture is the starting position from which planners determine
additional contingency basing requirements to support specific contingency plans and
crisis action responses. These requirements directly support the development of
operational LOCs and LOOs and affect the combat power and other capabilities that a joint
force can generate. In particular, the arrangement and positioning of temporary
contingency bases underwrite the ability of the joint force to project power by shielding its
components from enemy action and protecting critical factors such as sortie or resupply
rates. Incomplete planning for contingency base operations can unnecessarily increase the
sustainment requirements of the joint force, leading to unanticipated risk. Political and
diplomatic considerations can often affect basing decisions. US force basing options span
the range from permanently based forces to temporary sea basing that accelerates the
deployment and employment of maritime capabilities independent of infrastructure ashore.
(5) JFCs should consider various ways and means to help maneuver forces attain
positional advantage. Specifically, combat engineers provide mobility of the force by
breaching obstacles, while simultaneously countering the mobility of enemy forces by
emplacing obstacles, and minimizing the effects of enemy actions on friendly forces.
6. Protection
(1) The function focuses on force protection, which preserves the joint forces
fighting potential in four primary ways. One way uses active defensive measures that
protect the joint force, its information, its bases, necessary infrastructure, and LOCs from
an enemy attack. Another way uses passive defensive measures that make friendly forces,
systems, and facilities difficult to locate, strike, and destroy by reducing the probability of,
and minimizing the effects of, damage caused by hostile action without the intention of
taking the initiative. The application of technology and procedures to reduce the risk of
friendly fire incidents is equally important. Finally, emergency management and response
reduce the loss of personnel and capabilities due to isolating events, accidents, health
threats, and natural disasters.
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(2) Force protection does not include actions to defeat the enemy or protect against
accidents, weather, or disease. FHP complements force protection efforts by promoting,
improving, preserving, or restoring the mental or physical well-being of Service members.
(3) As the JFCs mission requires, the protection function also extends beyond
force protection to encompass protection of US noncombatants.
(8) Secure and protect combat and logistics forces, bases, JSAs, and LOCs.
(9) Provide physical protection and security for forces and means, to include
conducting operations to mitigate the effects of explosive hazards.
(13) Protect the DODIN using cybersecurity and cyberspace defense measures.
(15) Conduct identity collection activities. These include security screening and
vetting in support of I2.
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e. Key Considerations
(1) Security of forces and means enhances force protection by identifying and
reducing friendly vulnerability to hostile acts, influence, or surprise. Security operations
protect combat and logistics forces, bases, JSAs, and LOCs. Physical security includes
physical measures designed to safeguard personnel; to prevent unauthorized access to
equipment, installations, material, and documents; and to safeguard them against
espionage, sabotage, damage, and theft. The physical security process determines
vulnerabilities to known threats; applies appropriate deterrent, control, and denial
safeguarding techniques and measures; and responds to changing conditions. Functions in
physical security include facility security, law enforcement, guard and patrol operations,
special land and maritime security areas, and other physical security operations like
military working dog operations or emergency and disaster response support. Measures
include fencing and perimeter stand-off areas, land or maritime force patrols, lighting and
sensors, vehicle barriers, blast protection, intrusion detection systems and electronic
surveillance, and access control devices and systems. Physical security measures, like any
defense, should be overlapping and deployed in depth.
For additional guidance on physical security measures, refer to JP 3-10, Joint Security
Operations in Theater.
(2) DCA. DCA supports protection using both active and passive air and missile
defense measures.
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(a) Active air and missile defense includes all direct defensive actions taken
to destroy, nullify, or reduce the effectiveness of hostile air and missile threats against
friendly forces and assets. It includes the use of aircraft, air and missile defense weapons,
EW, and other available weapons. Ideally, integration of systems will allow for a defense
in depth, with potential for multiple engagements that increase the probability for success.
(b) Passive air and missile defense includes all measures, other than active
air and missile defense, taken to minimize the effectiveness of hostile air and missile threats
against friendly forces and assets. These measures include camouflage, concealment,
deception, dispersion, reconstitution, redundancy, detection and warning systems, and the
use of protective construction.
(3) Global Ballistic Missile Defense. Global ballistic missile defense is the
overarching characterization of cumulative planning and coordination for those defensive
capabilities designed to neutralize, destroy, or reduce effectiveness of enemy ballistic
missile attacks that cross AOR boundaries.
For additional guidance on countering theater air and missile threats, refer to JP 3-01,
Countering Air and Missile Threats.
(4) Defensive use of IRCs ensures timely, accurate, and relevant information
access while denying enemies and adversaries opportunities to exploit friendly information
and information systems for their own purposes.
For additional guidance on OPSEC, refer to CJCSI 3213.01, Joint Operations Security,
and JP 3-13.3, Operations Security.
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(5) PR. PR missions use military, diplomatic, and civil efforts to recover and
reintegrate isolated personnel. There are five PR tasks (report, locate, support, recover,
and reintegrate) necessary to achieve a complete and coordinated recovery of US military
personnel, DOD civilians, DOD contractors, and others designated by the President or
SecDef. JFCs should consider all individual, component, joint, and multinational partner
capabilities available when planning and executing PR missions.
(6) CBRN Defense. Preparation for potential enemy use of CBRN weapons is
integral to joint planning. Even when an enemy does not possess CBRN materiel or WMD,
access to materials such as radiation sources and toxic industrial materials is a significant
planning consideration. Whether a CBRN attack achieves traditional military objectives,
it will likely generate adverse strategic, operational, psychological, economic, and political
effects. CBRN defense focuses on avoiding CBRN hazards (contamination), protecting
individuals and units from CBRN hazards, and decontaminating personnel and materiel to
restore operational capability. CBRN defense may also contribute to the deterrence of
enemy WMD use through the enhancement of US forces CBRN survivability. CBRN
defense capabilities may also respond to a noncombatant incident or accidental causes such
as toxic industrial chemical incident.
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(b) The staff should develop CID procedures early during planning. These
procedures must be consistent with ROE and should not interfere with the ability of a unit
or individual to engage enemy forces. When developing the JFCs CID procedures,
important considerations include the missions, capabilities, and limitations of all
participants.
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For further guidance on countering inside threats, see JP 3-10, Joint Security Operations
in Theater. For more information on identity activities, see JDN 2-16, Identity Activities.
f. FHP complements force protection efforts, and includes all measures taken by the
JFC and the Military Health System to promote, improve, and conserve the mental and
physical well-being of Service members. These capabilities enable a healthy and fit force,
prevent injury and illness, and protect the force from health hazards. FHP measures focus
on the prevention of illness and injury. The JFC is responsible to allocate adequate
capabilities to identify health threats and implement appropriate FHP measures. Health
threats are a composite of ongoing or potential enemy actions; occupational,
environmental, geographical, and meteorological conditions; endemic diseases; and the
employment of CBRN weapons that can reduce the effectiveness of military forces.
Therefore, a robust health surveillance system is essential to FHP measures. Health
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g. Protection of Civilians. Persons who are neither part of nor associated with an
armed force or group, nor otherwise engaged in hostilities are classified as civilians and
have protected status under the law of war.
(1) It is US policy that members of the DOD components comply with the law of
war during all armed conflicts, however such conflicts are characterized, and in all other
military operations. This includes taking measures to protect civilians. In addition, the
accountability, credibility, and legitimacy of a joint operation, the success of the
overarching mission, and the achievement of US strategic objectives depends on the joint
forces ability to minimize harm to civilians in the course of their own operations and,
potentially, their ability to mitigate harm arising from the operations of other parties.
Strategic objectives often involve strengthening security, stability, and civilian well-being.
(3) Civilian casualty mitigation directly affects the success of the overall mission.
Even tactical actions can have strategic and second-order effects. Minimizing and
addressing civilian casualty incidents supports strategic imperatives and is also at the heart
of the profession of arms. Failure to minimize civilian casualties can undermine national
policy objectives and the mission of joint forces, while assisting the enemy. Additionally,
civilian casualties can incite increased opposition to joint forces. Focused attention on
civilian casualty mitigation can be an important investment to maintain legitimacy and
ensure eventual success.
7. Sustainment
III-42 JP 3-0
Joint Functions
extend operational reach. Sustainment determines the depth to which the joint force can
conduct decisive operations, allowing the JFC to seize, retain, and exploit the initiative.
The sustainment function includes tasks to:
(1) Coordinate the supply of food, operational energy (fuel and other energy
requirements), arms, munitions, and equipment.
(3) Coordinate and provide support for forces, including field services; personnel
services support; health services; mortuary affairs; religious support; postal support;
morale, welfare, and recreational support; financial support; and legal services.
III-43
Chapter III
(4) Logistic services (food, water, and ice, contingency basing, and hygiene).
For further guidance on logistic support, refer to JP 4-0, Joint Logistics. For further
guidance on personnel services, refer to JP 1-0, Joint Personnel Support. For further
guidance on legal support, refer to JP 1-04, Legal Support to Military Operations. For
further guidance on religious affairs, refer to JP 1-05, Religious Affairs in Joint
III-44 JP 3-0
Joint Functions
e. Key Considerations
(1) Employment of Logistic Forces. For some operations, logistic forces may
be employed in quantities disproportionate to their normal military roles, and in
nonstandard tasks. Further, logistic forces may precede other military forces or may be the
only forces deployed. Logistic forces may also continue to support other military personnel
and civilians after the departure of combat forces. In such cases, they must be familiar
with and adhere to applicable status-of-forces agreements and acquisition and cross-
servicing agreements to which the US is a party. Given the potential complexity of OEs,
logistic forces must be familiar with and adhere to legal, regulatory, and
diplomatic/political restraints governing US involvement because of the specialized nature
and unique authorities in operations such as disaster relief and humanitarian assistance.
Logistic forces, like all other forces, must be capable of self-defense, particularly if they
deploy alone or in advance of other military forces.
(3) Facilities. JFCs should plan for the early acquisition (leasing) of real estate
and facilities and bases when temporary occupancy is planned or the HN provides
inadequate or no property. Early acquisition of facilities can be critical to the flow of
forces. Use of automated planning tools can help forecast construction labor, materiel, and
equipment requirements in support of the JFCs contingency basing plan.
III-45
Chapter III
operations may not always be possible, careful planning should address environmental
considerations in joint operations, including legal aspects.
(5) Operational Energy. The ability of the joint force to conduct operations
depends on availability of sufficient energy, such as bulk fuel and electricity. Proper
consideration of operational energy requirements improves the joint forces ability to
maintain operational access. Furthermore, efficient management and use of operational
energy may enable greater availability of combat forces for a variety of missions.
(6) Health Services. Health services promote, improve, preserve, or restore the
behavioral or physical well-being of personnel. Health services include, but are not limited
to, the management of health services resources, such as manpower, monies, and facilities;
preventive and curative health measures; medical evacuation and patient movement of the
sick, wounded, or injured; selection of the medically fit and disposition of the medically
unfit; blood management; medical supply, equipment, and maintenance thereof; combat
and operational stress control; and medical, dental, veterinary, laboratory, optometric,
nutrition therapy, and medical intelligence services. Medical logistics, included within
health services, includes patient movement, evacuation, and hospitalization. CCDRs are
responsible for health services of forces assigned or attached to their command and should
establish health services policies and programs.
(c) Medical and rehabilitative care provides essential care in the OA and
rapid evacuation to definitive care facilities without sacrificing quality of care. It
encompasses care provided from the point of illness or injury through rehabilitative care.
III-46 JP 3-0
Joint Functions
For further guidance on health services, refer to JP 4-02, Joint Health Services. For
further guidance on procedures for deployment health activities, refer to DODI 6490.03,
Deployment Health.
(8) OCS. Logistic support requirements are often met through contracts with
commercial entities inside and outside the OA. Most joint operations will require a level
of contracted support. Certain contracted items or services could be essential to deploying,
sustaining, and redeploying joint forces effectively. OCS is the process for obtaining
supplies, services, and construction material from commercial sources in support of joint
operations. OCS is a multi-faceted joint activity executed by the GCC and subordinate
JFC's through boards, centers, working groups, and associated lead Service or joint theater
support contract related activities. OCS includes the ability to plan, orchestrate, and
synchronize the provision of contract support integration, contracting support, and
contractor management.
(10) Legal Support. Legal support is important across all joint functions. Many
decisions and actions have potential legal implications. The JFCs staff judge advocate
(SJA) provides the full spectrum of legal support during all joint operations through direct
and reachback capability. A key member of the JFCs personal staff, the SJA provides
legal advice on the laws, regulations, policies, treaties, and agreements that affect joint
operations. Legal advisors actively participate in the planning process from mission
analysis to execution, an essential function given the complexity of the OE. Legal
representatives advise on fiscal activities, international law, and many other factors that
III-47
Chapter III
can affect operations, to include identifying legal issues that affect operational limitations.
Further, the JFC should integrate HN legal personnel into the command legal staff as soon
as practical to obtain guidance on unique HN legal practices and customs.
Refer to JP 1-04, Legal Support to Military Operations, for more detailed information and
guidance on legal support.
Refer to JP 1-06, Financial Management Support in Joint Operations, for more detailed
information and guidance on financial management support.
III-48 JP 3-0
CHAPTER IV
ORGANIZING FOR JOINT OPERATIONS
Good will can make any organization work; conversely, the best organization
chart in the world is unsound if the men who have to make it work don't believe
in it.
1. Introduction
Organizing for joint operations involves many considerations. Most can be associated
in three primary groups related to organizing the joint force, organizing the joint force HQ,
and organizing OAs to help control operations. Understanding the OE helps the JFC
understand factors that may affect decisions in each of these areas.
a. General. Factors that affect joint operations extend far beyond the boundaries of
the JFCs assigned JOA. The JFCs OE is the composite of the conditions, circumstances,
and influences that affect employment of capabilities and bear on the decisions of the
commander. It encompasses physical areas of the air, land, maritime, and space domains;
the information environment (which includes cyberspace); the EMS; and other factors.
Included within these are enemy, friendly, and neutral systems that are relevant to a
specific joint operation. The nature and interaction of these systems will affect how the
commander plans, organizes for, and conducts joint operations.
(1) Physical Areas. The fundamental physical area in the OE is the JFCs
assigned OA. This term encompasses more descriptive terms for geographic areas in which
joint forces conduct military operations. OAs include, but are not limited to, such
descriptors as AOR, theater of war, theater of operations, JOA, AOA, joint special
operations area (JSOA), and AO.
(2) Physical Factors. The JFC and staff must consider many factors associated
with operations in the air, land, maritime, and space domains, and the information
environment (which includes cyberspace). These factors include terrain (including urban
settings), population, weather, topography, hydrology, EMS, and other environmental
conditions in the OA; distances associated with the deployment to the OA and employment
of joint capabilities; the location of bases, ports, and other supporting infrastructure; the
physical results of combat operations; and both friendly and enemy forces and other
capabilities. Combinations of these factors affect operations and sustainment.
IV-1
Chapter IV
(1) The information environment is where humans and systems observe, orient,
decide, and act upon information, and exists throughout the JFCs OE. The information
environment consists of three interrelated dimensionsphysical, informational, and
cognitivewithin which individuals, organizations, and systems continuously interact.
Resources in this environment include the information itself and the materials and systems
employed to process, store, display, disseminate, and protect information and produce
information-related products.
For more information on the EMS and EMS operations, see JP 3-13.1, Electronic Warfare,
and JP 6-01, Joint Electromagnetic Spectrum Management Operations.
IV-2 JP 3-0
Organizing for Joint Operations
e. A Systems Perspective
Information
Infrastructure
Social
Military
Operational
COG
Economic
Strategic
COG Political
A systems perspective facilitates operational design and joint operation planning by providing
the joint force commander (JFC) and staff with a common frame of reference for collaboration
with interorganizational and multinational partners to determine and coordinate actions that are
beyond the JFCs command authority.
Legend
COG center of gravity Decisive Point COG Node Node Link
IV-3
Chapter IV
(3) Understanding PMESII systems, their interaction with each other, and how
system relationships will change over time will increase the JFCs knowledge of how
actions within a system can affect other system components. Among other benefits, this
perspective helps intelligence analysts identify potential sources of warning intelligence,
and facilitates understanding the continuous and complex interaction of friendly,
adversary, enemy, and neutral systems. A systems understanding also facilitates
identification of operational design elements such as COGs, LOOs, and decisive points.
For example, Figure IV-1 depicts notional operational and strategic COGs (there could be
more). It shows each as a sub-system composed of related nodes and clarifies that the two
COGs are related by a common node. This helps commanders and their staffs visualize
and develop a broad approach to mission accomplishment early in the planning process,
which makes detailed planning more efficient.
a. General. How JFCs organize their assigned or attached forces affects the
responsiveness and versatility of joint operations. The JFCs mission and operational
approach, as well as the principle of unity of command and a mission command
philosophy, are guiding principles to organize the joint force for operations. Joint
forces can be established on a geographic or functional basis. JFCs may centralize
selected functions within the joint force, but should not reduce the versatility,
responsiveness, and initiative of subordinate forces. JFCs should allow Service and special
operations tactical and operational forces, organizations, and capabilities to function
generally as they were designed. All Service components contribute distinct capabilities
to joint operations that enable joint effectiveness. Joint interdependence is the purposeful
reliance by one Service on another Services capabilities to maximize the complementary
and reinforcing effects of both. The degree of interdependence varies with specific
circumstances. When JFCs organize their forces, they should also consider the degree of
interoperability among Service components, with multinational forces and other potential
participants. Complex or unclear command relationships are counterproductive to synergy
among multinational forces. Simplicity and clarity of expression are essential. Similarly,
IV-4 JP 3-0
Organizing for Joint Operations
(3) Joint Task Forces (JTFs). A JTF is a joint force constituted and designated
by SecDef, a CCDR, a subordinate unified command commander, or an existing
commander, joint task force (CJTF) to accomplish missions with specific, limited
objectives, and which do not require centralized control of logistics. However, there may
be situations where a CJTF may require directive authority for common support
capabilities delegated by the CCDR. JTFs may be established on a geographical area or
functional basis. However, JTFs can also be established based on a security challenge that
focuses on specific threats that cross AOR boundaries or multiple noncontiguous
geographic areas. The proper authority dissolves a JTF when the JTF achieves the
objectives for which it was created or is no longer required.
(4) There are several ways to form a JTF HQ. Normally, a CCMD may employ
a Service component HQ or one of the Service components existing subordinate HQ (e.g.,
Army corps, numbered air force, numbered fleet and Marine expeditionary force) as the
core of a JTF HQ and then augment that core with personnel and capabilities from the
IV-5
Chapter IV
Services comprising the JTF. Also, the theater special operations command (TSOC) or a
subordinate SOF HQ with the C2 capability can form the foundation for a JTF HQ. CCDRs
verify the readiness of assigned Service HQ staffs to establish, organize, and operate as a
JTF-capable HQ. JTF HQ basing depends on the JTF mission, OE, and available
capabilities and support. JTF HQ can be land- or sea-based, with transitions between both
basing options. JTFs are normally assigned a JOA. JTFs must be able to integrate
effectively with USG departments and agencies, multinational partners, and indigenous
and regional stakeholders. When direct participation by USG departments and agencies
other than DOD is significant, the TF establishing authority may designate it as a joint
interagency TF. This typically occurs when the other interagency partners have primacy
and legal authority and the JFC provides supporting capabilities, such as humanitarian
assistance.
(5) Forming and training the joint force HQ and task organizing the joint force
can be challenging, particularly in crisis action situations. Joint forces must quickly adjust
both operations and organization in response to planned operational transitions or
unexpected situational transitions. For example, achieving combat objectives in the
dominate phase of an operation much earlier than anticipated could signal to the JFC to
shift emphasis and organization quickly to stability actions commonly associated with the
stabilize and enable civil authority phases. Similarly, the JFCs mission will affect the
echelon at which joint capabilities are best employed. Advances in areas ranging from
communications and information sharing to munitions effectiveness make it possible to
synchronize lower echelons of command in some situations without the risks and
inefficiencies associated with fragmenting the assets themselves. JFCs should exploit such
opportunities.
For further guidance on the formation and employment of a JTF HQ to command and
control a joint operation, refer to JP 3-33, Joint Task Force Headquarters.
IV-6 JP 3-0
Organizing for Joint Operations
IV-7
Chapter IV
(c) The JFC designates forces and/or military capabilities that will be made
available for tasking by the functional component commander and the appropriate
command relationship(s). JFCs may also establish a support relationship between
components to facilitate operations. Regardless, the establishing JFC defines the authority
and responsibilities of functional component commanders based on the CONOPS, and the
JFC may alter their authority and responsibilities during the course of an operation.
(3) Combination. Joint forces often are organized with a combination of Service
and functional components. For example, joint forces organized with Service components
normally have SOF organized under a JFSOCC, while the conventional air forces will
normally have a JFACC designated, whose authorities and responsibilities are defined by
the establishing JFC based on the JFCs CONOPS.
(1) Used independently with conventional force support (since USC limits SOF
combat support and combat service support) or integrated with conventional forces, SOF
provide strategic options for national leaders and the GCCs through a global network that
fully integrates military, interagency, and international partners. SOF are most effective
when special operations are fully integrated into the overall plan, and the execution of
special operations is through proper SOF C2 elements employed intact.
a. Joint force HQ include those for unified, subordinate unified, and specified
commands and JTFs. While each HQ organizes to accommodate the nature of the JFCs
OA, mission, tasks, and preferences, all generally follow a traditional functional staff
alignment (i.e., personnel, intelligence, operations, logistics, plans, and communications)
depicted in Figure IV-2. The primary staff functional areas are also generally consistent
with those at Service component HQ, which facilitates higher, lower, and lateral cross-
command staff coordination and collaboration. Some HQ may combine functions under a
IV-8 JP 3-0
Organizing for Joint Operations
staff principal, while other HQ may add staff principals. Based on the mission and other
factors, some joint HQ may have additional primary staff organizations focused on areas
such as engineering; force structure, resource, and assessment; and CMO.
b. Figure IV-2 also shows boards, centers, working groups, and other semi-permanent
and temporary organizations. These facilitate cross-functional coordination,
synchronization, planning, and information sharing between principal staff directorates.
Although these organizations are cross-functional in their membership, they typically fall
under the oversight of a principal staff directorate or senior staff member. For example,
the joint operations center aligns under the J-3, the joint intelligence support element under
the J-2, and the joint media operations center under PA.
c. HQ also have personal and special staff sections or elements, which perform
specialized duties as prescribed by the JFC and handle special matters over which the JFC
wishes to exercise personal control. Examples include the SJA, provost marshal, and
inspector general.
For detailed guidance on the organization of a joint force HQ, refer to JP 3-33, Joint Task
Force Headquarters.
Chief of Staff
Working
Centers and Offices and Groups and
Cells Boards
Groups Elements Planning
Teams
NOTE: The commander may add additional primary J-staff directorates as required.
Legend
J-1 manpower and personnel directorate of a joint staff J-4 logistics directorate of a joint staff
J-2 intelligence directorate of a joint staff J-5 plans directorate of a joint staff
J-3 operations directorate of a joint staff J-6 communications system directorate of a joint staff
Figure IV-2. Notional Joint Force Headquarters and Cross-Functional Staff Organization
IV-9
Chapter IV
During Operation RESTORE HOPE in Somalia, the joint forces rear area
was centered around the separate sites of the embassy compound, port,
and airfield in the city of Mogadishu, while its operational area was widely
scattered around the towns and villages of the interior. The area of interest
included the rest of the country and particularly those population and relief
centers not under the joint force commanders supervision.
Various Sources
a. General. Except for AORs, which are assigned in the UCP, GCCs and other JFCs
designate smaller operational areas (e.g., JOA and AO) on a temporary basis. OAs have
physical dimensions comprised of some combination of air, land, maritime, and space
domains. While domains are useful constructs for visualizing and characterizing the
physical environment in which operations are conducted (the OA), the use of the term
domain is not meant to imply or mandate exclusivity, primacy, or C2 of any domain.
Specific authorities and responsibilities within an operational area are as specified by the
appropriate JFC. JFCs define these areas with geographical boundaries, which help
commanders and staffs coordinate, integrate, and deconflict joint operations among joint
force components and supporting commands. The size of these OAs and the types of forces
employed within them depend on the scope and nature of the mission and the projected
duration of operations.
(1) AOR. An AOR is an area established by the UCP that defines geographic
responsibilities for a GCC. A GCC has authority to plan for operations within the AOR
and conduct those operations approved by the President or SecDef. CCDRs may operate
forces wherever required to accomplish approved missions. All cross-AOR operations
must be coordinated among the affected GCCs.
IV-10 JP 3-0
Organizing for Joint Operations
AOR Theater of
War
JOA
Theater of
Operations
JSOA
This example depicts a combatant commanders AOR, also known as a theater. Within the AOR,
the combatant commander has designated a theater of war. Within the theater of war are two
theaters of operations and a JSOA. To handle a situation outside the theater of war, the combatant
commander has established a theater of operations and a JOA, within which a joint task force will
operate. JOAs could also be established within the theater of war or theaters of operations.
Legend
AOR area of responsibility JSOA joint special operations area
JOA joint operations area
protection, or mutual support. A theater of war does not normally encompass a GCCs
entire AOR, but may cross the boundaries of two or more AORs.
c. For operations somewhat limited in scope and duration, or for specialized activities,
the commander can establish the following OAs.
(1) JOA. A JOA is an area of land, sea, and airspace, defined by a GCC or
subordinate unified commander, in which a JFC (normally a CJTF) conducts military
operations to accomplish a specific mission. JOAs are particularly useful when operations
IV-11
Chapter IV
are limited in scope and geographic area or when operations are to be conducted on the
boundaries between theaters.
(2) JSOA. A JSOA is an area of land, sea, and airspace assigned by a JFC to the
commander of SOF to conduct special operations activities. It may be limited in size to
accommodate a discreet direct action mission or may be extensive enough to allow a
continuing broad range of unconventional warfare (UW) operations. A JSOA is defined
by a JFC who has geographic responsibilities. JFCs may use a JSOA to delineate and
facilitate simultaneous conventional and special operations. The JFSOCC is the supported
commander within the JSOA.
(3) JSA. A JSA is a specific surface area, designated by the JFC as critical, that
facilitates protection of joint bases and supports various aspects of joint operations such
as LOCs, force projection, movement control, sustainment, C2, airbases/airfields,
seaports, and other activities. JSAs are not necessarily contiguous with areas actively
engaged in combat (see Figure IV-4). JSAs may include intermediate support bases and
JSOA
ARFOR
AO
MARFOR
AO ARFOR MARFOR
AO AO
JSA
JSA
Contiguous Noncontiguous
Adjacent, subordinate commands operational Subordinate commands are assigned operational
areas share boundaries. In this case, the higher areas that do not share boundaries. The higher
headquarters has assigned all of its operational headquarters retains responsibility for the portion
area to subordinate commands. of its operational area not assigned to subordinate
commands.
Legend
AO area of operations JSOA joint special operations area
ARFOR Army forces MARFOR Marine Corps forces
JSA joint security area
IV-12 JP 3-0
Organizing for Joint Operations
other support facilities intermixed with combat elements. JSAs may be used in both linear
and nonlinear situations.
For additional guidance on JSAs, refer to JP 3-10, Joint Security Operations in Theater.
(4) AOA. The AOA is a geographic area within which is located the objective(s)
to be secured by the amphibious force. This area must be of sufficient size to ensure
accomplishment of the amphibious forces mission and must provide sufficient area for
conducting necessary sea, air, and land operations.
(5) AO. JFCs may define AOs for land and maritime forces. AOs do not
typically encompass the entire OA of the JFC, but should be large enough for component
commanders to accomplish their missions (to include a designated amount of airspace) and
protect their forces. Component commanders with AOs typically designate subordinate
AOs within which their subordinate forces operate. These commanders employ the full
range of joint and Service control measures and graphics as coordinated with other
component commanders and their representatives to delineate responsibilities, deconflict
operations, and achieve unity of effort.
(1) OAs may be contiguous or noncontiguous (Figure IV-4). When they are
contiguous, a boundary separates them. When OAs are noncontiguous, subordinate
commands do not share a boundary. The higher HQ retains responsibility for the
unassigned portion of its OA.
Refer to JP 3-33, Joint Task Force Headquarters, for specific guidance on assuming
responsibility for an OA.
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Intentionally Blank
IV-14 JP 3-0
CHAPTER V
JOINT OPERATIONS ACROSS THE CONFLICT CONTINUUM
I am confident that our Nation has the most professional and capable military in
the world. Our Joint Forces have proven effective and resilient throughout years
of combat, kept the homeland safe, and advanced our national interests across
the globe.
General Joseph F. Dunford, Jr., 19th Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Joint
Force Quarterly 80
1. Introduction
a. Threats to US and allied interests throughout the world can sometimes only be
countered by US forces able to respond to a wide variety of challenges along a conflict
continuum that spans from peace to war. Our national interests and the nature of crises
that can occur along this continuum require our nations armed forces to be proficient in a
wide variety of activities, tasks, missions, and operations that vary in purpose, scale, risk,
and combat intensity.
V-1
Chapter V
biometric capabilities helps military and law enforcement personnel identify terrorists and
piece together their human networks as part of combating terrorism.
b. Military operations are often categorized by their focus, as shown in Figure V-1.
In some cases, the title covers a variety of missions, tasks, and activities. Many activities
accomplished by single Services, such as tasks associated with security cooperation, do not
constitute a joint operation. Nonetheless, most of these occur under a joint umbrella,
because they contribute to achievement of CCDRs TCP objectives. Following are brief
summaries of examples of military operations and activities.
V-2 JP 3-0
Joint Operations Across the Conflict Continuum
(4) Recovery. Recovery is operations to search for, locate, identify, recover, and
return isolated personnel, human remains, sensitive equipment, or items critical to national
security. See JP 3-50, Personnel Recovery.
(6) Peace Operations (PO). PO are operations to contain conflict, redress the
peace, and shape the environment to support reconciliation and rebuilding and facilitate the
transition to legitimate governance. PO include peacekeeping operations (PKO), peace
enforcement operations (PEO), peacemaking (PM), peace building (PB), and conflict
prevention efforts. See JP 3-07.3, Peace Operations.
(8) CBRN Response. CBRN response is DOD support to USG actions that plan
for, prepare for, respond to, and recover from the effects of domestic and foreign CBRN
incidents. See JP 3-41, Chemical, Biological, Radiological, and Nuclear Response.
V-3
Chapter V
c. The complex nature of the strategic environment may require US forces to conduct
different types of joint operations and activities simultaneously across the conflict
continuum. Although this publication discusses specific types of operations and activities
under the various categories in the range of military operations, each type is not doctrinally
Range of
Crisis Response and Limited Contingency Operations Military
Operations
Our national leaders can use the military instrument of national power across the conflict
continuum in a wide variety of operations and activities that are commonly characterized in
three groups as this figure depicts.
V-4 JP 3-0
Joint Operations Across the Conflict Continuum
fixed and could shift within that range. For instance, security cooperation activities may
be satisfying internal security requirements of a PN, but the emergence of a violent internal
security threat that overwhelms PN security forces could require the USG to commit to
FID or COIN operations in that PN, while security cooperation activities continue.
(3) Large-Scale Combat Operations. The nature and scope of some missions
may require joint forces to conduct large-scale combat operations to achieve national
strategic objectives or protect national interests. Such combat typically occurs within the
framework of a major operation or campaign. A major operation is series of tactical actions
(battles, engagements, strikes) conducted by combat forces of a single or several Services,
coordinated in time and place, to achieve strategic or operational objectives in an OA. The
term can also refer to a noncombat operations of significant size and scope. A campaign
is a series of related major operations aimed at achieving strategic and operational
objectives within a given time and space. Usually associated with large-scale combat, a
campaign also can comprise predominately limited combat and noncombat operations of
extended duration to achieve theater and national strategic objectives. See Chapter VIII,
Major Operations and Campaigns.
V-5
Chapter V
b. The CCDRs theater campaign is the overarching framework that ensures all
activities and operations within the theater are synchronized to achieve theater and national
strategic objectives. A TCP operationalizes the GCCs strategy and approach to achieve
these objectives within two to five years by organizing and aligning available resources.
TCPs also support the campaign objectives of other CCDRs responsible for synchronizing
collaborative DOD planning. As Figure V-3 shows, TCPs encompass all ongoing and
planned operations across the range of military operations, continuously adjusted in
response to changes in the OE. The TCPs long-term and persistent and preventative
activities are intended to identify and deter, counter, or otherwise mitigate an adversarys
actions before escalation to combat. Many of these activities are conducted with DOD in
support of the diplomatic, economic, and informational efforts of USG partners and PNs.
The CCDR adjusts these activities as required for the occasional execution of a contingency
plan or response to a crisis.
For more information on theater campaign plans, see JP 5-0, Joint Planning.
c. The TCP also provides context for ongoing crisis response and contingency
operations to facilitate execution of contingency plans as branch plans to the TCP. These
are plans to respond to potential crises such as natural or man-made disasters and military
Counterterrorism OPLAN/
OPORD
Stability Actions
Peacekeeping
Time
The geographic combatant commanders theater campaign encompasses and provides context for all planned
and ongoing theater activities, crisis response requirements, and combat operations. The goal is to preclude the
necessity for a combat solution to problems, while maintaining an acceptable level of stability.
Legend
OPLAN operation plan OPORD operation order
V-6 JP 3-0
Joint Operations Across the Conflict Continuum
aggression by foreign powers. Also linked to the GCCs TCP and subordinate campaign
plans are designated DOD global campaign plans that address integrated execution of
global security priorities.
f. Some military operations may be conducted for one purpose. For example,
FHA is focused on a humanitarian purpose (e.g., Operation TOMODACHI, an assistance
operation to support Japan in disaster relief following the 2011 Tohoku earthquake and
tsunami). A strike may be conducted for the specific purpose of compelling or deterring
an action (e.g., Operation EL DORADO CANYON, the 1986 operation to coerce Libya to
conform with international laws against terrorism). Often, however, military operations
will have multiple purposes (based on strategic and operational-level objectives) and will
be influenced by a fluid and changing situation. Branch and sequel events may produce
additional tasks for the force, challenging the command with multiple missions (e.g.,
Operations PROVIDE COMFORT in Iraq and RESTORE HOPE in Somalia were PEO
that evolved from FHA efforts). Joint forces must strive to meet such challenges with
clearly defined objectives addressing diverse purposes.
V-7
Chapter V
characterize specific types of operations such as large-scale combat, FHA, and COIN. For
example, Figure V-4 shows six general groups of military activities that may typically
occur in preparation for and during a single large-scale joint combat operation.
b. The nature of operations and activities during a typical joint combat operation will
change from its beginning (when the CJCS issues the execute order) to the operations end
(when the joint force disbands and components return to a pre-operation status). Shaping
activities usually precede the operation and may continue during and after the operation.
The purpose of shaping activities is to help set the conditions for successful execution of
the operation. Figure V-4 shows that from deter through enable civil authority, the
operations and activities in these groups vary in magnitudetime, intensity, forces, etc.
as the operation progresses (the relative magnitudes in the figure are notional). At various
points in time, each specific group might characterize the main effort of the joint force.
Enable
Activities
Dominate
Level of Military Effort
Stabilize
Activities Activities
Develop Revise,
and Maintain,
Maintain or Cancel
Operation Operation
Plan Plan
XXXX XXXX
Deter Activities
Operation Shaping Activities
Theater Shaping Activities
The model depicts six general groups of military activities that typically comprise a single joint
combat operation. The model applies to a large-scale combat operation as well as to a combat
operation relatively limited in scope and duration. It shows that emphasis on activity types shifts as
an operation progresses.
Operation shaping activities may begin during plan development to help set conditions for
successful execution. They may continue after the operation ends if the command continues to
maintain an operation plan.
Theater and global shaping activities occur continuously to support theater and global requirements.
Specific theater and global shaping activities may support a specific joint operation plan during its
execution.
V-8 JP 3-0
Joint Operations Across the Conflict Continuum
For example, dominate activities would characterize the main effort after the joint force
seizes the initiative until the enemy no longer is able to effectively resist. Even so,
activities in the other groups would usually occur concurrently at some level of effort. The
following paragraphs provide more information on the nature of these activities.
(1) Shape
(a) In general, shaping activities help set conditions for successful theater
operations. Shaping activities include long-term persistent and preventive military
engagement, security cooperation, and deterrence actions to assure friends, build partner
capacity and capability, and promote regional stability. They help identify, deter, counter,
and/or mitigate competitor and adversary actions that challenge country and regional
stability. A GCCs TCP provides these and other activities tasked by SecDef/CJCS
strategic guidance in pursuit of national objectives. Likewise, CCDRs may direct more
focused geographic and functional shaping activities at the potential execution of specific
contingency plans for various types of operations. In the best case, shaping activities may
avert or diminish conflict. At the least, shaping provides a deeper, and common,
understanding of the OE. Preparatory intelligence activities inform operation assessment,
planning, and execution to improve the JFCs understanding of the OE.
V-9
Chapter V
(3) Seize Initiative. JFCs seek to seize the initiative in all situations through
decisive use of joint force capabilities. In combat, this involves both defensive and
offensive operations at the earliest possible time, forcing the enemy to culminate
offensively and setting the conditions for decisive operations. Rapid application of joint
combat power may be required to delay, impede, or halt the enemys initial aggression and
to deny the enemy its initial objectives. Operations to gain access to theater infrastructure
and expand friendly freedom of action continue during this phase, while the JFC seeks to
degrade enemy capabilities with the intent of resolving the crisis at the earliest opportunity.
(4) Dominate. These actions focus on breaking the enemys will to resist or, in
noncombat situations, to control the OE. Successful domination depends on overmatching
enemy capabilities at critical times and places. Joint force options include attacking
weaknesses at the leading edge of the enemys defensive perimeter to roll enemy forces
back, and striking in depth to threaten the integrity of the enemys A2/AD, offensive
weapons and force projection capabilities, and defensive systems. Operations can range
from large-scale combat to various stability actions depending on the nature of the enemy.
Dominating activities may establish the conditions to achieve strategic objectives early or
may set the conditions for transition to a subsequent phase of the operation.
(5) Stabilize. These actions and activities are typically characterized by a shift
in focus from sustained combat operations to stability activities. These operations help
reestablish a safe and secure environment and provide essential government services,
emergency infrastructure reconstruction, and humanitarian relief. The intent is to help
restore local political, economic, and infrastructure stability. Civilian officials may lead
operations during part or all of this period, but the JFC typically will provide significant
supporting capabilities and activities. The joint force may be required to perform limited
local governance (i.e., military government), and integrate the efforts of other supporting
interagency and multinational partners until legitimate local entities are functioning. The
JFC continuously assesses the impact of operations on the ability to transfer authority for
remaining requirements to a legitimate civil entity.
(6) Enable Civil Authority. Joint force support to legitimate civil governance
typically characterizes these actions and activities. The commander provides this support
by agreement with the appropriate civil authority. In some cases, especially for operations
within the US, the commander provides this support under direction of the civil authority.
The purpose is to help the civil authority regain its ability to govern and administer to the
services and other needs of the population. The military end state typically is reached
during this phase, signaling the end of the joint operation. CCMD involvement with other
nations and other government agencies beyond the termination of the joint operation, such
as lower-level stability activities and FHA, may be required to achieve national objectives.
V-10 JP 3-0
Joint Operations Across the Conflict Continuum
c. Some joint operations below the level of large-scale combat will have
distinguishable groups of activity. However, activities may be compressed or absent
entirely according to the nature of the operation. For example, deployment of forces
associated with seize the initiative activities may have a deterrent effect sufficient to
dissuade an enemy from conducting further operations, returning the OE to a more stable
state. Likewise, although FID and NEO may occur as supporting operations to larger
combat operations in the OA, they will have no evident dominating activities. Figure V-5
shows a notional successful joint strike, which did not require follow-on operations. Figure
V-6 shows a notional FHA operation that required predominantly stabilize and enable civil
authority activities.
Dominate
Deter Activities
This is a notional example of the balance of military activities in a successful operation to coerce
the enemy to stop unacceptable behavior (e.g., state-sponsored terrorism, pursuit of nuclear
weapons). In this example, the President ordered strikes (seize the initiative activities). The
President prepared to order follow-on operations to compel enforcement when military-enforced
economic and other sanctions (deter activities) failed.
Examples include Operations EL DORADO CANYON (Libya, Apr1986) and DESERT THUNDER
(Iraq, Dec 1998)
V-11
Chapter V
Enable Activities
Do
mi
Seize na
te
Initiative Stabilize Activities
Activities
Deter Activities
This is a notional example of the balance of military activities by a joint task force (JTF) responding
to one type of crisis (foreign humanitarian assistance). There is no pre-existing operation plan in
this example. Therefore, there are no planned pre-crisis shaping activities except for theater
shaping that may generally support unplanned crisis response. Dominate activities might not occur
depending on the extent of criminal activity and lawlessness and the host nation governments ability
to control it. Theater shaping activities that support stabilization and enable civil authorities in the
affected area may increase after the operation ends and the JTF disbands.
a. The six general groups of activity in Figure V-4 provide a convenient basis for
thinking about a joint operation in notional phases, as Figure V-7 depicts. A phase is a
definitive stage or period during a joint operation in which a large portion of the forces and
capabilities are involved in similar or mutually supporting activities for a common purpose
that often is represented by intermediate objectives. Phasing, which can be used in any
operation regardless of size, helps the JFC organize large operations by integrating and
synchronizing subordinate operations. Phasing helps JFCs and staffs visualize, plan,
and execute the entire operation and define requirements in terms of forces,
resources, time, space, and purpose. It helps them systematically achieve military
objectives that cannot be attained all at once by arranging smaller, focused, related
V-12 JP 3-0
Joint Operations Across the Conflict Continuum
operations in a logical sequence. Phasing also helps commanders mitigate risk in the more
dangerous or difficult portions of an operation.
b. Figure V-7 shows one phasing alternative. Actual phases of an operation will vary
(e.g., compressed, expanded, or omitted entirely) according to the nature of the operation
and the JFCs decisions. For example, UW operations normally use a seven-phase model.
During planning, the JFC establishes conditions, objectives, and events for transitioning
from one phase to another and plans sequels and branches for potential contingencies.
Phases may be conducted sequentially, but some activities from a phase may begin in a
previous phase and continue into subsequent phases. The JFC adjusts the phases to exploit
opportunities presented by the enemy and operational situation or to react to unforeseen
conditions.
Enable
Stabilize Activities
Activities
Deter Activities
Operation Shaping Activities
Theater Shaping Activities
The six general groups of activities provide a basis for thinking about a joint operation in notional
phases.
Phasing can be used in any joint operation regardless of size.
Phasing helps joint force commanders and staffs visualize, plan, and execute the entire operation
and define requirements in terms of forces, resources, time, space, and purpose to achieve
objectives.
V-13
Chapter V
c. A GCCs theater campaign encompasses all operations and activities for which the
GCC is responsible, from relatively benign security cooperation activities through ongoing
large-scale combat operations. All six groups of joint operation activities may be present
in the GCCs AOR. However, use of the groups of activities for the purpose of phasing
applies only to planning and executing individual operations, whether small-scale
contingencies or large-scale campaigns that support the GCCs theater campaign. The
groups of military activities associated with phases in Figure V-7 can serve as a frame of
reference that facilitates common understanding among interagency and multinational
partners and supporting commanders of how a JFC intends to execute a specific joint
operation as well as progress during execution.
The use of groups of activities for the purpose of phasing applies only
to planning and executing individual joint operations, not to a GCCs
theater campaign or strategy development.
d. Transitions
(1) During execution, a transition marks a change between phases or between the
ongoing operations and execution of a branch or sequel. This shift in focus by the joint
force often is accompanied by changes in command or support relationships and priorities
of effort. Transitions require planning and preparation well before their execution. The
activities that predominate during a given phase rarely align with neatly definable
breakpoints. The need to move into another phase normally is identified by assessing that
a set of objectives has been achieved or that the enemy has acted in a manner that requires
a major change for the joint force. Thus, the transition to a new phase is usually driven by
events rather than time. An example is the shift from sustained combat operations in the
dominate phase to stability activities in the stabilize and enable civil authority phases.
Through continuous assessment, the staff measures progress toward planned transitions so
that the force prepares for and executes them.
Plan for and manage operational transitions over time and space.
(2) Sometimes, however, the situation facing the JFC will change unexpectedly
and without apparent correlation to a planned transition. The JFC may choose to shift
operations to address unanticipated critical changes. The JFC must recognize fundamental
changes in the situation and respond quickly and smoothly. Failure to do so can cause the
joint force to lose momentum, miss important opportunities, experience setbacks, or even
fail to accomplish the mission. Conversely, successful transitions enable the joint force to
seize the initiative and quickly and efficiently garner favorable results. The JFC should
anticipate transformations, as well as plan shifts, during operations.
Refer to JP 5-0, Joint Planning, for more information on phasing. Refer to JP 3-05.1,
Unconventional Warfare, for additional information on phasing UW operations. Refer to
V-14 JP 3-0
Joint Operations Across the Conflict Continuum
a. Combat missions and tasks can vary widely depending on context of the operation
and the objective. Most combat operations will require the commander to balance
offensive, defensive, and stability activities. This is particularly evident in a campaign or
major operation, where combat can occur during several phases and stability activities may
occur throughout. Figure V-8 depicts notional proportions of offensive, defensive, and
stability activities through the phases of a joint operation.
Deter
Offense
Stability
Defense
Seize Initiative
Offense
Stability Defense
Dominate
Offense
Stability Defense
Stabilize
Stability Offense
Defense
NOTES:
The figure reflects a single operation.
Stability activities are conducted outside the United States. Department of Defense provides similar
support to US civil authorities for homeland defense and other operations in the US through defense
support of civil authorities operations.
V-15
Chapter V
components (e.g., interdiction, maneuver, forcible entry, fire support, countering air and
missile threats, DCO, base defense). Although defense may be the stronger form, offense
is normally decisive in combat. To achieve military objectives quickly and efficiently,
JFCs normally seek the earliest opportunity to conduct decisive offensive operations.
Nevertheless, during a sustained offensive, selected elements of the joint force may need
to pause, defend, resupply, or reconstitute, while other forces continue the attack.
Accordingly, certain defensive measures and protection activities (e.g., OPSEC) are
required throughout each joint operation phase. Joint forces at all levels should be capable
of rapid transition between offense and defense and vice versa. The relationship between
offense and defense, then, is a complementary one. Defensive operations enable JFCs to
conduct or prepare for decisive offensive operations.
(2) Figure V-8 relates to Figure V-7 and the phasing explanation in paragraph 6,
Phasing a Joint Operation. Figure V-8 illustrates the notional balance between offensive
and defensive actions and stability activities as an operation progresses. Since the focus of
the CCMDs ongoing theater campaign is on prevention and preparation, any stability
activities in the JFCs proposed operational area might continue, and combat (offense and
V-16 JP 3-0
Joint Operations Across the Conflict Continuum
(3) Planning for the transition from sustained combat operations to assumption
of responsibility by civil authority, should begin during plan development and continue
during all phases of a joint operation. Planning for redeployment should be considered
early and continue throughout the operation and is best accomplished in the same time-
phased process in which deployment was accomplished. An unnecessarily narrow focus
on planning offensive and defensive operations in the dominate phase may threaten full
development of the stabilize and enable civil authority phases and negatively affect joint
operation momentum. Even during sustained combat operations the joint force should
establish or restore security and control and provide humanitarian relief as areas are
occupied, bypassed, or returned to civilian control. Planning for humanitarian assistance
should be coordinated through the security cooperation organization and the USAID if it
has mission presence, and also shared with the senior development advisor to the CCDR
in order to avoid duplication of effort in the HN.
a. In linear operations, each commander directs and sustains combat power toward
enemy forces in concert with adjacent units. Linearity refers primarily to the conduct of
operations with identified forward lines of own troops (FLOTs). In linear operations,
emphasis is placed on maintaining the position of friendly forces in relation to other
friendly forces. From this relative positioning of forces, security is enhanced and massing
of forces can be facilitated. Also inherent in linear operations is the security of rear areas,
especially LOCs between sustaining bases and fighting forces. Protected LOCs, in turn,
increase the endurance of joint forces and ensure freedom of action for extended periods.
A linear OA organization may be best for some operations or certain phases of an operation.
Conditions that favor linear operations include those where US forces lack the information
needed to conduct nonlinear operations or are severely outnumbered. Linear operations
also are appropriate against a deeply arrayed, echeloned enemy force or when the threat to
LOCs reduces friendly force freedom of action. In these circumstances, linear operations
allow commanders to concentrate and synchronize combat power more easily. World Wars
I and II offer multiple examples of linear operations.
V-17
Chapter V
functions may depend on sustainment assets moving with forces or aerial delivery.
Noncombatants and the fluidity of nonlinear operations require careful judgment in
clearing fires, both direct and indirect. Situational awareness, coupled with precision fires,
frees commanders to act against multiple objectives. Swift maneuver against several
decisive points supported by precise, concentrated fire can induce paralysis and shock
among enemy troops and commanders. Nonlinear operations were applied during
Operation JUST CAUSE. The joint forces oriented more on their assigned objectives (e.g.,
destroying an enemy force or seizing and controlling critical terrain or population centers)
and less on their geographic relationship to other friendly forces. To protect themselves,
individual forces relied more on situational awareness, mobility advantages, and freedom
of action than on mass. Nonlinear operations place a premium on the communications,
intelligence, mobility, and innovative means for sustainment.
(1) During nonlinear offensive operations, attacking forces must focus offensive
actions against decisive points, while allocating the minimum essential combat power to
defensive operations. Reserves must have a high degree of mobility to respond where
needed. JFCs may be required to dedicate combat forces to provide for LOC and base
defense. Vulnerability increases as operations extend and attacking forces are exposed
over a larger OA. Linkup operations, particularly those involving vertical envelopments,
require extensive planning and preparation. The potential for friendly fire incidents
increases due to the fluid nature of the nonlinear OA and the changing disposition of
attacking and defending forces. The presence of civilians in the OA further complicates
operations.
V-18 JP 3-0
Joint Operations Across the Conflict Continuum
II Rear
X
XX X XX Area
X XX
XX
X Forward Edge X
Forward Edge
of the Battle X of the Battle X
Area X
Area
XX
X X II
Rear
X
Area
XX
XXX
XXX
X X
XXX
XX
XX X
XX X
XXX XXX
V-19
Chapter V
V-20 JP 3-0
CHAPTER VI
MILITARY ENGAGEMENT, SECURITY COOPERATION, AND
DETERRENCE
Building security globally not only assures Allies and partners and builds their
capacity but also helps protect the homeland by deterring conflict and increasing
stability.
1. Introduction
VI-1
Chapter VI
Continuum, has limited application with respect to phasing these activities for normal
cooperative and competitive environments. Figure VI-1 shows a notional depiction of
activities in an environment of cooperation and competition. DOD forces, as part of larger
whole-of-government efforts, conduct operations with partners to prevent, deter, or turn
back escalatory activity by adversaries.
Diplomacy Joint
Operation
Effort Diplomatic efforts (shaded area) increase
Resources during times of increased tension. Increasingly,
Intensity legal actions, economic sanctions, and other
Risk
or
deterrent options may be used to reduce nsion
ing Te
tension and return to an environment of Increas
peaceful cooperation and beneficial
competition.
Return to
The Goal: Prevent Conflict Diplomacy
VI-2 JP 3-0
Military Engagement, Security Cooperation, and Deterrence
(3) Despite the efforts to prevent or mitigate conflict, an armed conflict may
occur. As conditions and objectives become more defined, GCCs may transition to the
notional phasing construct for execution of a specific contingency operation as Figure VI-
1 depicts. However, time spent to the left allows DOD to develop a deeper understanding
of the environment to see and act ahead of conflict flashpoints, develop options, and
maximize the efficiency of resources.
e. Security Cooperation
(1) Security cooperation involves all DOD interactions with foreign defense
establishments to build defense relationships that promote specific US security interests,
develop allied and friendly military capabilities for self-defense and multinational
operations, and provide US forces with peacetime and contingency access to the HN. The
policy on which security cooperation is based resides in Presidential Policy Directive-23,
Security Sector Assistance. This directive refers to the policies, programs, and activities
the US uses to work with foreign partners and help shape their policies and actions in the
security sector; help foreign partners build and sustain the capacity and effectiveness of
legitimate institutions to provide security, safety, and justice for their people; and, enable
foreign partners to contribute to efforts that address common security challenges.
(2) Security cooperation is a key element of global and theater shaping activities
and critical aspect of communication synchronization. GCCs shape their AORs through
security cooperation and stability activities by continually employing military forces to
complement and support other instruments of national power that typically provide
development assistance or humanitarian assistance to PNs. The GCCs TCP provides a
framework within which CCMDs conduct cooperative security cooperation activities and
development with PNs. Ideally, security cooperation activities mitigate the causes of a
potential crisis before a situation deteriorates and requires US military intervention.
Security assistance and security force assistance (SFA) normally provide some of the
means for security cooperation activities.
VI-3
Chapter VI
f. Deterrence
VI-4 JP 3-0
Military Engagement, Security Cooperation, and Deterrence
(1) Arms control agreements refer to the written or unwritten embodiment of the
acceptance of one or more arms control measure by two or more nations. Arms control
refers to mutually agreed upon and verifiable restraints between states on the research,
manufacture, or levels of, and/or locations of, deployment of troops and weapon systems.
VI-5
Chapter VI
Arms control may be used by states to restrain military modernization of another party to
the agreement, to entitle a party to achieve at least military parity with another party, to
free up hard currency for other priorities, to redirect military modernization efforts so as to
take advantage of technological advances in new weapon system areas, to facilitate sources
and methods of intelligence gathering, or to enable states to negate first strike capabilities.
VI-6 JP 3-0
Military Engagement, Security Cooperation, and Deterrence
Various Sources
include all instruments of national power to undermine enemy power, will, credibility, and
legitimacy, thereby diminishing its ability to influence the relevant population.
e. Support to CD Operations. DOD supports federal, state, and local LEAs in their
effort to disrupt the transport and/or transfer of illegal drugs into the US. Specific
DOD authorities that pertain to a CD are contained in Title 10, USC, Sections 124 and 371-
382. Discussion of similar authorities is discussed in DODI 3025.21, Defense Support of
Civilian Law Enforcement Agencies.
VI-7
Chapter VI
The Berlin air corridors, established between 1948 and 1990, which allowed
air access to West Berlin, were set up to maintain international airspace to
an air-locked geographical area. When Soviet forces disrupted ground
passage to Berlin, the US asserted its rights to utilize these air corridors
during the Berlin airlift. The ATTAIN DOCUMENT series of operations
against Libya in 1986 were freedom of navigation operations, both air and
sea, in the Gulf of Sidra, a recognized international body of water over
which Libya illegally claimed sovereignty.
Various Sources
(1) International law has long recognized that a coastal state may exercise
jurisdiction and control within its territorial sea in the same manner that it can exercise
sovereignty over its own land territory. International law accords the right of innocent
passage to ships of other nations through a states territorial waters. Passage is innocent
as long as it is not prejudicial to the peace, good order, or security of the coastal state. The
high seas are free for reasonable use of all states.
VI-8 JP 3-0
Military Engagement, Security Cooperation, and Deterrence
k. SFA. SFA is DODs contribution to unified action by the USG to support the
development of the capacity and capability of foreign security forces (FSF) and their
supporting institutions, to achieve objectives shared by the USG. SFA is conducted with
and through FSF. The US military conducts activities to enhance the capabilities and
capacities of a PN (or regional security organization) by providing training, equipment,
advice, and assistance to those FSF organized in national ministry of defense (or equivalent
regional military or paramilitary forces). Other USG departments and agencies focus
forces assigned to other ministries (or their equivalents) such as interior, justice, or
intelligence services.
For further information about security cooperation, security assistance, and SFA, refer to
JP 3-20, Security Cooperation.
VI-9
Chapter VI
For further guidance on FID, refer to JP 3-22, Foreign Internal Defense. For further
guidance on SOF involvement in FID, refer to JP 3-05, Special Operations.
m. Humanitarian assistance programs are governed by Title 10, USC, Section 401.
This assistance may be provided in conjunction with military operations and exercises, but
must fulfill unit training requirements that incidentally create humanitarian benefit to the
local populace. In contrast to emergency relief conducted under FHA operations,
humanitarian and civic assistance programs generally encompass planned activities in the
following categories:
(1) Medical, dental, and veterinary care provided in rural or underserved areas
of a country.
(1) The US deploys forces abroad to lend credibility to its promises and
commitments, increase its regional influence, and demonstrate its resolve to use
VI-10 JP 3-0
Military Engagement, Security Cooperation, and Deterrence
Various Sources
military force if necessary. In addition, SecDef orders a show of force to bolster and
reassure friends and allies. Show of force operations are military in nature but often serve
both diplomatic and military purposes. These operations may influence other governments
or politico-military organizations to refrain from belligerent acts.
p. Support to Insurgency
(2) The US may support insurgencies that oppose oppressive regimes. The US
coordinates this support with its friends and allies. US military support is typically through
UW, which includes activities to enable a resistance movement or insurgency to coerce,
disrupt, or overthrow a government or occupying power by operating with an underground,
auxiliary, and guerrilla force in a denied area. Special forces are well-suited to conduct
UW and provide this support. Conventional forces have functional specialties they may
contribute to the mission. US forces may provide logistic and training support, as they did
for the Mujahidin resistance in Afghanistan during the Soviet occupation in the 1980s. In
certain circumstances, the US can provide direct combat support, such as support to the
French Resistance in World War II, the Afghanistan Northern Alliance to remove the
Taliban in 2001-2002, and for NATOs liberation of Kosovo in 1999.
VI-11
Chapter VI
3. Other Considerations
VI-12 JP 3-0
Military Engagement, Security Cooperation, and Deterrence
VI-13
Chapter VI
Intentionally Blank
VI-14 JP 3-0
CHAPTER VII
CRISIS RESPONSE AND LIMITED CONTINGENCY OPERATIONS
1. Introduction
Crisis response and limited contingency operations typically are focused in scope and
scale and conducted to achieve a very specific strategic or operational-level objective in an
OA. They may be conducted as a stand-alone response to a crisis (e.g., NEO) or executed
as an element of a larger, more complex operation. Joint forces conduct crisis response
and limited contingency operations to achieve operational and, sometimes, strategic
objectives.
a. CCDRs plan for various situations that require military operations in response to
natural disasters, terrorists, subversives, or other contingencies and crises as directed by
appropriate authority. The level of complexity, duration, and resources depends on the
circumstances. Limited contingency operations ensure the safety of US citizens and US
interests while maintaining and improving the ability to operate with multinational partners
to deter hostile ambitions of potential aggressors (e.g., JTF SHINING HOPE in the spring
of 1999 to support refugee humanitarian relief for hundreds of thousands of ethnic
Albanians fleeing their homes in Kosovo). Many of these operations involve a
combination of military forces and capabilities operating in close cooperation with
interorganizational participants. APEX integrates crisis action and deliberate planning into
one unified construct to facilitate unity of effort and transition from planning to execution.
Planning functions can be performed in series over a period of time or they can be
compressed, performed in parallel, or truncated as appropriate.
b. Initial Response. When crises develop and the President directs, CCDRs respond.
If the crisis revolves around external threats to a regional partner, CCDRs employ joint
forces to deter aggression and signal US commitment (e.g., deploying joint forces to train
in Kuwait). If the crisis is caused by an internal conflict that threatens regional stability,
US forces may intervene to restore or guarantee stability (e.g., Operation RESTORE
DEMOCRACY, the 1994 intervention in Haiti). If the crisis is within US territory (e.g.,
natural or man-made disaster, deliberate attack), US joint forces will conduct DSCA and
HD operations as directed by the President and SecDef. Prompt deployment of sufficient
forces in the initial phase of a crisis can preclude the need to deploy larger forces later.
Effective early intervention can also deny an adversary time to set conditions in their favor,
achieve destabilizing objectives, or mitigate the effects of a natural or man-made disaster.
Deploying a credible force rapidly is one step in deterring or blocking aggression.
However, deployment alone will not guarantee success. Achieving successful deterrence
involves convincing the adversary that the deployed force is able to conduct decisive
VII-1
Chapter VII
operations and the national leadership is willing to employ that force and to deploy more
forces if necessary.
c. Strategic Aspects. Two important aspects about crisis response and foreign
limited contingency operations stand out. First, understanding the strategic objective
helps avoid actions that may have adverse diplomatic or political effects. It is not
uncommon in some operations, such as peacekeeping, for junior leaders to make decisions
that have significant strategic implications. Second, commanders should remain aware
of changes not only in the operational situation, but also in strategic objectives that
may warrant a change in military operations. These changes may not always be
obvious. Therefore, commanders must strive to detect subtle changes, which may
eventually lead to disconnects between national objectives and military operations. Failure
to recognize changes in national objectives early may lead to ineffective or
counterproductive military operations.
3. Typical Operations
VII-2 JP 3-0
Crisis Response and Limited Contingency Operations
In the early part of February 2000, Cyclone Connie drenched the Southern
Africa region with over 40 inches of rain causing many rivers in the region
to overflow and flood populated areas. US European Command sent a
humanitarian assistance survey team (HAST) to get eyes on the ground.
Just as the effects of Connie were lessening and the HAST was preparing
to head home, Cyclone Leon-Eline hit Madagascar. The storm pushed
further inland and rain fell in Zimbabwe, adding to reservoirs that were
already full. This forced the release of water from reservoirs, causing even
more flooding. Mozambique was the country with the greatest needs in the
region. Consequently, between 18 February and 1 April 2000, Joint Task
Force (JTF)-ATLAS RESPONSE, under the command of Major General
Joseph H. Wehrle, Jr., US Air Force, was sent to aid the people of
Mozambique, South Africa, Botswana, Zimbabwe, and Zambia.
During the brief time of the operation, the JTFs aircraft carried a total of
714.3 short tons of intergovernmental organization (IGO)/nongovernmental
organization (NGO) cargo, most of it for direct support of the local
population. Helicopters and C-130s also moved 511 non-US passengers.
The majority were medics or aid workers carried on special operations
forces HH-60s bringing immediate relief to populations cut off from the rest
of the world.
For the Armed Forces of the United States, PO encompass PKO, predominantly military
PEO, predominantly diplomatic PB actions, PM processes, and conflict prevention. PO
are conducted in conjunction with the various diplomatic activities and humanitarian
efforts necessary to secure a negotiated truce and resolve the conflict. PO are tailored to
each situation and may be conducted in support of diplomatic activities before, during, or
after conflict. PO support national/multinational strategic objectives. Military support
VII-3
Chapter VII
improves the chances for success in the peace process by lending credibility to diplomatic
actions and demonstrating resolve to achieve viable political settlements.
d. Recovery operations may be conducted to search for, locate, identify, recover, and
return isolated personnel, sensitive equipment, items critical to national security, or human
remains (e.g., JTF Full Accounting, which had the mission to achieve the fullest possible
accounting of Americans listed as missing or prisoners of war from all past wars and
conflicts). Regardless of the recovery purpose, each type of recovery operation is generally
a sophisticated activity requiring detailed planning in order to execute. Recovery
operations may be clandestine, covert, or overt depending on whether the OE is hostile,
uncertain, or permissive.
(2) Raids are operations to temporarily seize an area, usually through forcible
entry, in order to secure information, confuse an enemy, capture personnel or equipment,
or destroy an objective or capability (e.g., Operation RHINO, a raid led by US SOF
elements on several Taliban targets in and around Kandahar, Afghanistan, in October
2001). Raids end with a planned withdrawal upon completion of the assigned mission.
f. HD and DSCA. Security and defense of the US homeland is the USGs top
responsibility and is conducted as a continuous, cooperative effort among all federal
VII-4 JP 3-0
Crisis Response and Limited Contingency Operations
The strike was designed to hit directly at the heart of Libyan leader
Muammar Gaddafis ability to export terrorism with the belief that such a
preemptive strike would provide him incentives and reasons to alter his
criminal behavior. The final targets were selected at the National Security
Council level within the circle of the Presidents advisors. Ultimately, five
targets were selected. All except one of the targets were chosen because
of their direct connection to terrorist activity. The single exception was the
Benina military airfield which based Libyan fighter aircraft. This target was
hit to preempt Libyan interceptors from taking off and attacking the
incoming US bombers.
The actual combat commenced at 0200 (local Libyan time) and lasted less
than 12 minutes, resulting in the dropping of 60 tons of munitions. Navy A-
6 Intruders were assigned the two targets in the Benghazi area, and the Air
Force F-111s hit the other three targets in the vicinity of Tripoli. Resistance
outside the immediate area of attack was nonexistent, and Libyan air
defense aircraft never launched. One F-111 strike aircraft was lost during
the strike.
Various Sources
agencies, as well as state, tribal, and local government. Military operations inside the US
and its territories, though limited in many respects, are conducted to accomplish two
missionsHD and DSCA.
(2) DSCA
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are conducted IAW the NRF, which establishes a comprehensive, national, all-hazards
approach to domestic incident response. Within a state, that states governor is the key
decision maker and commands the states National Guard forces when they are not in
federal Title 10, USC, status. When the governor mobilizes the National Guard, it will
most often be under state active duty when supporting civil authorities.
For more information on DSCA, see JP 3-28, Defense Support of Civil Authorities, and
for detailed guidance on DSCA, see DODD 3025.18, Defense Support of Civil Authorities.
For more information on National Guard support, see DODD 3025.18, Defense Support
of Civil Authorities, and DODI 3025.22, The Use of the National Guard for Defense
Support of Civil Authorities.
4. Other Considerations
a. Duration and End State. Crisis response and limited contingency operations may
be relatively short in duration (e.g., NEO, strike, raid) or last for an extended period to
achieve the national objective (such as US participation with ten other nations in the
independent [non-UN] peacekeeping operation, Multinational Force and Observers, in the
Sinai Peninsula since 1982). Short duration operations are not always possible, particularly
in situations where destabilizing conditions have existed for years or where conditions are
such that a long-term commitment is required to achieve national strategic objectives.
Nevertheless, it is imperative to have clear national objectives for all types of
contingencies.
VII-6 JP 3-0
Crisis Response and Limited Contingency Operations
sources. In some contingencies (e.g., PKO), the term information collection is used rather
than the term intelligence because of the operations sensitivity.
(1) HUMINT may often provide the most useful source of information and is
essential to understanding an enemy or adversary. If a HUMINT infrastructure is not in
place when US forces arrive, it needs to be established as quickly as possible. HUMINT
also complements other intelligence sources with information not available through
technical means. For example, while overhead imagery may graphically depict the number
of people gathered in a town square, it cannot gauge the motivations or enthusiasm of the
crowd. Additionally, in underdeveloped areas, belligerent forces may not rely heavily on
radio communications, thereby denying US forces intelligence derived through signal
intercept.
(3) Tailored products based on continuous JIPOE can promote timely and
comprehensive understanding of all aspects of the OE needed for crisis response and
limited contingency operations.
(4) GEOINT consists of the exploitation and analysis of imagery and geospatial
information to describe, assess, and visually depict physical features and geographically
referenced activities. GEOINT consists of imagery, imagery intelligence, and geospatial
information.
For further guidance on JIPOE, refer to JP 2-01.3, Joint Intelligence Preparation of the
Operational Environment.
VII-7
Chapter VII
VII-8 JP 3-0
CHAPTER VIII
LARGE-SCALE COMBAT OPERATIONS
Your task will not be an easy one. Your enemy is well trained, well equipped
and battle hardened. He will fight savagely.
But this is the year 1944! Much has happened since the Nazi triumphs of 1940-
41. The United Nations have inflicted upon the Germans great defeats, in open
battle, man-to-man. Our air offensive has seriously reduced their strength in the
air and their capacity to wage war on the ground. Our Home Fronts have given
us an overwhelming superiority in weapons and munitions of war, and placed at
our disposal great reserves of trained fighting men. The tide has turned! The
free men of the world are marching together to Victory!
I have full confidence in your courage and devotion to duty and skill in battle. We
will accept nothing less than full Victory!
1. Introduction
a. Traditionally, campaigns are the most extensive joint operations, in terms of the
amount of forces and other capabilities committed and duration of operations. In the
context of large-scale combat, a campaign is a series of related major operations aimed at
achieving strategic and operational objectives within a given time and space. A major
operation is a series of tactical actions, such as battles, engagements, and strikes, and is the
primary building block of a campaign. Major operations and campaigns typically include
multiple phases (e.g., the 1990-1991 Operations DESERT SHIELD and DESERT STORM
and 2003 OIF). Campaign planning is appropriate when the contemplated military
operations exceed the scope of a single major operation.
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b. CCDRs document the full scope of their campaigns in the set of plans that includes
the theater or functional campaign plan, and all of its GEF- and JSCP-directed plans,
subordinate and supporting plans, posture or master plans, country plans (for the
geographic CCMDs), OPLANs of operations currently in execution, contingency plans,
and crisis action plans.
(1) GCCs, as directed in the UCP, GEF, and JSCP, prepare TCPs in APEX
OPLAN format for their UCP-assigned AOR and integrate the planning of designated
missions assigned to specified CCDRs into their TCPs.
(2) FCCs, as directed in the UCP, GEF, and JSCP, prepare functional campaign
plans in APEX OPLAN format for their UCP-assigned missions and responsibilities and
synchronize planning across CCMDs, Services, and DOD agencies for designated
missions.
(3) The scale and projected duration of a subordinate JFCs crisis response or
contingency mission may require the GCC or JFC to develop a campaign plan subordinate
to the GCCs theater campaign.
For detailed guidance on joint planning and campaign plans, see JP 5-0, Joint Planning.
On 2 August 1990, Iraq invaded and occupied Kuwait. Much of the rest of
the world, including most other Arab nations, united in condemnation of
that action. On 7 August, the operation known as DESERT SHIELD began.
Its principal objectives were to deter further aggression and to force Iraq to
withdraw from Kuwait. The United Nations (UN) Security Council passed a
series of resolutions calling for Iraq to leave Kuwait, finally authorizing all
necessary means, including the use of force, to force Iraq to comply with
UN resolutions.
The US led in establishing a political and military coalition to force Iraq from
Kuwait and restore stability to the region. The military campaign to
accomplish these ends took the form of a series of major operations. These
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Large-Scale Combat Operations
OFFENSE
The initial entry of air and land forces into the theater was unopposed. The
Commander, United States Central Command (CDRUSCENTCOM),
balanced the arrival of these forces to provide an early, viable deterrent
capability and the logistic capability needed to receive, further deploy, and
sustain the rapidly growing force. Planning, mobilization, and deployment
continued throughout this phase.
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While airpower attacked Iraqi forces throughout their depth, land forces
repositioned from deceptive locations to attack positions using extensive
OPSEC measures and simulations to deny knowledge of movements to the
enemy. Coalition land forces moved a great distance in an extremely short
time to positions from which they could attack the more vulnerable western
flanks of Iraqi forces. US amphibious forces threatened to attack from eastern
seaward approaches, drawing Iraqi attention and defensive effort in that
direction.
On 24 February, land forces attacked Iraq and rapidly closed on Iraqi flanks.
Under a massive and continuous air operation, coalition land forces closed
with the Republican Guard. Iraqis surrendered in large numbers. To the
extent that it could, the Iraqi military retreated. Within 100 hours of the start
of the land force attack, the coalition achieved its strategic objectives and a
cease-fire was ordered.
The end of combat operations did not bring an end to conflict. The coalition
conducted peace enforcement operations, humanitarian relief, security
operations, extensive weapons and ordnance disposal, and humanitarian
assistance. On 5 April, for example, President Bush announced the beginning
of a relief operation in the area of northern Iraq. By 7 April, US aircraft from
Europe were dropping relief supplies over the Iraqi border. Several thousand
Service personnel who had participated in Operation DESERT STORM
eventually redeployed to Turkey and northern Iraq in this joint and
multinational relief operation.
This postwar phase also included the major operations associated with the
redeployment and demobilization of forces.
Various Sources
a. General. CCDRs and JFCs execute their campaigns and operations in pursuit of
US national objectives and to shape the OE. In pursuit of national objectives, these
campaigns and operations also seek to prevent, prepare for, or mitigate the impact of a
crisis or contingency. In many cases, these actions enhance bonds between potential
multinational partners, increase understanding of the region, help ensure access when
required, and strengthen the capability for future multinational operations, all of which help
prevent crises from developing.
b. Organizing and Training Forces. Organizing and, where possible, training forces
to conduct operations throughout the OA can be a deterrent. JTFs and components that are
likely to be employed in theater operations should be exercised regularly during peacetime.
VIII-4 JP 3-0
Large-Scale Combat Operations
Staffs should be identified and trained for planning and controlling joint and multinational
operations. The composition of joint force staffs should reflect the composition of the joint
force to ensure those employing joint forces have thorough knowledge of their capabilities
and limitations. When possible, JFCs and their staffs should invite non-DOD agencies to
participate in training to facilitate a common understanding and to build a working
relationship prior to actual execution. Commanders must continue to refine interactions
with interagency partners they will work with most often and develop common procedures
to improve interoperability. When it is not possible to train forces in the theater of
employment, as with US-based forces with multiple tasks, commanders should make
maximum use of regularly scheduled and ad hoc exercise opportunities. The training focus
for all forces and the basis for exercise objectives should be the CCDRs joint mission-
essential tasks.
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assistance in integrating space forces, capabilities, and considerations into each phase of
campaign and major OPLANs. Global and theater space operations require robust planning
and skilled employment to synchronize and integrate space operations with the joint
operation. It is therefore incumbent upon the GCCs to coordinate as required to minimize
conflicts. Space capabilities help shape the OE in a variety of ways including providing
intelligence and communications necessary to keep commanders and leaders informed
worldwide. JFCs and their components should request space support early in the planning
process to ensure effective and efficient use of space assets.
For further guidance on space operations, refer to JP 3-14, Space Operations, and Air
Force Doctrine Annex 3-14, Space Operations.
f. EMS Considerations. The joint force is critically dependent on the EMS for
operations across all joint functions and throughout the OE. For example, modern C2
requires operation of EMS-dependent sensing and communication systems, while
advanced weapons rely on positioning, navigation, and timing (PNT) information
transmitted through the EMS. Therefore, the joint force must obtain EMS superiority as
an essential prerequisite to executing joint operations. EMS superiority is that degree of
dominance in the EMS that permits the conduct of operations at a given time and place
without prohibitive interference, while affecting an adversarys ability to do the same.
Achieving EMS superiority is complicated by increasing joint EMS-use requirements,
EME congestion, and proliferation of EMS threats. Joint forces execute JEMSO,
facilitated by electromagnetic battle management (EMBM), in order to achieve the
necessary unity of effort for EMS superiority.
For further information on EMS/JEMSO, see the National Military Strategic Plan for
Electronic Warfare; JP 6-01, Joint Electromagnetic Spectrum Management Operations; JP
3-13.1, Electronic Warfare; and the DOD EMS Strategy.
g. Stability Activities. Activities in the shape phase may focus on continued planning
and preparation for anticipated stability activities in the subsequent phases. These activities
should include conducting collaborative interagency planning to synchronize the civil-
military effort, confirming the feasibility of pertinent military objectives and the military
end state, and providing for adequate intelligence, an appropriate force mix, and other
capabilities. US military support to stabilization efforts in this phase may be required as
part of the USGs security sector assistance, purposed to quickly restore security and
infrastructure or provide humanitarian relief in select portions of the OA to dissuade further
adversary actions or to help gain and maintain access and future success.
VIII-6 JP 3-0
Large-Scale Combat Operations
intent to deny the adversarys goals, and execute subsequent phases of the operation.
Deterrence should be based on capability (having the means to influence behavior),
credibility (maintaining a level of believability that the proposed actions may actually be
employed), and communication (transmitting the intended message to the desired
audience) to ensure greater effectiveness (effectiveness of deterrence must be viewed from
the perspective of the agent/actor that is to be deterred). Before hostilities begin, the JFC
and staff analyze and assess the adversarys goals and decision-making process to
determine how, where, and when these can be affected and what friendly actions (military
and others) can influence events and act as a deterrent. For example, traditional US military
force may be less of a deterrent to irregular and non-state threats, and the assessment should
therefore consider alternative or complementary approaches. Emphasis should be placed
on setting the conditions for successful joint operations in the dominate and follow-on
phases should deterrence fail.
b. Preparing the OA
(1) Special Operations. SOF play a major role in preparing and shaping the
operational area and environment by setting conditions which mitigate risk and facilitate
successful follow-on operations. The regional focus, cross-cultural/ethnic insights,
language capabilities, and relationships of SOF provide access to and influence in nations
where the presence of conventional US forces is unacceptable or inappropriate. SOF
contributions can provide operational leverage by gathering critical information,
undermining an adversarys will or capacity to wage war, and enhancing the capabilities
of conventional US, multinational, or indigenous/surrogate forces. CDRUSSOCOM
synchronizes planning for global operations against terrorist networks in coordination with
other CCMDs, the Services, and, as directed, appropriate USG departments and agencies.
In coordination with GCCs and the supported JFC, CDRUSSOCOM plans and executes or
synchronizes the execution of activities related to preparing the OE and OA, or provides
SOF to other CCMDs.
(2) Stability Activities. Joint force planning and operations conducted prior to
commencement of hostilities should establish a sound foundation for operations in the
stabilize and enable civil authority phases. JFCs should anticipate and address how to fill
the power vacuum created when sustained combat operations wind down. Accomplishing
this task should ease the transition to operations in the stabilize phase and shorten the path
to national objectives and transition to another authority. Considerations include actions
to:
(a) Limit the damage to key infrastructure (water, energy, medical) and
services.
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(d) Provide for the availability of cash or other means of financial exchange.
(e) Determine the proper force mix (e.g., combat, military police, CA,
engineer, medical, multinational).
(g) Secure key infrastructure nodes and facilitate HN law enforcement and
first responder services.
(3) CA forces have a variety of specialty skills that may support the joint
operation being planned. CA forces conduct military engagement, humanitarian and civic
assistance, and nation assistance to influence HN and foreign nation populations. CA
forces assess impacts of the population and culture on military operations, assess impact of
military operations on the population and culture, and facilitate interorganizational
coordination. Establishing and maintaining civil-military relations may include
interaction among US, allied, multinational, and HN forces, as well as other government
agencies, international organizations, and NGOs. CA forces can provide expertise on
factors that directly affect military operations to include culture, social structure, economic
systems, language, and HNS capabilities. CA may be able to perform functions for limited
durations that normally are the responsibility of local or indigenous governments.
Employment of CA forces should be based upon a clear concept of CA mission
requirements for the type operation being planned.
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Large-Scale Combat Operations
For further guidance on sustainment and distribution operations, refer to JP 4-0, Joint
Logistics, and JP 4-09, Distribution Operations.
(1) With Presidential and SecDef approval, guidance, and national support, JFCs
strive to isolate enemies by denying them allies and sanctuary. The intent is to strip
away as much enemy support or freedom of action as possible, while limiting the enemys
potential for horizontal or vertical escalation. JFCs may also be tasked by the President
and SecDef to support diplomatic, economic, and informational actions.
(2) The JFC also seeks to isolate the main enemy force from both its strategic
leadership and its supporting infrastructure. Such isolation can be achieved through
the use of IRCs and the interdiction of LOCs or resources affecting the enemys ability to
conduct or sustain military operations. This step serves to deny the enemy both physical
and psychological support and may separate the enemy leadership and military from their
public support.
d. FDOs and FROs. FDOs and FROs are executed on order and provide scalable
options to respond to a crisis. Both provide the ability to scale up (escalate) or de-escalate
based on continuous assessment of an adversarys actions and reaction. While FDOs are
primarily intended to prevent the crisis from worsening and allow for de-escalation, FROs
are generally punitive in nature.
(2) FROs. FROs, usually used in response to terrorism, can also be employed in
response to aggression by a competitor or adversary. Like FDOs, the discussion should
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For further guidance on planning FDOs and FROs, refer to JP 5-0, Joint Planning.
e. Protection. JFCs must protect their forces and their freedom of action to
accomplish their mission. This dictates that JFCs not only provide force protection, but be
aware of and participate as appropriate in the protection of interagency and regional
multinational capabilities and activities. JFCs may spend as much time on protection to
assure partners to preserve coalition resolve and maintain access as on direct preparation
of their forces for combat.
f. Space Operations. JFCs depend upon and exploit the advantages of space
capabilities. During the deter phase, space forces are limited to already fielded and
immediately deployable assets and established priorities for service. As the situation
develops, priorities for space force enhancement may change to aid the JFC in assessing
the changing OE. Most importantly, the JFC and component commanders need to
anticipate surge space capabilities needed for future phases due to the long lead times to
reprioritize or acquire additional capabilities.
For further guidance on space operations, refer to JP 3-14, Space Operations, and Air
Force Doctrine Annex 3-14, Space Operations.
h. Physical Environment
(1) Weather, terrain, and sea conditions can significantly affect operations and
sustainment support of the joint force and should be carefully assessed before and during
sustained combat operations. Mobility of the force, integration and synchronization of
VIII-10 JP 3-0
Large-Scale Combat Operations
(2) Urban areas possess all of the characteristics of the natural landscape,
coupled with man-made construction and the associated infrastructure, resulting in a
complicated and dynamic environment that influences the conduct of military operations
in many ways. The most distinguishing characteristic of operations in urban areas,
however, is not the infrastructure but the density of civilians. Joint urban operations
(JUOs) are conducted in large, densely populated areas with problems unique to clearing
enemy forces, while possibly restoring services and managing major concentrations of
people. For example, industrial areas and port facilities often are collocated with highly
populated areas, creating the opportunity for accidental or deliberate release of toxic
industrial materials which could impact JUOs. During JUOs, joint forces may not focus
only on destruction of enemy forces but may also be required to take steps necessary to
protect and support civilians and their infrastructure from which they receive services
necessary for survival. As such, ROE during JUOs may be more restrictive than for other
types of operations. When planning JUOs, the JFC and staff should consider the impact of
military operations on civilians to include their culture, values, and infrastructure; thereby
viewing the urban area as a dynamic and complex systemnot solely as terrain. This
implies the joint force should be capable of understanding the specific urban environment;
sensing, locating, and isolating the enemy among civilians; and applying combat power
precisely and discriminately.
(3) Littoral Areas. The littoral area contains two parts. First is the seaward area
from the open ocean to the shore, which must be controlled to support operations ashore.
Second is the landward area inland from the shore that can be supported and defended
directly from the sea. Control of the littoral area often is essential to maritime superiority.
Maritime operations conducted in the littoral area can project power, fires, and forces to
achieve the JFCs objectives. These operations facilitate the entry and movement of other
elements of the joint force through the seizure of an enemys port, naval base, or air base.
Access to, and freedom of maneuver within, the littorals depend on the enemys A2/AD
actions and capabilities, such as the use of surface-to-surface missiles and use of mines.
The ability to avoid detection and maneuver to evade can be reduced in the littorals due to
the proximity to enemy sensors and the lack of maneuver space, thus increasing risk.
Depending on the situation, mine warfare may be critical to control of the littoral areas.
(4) The EMS, which has become increasingly complex, contested, and congested
as technology has advanced, can significantly affect joint force operations. Operational
experiences demonstrate not only how successful control of the EMS can influence the
outcome of the conflict, but highlight US vulnerabilities and dependence on the EMS to
successfully operate. When planning operations, the JFC should consider both the impact
of military operations on the current EME, as well as its effect on military operations. Key
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b. Force Projection
(2) The President and SecDef may direct a CCDR to resolve a crisis quickly,
employing immediately available forces and appropriate FDOs as discussed above to
preclude escalation. When these forces and actions are not sufficient, follow-on strikes
and/or the deployment of forces from CONUS or another theater and/or the use of
multinational forces may be necessary. Consequently, the CCDR must sequence, enable,
and protect the deployment of forces to create early decisive advantage. The CCDR should
not overlook enemy A2/AD capabilities that may affect the deployment of combat and
logistic forces from bases to ports of embarkation. The CCDR may have to adjust the time-
phased force and deployment data to meet a changing OE. The deployment of forces may
be either opposed or unopposed by an enemy.
VIII-12 JP 3-0
Large-Scale Combat Operations
(3) Commanders should brief deploying forces on the threat and force protection
requirements prior to deployment and upon arrival in the OA. Also, JFCs and their
subordinate commanders evaluate the timing, location, and other factors of force
deployment in each COA for the impact of sabotage, criminal activity, and terrorist acts
and their impact on joint reception, staging, onward movement, and integration (JRSOI)
and the follow-on CONOPS. The threat could involve those not directly supporting or
sympathetic to the enemy, but those seeking to take advantage of the situation. When the
situation involves a failed or failing WMD-possessor state, commanders should consider
that opportunists could employ lost or stolen WMD.
(5) JRSOI occurs in the OA and comprises the essential processes required to
transition arriving personnel, equipment, and materiel into forces capable of meeting
operational requirements. Forces are vulnerable during JRSOI, so planning must include
force protection requirements.
(1) US military forces normally train as units and are best able to accomplish a
mission when deployed intact. By deploying as an existing unit, forces are able to continue
to operate under established procedures, adapting them to the mission and situation, as
required. When personnel and elements are drawn from various commands, effectiveness
may be decreased. By deploying without established operating procedures, an ad hoc force
takes more time to form and adjust to requirements of the mission. This not only
complicates mission accomplishment, but also may have an impact on force protection.
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versatility, it may not be possible to preserve complete unit integrity. In such cases, units
must be prepared to send elements that are able to operate independently of parent units.
Attachment to a related unit is the usual mode. In this instance, units not accustomed to
having attachments may be required to provide administrative and logistic support to
normally unrelated units.
d. While access operations focus on enabling access to the OA, entry operations
focus on actions within the OA. Joint forces conduct entry operations for various
purposes, including to defeat threats to the access and use of portions of the OE; to control,
defeat, disable, and/or dispose of specific WMD threats; to assist populations and groups;
to establish a lodgment; and to conduct other limited duration missions.
(1) Forcible entry operations may include amphibious, airborne, and air assault
operations, or any combination thereof. Forcible entry operations can create multiple
dilemmas by creating threats that exceed the enemys capability to respond. Commanders
will employ distributed, yet coherent, operations to attack the objective area or areas. The
net result will be a coordinated attack that overwhelms the enemy before they have time to
react. A well-positioned and networked force enables the defeat of any enemy reaction
and facilitates follow-on operations, if required.
(2) Forcible entry is normally complex and risky and should, therefore, be kept
as simple as possible in concept. These operations require extensive intelligence, detailed
coordination, innovation, and flexibility. Schemes of maneuver and coordination between
forces need to be clearly understood by all participants. Forces are tailored for the mission
and echeloned to permit simultaneous deployment and employment. When airborne,
amphibious, and air assault operations are combined, unity of command is vital.
Rehearsals are a critical part of preparation for forcible entry. Participating forces need to
be prepared to fight immediately upon arrival and require robust communications and
intelligence capabilities to move with forward elements.
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Large-Scale Combat Operations
(4) Successful OPSEC and MILDEC may confuse the enemy and ease
forcible entry operations. OPSEC helps foster a credible MILDEC. Additionally, the
actions, themes, and messages portrayed by all friendly forces must be consistent if
MILDEC is to be believable.
Various Sources
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Chapter VIII
(5) SOF may precede forcible entry forces to identify, clarify, establish, or
modify conditions in the lodgment. SOF may conduct the assaults to seize small, initial
lodgments such as airfields or seaports. They may provide or assist in employing fire
support and conduct other operations in support of the forcible entry, such as seizing
airfields or conducting reconnaissance of landing zones or amphibious landing sites. They
may conduct special reconnaissance and direct action well beyond the lodgment to identify,
interdict, and destroy forces that threaten the conventional entry force.
(6) The sustainment requirements and challenges for forcible entry operations
can be formidable, but must not be allowed to become such an overriding concern that
the forcible entry operation itself is jeopardized. JFCs must carefully balance the
introduction of sustainment forces needed to support initial combat with combat forces
required to establish, maintain, and protect the lodgment as well as forces required to
transition to follow-on operations.
For additional and detailed guidance on forcible entry operations, refer to JP 3-18, Joint
Forcible Entry Operations.
f. Attack of Enemy COGs. As part of creating decisive advantages early, joint force
operations may be directed immediately against enemy COGs using conventional forces
and SOF if COGs are vulnerable and sufficient friendly force capabilities are available.
These attacks may be decisive or may begin offensive operations throughout the enemys
depth that can create dilemmas causing paralysis and destroying cohesion.
(1) JFCs normally strive to achieve air and maritime superiority early. Air
and maritime superiority allows joint forces to conduct operations without prohibitive
interference from opposing air and maritime forces. Control of the air is a critical enabler
because it allows joint forces both freedom from attack and freedom to attack. Using both
defensive and offensive operations, JFCs employ complementary weapon systems and
sensors to achieve air and maritime superiority.
(2) Land forces can be moved quickly into an area to deter the enemy from
inserting forces, thereby precluding the enemy from gaining an operational advantage. The
rapid deployment and employment of land forces (with support of other components)
enable sustained operations, more quickly contribute to the enemys defeat, and help
restore stability in the OA.
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Large-Scale Combat Operations
(5) Control of the EME must be achieved early to support freedom of action.
This control is important for superiority across the physical domains and information
environment.
h. C2 in Littoral Areas
(1) Controlled littoral areas often offer the best positions from which to
begin, sustain, and support joint operations, especially in OAs with limited or poor
infrastructure for supporting US joint operations ashore. JFCs can gain and maintain the
initiative through the ability to project fires and employ forces from sea-based assets in
combination with C2, intelligence collection, and IRCs. Maritime forces operating in
littoral areas can dominate coastal areas and rapidly generate high intensity offensive
power at times and in locations required by JFCs. Maritime forces relative freedom of
action enables JFCs to position these capabilities where they can readily strike opponents.
Maritime forces very presence, if made known, can pose a threat that the enemy cannot
ignore.
(2) JFCs can operate from a HQ platform at sea. Depending on the nature of
the joint operation, a maritime commander can serve as the JFC or function as a JFACC
while the operation is primarily maritime and shift that command ashore if the operation
shifts landward IAW the JFCs CONOPS. A sea base provides JFCs with the ability to
command and control forces and conduct select functions and tasks at sea without
dependence on infrastructure ashore. In other cases, a maritime HQ may serve as the base
of the joint force HQ, or subordinate JFCs or other component commanders may use the
C2 and intelligence facilities aboard ship.
(3) Transferring C2 from sea to shore requires detailed planning, active liaison,
and coordination throughout the joint force. Such a transition may involve a simple
movement of flags and supporting personnel, or it may require a complete change of joint
force HQ. The new joint force HQ may use personnel and equipment, especially
communications equipment, from the old HQ, or it may require augmentation from
different sources. One technique is to transfer C2 in several stages. Another technique is
for the JFC to satellite off the capabilities of one of the components ashore until the new
HQ is fully prepared. Whichever way the transition is done, staffs should develop detailed
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Various Sources
checklists to address all of the C2 requirements and the timing of transfer of each. The
value of joint training and rehearsals in this transition is evident.
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JFCs counter the enemys fires and maneuver by making personnel, systems, and units
difficult to locate, strike, and destroy. They protect their force from enemy maneuver and
fires by using various physical and informational measures. OPSEC and MILDEC are key
elements of this effort. Operations to gain air, space, maritime, and EMS superiority;
defensive use of IO; PR; and protection of airports and seaports, LOCs, and friendly force
lodgment also contribute significantly to force protection at the onset of combat operations.
l. Prevention of Friendly Fire Incidents. JFCs must make every effort to reduce the
potential for the killing or wounding of friendly personnel by friendly fire. The destructive
power and range of modern weapons, coupled with the high intensity and rapid tempo of
modern combat, increase the potential for friendly fire incidents. Commanders must be
aware of those situations that increase the risk of friendly fire incidents and institute
appropriate preventive measures. The primary mechanisms for reducing friendly fire
incidents are command emphasis, disciplined operations, close coordination among
component commands and multinational partners, SOPs, training and exercises,
technology solutions (e.g., identify friend or foe, blue force tracking), rehearsals, effective
CID, and enhanced awareness of the OE. Commanders should seek to minimize friendly
fire incidents while not limiting boldness and initiative. CCMDs should consult with
USAID when it has a mission presence to determine locations of friendly international
organizations, NGOs, and local partners operating in the targeted area to avoid friendly fire
incidents.
a. General. JFCs conduct sustained combat operations when a swift victory is not
possible. During sustained combat operations, JFCs simultaneously employ conventional
forces and SOF throughout the OA. The JFC may designate one component or LOO to be
the main effort, with other components providing support and other LOOs as supporting
efforts. When conditions or plans change, the main effort might shift. Some missions and
operations (i.e., strategic attack, interdiction, and IO) continue throughout to deny the
enemy sanctuary, freedom of action, or informational advantage. These missions and
operations, when executed concurrently with other operations, degrade enemy morale and
physical cohesion and bring the enemy closer to culmination. When prevented from
concentrating, opponents can be attacked, isolated at tactical and operational levels, and
defeated in detail. At other times, JFCs may cause their opponents to concentrate their
forces, facilitating their attack by friendly forces. In some circumstances (e.g., regime
change, ensuring stability prior to transition to civil authority), the JFC may be required to
maintain a temporary military occupation of enemy territory while continuing offensive
actions. If the occupation is extended and a countrys government is not functioning, the
JFC may be required to establish a military government through the designation of a
transitional military authority.
b. Operating in the Littoral Areas. Even when joint forces are firmly established
ashore, littoral operations provide JFCs with excellent opportunities to gain leverage over
the enemy by operational maneuver from the sea. Such operations can introduce
significant size forces over relatively great distances in short periods of time into the rear
or flanks of the enemy. The mobility and fire support capability of maritime forces at sea,
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Chapter VIII
coupled with the ability to rapidly land operationally significant forces, can be key to
achieving military operational objectives. These capabilities are further enhanced by
operational flexibility and the ability to identify and take advantage of fleeting
opportunities.
(2) As a guiding principle, JFCs should exploit the flexibility inherent in joint
force command relationships, joint targeting procedures, and other techniques to resolve
the issues that can arise from the relationship between interdiction and maneuver. When
interdiction and maneuver are employed, JFCs need to carefully balance the needs of
surface maneuver forces, area-wide requirements for interdiction, and the undesirability of
fragmenting joint force capabilities. The JFCs objectives, intent, and priorities, reflected
in mission assignments and coordinating arrangements, enable subordinates to fully exploit
the military potential of their forces while minimizing the friction generated by competing
requirements. Effective targeting procedures in the joint force also alleviate such friction.
As an example, interdiction requirements will often exceed interdiction means, requiring
JFCs to prioritize requirements. Land and maritime force commanders responsible for
integrating and synchronizing maneuver and interdiction within their AOs should be
knowledgeable of JFC priorities and the responsibilities and authority assigned and
delegated to commanders designated by the JFC to execute theater- and/or JOA-wide
functions. JFCs alleviate this friction through the CONOPS and clear statements of intent
for interdiction conducted relatively independent of surface maneuver operations. In doing
this, JFCs rely on their vision as to how the major elements of the joint force contribute to
achieving theater-strategic objectives. JFCs then employ a flexible range of techniques to
VIII-20 JP 3-0
Large-Scale Combat Operations
assist in identifying requirements and applying capabilities to meet them. JFCs must define
appropriate command relationships, establish effective joint targeting procedures, and
make apportionment decisions.
(3) All commanders should consider how their operations can complement
interdiction. These operations may include actions such as MILDEC, withdrawals, lateral
repositioning, and flanking movements that are likely to cause the enemy to reposition
surface forces, making them better targets for interdiction. Likewise, interdiction
operations need to conform to and enhance the JFCs scheme of maneuver. This
complementary use of maneuver and interdiction places the enemy in the operational
dilemma of either defending from disadvantageous positions or exposing forces to
interdiction strikes during attempted repositioning.
(4) Within the JOA, all joint force component operations must contribute to
achievement of the JFCs objectives. To facilitate these operations, JFCs may establish
AOs within their OA. Synchronization and/or integration of maneuver and
interdiction within land or maritime AOs is of particular importance, particularly
when JFCs task component commanders to execute theater- and/or JOA-wide functions.
(a) Air, land, and maritime commanders are directly concerned with those
enemy forces and capabilities that can affect their current and future operations.
Accordingly, that part of interdiction with a near-term effect on air, land, and maritime
maneuver normally supports that maneuver. In fact, successful operations may depend on
successful interdiction operations; for instance, to isolate the battle or weaken the enemy
force before battle is fully joined.
(b) JFCs establish land and maritime AOs to decentralize execution of land
and maritime component operations, allow rapid maneuver, and provide the ability to fight
at extended ranges. The size, shape, and positioning of land or maritime AOs will be based
on the JFCs CONOPS and the land or maritime commanders requirements to accomplish
their missions and protect their forces. Within these AOs, land and maritime
commanders are designated the supported commander for the integration and
synchronization of maneuver, fires, and interdiction. Accordingly, land and maritime
commanders designate the target priority, effects, and timing of interdiction operations
within their AOs. Further, in coordination with the land or maritime commander, a
component commander designated as the supported commander for theater/JOA-wide
interdiction has the latitude to plan and execute JFC prioritized missions within a land or
maritime AO. If theater or JOA-wide interdiction operations would have adverse effects
within a land or maritime AO, then the commander conducting those operations must either
readjust the plan, resolve the issue with the appropriate component commander, or consult
with the JFC for resolution.
(c) The land or maritime commander should clearly articulate the vision of
maneuver operations to other commanders that may employ interdiction forces within the
land or maritime AO. The land or maritime commanders intent and CONOPS should
clearly state how interdiction will enable or enhance land or maritime force maneuver in
the AO and what is to be accomplished with interdiction (as well as those actions to be
VIII-21
Chapter VIII
avoided, such as the destruction of key transportation nodes or the use of certain munitions
in a specific area). Once this is understood, other interdiction-capable commanders can
normally plan and execute operations with only that coordination required with the land or
maritime commander. However, the land or maritime commander should provide other
interdiction-capable commanders as much latitude as possible in the planning and
execution of interdiction operations within the AO.
(d) Joint force operations in maritime or littoral OAs often require additional
coordination among the maritime commander and other interdiction-capable commanders
because of the highly specialized nature of some maritime operations, such as
antisubmarine and mine warfare. This type of coordination requires that the interdiction-
capable commanders maintain communication with the maritime commander. As in all
operations, lack of close coordination among commanders in maritime OAs can result in
friendly fire incidents and failed missions. The same principle applies concerning joint
force air component mining operations in land or maritime OAs.
(5) JFCs need to pay particular attention and give priority to activities impinging
on and supporting the maneuver and interdiction needs of all forces. In addition to normal
target nomination procedures, JFCs establish procedures through which land or maritime
force commanders can specifically identify those interdiction targets they are unable to
engage with organic assets within their OAs that could affect planned or ongoing
maneuver. These targets may be identified individually or by category, specified
geographically, or tied to a desired effect or time period. Interdiction target priorities
within the land or maritime OAs are considered along with theater and JOA-wide
interdiction priorities by JFCs and reflected in the air apportionment decision. The JFACC
uses these priorities to plan, coordinate, and execute the theater- and/or JOA-wide air
interdiction effort. The purpose of these procedures is to afford added visibility to, and
allow JFCs to give priority to, targets directly affecting planned maneuver by air, land, or
maritime forces.
(1) Locating WMD and WMD Materials. Since an enemys use of WMD can
quickly change the character of an operation or campaign, joint forces may be required to
track, seize, and secure any WMD and materials used to develop WMD discovered or
located in an OA. Once located, resources may be required to secure and inventory items
for subsequent exploitation. If WMD sites are located, but joint forces are unable to seize
and secure them, the JFC should plan to strike the sites if required to prevent WMD from
being used or falling into enemy control. The desired effects of strikes are to minimize
collateral effects and deny access to WMD. If sites are not under enemy control or in
imminent jeopardy of falling to the enemy, monitor them persistently until sites can be
seized and secured. During combat operations, exploitation, secure transport of WMD,
and safe transport of technical personnel for disposition may depend upon a permissive
OE.
(2) Enemy Employment. The use or the threatened use of WMD can cause
large-scale shifts in strategic and operational-level objectives, phases, and COAs.
VIII-22 JP 3-0
Large-Scale Combat Operations
(a) Intelligence and other joint staff members advise JFCs of an enemys
capability to employ WMD and under what conditions that enemy is most likely to do so.
This advice includes an assessment of the enemys willingness and intent to employ these
weapons. It is important to ensure that high force or materiel concentrations do not provide
lucrative targets for enemy WMD.
(b) Known threat of WMD use and associated preparedness against such use
are imperative in this environment. The joint force can survive use of WMD by
anticipating their employment and taking appropriate offensive and defensive measures.
Commanders can protect their forces in a variety of ways, including training, MISO,
OPSEC, dispersion of forces or materiel, use of IPE, and proper use of terrain for shielding
against blast and radiation effects. Enhancement of CBRN defense capabilities may reduce
incentives for a first strike by an enemy with WMD.
(c) The combination of active and passive defense can reduce the
effectiveness or success of an enemys use of WMD. The JFC may have to conduct
offensive operations to control, defeat, disable, and/or dispose of enemy WMD capabilities
before they can be brought to bear. Offensive measures include raids, strikes, and
operations to locate and neutralize the threat of such weapons. When conducting offensive
operations, the JFC must fully understand the collateral effects created by striking or
neutralizing enemy WMD capabilities.
VIII-23
Chapter VIII
support nuclear weapon employment. If directed to plan for the use of nuclear weapons,
JFCs typically have two escalating objectives.
(a) The first objective is deterring or preventing the enemy from using
WMD. Effective WMD deterrence rests on a credible deterrence policy that declares an
adversary, expresses the will to pursue that adversary, and is backed by the capability to
defend against the use and protect against the effects of WMD. A demonstrated collective
military capability may contribute to the success of all three criteria for WMD deterrence.
JFC deterrence efforts should involve security cooperation plans that emphasize the
willingness of the US and its partners to employ forces for collective interests. Various
bilateral and multilateral exercises and operations support deterrence by demonstrating
collective willingness and capability to use force when necessary. Overall USG deterrence
goals are supported by a credible capability to intercept WMD in transit; destroy critical
nodes, links, and sources; defend against WMD attack; attribute WMD attacks; and
dismantle WMD programs.
f. Stability Activities. Stability tasks and activities that began in previous phases may
continue during this phase. These activities may focus on stability tasks that will help
achieve strategic and operational-level objectives and create the conditions for the later
stabilization and enable civil authority phases. Minimum essential stability activities
should focus on protecting and facilitating the personal security and well-being of the
civilian population. Stability activities provide minimum levels of security, food, water,
shelter, and medical treatment. If no civilian or HN agency is present, capable, and willing,
then JFCs and their staffs must resource these minimum essential stability tasks. When
demand for resources exceeds the JFCs capability, higher level joint commanders should
provide additional resources. These resources may be given to the requesting JFC or the
mission may be given to follow-on forces to expeditiously conduct the tasks. JFCs at all
levels assess resources available against the mission to determine how best to conduct these
VIII-24 JP 3-0
Large-Scale Combat Operations
minimum essential stability tasks and what risk they can accept to accomplishment of
combat tasks.
c. Forces and Capabilities Mix. The JFC may need to realign forces and capabilities
or adjust force structure to begin stability activities in some portions of the OA even while
sustained combat operations still are ongoing in other areas. For example, CA forces and
HUMINT capabilities are critical to supporting stabilize phase operations and often involve
a mix of forces and capabilities far different than those that supported the previous phases.
Planning and continuous assessment will reveal the nature and scope of forces and
capabilities required. These forces and capabilities may be available within the joint force
or may be required from another theater or from the Reserve Component. The JFC should
anticipate and request these forces and capabilities in a timely manner to facilitate their
opportune employment.
VIII-25
Chapter VIII
d. Stability Activities
(1) As sustained combat operations conclude, military forces will shift their focus
to stability activities as the military instruments contribution to the more comprehensive
stabilization efforts by all instruments of national power. Force protection will continue
to be important, and combat operations might continue, although with less frequency and
intensity than in the dominate phase. Of particular importance will be CMO, initially
conducted to secure and safeguard the populace, reestablish civil law and order, protect or
rebuild key infrastructure, and restore public services. US military forces should be
prepared to lead the activities necessary to accomplish these tasks, especially if conducting
a military occupation, and restore rule of law when indigenous civil, USG, multinational
or international capacity does not exist or is incapable of assuming responsibility. Once
legitimate civil authority is prepared to conduct such tasks, US military forces may support
such activities as required/necessary. SFA plays an important part during stability
activities by supporting and augmenting the development of the capacity and capability of
FSFs and their supporting institutions. Likewise, the JFCs communication
synchronization will play an important role in providing public information to foreign
populations during this period.
(2) The militarys predominant presence and its ability to command and control
forces and logistics under extreme conditions may give it the de facto lead in stabilization
efforts normally governed by other agencies that lack such capacities. However, most
stability activities will likely be in support of, or transition to support of, US diplomatic, UN,
or HN efforts. Integrated civilian and military efforts are key to success and military forces
need to work competently in this environment while properly supporting the agency in
charge. To be effective, planning and conducting stabilization efforts require a variety of
perspectives and expertise and the cooperation and assistance of other USG departments and
agencies, other Services, and alliance or multinational partners. Military forces should be
prepared to work in integrated civilian-military teams that could include representatives from
other US departments and agencies, foreign governments and security forces, international
organizations, NGOs, and members of the private sector with relevant skills and expertise.
Typical military support includes emergency infrastructure reconstruction, engineering,
logistics, law enforcement, health services, and other activities to restore essential services.
For further guidance on stability activities and USG stabilization efforts, refer to JP 3-07,
Stability, and DODI 3000.05, Stability Operations.
VIII-26 JP 3-0
Large-Scale Combat Operations
For more information on identity activities, see JDN 2-16, Identity Activities.
e. In the stabilize phase, commanders must consider protection from virtually any
person, element, or group hostile to US interests. These could include activists, a group
opposed to the operation, looters, and terrorists. Forces will have to be even more alert to
force protection and security matters after a CBRN incident. JFCs also should be
constantly ready to counter activity that could bring significant harm to units or jeopardize
mission accomplishment. Protection may involve the security of HN authorities, other
USG department and agency personnel, and international organization and NGO
members if authorized by higher authority. For contractors, the GCC must evaluate the
need for force protection support following the guidelines of DODI 3020.41, Operational
Contract Support (OCS).
f. Personnel should stay alert even in an operation with little or no perceived risk.
JFCs must take measures to prevent complacency and be ready to counter activity
that could bring harm to units or jeopardize the operation. However, security
requirements should be balanced with the military operations nature and objectives.
During some stability activities, the use of certain security measures, such as carrying arms,
wearing helmets and protective vests, or using secure communications may cause military
forces to appear more threatening than intended, which may degrade the forces legitimacy
and hurt relations with the local population.
g. Restraint. During the stabilize phase, military capability must be applied even
more prudently since the support of the local population is essential for success. The
actions of military personnel and units are framed by the disciplined application of force,
including specific ROE. These ROE often will be more restrictive and detailed when
compared to those for sustained combat operations due to national policy concerns.
Moreover, these rules may change frequently during operations. Restraints on weaponry,
tactics, and levels of violence characterize the environment. The use of excessive force
could adversely affect efforts to gain or maintain legitimacy and impede the attainment of
VIII-27
Chapter VIII
both short- and long-term goals. The use of nonlethal capabilities should be considered to
fill the gap between verbal warnings and deadly force when dealing with unarmed hostile
elements and to avoid raising the level of conflict unnecessarily. The JFC must determine
early in the planning stage what nonlethal technology is available, how well the force is
trained to use it, and how the established ROE authorize its employment. The principle of
restraint does not preclude the application of overwhelming force, when appropriate and
authorized, to display US resolve and commitment. The reasons for the restraint often need
to be understood by the individual Service member, because a single act could cause
adverse diplomatic/political consequences.
h. Perseverance. Some operations may move quickly through the stabilize phase and
transition smoothly to the enable civil authority phase. Other situations may require years
of stabilization activities before this transition occurs. Therefore, the patient, resolute, and
persistent pursuit for as long as necessary of the conditions desired to reach national
objectives is often the requirement for success.
i. Legitimacy. Military activities must sustain the legitimacy of the operation and of
the emerging or host government. During operations where a government does not exist,
extreme caution should be used when dealing with individuals and organizations to avoid
inadvertently legitimizing them. Implementation of strategic guidance through the CCS
process can enhance perceptions of the legitimacy of stabilization efforts.
j. OPSEC. Although there may be no clearly defined threat, the essential elements
of US military operations should be safeguarded. The uncertain nature of the situation,
coupled with the potential for rapid change, requires that OPSEC be an integral part of all
military operations. They can then pass on information gleaned from that interaction or
provide other support to a belligerent element to seek favor or to avoid retaliation. The
JFC must consider these and similar possibilities and take appropriate actions to counter
potential compromise. OPSEC planners must consider the effect of media coverage and
the possibility coverage may compromise essential security or disclose critical information.
a. General. In this phase, the joint operation is assessed and enabling objectives are
established for transitioning from large-scale combat operations to FID and security
cooperation. The catalyst for transition is that a legitimate civil authority has been
established to manage the situation without further outside military intervention. The new
government obtains legitimacy, and authority is transitioned from an interim civilian
authority or transitional military authority to the new indigenous government. This
situation may require a change in the joint operation as a result of an extension of the
required stability activities in support of US diplomatic, HN, international organization,
and/or NGO stabilization efforts.
b. PB. The transition from military operations to full civilian control may involve
ongoing operations that have a significant combat component, including COIN operations,
antiterrorism, and CT. Even while combat operations are ongoing, the operation will
include a large stability component that is essentially a PB mission. PB, transitioning to a
VIII-28 JP 3-0
Large-Scale Combat Operations
DOS-led effort, provides the reconstruction and societal rehabilitation that offers hope to
the HN populace. Stability measures establish the conditions that enable PB to succeed.
PB promotes reconciliation, strengthens and rebuilds civil infrastructures and institutions,
builds confidence, and supports economic reconstruction to prevent a return to conflict.
The ultimate measure of success in PB is political, not military. Therefore, JFCs seek a
clear understanding of the national/PN objectives and how military operations support that
end state.
d. Redeployment
VIII-29
Chapter VIII
VIII-30 JP 3-0
APPENDIX A
PRINCIPLES OF JOINT OPERATIONS
1. Introduction
The principles of joint operations are formed around the traditional principles of
war. Three additional principlesrestraint, perseverance, and legitimacyare relevant to
how the Armed Forces of the United States use combat power across the range of military
operations. These three, added to the original nine, comprise 12 principles of joint
operations. The principles do not apply equally in all joint operations. Most principles, if
not all, are relevant in combat. Some principles, such as offensive, maneuver, and surprise,
may not apply in some crisis response operations like FHA. However, principles such as
unity of command, objective, and legitimacy are important in all operations.
a. Objective
(1) The purpose of specifying the objective is to direct every military operation
toward a clearly defined, decisive, and achievable goal.
(3) Additionally, changes to the military objectives may occur because national
and military leaders gain a better understanding of the situation, or they may occur because
the situation itself changes. The JFC should anticipate these shifts in national
objectives necessitating changes in the military objectives. The changes may be very
subtle, but if not made, achievement of the military objectives may no longer support the
national objectives, legitimacy may be undermined, and force security may be
compromised.
b. Offensive
(1) The purpose of an offensive action is to seize, retain, and exploit the initiative.
(2) Offensive action is the most effective and decisive way to achieve a clearly
defined objective. Offensive operations are the means by which a military force seizes and
holds the initiative while maintaining freedom of action and achieving decisive results.
The importance of offensive action is fundamentally true across all levels of warfare.
A-1
Appendix A
(3) Commanders adopt the defensive only as a temporary expedient and must
seek every opportunity to seize or regain the initiative. An offensive spirit must be inherent
in the conduct of all defensive operations.
c. Mass
(1) The purpose of mass is to concentrate the effects of combat power at the most
advantageous place and time to produce decisive results.
(2) In order to achieve mass, appropriate joint force capabilities are integrated
and synchronized where they will have a decisive effect in a short period of time. Mass
often must be sustained to have the desired effect. Massing effects of combat power, rather
than concentrating forces, can enable even numerically inferior forces to produce decisive
results and minimize human losses and waste of resources.
d. Maneuver
e. Economy of Force
f. Unity of Command
(1) The purpose of unity of command is to ensure unity of effort under one
responsible commander for every objective.
(2) Unity of command means that all forces operate under a single commander
with the requisite authority to direct all forces employed in pursuit of a common purpose.
Unity of command may not be possible during coordination and operations with
multinational and interagency partners, but the requirement for unity of effort is paramount.
Unity of effortthe coordination and cooperation toward common objectives, even if the
A-2 JP 3-0
Principles of Joint Operations
participants are not necessarily part of the same command or organizationis the product
of successful unified action.
g. Security
(1) The purpose of security is to prevent the enemy from acquiring unexpected
advantage.
h. Surprise
(1) The purpose of surprise is to strike at a time or place or in a manner for which
the enemy is unprepared.
(2) Surprise can help the commander shift the balance of combat power and thus
achieve success well out of proportion to the effort expended. Factors contributing to
surprise include speed in decision making, information sharing, and force movement;
effective intelligence; deception; application of unexpected combat power; OPSEC; and
variations in tactics and methods of operation.
i. Simplicity
(1) The purpose of simplicity is to increase the probability that plans and
operations will be executed as intended by preparing clear, uncomplicated plans and
concise orders.
(2) Simplicity contributes to successful operations. Simple plans and clear, concise
orders minimize misunderstanding and confusion. When other factors are equal, the simplest
plan is preferable. Simplicity in plans allows better understanding and execution planning at
all echelons. Simplicity and clarity of expression greatly facilitate mission execution in the
stress, fatigue, fog of war, and complexities of modern combat, and are especially critical to
success in multinational operations.
j. Restraint
(2) A single act could cause significant military and political consequences;
therefore, judicious use of force is necessary. Restraint requires the careful and disciplined
balancing of the need for security, the conduct of military operations, and national
objectives. Excessive force antagonizes those parties involved, thereby damaging the
legitimacy of the organization that uses it while potentially enhancing the legitimacy of the
A-3
Appendix A
opposing party. Sufficiently detailed ROE that the commander tailors to the specific
circumstances of the operation can facilitate appropriate restraint.
k. Perseverance
l. Legitimacy
(1) The purpose of legitimacy is to maintain legal and moral authority in the
conduct of operations.
(3) Committed forces must sustain the legitimacy of the operation and of the host
government, where applicable. Security actions must be balanced with legitimacy
concerns. All actions must be considered in the light of potentially competing strategic
and tactical-level requirements, and must exhibit fairness in dealing with competing
factions where appropriate. Legitimacy may depend on adherence to objectives agreed to
by the international community, ensuring the action is appropriate to the situation and to
perceptions of fairness in dealing with various factions. Restricting the use of force,
restructuring the type of forces employed, protecting civilians, and ensuring the disciplined
conduct of the forces involved may reinforce legitimacy.
(4) Another aspect of this principle is the legitimacy bestowed upon a local
government through the perception of the populace that it governs. Humanitarian and civil
military operations help develop a sense of legitimacy for the supported government.
Because the populace perceives that the government has genuine authority to govern and
uses proper agencies for valid purposes, they consider that government as legitimate,
especially when coupled with successful efforts to build the capability and capacity of the
supported government to complete such operations on its own. During operations in an
area where a legitimate government does not exist, extreme caution should be used when
dealing with individuals and organizations to avoid inadvertently legitimizing them.
A-4 JP 3-0
APPENDIX B
REFERENCES
1. General
q. UN Charter.
B-1
Appendix B
b. DODD 3000.03E, DOD Executive Agent for Non-Lethal Weapons (NLW), and
NLW Policy.
h. DODI, 3025.22, The Use of the National Guard for Defense Support of Civil
Authorities.
f. CJCSI 3500.01H, Joint Training Policy for the Armed Forces of the United States.
B-2 JP 3-0
References
l. CJCSM 3130.03, Adaptive Planning and Execution (APEX) Planning Formats and
Guidance.
y JP 3-07, Stability.
B-3
Appendix B
B-4 JP 3-0
References
B-5
Appendix B
Intentionally Blank
B-6 JP 3-0
APPENDIX C
ADMINISTRATIVE INSTRUCTIONS
1. User Comments
Users in the field are highly encouraged to submit comments on this publication to:
Joint Staff J-7, Deputy Director, Joint Education and Doctrine, ATTN: Joint Doctrine
Analysis Division, 116 Lake View Parkway, Suffolk, VA 23435-2697. These comments
should address content (accuracy, usefulness, consistency, and organization), writing, and
appearance.
2. Authorship
The lead agent and Joint Staff doctrine sponsor for this publication is the Joint Staff
Director for Joint Force Development (J-7).
3. Supersession
4. Change Recommendations
TO: Deputy Director, Joint Education and Doctrine (DD JED), Attn: Joint
Doctrine Division, 7000 Joint Staff (J-7), Washington, DC, 20318-7000 or
email:[email protected].
c. When a Joint Staff directorate submits a proposal to the CJCS that would change
source document information reflected in this publication, that directorate will include a
proposed change to this publication as an enclosure to its proposal. The Services and other
organizations are requested to notify the Joint Staff J-7 when changes to source documents
reflected in this publication are initiated.
5. Lessons Learned
The Joint Lessons Learned Program (JLLP) primary objective is to enhance joint force
readiness and effectiveness by contributing to improvements in doctrine, organization,
training, materiel, leadership and education, personnel, facilities, and policy. The Joint
Lessons Learned Information System (JLLIS) is the DOD system of record for lessons
learned and facilitates the collection, tracking, management, sharing, collaborative
resolution, and dissemination of lessons learned to improve the development and readiness
of the joint force. The JLLP integrates with joint doctrine through the joint doctrine
C-1
Appendix C
development process by providing lessons and lessons learned derived from operations,
events, and exercises. As these inputs are incorporated into joint doctrine, they become
institutionalized for future use, a major goal of the JLLP. Lessons and lessons learned are
routinely sought and incorporated into draft JPs throughout formal staffing of the
development process. The JLLIS Website can be found at https://www.jllis.mil or
http://www.jllis.smil.mil.
6. Distribution of Publications
a. Joint Staff J-7 will not print copies of JPs for distribution. Electronic versions are
available on JDEIS Joint Electronic Library Plus (JEL+) at
https://jdeis.js.mil/jdeis/index.jsp (NIPRNET) and http://jdeis.js.smil.mil/jdeis/index.jsp
(SIPRNET), and on the JEL at http://www.dtic.mil/doctrine (NIPRNET).
b. Only approved JPs are releasable outside the combatant commands, Services, and
Joint Staff. Defense attachs may request classified JPs by sending written requests to
Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA)/IE-3, 200 MacDill Blvd., Joint Base Anacostia-
Bolling, Washington, DC 20340-5100.
C-2 JP 3-0
GLOSSARY
PART IABBREVIATIONS, ACRONYMS, AND INITIALISMS
A2 antiaccess
AADC area air defense commander
ACA airspace control authority
ACO airspace control order
ACP airspace control plan
ACS airspace control system
AD area denial
AJP Allied joint publication
AO area of operations
AOA amphibious objective area
AOR area of responsibility
APEX Adaptive Planning and Execution
GL-1
Glossary
EA electronic attack
EMBM electromagnetic battle management
EME electromagnetic environment
EMS electromagnetic spectrum
EW electronic warfare
EWCA electronic warfare control authority
HD homeland defense
HN host nation
HNS host-nation support
HQ headquarters
HUMINT human intelligence
I2 identity intelligence
IAW in accordance with
GL-2 JP 3-0
Glossary
GL-3
Glossary
OA operational area
OCA offensive counterair
OCS operational contract support
OE operational environment
OEF Operation ENDURING FREEDOM
OIF Operation IRAQI FREEDOM
OPCON operational control
OPLAN operation plan
OPORD operation order
OPSEC operations security
OSINT open-source intelligence
PA public affairs
PB peace building
PEO peace enforcement operations
PIR priority intelligence requirement
PKO peacekeeping operations
PM peacemaking
PMESII political, military, economic, social, information, and
infrastructure
PN partner nation
PNT positioning, navigation, and timing
PO peace operations
PR personnel recovery
GL-4 JP 3-0
Glossary
GL-5
PART IITERMS AND DEFINITIONS
air apportionment. The determination and assignment of the total expected effort by
percentage and/or by priority that should be devoted to the various air operations for a
given period of time. (DOD Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-0)
alliance. The relationship that results from a formal agreement between two or more
nations for broad, long-term objectives that further the common interests of the
members. (DOD Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-0)
area denial. Action, activity, or capability, usually short-range, designed to limit an enemy
forces freedom of action within an operational area. Also called AD. (Approved for
inclusion in the DOD Dictionary.)
area of interest. That area of concern to the commander, including the area of influence,
areas adjacent thereto, and extending into enemy territory. Also called AOI.
(Approved for incorporation into the DOD Dictionary.)
area of operations. An operational area defined by a commander for land and maritime
forces that should be large enough to accomplish their missions and protect their
forces. Also called AO. (Approved for incorporation into the DOD Dictionary.)
GL-6 JP 3-0
Glossary
battle damage assessment. The estimate of damage composed of physical and functional
damage assessment, as well as target system assessment, resulting from the application
of lethal or nonlethal military force. Also called BDA. (DOD Dictionary. SOURCE:
JP 3-0)
boundary. A line that delineates surface areas for the purpose of facilitating coordination
and deconfliction of operations between adjacent units, formations, or areas. (DOD
Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-0)
close air support. Air action by manned or unmanned fixed-wing and rotary-wing aircraft
against hostile targets that are in close proximity to friendly forces and that require
detailed integration of each air mission with the fire and movement of those forces.
Also called CAS. (Approved for incorporation into the DOD Dictionary.)
combat power. The total means of destructive and/or disruptive force that a military
unit/formation can apply against the opponent at a given time. (Approved for
incorporation into the DOD Dictionary.)
commanders intent. A clear and concise expression of the purpose of the operation and
the desired military end state that supports mission command, provides focus to the
staff, and helps subordinate and supporting commanders act to achieve the
commanders desired results without further orders, even when the operation does not
unfold as planned. (DOD Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-0)
command post exercise. None. (Approved for removal from the DOD Dictionary.)
GL-7
Glossary
control. 1. Authority that may be less than full command exercised by a commander over
part of the activities of subordinate or other organizations. (JP 1) 2. In mapping,
charting, and photogrammetry, a collective term for a system of marks or objects on
the Earth or on a map or a photograph, whose positions or elevations (or both) have
been or will be determined. (JP 2-03) 3. Physical or psychological pressures exerted
with the intent to assure that an agent or group will respond as directed. (JP 3-0) 4.
In intelligence usage, an indicator governing the distribution and use of documents,
information, or material. (Approved for incorporation into the DOD Dictionary.)
coup de main. None. (Approved for removal from the DOD Dictionary.)
crisis. An incident or situation involving a threat to the United States, its citizens, military
forces, or vital interests that develops rapidly and creates a condition of such
diplomatic, economic, or military importance that commitment of military forces and
resources is contemplated to achieve national objectives. (DOD Dictionary.
SOURCE: JP 3-0)
effect. 1. The physical or behavioral state of a system that results from an action, a set of
actions, or another effect. 2. The result, outcome, or consequence of an action. 3. A
change to a condition, behavior, or degree of freedom. (DOD Dictionary. SOURCE:
JP 3-0)
GL-8 JP 3-0
Glossary
end state. The set of required conditions that defines achievement of the commanders
objectives. (DOD Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-0)
force projection. The ability to project the military instrument of national power from the
United States or another theater, in response to requirements for military operations.
(DOD Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-0)
foreign assistance. Assistance to foreign nations ranging from the sale of military
equipment and support for foreign internal defense to donations of food and medical
supplies to aid survivors of natural and man-made disasters that may be provided
through development assistance, humanitarian assistance, and security assistance.
(Approved for incorporation into the DOD Dictionary.)
GL-9
Glossary
friendly force information requirement. Information the commander and staff need to
understand the status of friendly force and supporting capabilities. Also called FFIR.
(DOD Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-0)
full-spectrum superiority. The cumulative effect of dominance in the air, land, maritime,
and space domains, electromagnetic spectrum, and information environment (which
includes cyberspace) that permits the conduct of joint operations without effective
opposition or prohibitive interference. (Approved for incorporation into the DOD
Dictionary.)
joint fires. Fires delivered during the employment of forces from two or more components
in coordinated action to produce desired effects in support of a common objective.
(DOD Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-0)
joint fire support. Joint fires that assist air, land, maritime, and special operations forces
to move, maneuver, and control territory, populations, airspace, and key waters. (DOD
Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-0)
joint force. A force composed of elements, assigned or attached, of two or more Military
Departments operating under a single joint force commander. (Approved for
incorporation into the DOD Dictionary.)
joint force air component commander. The commander within a unified command,
subordinate unified command, or joint task force responsible to the establishing
commander for recommending the proper employment of assigned, attached, and/or
GL-10 JP 3-0
Glossary
made available for tasking air forces; planning and coordinating air operations; or
accomplishing such operational missions as may be assigned. Also called JFACC.
(DOD Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-0)
joint force land component commander. The commander within a unified command,
subordinate unified command, or joint task force responsible to the establishing
commander for recommending the proper employment of assigned, attached, and/or
made available for tasking land forces; planning and coordinating land operations; or
accomplishing such operational missions as may be assigned. Also called JFLCC.
(DOD Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-0)
joint force special operations component commander. The commander within a unified
command, subordinate unified command, or joint task force responsible to the
establishing commander for recommending the proper employment of assigned,
attached, and/or made available for tasking special operations forces and assets;
planning and coordinating special operations; or accomplishing such operational
missions as may be assigned. Also called JFSOCC. (DOD Dictionary. SOURCE:
JP 3-0)
joint functions. Related capabilities and activities placed into six basic groups of
command and control, intelligence, fires, movement and maneuver, protection, and
sustainment to help joint force commanders synchronize, integrate, and direct joint
operations. (DOD Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-0)
joint operations. Military actions conducted by joint forces and those Service forces
employed in specified command relationships with each other, which of themselves,
do not establish joint forces. (Approved for incorporation into the DOD Dictionary.)
joint operations area. An area of land, sea, and airspace, defined by a geographic
combatant commander or subordinate unified commander, in which a joint force
commander (normally a joint task force commander) conducts military operations to
accomplish a specific mission. Also called JOA. (DOD Dictionary. SOURCE: JP
3-0)
joint special operations area. An area of land, sea, and airspace assigned by a joint force
commander to the commander of a joint special operations force to conduct special
operations activities. Also called JSOA. (DOD Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-0)
GL-11
Glossary
that connects any two or more routes together. (Approved for incorporation into the
DOD Dictionary.)
military intervention. The deliberate act of a nation or a group of nations to introduce its
military forces into the course of an existing controversy. (DOD Dictionary.
SOURCE: JP 3-0)
mission. 1. The task, together with the purpose, that clearly indicates the action to be taken
and the reason therefore. (JP 3-0) 2. In common usage, especially when applied to
lower military units, a duty assigned to an individual or unit; a task. (JP 3-0) 3. The
dispatching of one or more aircraft to accomplish one particular task. (DOD
Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-30)
nation assistance. None. (Approved for removal from the DOD Dictionary.)
neutral. In combat and combat support operations, an identity applied to a track whose
characteristics, behavior, origin, or nationality indicate that it is neither supporting nor
opposing friendly forces. (DOD Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-0)
neutrality. In international law, the attitude of impartiality during periods of war adopted
by third states toward a belligerent and subsequently recognized by the belligerent,
which creates rights and duties between the impartial states and the belligerent. (DOD
Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-0)
GL-12 JP 3-0
Glossary
operation. 3. To render safe mines, bombs, missiles, and booby traps. 4. To make
harmless anything contaminated with a chemical agent. (DOD Dictionary. SOURCE:
JP 3-0)
operational access. The ability to project military force into an operational area with
sufficient freedom of action to accomplish the mission. (Approved for inclusion in the
DOD Dictionary.)
operational level of warfare. The level of warfare at which campaigns and major
operations are planned, conducted, and sustained to achieve strategic objectives within
theaters or other operational areas. (Approved for replacement of operational level
of war and its definition in the DOD Dictionary.)
operational reach. The distance and duration across which a force can successfully
employ military capabilities. (Approved for incorporation into the DOD Dictionary.)
physical security. 1. That part of security concerned with physical measures designed to
safeguard personnel; to prevent unauthorized access to equipment, installations,
GL-13
Glossary
material, and documents; and to safeguard them against espionage, sabotage, damage,
and theft. (JP 3-0) 2. In communications security, the component that results from all
physical measures necessary to safeguard classified equipment, material, and
documents from access thereto or observation thereof by unauthorized persons. (DOD
Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 6-0)
protection of shipping. The use of proportionate force, when necessary for the protection
of United States flag vessels and aircraft, United States citizens (whether embarked in
United States or foreign vessels), and their property against unlawful violence.
(Approved for incorporation into the DOD Dictionary.)
risk management. The process to identify, assess, and control risks and make decisions
that balance risk cost with mission benefits. Also called RM. (Approved for
incorporation into the DOD Dictionary.)
show of force. An operation planned to demonstrate United States resolve that involves
increased visibility of United States deployed forces in an attempt to defuse a specific
situation that, if allowed to continue, may be detrimental to United States interests or
national objectives. (Approved for incorporation into the DOD Dictionary.)
stability activities. Various military missions, tasks, and activities conducted outside the
United States in coordination with other instruments of national power to maintain or
reestablish a safe and secure environment, provide essential governmental services,
emergency infrastructure reconstruction, and humanitarian relief. (Approved for
replacement of stability operations and its definition in the DOD Dictionary.)
standing joint force headquarters. None. (Approved for removal from the DOD
Dictionary.)
strategic level of warfare. The level of warfare at which a nation, often as a member of a
group of nations, determines national or multinational (alliance or coalition) strategic
security objectives and guidance, then develops and uses national resources to achieve
those objectives. (Approved for the replacement of strategic level of war and its
definition in the DOD Dictionary.)
GL-14 JP 3-0
Glossary
strategy. A prudent idea or set of ideas for employing the instruments of national power
in a synchronized and integrated fashion to achieve theater, national, and/or
multinational objectives. (DOD Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-0)
supported commander. 1. The commander having primary responsibility for all aspects
of a task assigned by the Joint Strategic Capabilities Plan or other joint planning
authority. 2. In the context of joint planning, the commander who prepares operation
plans or operation orders in response to requirements of the Chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff. 3. In the context of a support command relationship, the commander
who receives assistance from another commanders force or capabilities, and who is
responsible for ensuring that the supporting commander understands the assistance
required. (Approved for incorporation into the DOD Dictionary.)
sustainment. The provision of logistics and personnel services required to maintain and
prolong operations until successful mission accomplishment. (DOD Dictionary.
SOURCE: JP 3-0)
tactical level of warfare. The level of warfare at which battles and engagements are
planned and executed to achieve military objectives assigned to tactical units or task
forces. (Approved for replacement of tactical level of war and its definition in the
DOD Dictionary.)
targeting. The process of selecting and prioritizing targets and matching the appropriate
response to them, considering operational requirements and capabilities. (DOD
Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-0)
termination criteria. The specified standards approved by the President and/or the
Secretary of Defense that must be met before a joint operation can be concluded.
(DOD Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-0)
GL-15
Glossary
terms of reference. None. (Approved for removal from the DOD Dictionary.)
unity of command. The operation of all forces under a single responsible commander
who has the requisite authority to direct and employ those forces in pursuit of a
common purpose. (DOD Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-0)
weapon system. A combination of one or more weapons with all related equipment,
materials, services, personnel, and means of delivery and deployment (if applicable)
required for self-sufficiency. (DOD Dictionary. SOURCE: JP 3-0)
GL-16 JP 3-0
JOINT DOCTRINE PUBLICATIONS HIERARCHY
JP 1
JOINT
DOCTRINE
All joint publications are organized into a comprehensive hierarchy as shown in the chart above. Joint
Publication (JP) 3-0 is in the Operations series of joint doctrine publications. The diagram below
illustrates an overview of the development process:
Initiation
ENHANCED
JOINT JOINT
WARFIGHTING DOCTRINE
CAPABILITY PUBLICATION
Approval Development