The CINCs' Strategies: the Combatant Command ProcessDIANE Publishing |
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Page 5
... forces for nuclear and conventional combat ; keeping their component commands engaged throughout the AOR to deter war and encourage regional stability ; devising new ways to counter the proliferation of WMD in their AORs ; and finding ...
... forces for nuclear and conventional combat ; keeping their component commands engaged throughout the AOR to deter war and encourage regional stability ; devising new ways to counter the proliferation of WMD in their AORs ; and finding ...
Page 12
... forces at the operational and tactical levels of war. The 1986 Goldwater ... nuclear weapons employment, counterterrorism, counter- proliferation ... forces needed to accomplish the objectives of the President's NSS. The NMS assists with ...
... forces at the operational and tactical levels of war. The 1986 Goldwater ... nuclear weapons employment, counterterrorism, counter- proliferation ... forces needed to accomplish the objectives of the President's NSS. The NMS assists with ...
Page 52
... the geographic CINCs. USSTRATCOM is located at Offutt Air Force Base near Omaha, Nebraska. In the peacetime environment, CINCSTRAT exercises his full combatant command authority over single purpose nuclear forces through the two STRATCOM ...
... the geographic CINCs. USSTRATCOM is located at Offutt Air Force Base near Omaha, Nebraska. In the peacetime environment, CINCSTRAT exercises his full combatant command authority over single purpose nuclear forces through the two STRATCOM ...
Page 53
authority over single purpose nuclear forces through the two STRATCOM Air Force components , Air Combat Command ( ACC ) and Air Force Space Command . Dual- purpose forces ( nuclear and conventional capable aircraft ) are not assigned to ...
authority over single purpose nuclear forces through the two STRATCOM Air Force components , Air Combat Command ( ACC ) and Air Force Space Command . Dual- purpose forces ( nuclear and conventional capable aircraft ) are not assigned to ...
Page 54
... nuclear-capable forces in the field. The SWPS was developed because of the changed nature of the threat, increased planning requirements for rapid response, and the significant reduction in the U.S. nuclear force structure. Process. 50 ...
... nuclear-capable forces in the field. The SWPS was developed because of the changed nature of the threat, increased planning requirements for rapid response, and the significant reduction in the U.S. nuclear force structure. Process. 50 ...
Common terms and phrases
Air Force Base assessment Camp H. M. Smith CENTCOM Chiefs of Staff CINCs CINCSTRAT combatant commands component commanders coordination Directorate engagement activities EUCOM geographic CINCs interagency Interview by authors January joint doctrine Joint Operations Joint Pub Joint Staff Joint Strategic Capabilities JSCP Lieutenant Colonel military resources mission National Military Strategy National Security Strategy Offutt Air Force operation plans Pacific Command strategy PACOM peacetime engagement Planning Guidance Posture Statement regional campaign plans regional strategy Secretary of Defense security assistance service components SIOP SOUTHCOM Special Operations Command STRATCOM Strategic Capabilities Plan strategic concepts strategic objectives strategic planners strategic planning process Strategic Planning System Strategy Division strategy process theater strategy threats TSPS U.S. Army U.S. Central Command U.S. Government U.S. interests U.S. Navy U.S. Pacific Command U.S. Special Operations U.S. Strategic Command Unified Command Plan update USACOM USCENTCOM USEUCOM USSOCOM USSOUTHCOM USSTRATCOM warfighting Washington
Popular passages
Page 62 - To this end, the study is sponsored jointly by the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations and Low Intensity Conflict (OASD/SO/LIC) and the Office of the Under Secretary of State for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs (DOS/R).
Page 18 - Carl Von Clausewitz, On War, Michael Howard and Peter Paret, eds. (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1976), pp. 88-89. 42. Douglas Pike, "Vietnam War," Marxism, Communism, and Western Society, A Comparative Encyclopedia (Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press), p.
Page 10 - Combatant command (command authority) cannot be delegated and is the authority of a combatant commander to perform those functions of command over assigned forces involving organizing and employing commands and forces, assigning tasks, designating objectives, and giving authoritative direction over all aspects of military operations, joint training, and logistics necessary to accomplish the missions assigned to the command. Combatant command (command authority) should be exercised through the commanders...
Page 19 - To sum up: we clearly see that the activities characteristic of war may be split into two main categories: those that are merely preparations for war, and war proper. The same distinction must be made in theory as well. The knowledge and skills involved in the preparations will be concerned with the creation, training and maintenance of the fighting forces.
Page ix - Colonel, he served as a tenured faculty instructor at the US Army War College where he held the Maxwell D. Taylor Chair of the Profession of Arms. His military duties included infantry and general staff assignments in the United States, Korea, Vietnam, and Germany.
Page 61 - H. Allen Holmes, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations and Low-Intensity Conflict...
Page 10 - ... (A) giving authoritative direction to subordinate commands and forces necessary to carry out missions assigned to the command, including authoritative direction over all aspects of military operations, joint training, and logistics; (B) prescribing the chain of command to the commands and forces within the command; (C) organizing...
Page 4 - Our nation can only address this era's dangers and opportunities if we remain actively engaged in global affairs. We are the world's greatest power, and we have global interests äs well äs responsibilities.
Page 17 - US Department of Defense, Report on the Bottom-Up Review, Washington, DC: US Government Printing Office, October 1993, pp. 27-31. 6.1 bid, p. 19. 7. For example, seeGraham H. Turbiville, "OperationsOther Than War: Organized Crime Dimension,
Page 82 - C3i; the Joint Requirements Oversight Council, supported by requirements analyses provided by a Joint C4ISR Decision Support Center; the Joint Strategic Planning System; the Planning, Programming, and Budgeting System; and the acquisition system. DOD also indicated that it will rely on program reviews conducted within the planning, budgeting, and acquisition oversight processes to achieve compliance with the C4ISR Architecture.