Adp3 90
Adp3 90
Adp3 90
JULY 2019
DISTRIBUTION RESTRICTION:
Approved for public release; distribution is unlimited.
This publication supersedes ADP 3-90, dated 13 August 2018.
HEADQUARTERS, DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY
This publication is available at the Army Publishing Directorate site
(https://armypubs.army.mil) and the Central Army Registry site
(https://atiam.train.army.mil/catalog/dashboard).
*ADP 3-90
i
Contents
Figures
Figure 1-1. Risk reduction factors .................................................................................................. 1-7
Figure 2-1. Taxonomy of Army tactics ........................................................................................... 2-3
Figure 2-2. Division-assigned airspace .......................................................................................... 2-9
Figure 2-3. Flanks of a stationary unit ......................................................................................... 2-12
Figure 2-4. Flanks of a moving unit ............................................................................................. 2-13
Figure 4-1. Defensive arrangement ............................................................................................... 4-6
Tables
Introductory table. New and modified Army terms ............................................................................ vi
TACTICS
1-1. Tactics is the employment, ordered arrangement, and directed actions of forces in relation to
each other. ADP 3-90 is the primary publication for the offense and defense at the tactical level. It is
authoritative and provides guidance in the form of combat-tested concepts and ideas modified to take
advantage of Army and joint capabilities. It focuses on the tactics used to employ current capabilities to
prevail in combat. Tactics are not prescriptive. Tacticians use creativity to develop solutions for which enemy
forces are neither prepared nor able to cope.
1-2. Tactics always require judgment and adaptation to a situation’s unique circumstances. Techniques and
procedures are established patterns or processes that can be applied repeatedly with little judgment to various
circumstances. Together, tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTP) provide commanders and staffs with the
fundamentals to develop solutions to tactical problems. The solution to any specific problem is a unique
combination of these fundamentals, current TTP, and the creation of new TTP based on an evaluation of the
situation. Commanders determine acceptable solutions by mastering doctrine and current TTP. They gain
this mastery through experiences in education, training, and operations.
1-7. The levels of warfare help commanders to visualize a logical nesting of operations, to allocate
resources, and to assign tasks to the appropriate echelon of command. Advances in technology and a complex
information environment compress time and space relationships. This reality blurs the boundaries among the
levels of warfare. In a world of constant and immediate communication, a single event may affect all three
levels of warfare simultaneously.
1-11. Combat is a lethal clash of opposing wills and a violent struggle between thinking and adaptive
commanders with opposing goals. Commanders strive to defeat their enemies. Defeat is to render a force
incapable of achieving its objectives (ADP 3-0). Commanders seek to accomplish missions that support
operational or strategic purposes while preventing their enemies from doing the same.
1-12. These options that support operational or strategic purposes represent a starting point for developing a
course of action (COA) to a specific tactical problem. Each decision represents a choice among a range of
options. Each option balances competing demands and requires judgment. Tacticians use experience and
creativity to outthink their opposing enemy commanders. The mission variables have many combinations
that make each new tactical situation unique. Because enemy forces change and adapt to friendly moves
during operations, there is no guarantee that the current plan remains valid throughout a single operation.
capabilities requires friendly forces effectively integrating information operations, cyberspace operations,
and electronic warfare capabilities, as appropriate, to the lowest possible echelons.
employing the various elements of the combined arms team. A combined arms team is a team that uses
combined arms—the synchronized and simultaneous application of arms to achieve an effect greater than if
each element was used separately or sequentially (ADP 3-0).
1-22. Mastery of the science of tactics is necessary for leaders to understand physical and procedural
constraints. These constraints include the effects from mission variables or the effects of rules of engagement
on friendly and enemy force capabilities.
Sustaining and protecting subordinate forces before, during, and after battles.
Maintaining a better understanding of the tactical situation than enemy forces and exploiting it.
Planning beyond the initial operation and anticipating its branches or sequels.
Continuously consolidating gains to defeat all forms of enemy resistance.
1-29. Momentum complements and helps maintain the initiative. Momentum reflects a unit’s combat power
and the velocity and tempo of its operations. Concentrating combat power at the decisive point, supported by
rapid maneuver, places an enemy in a disadvantageous position. Commanders maintain focus and pressure,
controlling the tempo of operations while seeking and exploiting opportunities. Maintaining momentum
requires continuously assessing the situation and making risk decisions with regard to resourcing the main
effort.
1-30. A thorough understanding of an operational environment greatly helps commanders to develop tactical
solutions and allows them to drive the operations process. Commanders who make and implement decisions
faster than a hesitant enemy, even to a small degree, gain an accruing advantage. (See ADP 6-0 for a
description of the operations process.)
1-31. Transitions among operations are difficult and may create unexpected opportunities for friendly or
enemy forces. Commanders and their supporting staffs quickly recognize such opportunities, acting on
branches or sequels prepared during the planning process. Improvisation may be necessary to cope with
unforeseen circumstances, particularly those arising from consolidating gains. Consolidate gains is activities
to make enduring any temporary operational success and to set the conditions for a sustainable security
environment, allowing for a transition of control to legitimate authorities (ADP 3-0). (See ADP 3-0 for
additional information on the consolidation of gains.)
1-32. Ultimately, solutions to tactical problems result from the collective efforts of a commander’s plan and
the ability of subordinate leaders to execute it. Commanders are responsible for training their subordinates.
The result of that rigorous and realistic training leaves commanders fully confident in their subordinates’
mastery of the art and science of tactics and in their ability to execute a chosen solution.
RISK
1-36. Choices and the cost of those choices characterize all operations. Commanders decide if they can
accomplish their mission based on current intelligence of the enemy situation and an assessment of the assets
available (including time) and the means to coordinate and synchronize those assets. If those assets are not
available, commanders choose to take additional time to plan, resource, and prepare for an operation, or they
articulate where and how they will assume risk.
1-37. Commanders may act on limited combat information in a time-constrained environment. Combat
information is unevaluated data, gathered by or provided directly to the tactical commander which, due to its
highly perishable nature or the criticality of the situation, cannot be processed into tactical intelligence in
time to satisfy the user’s tactical intelligence requirements (JP 2-01). Commanders must understand the
inherent risk of acting only on combat information, since it is vulnerable to enemy deception and can be
misinterpreted. The intelligence staff helps commanders assess combat information used in decision making.
1-38. Commanders cannot be successful without a willingness to act under conditions of uncertainty, which
demands balancing risks with taking advantage of opportunities. No amount of intelligence can eliminate all
uncertainties and inherent risks of tactical operations. Commanders will never have absolute situational
understanding. A lack of information must not paralyze the decision-making process. The more information
a commander collects concerning the mission variables, the better that commander is able to make informed
decisions. Less information means that a commander has a greater risk of making a poor decision for a
specific situation. Knowing when there is enough information to make a decision within the higher
commander’s intent and constraints is part of the art of tactics and is a critical skill for all leaders.
1-39. To shape success, commanders take the minimum time necessary to plan and prepare. Reduced
coordination at the start of an operation may result in less than optimal effects on the enemy. However, that
reduced coordination may offer increased speed and momentum and, potentially, surprise. The more time a
commander takes to prepare for an operation, the more opportunity the enemy has to prepare.
1-40. Bold decisions that are adequately informed give the best promise of success. Commanders accept risk
when making decisions because there will always be a degree of uncertainty. Opportunities come with risks.
The willingness to accept risk is often the key to exposing enemy weaknesses. There are times when leaders
cannot find ways of addressing all of the risk and should consider if the outcome is worth the risk. Situational
understanding, running estimates, and planning reduces risk.
1-41. In some circumstances, commanders can forego detailed planning, extensive rehearsals, and significant
changes in task organization. Their prior self-development, training, and experience allows them to assess
and create overwhelming combat power at decisive points. For example, an attacking battalion task force
encountering enemy security elements just moving into position can conduct actions on contact to destroy
these elements without the loss of momentum. Actions on contact are a series of combat actions, often
conducted nearly simultaneously, taken on contact with the enemy to develop the situation. Friendly
commanders determine what must be done to preserve combat power and create conditions for success.
1-42. Every military decision includes risk. Commanders exercise judgement when deciding where to accept
risk. As shown in figure 1-1, commanders have several techniques available to reduce the risk associated
with a lack of information and intelligence in a specific operation. Some of these techniques for reducing risk
require the commitment of additional resources. Deciding what resources to divert to reduce risk is part of
the art of tactics. In general terms, risk is the exposure of someone or something valued to danger, harm, or
loss. Risk is an expression of the probability and implications of an activity or event, with positive or negative
consequences taking place. It is a measure of the likelihood of something going right or wrong, and the
associated impact, good or bad.
1-43. Because risk is part of every operation, it cannot be avoided. Commanders analyze risk in collaboration
with subordinates to help determine what level of risk exists and how to mitigate it. When considering how
much risk to accept with a COA, commanders consider risk to the force and risk to the mission against the
perceived benefit. They apply judgment with regard to the importance of an objective, time available, and
anticipated cost. Commanders need to balance the tension between creating opportunities, protecting the
force, and accepting and managing risks that must be taken to accomplish their mission.
1-44. While each situation is different, commanders avoid undue caution or commitment of resources to
guard against every perceived threat. An unrealistic expectation of avoiding all risk is detrimental to mission
accomplishment. Waiting for perfect intelligence and synchronization increases risk or closes a window of
opportunity. Successful operations require commanders and subordinates to manage accepted risk, exercise
initiative, and act decisively even when the outcome is uncertain.
1-45. Commanders—when supported by systems that can access current and accurate information—exploit
their understanding of the enemy and friendly situations. This understanding allows maneuver at favorable
ranges and ensures responsive and flexible support of forces. The integration of information technologies,
capable leaders, and agile formations reduces risk and facilitates decisive action.
1-46. Risk reduction does not always mean seeking to increase information about the enemy at the expense
of time. Commanders partially compensate for this gap by maintaining flexibility in their troop dispositions.
They accomplish this by increasing the depth of their unit security areas; the size, number, capabilities of
their security elements; and the size of their reserve. A security area is that area occupied by a unit’s
security elements and includes the areas of influence of those security elements. Commanders choose
formations that provide versatility and allow for initial enemy contact with the smallest possible friendly
force. Another way to compensate for increased risk is to provide additional time and resources for
subordinate elements to develop the situation before committing to a particular COA.
1-47. Friendly force agility further mitigates risk in tactical operations. Agility is the ability of friendly forces
to react faster than enemy forces. It is as much a mental as a physical quality. Agility permits the rapid
concentration of friendly strengths against enemy vulnerabilities. Friendly forces achieve agility through
rigorous and realistic training, well-known and drilled unit standard operating procedures, maintained and
continuously shared understanding and estimates, and the use of the mission command approach.
1-48. In any operation, the relationship among information, uncertainty, risk, size of reserves and security
forces, and the disposition of the main body may frequently changes. The main body is the principal part
of a tactical command or formation. It does not include detached elements of the command, such as
advance guards, flank guards, and covering forces. Commanders continually weigh the balance of
information, uncertainty, risk, and size of reserves and security forces against the disposition of the main
body. They then make adjustments as needed.
1-49. Changes to task organization, mission, and priorities are part of the operations process. Commanders,
advised by their staffs, determine the optimal formation and organization for a specific mission, and they
continuously assess risk. If the situation warrants, commanders make appropriate changes and allocate
resources to minimize risk through these changes. Every change has opportunities and risks. Commanders
balance the two to achieve their purpose.
Tacticians apply common tactical concepts, military definitions, and the tactical
echelons and organizations as they conduct offensive and defensive operations. This
chapter discusses joint interdependence, principles of joint operations, and the
operational and mission variables. It introduces the Army doctrinal hierarchy that
forms the framework that organizes this publication and its subordinate publications as
well as warfighting functions and defeat mechanisms. This chapter contains a
discussion of common tactical concepts and echelons. This chapter concludes by
covering forms of maneuver, forms or defense, and echelons.
JOINT INTERDEPENDENCE
2-1. Army forces conduct offensive and defensive operations as members of
an interdependent joint force, applying land power as part of unified action. Principles of Joint
Joint interdependence is the purposeful reliance by one Service on another Operations
Service to complement and reinforce each other’s effects. Joint capabilities Objective
enhance the effectiveness of Army forces. Joint operations also have Offensive
interagency and multinational aspects. (See JP-1, JP 3-0, and ADP 3-0 for Mass
additional information on joint interdependence. See JP 3-08 and FM 3-16 for Maneuver
information on Army interagency and multinational aspects.)
Economy of force
Unity of command
PRINCIPLES OF JOINT OPERATIONS Security
2-2. JP 3-0 defines the twelve principles of joint operations and provides Surprise
general guidance for conducting military operations. The joint principles Simplicity
originate from Army doctrine. First published in America in 1923 as general
Restraint
principles in Field Service Regulations United States Army, the first nine, as
Perseverance
principles of war, have stood the tests of time, analysis, experimentation, and
practice. The principles of joint operations provide a crucial link between pure Legitimacy
theory and actual application. (See JP 3-0 for further information on these
principles.)
OPERATIONAL VARIABLES
2-3. Army planners use the operational variables to describe an operational
Operational Variables
environment. Operational variables are those aspects of an operational
environment which affect operations, and they differ from one area of Political
operations to another. Army planners analyze an operational environment in Military
terms of eight interrelated operational variables: political, military, economic, Economic
social, information, infrastructure, physical environment, and time (also known Social
as PMESII-PT). As soon as a commander and staff have an indication of where Information
their unit may deploy, they begin analyzing that location’s operational
Infrastructure
environment using the operational variables. They continue to refine and
update their analysis even after receiving a mission and throughout the course Physical Environment
of the ensuing operation. (See ADP 3-0 for additional information on the Time
operational variables.)
MISSION VARIABLES
2-4. Upon receipt of a mission, Army leaders filter relevant information
Mission Variables
categorized by the operational variables into the categories of the mission
variables for use during mission analysis. Incorporating an analysis of the Mission
operational variables with the mission variables ensures Army leaders Enemy
understand the context in which they perform their missions. Terrain and weather
2-5. The mission variables describe the conditions in which commanders and Troops and support
available
staffs execute the art and science of tactics. An analysis of these mission
variables is critical during the military decision-making process. Commanders Time available
consider each variable during the operations process. (See ADP 3-0 for Civil considerations
additional information on the mission variables.)
WARFIGHTING FUNCTIONS
2-10. A warfighting function is a group of tasks and systems united by a common purpose that commanders
use to accomplish missions and training objectives (ADP 3-0). The warfighting functions provide an
intellectual organization of common capabilities available to commanders and staffs to achieve objectives
and accomplish missions. In 2008, the Army established six warfighting functions that linked to the joint
functions established in JP 3-0. The Army defines each of these six warfighting functions:
The command and control warfighting function is the related tasks and a system that enable
commanders to synchronize and converge all elements of combat power (ADP 3-0).
The movement and maneuver warfighting function is the related tasks and systems that move and
employ forces to achieve a position of relative advantage over the enemy and other threats
(ADP 3-0). Direct fire and close combat are inherent in maneuver.
The intelligence warfighting function is the related tasks and systems that facilitate understanding
the enemy, terrain, weather, civil considerations, and other significant aspects of the operational
environment (ADP 3-0).
The fires warfighting function is the related tasks and systems that create and converge effects in
all domains against the adversary or enemy to enable operations across the range of military
operations (ADP 3-0).
The sustainment warfighting function is the related tasks and systems that provide support and
services to ensure freedom of action, extend operational reach, and prolong endurance (ADP 3-0).
The protection warfighting function is the related tasks and systems that preserve the force so the
commander can apply maximum combat power to accomplish the mission (ADP 3-0).
The successful execution of operations requires the use of all the warfighting functions in various
combinations and with the other two elements of combat power—leadership and information.
DEFEAT MECHANISMS
2-11. A defeat mechanism is a method through which friendly forces accomplish their mission against enemy
opposition (ADP 3-0). Tactical forces at all echelons use combinations of the four defeat mechanisms:
destroy, dislocate, disintegrate, and isolate. There are also stability mechanisms used in the conduct of
stability. (See ADP 3-0 for a discussion of both defeat and stability mechanisms.)
AREA OF OPERATIONS
2-15. An area of operations is 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 (JP 3-0). The joint force land
component commander, Army Service component command commander, or Army forces commander
assigns subordinates AOs. Those subordinates further assign AOs from their assigned AO, down to the
battalion or company echelon based on the mission variables. A unit assigned an AO may not change control
measures imposed by a higher echelon headquarters within its AO. However, it may establish additional
2-18. The organizational design of the three types of BCTs and the maneuver enhancement brigade allows
them to be assigned AOs. If commanders assign an AO to a unit that is not designed to perform all the tasks
associated with controlling an AO, they clearly articulate which AO responsibilities they will not perform
and what risk the commander is willing to assume. They also designate the units or command posts that
perform those functions on their behalf.
Terrain Management
2-19. Terrain management is the process of allocating terrain by establishing areas of operations,
designating assembly areas, and specifying locations for units and activities to deconflict activities that
might interfere with each other. Commanders assigned AOs are responsible for terrain management within
the boundaries of those AOs. Throughout operations, commanders manage terrain within their boundaries by
assigning subordinate units areas and positions. Their command posts track unit locations and movements
and adjust control measures to deconflict space and control movements within their AOs. A higher echelon
headquarters may dictate that another unit position itself within a subordinate unit’s AO. The commander
assigned the AO retains approval authority for that unit’s placement. This ensures that the commander
controlling the AO knows what units are in the AO and where they are located. This allows commanders to
synchronize efforts. As tenants of an AO, units are required to coordinate with the headquarters assigned the
AO.
Information Collection
2-20. Within their AOs, commanders perform intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (known as ISR)
as part of their collection efforts. They perform these tasks and conduct operations to maintain current and
accurate common operational pictures of their AOs. They share the common operational picture with higher
echelon, adjacent, subordinate, and tenant units to maintain a clear understanding of their AOs and areas of
interest.
2-21. Intelligence operations are the tasks undertaken by military intelligence units through the intelligence
disciplines to obtain information to satisfy validated requirements (ADP 2-0). Intelligence operations collect
information about the activities and resources of the threat or information concerning the characteristics of
an operational environment. The intelligence disciplines of counterintelligence, geospatial intelligence,
human intelligence, measurement and signature intelligence, signals intelligence, and technical intelligence
routinely perform tasks associated with intelligence operations. (See FM 2-0 for additional information on
intelligence operations.)
2-22. The Army views the intelligence process as a model that describes how the intelligence warfighting
function facilitates situational understanding and supports decision making. Commanders and staffs must
understand the intelligence process. To be effective, collected data and information require processing, timely
analysis, fusion, distribution, and access. The Army intelligence process consists of four steps (plan and
direct, collect and process, produce, and disseminate) and two continuing activities (analyze and assess). (See
ADP 2-0 for additional information on the intelligence process.)
2-23. Surveillance is a systematic collection of information. It should be continuous, and it involves active
and passive activities. Reconnaissance is the active collection of information, and it usually includes human
participation. Both surveillance and reconnaissance produce combat information that meets one or more of
the commander’s critical information requirements or intelligence requirements. (See chapter 5 for additional
information on reconnaissance operations. See FM 3-90-2 for a detailed discussion of reconnaissance.)
2-24. Security operations are those operations performed by commanders to provide early and
accurate warning of enemy operations, to provide the forces being protected with time and maneuver
space within which to react to the enemy, and to develop the situation to allow commanders to
effectively use their protected forces. Security operations and reconnaissance operations differ in that
security operations focus on the protected force or location while reconnaissance operations focus on the
enemy and terrain. (See chapter 5 for additional information on security operations.)
Civil-Military Operations
2-25. Civil-military operations is activities of a commander performed by designated military forces that
establish, maintain, influence, or exploit relations between military forces and indigenous populations and
institutions by directly supporting the achievement of objectives relating to the reestablishment or
maintenance of stability within a region or host nation (JP 3-57). Commanders conduct civil-military
operations to coordinate and integrate joint, single-Service, and multinational operations with the operations
of other U.S. government departments and agencies, nongovernmental organizations, intergovernmental
organizations (for example, the United Nations), and the private sector.
Movement Control
2-26. Movement control is the dual process of committing allocated transportation assets and regulating
movements according to command priorities to synchronize distribution flow over lines of communications
to sustain land forces (ADP 4-0). Units transiting another unit’s AO are required to coordinate with that unit’s
headquarters. Generally, the unit assigned an AO controls movement within that AO. The designation,
maintenance, route security, and control of movement along routes within an AO are the responsibility of the
owning unit unless the higher echelon coordinating instructions directs otherwise. The commander of an AO
may designate movement routes as open, supervised, dispatch, reserved, or prohibited. Each route’s
designation varies based on the mission variables. (See ATP 4-16 for a discussion of movement planning and
control measures.)
Clearance of Fires
2-27. Clearance of fires is the process by which the supported commander ensures that fires or their effects
will have no unintended consequences on friendly units or the scheme of maneuver (FM 3-09). The
commander of the AO clears fires. Within their AO, units may employ most direct or indirect fire systems
without receiving further clearance from their higher echelon headquarters. However, there are three
exceptions. The first and most common exception is that a unit may not use munitions within its own AO
without coordination if the effects of those munitions extend beyond its AO. Second, a higher echelon
headquarters may explicitly restrict the use of certain munitions, such as scatterable mines. Third, a higher
echelon headquarters may impose a restrictive fire support coordination measure (FSCM), such as a no-fire
area around a dislocated civilian camp.
2-28. Generally, a commander may not employ indirect fires across boundaries without receiving clearance
from the unit into whose AO the fires enter. In limited circumstances, commanders use direct and observed
joint fires when firing across boundaries at positively identified enemy forces when there is no time to
coordinate with adjacent friendly units.
2-29. A fire support coordination measure is a measure employed by commanders to facilitate the rapid
engagement of targets and simultaneously provide safeguards for friendly forces (JP 3-0). FSCMs govern the
employment of artillery and mortars, attacks by Army rotary-wing aircraft, fires from unmanned aircraft, and
close air support and air interdiction by fixed-wing aircraft. FSCMs enhance the rapid engagement of targets;
protect forces, populations, critical infrastructure, and sites of religious or cultural significance; and shape
future operations. Commanders position and adjust FSCMs consistent with the situation and after consulting
higher, subordinate, supporting, and affected commanders.
2-30. FSCMs can be either permissive or restrictive in nature. Permissive FSCMs are the coordinated fire
line, fire support coordination line (FSCL), free-fire area, and the kill box. Restrictive FSCMs are the no-fire
area, restrictive fire area, restrictive fire line, fire support area and fire support station, and zone of fire. There
are additional target acquisition control measures and airspace coordinating measures that impact the
clearance of fires, such as critical friendly zones, call for fire zones, artillery target intelligence zones, sensor
zones, airspace coordination areas, coordinating altitudes, and restricted operations areas. (See FM 3-09 for
the definition of each of these FSCMs and a discussion of each use.)
Security
2-31. The general security of all units operating within an AO is the responsibility of the unit assigned the
AO. Unit commanders remain responsible for their unit’s local security. Commanders assigned AOs assess
risk and perform security operations. The conduct of security operations prevents surprise and provides time
for units located within an AO to respond to enemy actions. When commanders cannot or choose not to
provide security measures throughout their AO, they specify what they are not providing and then coordinate
with adjacent, subordinate, and tenant units.
Personnel Recovery
2-32. Army personnel recovery is the military efforts taken to prepare for and execute the recovery and
reintegration of isolated personnel (FM 3-50). Isolation occurs through enemy action, disorientation, or
environmental conditions. The commander assigned an AO is responsible for recovering and returning
isolated persons within that AO to friendly control. Large-scale combat operations require an analysis of the
mission variable before triggering an immediate response. If immediate recovery is not undertaken or is not
successful, the unit conducts detailed planning and executes deliberate recovery. Army forces support
external supported recovery of joint task force components, interagency organizations, and multinational
forces. (See FM 3-50 for additional information on Army personnel recovery and the operations process.)
operations among subordinate units. These procedures and annexes ensure consistency with joint airspace
procedures, the theater airspace control plan, aeronautical information publications, and associated plans and
orders. To support the division mission, the airspace elements are responsible for—
Providing airspace control expertise for the commander.
Monitoring joint airspace operations.
Planning and updating input to the joint airspace control plan.
Integrating the airspace control architecture into the joint airspace control architecture.
Developing the airspace control architecture to support plans.
Drafting all airspace control input for operation orders, operation plans, appendices, and running
estimates.
Planning and requesting airspace coordinating measures.
Deconflicting airspace through the appropriate authority.
Coordinating with the movement and maneuver (for aviation), intelligence (for information
collection), and fires and protection (for air and missile defense) cells.
Providing air traffic service expertise to the headquarters.
2-35. The division airspace element oversees airspace control for all of the division’s assigned airspace.
When a division allocates part of its AO to a subordinate brigade, it delegates some airspace management
responsibilities to that brigade. However, the division airspace element still integrates airspace users over the
entire division AO. If the division has an unusually large AO or if the division AO is noncontiguous, then it
can delegate more airspace control responsibilities to subordinate units. Normally, delegation of airspace
control for unified action partner airspace requires significant augmentation of the brigade with organized,
trained, and equipped airspace control personnel from both the Army and the Air Force.
2-39. Army commanders and staffs use positive control methods (division positive control is limited to areas
controlled by Army or joint air traffic control elements), procedural control methods (used throughout
division-assigned airspace), or a combination of both methods. When a division is delegated control of
airspace, the JAGIC controls division-assigned airspace using primarily procedural control. The airmen in
the JAGIC may provide procedural control for joint force air component command aircraft operating in the
division-assigned airspace. The airspace control appendix specifies control for division aircraft. (See FM 6-0
for orders annexes. See paragraph 3a of appendix 10 to Annex C, Operations.) Normally the JAGIC relies
on the BCTs to integrate division aviation elements operating below the coordinating altitude in their AO.
Simultaneously, the JAGIC airspace Soldiers integrate division aircraft operating above the coordinating
altitude and any division aircraft operating in parts of the division AO not further assigned as a brigade AO.
For example, during a division deep operation the JAGIC is the airspace control agency for Shadow or Gray
Eagle unmanned aircraft within division-assigned airspace as well as for aircraft operating forward of one or
more BCT AOs.
the control of a corps or division, then the corps or division airspace element integrates the functional brigade
airspace requirements.
2-42. Most multifunctional support brigades do not routinely control AOs but conduct operations throughout
a corps or division AO. Normally these brigades coordinate their airspace use with the divisions and brigades
that have AOs. Airspace control becomes more complex when a corps tasks these multifunctional support
brigades to accomplish a mission that affects airspace use in other AOs. The multifunctional support brigade
conducting the operation submits its airspace requirements with the higher echelon headquarters airspace
element providing planning and airspace control support to the multifunctional support brigade’s air defense
airspace management element. The division airspace element checks that it adjusts the airspace plan to
account for the multifunctional support brigade commander’s priorities and concept of operations.
2-44. Commanders request the resources they need to perform stability tasks for their assigned AO. If the
requirements exceed their organization’s capacity, they request additional or follow-on forces to provide
additional resources. Commanders at all levels assess resources available against their missions to determine
how best to ensure minimum-essential stability tasks are performed. (See ATP 3-07.5 for more information
on stability tasks.)
Environmental Considerations
2-45. Commanders have the responsibility to integrate environmental considerations into planning and
operations if applicable. Commanders use judgment in determining how environmental considerations affect
their units (either actively or passively) when conducting operations. Responsibility for environmental issues
is not included in the list of responsibilities associated with a unit assigned an AO in ADP 3-0. However,
environmental considerations do apply in one degree or another to all units. Environmental considerations
most significantly affect units consolidating gains or remaining in a location for an extended time. (See ATP
3-34.5 for additional information on environmental considerations.)
AVENUE OF APPROACH
2-46. An avenue of approach is a path used by an attacking force leading to its objective or to key
terrain. Avenues of approach exist in all domains. Effective commanders identify avenues of approach
since all COAs that involve maneuver depend on available avenues of approach. While conducting the
offense, commanders evaluate avenues of approach in terms of their ability to facilitate friendly maneuver to
the objective and the enemy force’s capability to affect the objective. Conversely, while conducting the
defense, commanders analyze avenues of approach in terms of their ability to facilitate an enemy force’s
attack on friendly positions and the capability of friendly forces to reinforce the battle area.
COMBINED ARMS
2-47. As defined in paragraph 1-21, combined arms includes all capabilities made available to a commander
from joint, multinational, interagency, intergovernmental, nongovernmental, and private volunteer
organizations. Weapons and units work more effectively when they operate together. No single action,
weapon, branch, or warfighting function generates sufficient power by itself to achieve the effects required
to prevail.
COMMITTED FORCE
2-48. A committed force is a force in contact with an enemy or deployed on a specific mission or course
of action, which precludes its employment elsewhere. A force with an on-order mission is considered a
committed force.
CONCEPT OF OPERATIONS
2-49. The concept of operations is a statement that directs the manner in which subordinate units cooperate
to accomplish the mission and establishes the sequence of actions the force will use to achieve the end state
(ADP 5-0). The concept of operations expands on the commander’s intent by describing how the commander
wants the force to accomplish the mission. The concept of operations promotes general understanding by
stating the task that directly accomplishes the mission and the units that will execute it. (See ADP 5-0 for
additional information.)
DECISIVE ENGAGEMENT
2-50. A decisive engagement is an engagement in which a unit is considered fully committed and cannot
maneuver or extricate itself. In the absence of outside assistance, an action must be fought to a conclusion
with the forces available. A unit’s mission may result in the unit fighting a decisive engagement, such as
when it is tasked to hold key terrain. A unit is considered to be decisively engaged when it is fully committed
to that engagement.
DEFEAT IN DETAIL
2-51. Defeat in detail is concentrating overwhelming combat power against separate parts of a force
rather than defeating the entire force at once. A smaller force can use this technique to achieve success
against a larger enemy. Defeat in detail can occur sequentially or separately. For example, a commander can
mass overwhelming combat power effects against an enemy element outside the supporting distance of the
rest of the enemy force to defeat the enemy element before it can be reinforced.
ECONOMY OF FORCE
2-52. Economy of force is the judicious employment and distribution of forces so as to expend the minimum
essential combat power on secondary efforts to allocate the maximum possible combat power on primary
efforts (JP 3-0). It is a principle of war. Commanders employ economy of force measures (and assume risk)
to expend minimum essential combat power on their shaping operations or supporting efforts to provide the
maximum possible combat power for their decisive operation or main effort.
ENCIRCLEMENT OPERATIONS
2-53. Encirclement operations are operations where one force loses its freedom of maneuver because
an opposing force is able to isolate it by controlling all ground lines of communications and
reinforcement. A unit can conduct offensive encirclement operations to isolate an enemy force or conduct
defensive encirclement operations because of the unit’s isolation from the actions of an enemy force. (For
more information on encirclement operations, see FM 3-90-2.)
ENGAGEMENT AREA
2-54. Some situations, such as engaging enemy forces from battle positions, have the best choice for control
being to sub-divide an engagement area. In this instance, subordinate units operate in the AO of their higher
headquarters. An engagement area is an area where the commander intends to contain and destroy an
enemy force with the massed effects of all available weapons and supporting systems.
FLANKS
2-55. A flank is the right or left limit of a unit. For a stationary unit, flanks are designated in terms of an
enemy’s actual or expected location. For a moving unit, the direction of movement defines the flanks.
Commanders try to deny an enemy the opportunity to engage their flanks because a unit cannot concentrate
as much direct fire on its flanks as it can to the front. Commanders seek to engage the flanks of enemy units
for the same reason. (Figures 2-3 and 2-4 depict flanks of a stationary and a moving unit.)
2-56. Commanders try to deny enemy forces opportunities to engage the rear of friendly forces. They seek
to engage the rear of enemy forces because it is difficult for enemy forces to concentrate direct fires to their
rear without a significant redeployment of assets.
2-57. An assailable flank is a flank exposed to attack or envelopment. An exposed flank usually results
from the terrain, the weakness of forces, the technical capability of an opponent, or a gap between adjacent
units. Sufficient room must exist for the attacking force to maneuver for the flank to be assailable. A unit
may not have an assailable flank if both flanks link into other forces. When a unit has an assailable flank, the
commander may attempt to protect it by using various techniques, such as planning and preparing
supplementary positions.
2-58. A flanking position is a geographical location on the flank of a force from which effective fires
can be placed on that flank. An attacking commander maneuvers to occupy flanking positions against a
defending force to place destructive fires directly on enemy vulnerabilities. A defending commander
maneuvers to occupy positions on an attacking force’s flanks for the same reason.
FORMS OF CONTACT
2-59. There are eight forms of contact: visual; direct; indirect; non-hostile; obstacles; aircraft; chemical,
biological, radiological, and nuclear (CBRN); and electronic. (Electronic contact includes contact in
cyberspace.) Units may experience all forms of contact simultaneously. Leaders always assume that they are
in contact with peer threats, particularly electronic contact.
LOCAL SECURITY
2-60. Local security is the low-level security activities conducted near a unit to prevent surprise by the
enemy. Local security is closely associated with unit force protection efforts. Local security provides
immediate protection to the friendly force.
MANEUVER
2-61. Maneuver is the employment of forces in the operational area, through movement in combination with
fires and information, to achieve a position of advantage in respect to the enemy (JP 3-0). For the Army,
maneuver is movement in conjunction with fires. A position of relative advantage is a location or the
establishment of a favorable condition within the area of operations that provides the commander with
temporary freedom of action to enhance combat power over an enemy or influence the enemy to accept risk
and move to a position of disadvantage (ADP 3-0). It is possible for this position of relative advantage to
exist in any or all the dimensions of the information environment—physical, informational, and cognitive.
Maneuver creates and exposes enemy vulnerabilities to the massed effects of friendly combat power. A
commander employs elements of combat power in symmetrical and asymmetrical ways to attain positional
advantages over an enemy force and then exploits those positions of relative advantage.
MEETING ENGAGEMENT
2-62. A meeting engagement is a combat action that occurs when a moving force, incompletely
deployed for battle, engages an enemy at an unexpected time and place. A friendly force can encounter
a stationary or moving enemy force. A meeting engagement does not require both forces be surprised. The
force making unexpected contact is the one conducting a meeting engagement. Such encounters often occur
in small-unit operations when reconnaissance has been ineffective. The force that reacts first to the
unexpected contact generally gains an advantage over its enemy.
2-63. A meeting engagement may also occur when opponents are aware of each other and both decide to
attack to obtain a tactical advantage. Additionally, a meeting engagement may occur when one force attempts
to deploy into a hasty defense while the other force attacks before its opponent can organize an effective
defense. No matter how the force makes contact, seizing the initiative is the overriding imperative. Prompt
execution of battle drills at platoon level and below, and standard actions on contact for larger units, can give
that initiative to the friendly force.
MOVEMENT
2-64. In the context of Army tactics, movement is the positioning of combat power to establish the
conditions for maneuver. To direct movement, Army forces use movement techniques, use movement
formations, and conduct battle drills to mitigate the risk of making contact with the enemy before
maneuvering. Battle drills are rehearsed and well understood actions made in response to common
battlefield occurrences. They require a “go” order instead of a plan.
MUTUAL SUPPORT
2-65. Mutual support is that support which units render each other against an enemy, because of their
assigned tasks, their position relative to each other and to the enemy, and their inherent capabilities (JP 3-31).
In Army doctrine, mutual support is a planning consideration related to force disposition, not a command
relationship. Commanders consider mutual support when task-organizing forces, assigning AOs, and
positioning units. Mutual support has two aspects—supporting range and supporting distance.
2-66. Mutual support exists between two or more units or positions when they can support each other with
direct or indirect fires, thus preventing an enemy from engaging one unit or position without being fired on
from one or more adjacent units or positions. When a mutual support relationship exists between two or more
units moving in relation to each other, those units can maneuver to obtain positional advantage over an enemy
force engaging another unit. In the offense, a commander maneuvers subordinate forces to ensure some
degree of mutual support between them.
2-67. In the defense, commanders select tactical positions to achieve the maximum degree of mutual support.
Mutual support increases the strength of defensive positions, prevents an enemy force from attempting to
defeat the defending friendly forces in detail, and helps prevent infiltration. When friendly forces are static,
supporting range equals supporting distance.
OPERATION
2-68. An operation is a sequence of tactical actions with a common purpose and a unifying theme (JP 1). It
includes the process of planning, preparing, executing, and assessing the offensive, defensive, and stability
operations or defense support of civil authorities tasks and what may be needed to achieve the objectives of
any engagement, battle, major operation, or campaign. It also includes enabling operations.
OPERATIONAL FRAMEWORK
2-69. An operational framework is a cognitive tool used to assist commanders and staffs in clearly
visualizing and describing the application of combat power in time, space, purpose, and resources in the
concept of operations (ADP 1-01). Army leaders are responsible for clearly articulating their visualization of
operations in time, space, purpose, and resources. They do this through the Army operational framework and
its associated vocabulary. (See ADP 3-0 for an additional discussion of the operational framework.)
2-70. The operational framework has four components. First, commanders are assigned an AO for the
conduct of operations, from which, in turn, they assign AOs to subordinate units based on their visualization
of an operation. Second, within their AO commanders may designate deep, close, support, and consolidation
areas to describe the physical arrangement of forces in time, space, and purpose. Third, commanders establish
decisive, shaping, and sustaining operations to further articulate an operation in terms of purpose. Finally,
commanders designate main and supporting efforts to designate the shifting and prioritization of resources.
(See ADP 3-0 for a discussion of the operational framework and deep, close, support, and consolidation
areas.)
PIECEMEAL COMMITMENT
2-71. Piecemeal commitment is the immediate employment of units in combat as they become available
instead of waiting for larger aggregations of units to ensure mass, or the unsynchronized employment
of available forces so that their combat power is not employed effectively. Piecemeal commitment
subjects the smaller committed forces to defeat in detail and prevents the massing and synchronizing of
combat power with following maneuver and sustainment elements. However, piecemeal commitment may
be advantageous to maintain momentum and to retain or exploit the initiative.
RECONSTITUTION
2-72. Reconstitution is those actions, including regeneration and reorganization, commanders plan and
implement to restore units to a desired level of combat effectiveness commensurate with mission
requirements and available resources (JP 3-02). Whereas reorganization is possible at the tactical level,
regeneration requires support from higher echelons. Reconstitution is a total process and is not solely a
sustainment operation. Commanders perform reconstitution when one or more subordinate units become
combat ineffective, or when a commander can raise the combat effectiveness of a subordinate unit by shifting
available resources. Reconstitution may include—
Removing a unit from combat.
Assessing a unit with external assets.
Reestablishing a unit’s chain of command.
Training a unit for future operations.
Reestablishing unit cohesion.
Reconstitution transcends the performance of normal day-to-day force sustainment tasks. However, it uses
existing systems and units to do so. (See FM 4-95 for additional information on reconstitution.)
RESERVE
2-73. While joint doctrine has three definitions for reserve, the following Army definition applies to Army
tactical operations. A reserve is that portion of a body of troops that is withheld from action at the
beginning of an engagement to be available for a decisive movement. A reserve is an uncommitted force
and thus does not normally have a full suite of combat multipliers available to it until it is committed. It is
normally the echelon’s main effort once it is committed. Commanders constitute a reserve and base the size
of the reserve on the level of uncertainty in the current tactical situation. Commanders consider survivability
and the most likely mission when positioning their reserve. While commanders can assign their reserve a
wide variety of tasks to perform on commitment, a reserve remains prepared to accomplish other missions.
The primary tasks for a reserve are to—
Retain the initiative.
Take advantage of unexpected success.
Counter tactical reverses that threaten the integrity of the friendly force’s operations.
A successful commander retains a reserve, reconstituting one whenever possible on the commitment of the
original reserve.
RULES OF ENGAGEMENT
2-74. Rules of engagement are directives issued by competent military authority that delineate the
circumstances and limitations under which United States forces will initiate and/or continue combat
engagement with other forces encountered (JP 3-84). Operational requirements, policy, and law define the
rules of engagement a commander must follow. Rules of engagement influence how a commander conducts
operations by imposing political, practical, operational, and legal limitations. They may extend to criteria for
initiating engagements with certain weapon systems, such as employing unobserved indirect fires within the
echelon support and consolidation areas, or reacting to an attack. Unit commanders always retain the inherent
right and obligation to exercise unit self-defense in response to a hostile act or demonstrated hostile intent.
Unless otherwise directed by a unit commander, military members may exercise individual self-defense in
response to a hostile act or demonstrated hostile intent. The Joint Chiefs of Staff have established standing
rules of engagement. Operational-level commanders modify those standing rules of engagement as necessary.
(See FM 1-04 for additional information on rules of engagement.)
SUPPORTING DISTANCE
2-75. Supporting distance is the distance between two units that can be traveled in time for one to come to
the aid of the other and prevent its defeat by an enemy or ensure it regains control of a civil situation
(ADP 3-0). For lower echelon units, it is the distance between two units that can be covered effectively by
their fires. Supporting distance is a factor of combat power, dispositions, communications, and the tactical
mobility of friendly and enemy forces.
SUPPORTING RANGE
2-76. Supporting range is the distance one unit may be geographically separated from a second unit yet
remain within the maximum range of the second unit’s weapons systems (ADP 3-0). Major factors that affect
supporting range are terrain, the range of the supporting unit’s weapon systems, and the locations of weapons
systems in relation to a supported unit’s position.
TACTICAL MOBILITY
2-77. Tactical mobility is the ability of friendly forces to move and maneuver freely on the battlefield
relative to the enemy. Tactical mobility is a function of the relationship of cross-country mobility, firepower,
and protection. The terrain, soil conditions, and weather affect cross-country mobility. Armored ground
maneuver units, such as combined arms battalions, have good tactical mobility—except in restrictive
terrain—combined with maximum firepower and protection. Infantry ground maneuver units, such as
airborne infantry battalions, have a tactical mobility advantage against enemy armored forces in restrictive
terrain, but they have limited firepower and protection. Stryker equipped forces also have good tactical
mobility, but they possess less firepower and protection than armored forces. Army aviation maneuver units
have excellent mobility in all but the most restrictive types of terrain, but they have limited protection.
Extreme weather conditions also restrict the mobility of Army aviation units.
UNCOMMITTED FORCES
2-78. An uncommitted force is a force that is not in contact with an enemy and is not already deployed
on a specific mission or course of action. Commanders use uncommitted forces to exploit success or avoid
failure. Echelon reserves are examples of uncommitted forces.
ECHELONS
2-83. Army echelons have capabilities to perform different functions. These functions vary with the type of
unit, the organization of the theater or joint operations area, the nature of the conflict, and the number and
types of friendly forces committed to the effort. The echelons range from the fire team or crew, through the
squad, section, platoon, company, battalion, and brigade to the division and corps.
2-84. At each echelon, a commander or leader task-organizes available capabilities to accomplish the
mission. The purpose of task organization is to maximize different subordinate abilities to generate a
combined arms effect consistent with the concept of operations. Commanders and staffs work to ensure the
distribution of capabilities to the appropriate components of the force to weight the decisive operation and
main effort. Command and support relationships describe the relationships between units within and
supporting an echelon. (See ADP 5-0 for a discussion of these relationships.)
FIRE TEAMS
2-85. A fire team is a small military unit typically containing four or fewer Soldiers. A fire team is
usually grouped by two or three teams into a squad or section. The concept of the fire team is based on the
need for tactical flexibility. A fire team is capable of autonomous operations as part of its next larger unit,
such as a squad or section. It is usually led by a sergeant.
CREWS
2-86. A crew is a small military unit that consists of all personnel operating a particular system. This
system might be a weapons system (such as a mortar or a machinegun). The system might also be a vehicle
(such as a tank) or a sensor system (such as a target acquisition radar). Based on the system, the rank of the
senior crewmember can vary widely from a junior noncommissioned officer to a commissioned or warrant
officer.
SQUADS
2-87. A squad is a small military unit typically containing two or more fire teams. It typically contains
a dozen Soldiers or less. In some cases, the crew of a system may also be designated as a squad. Squads are
usually led by a staff sergeant.
SECTIONS
2-88. A section is a tactical unit of the Army and Marine Corps smaller than a platoon and larger than
a squad. A section may consist of the crews of two or more Army systems, such as a tank section or several
fire teams.
PLATOONS
2-89. A platoon is a subdivision of a company or troop consisting of two or more squads or sections. A
platoon is normally led by a lieutenant. Platoons tend to contain roughly 30 Soldiers, but in some cases they
contain significantly more or less than that number depending upon the type of formation.
2-99. Groups are brigade-size organizations that, because of Army modularity, are rarely used outside of
Army’s special operations forces. Army special operations forces use the term to designate large special
forces and psychological operations units. The Army’s modular design deactivated group headquarters in
favor of activating additional brigade headquarters. Explosive ordnance disposal, criminal investigation
division, regional support groups, specialized aviation units, and specialized intelligence units are exceptions
to this rule.
DIVISIONS
2-100. A division is an echelon of command and tactical formation that employs brigade combat
teams, multi-functional brigades, and functional brigades to achieve objectives on land. It is normally
employed as a tactical headquarters that employs a combination of BCTs, multifunctional brigades, and
functional brigades to operate as a formation. Two to five BCTs, a sustainment brigade, a combat aviation
brigade, a division artillery headquarters and headquarters battery, and a maneuver enhancement brigade are
assigned to a division conducting large-scale ground combat operations. A division headquarters is a
self-contained organization with a command group and a fully functional staff that requires no staff support
from subordinate units to provide capabilities for its primary role. The Army organizes each division
headquarters staff into a division headquarters and headquarters battalion. That battalion is augmented by a
reserve component main command post operational detachment to provide it with additional capacity.
Functional support brigades consist of military police, engineer, air and missile defense, and military
intelligence brigades. Functional support brigades normally have command relationships with a division
headquarters (assigned, attached, operational control, or tactical control).
2-101. A division headquarters provides a flexible command and control capability in all operational
environments. A division headquarters may be used in other roles, including acting as the senior Army
headquarters, joint force land component, or a joint task force headquarters in a joint operations area for
small-scale operations. However, when performing these roles, a division requires significant Army and joint
augmentation.
2-102. The mission variables determine the optimal size and mix of capabilities of the forces task-organized
under each division headquarters. The size, composition, and capabilities of the forces task-organized under
a division headquarters may vary between divisions involved in the same joint campaign and may change
from one phase of that campaign to another. Operations focused on the destruction of a conventional enemy
may require a mix of forces and capabilities that differ from those required for an operation focused on
protection of civil populations.
2-103. A division normally operates as a tactical headquarters under the operational control of an Army
corps, ARFOR, or joint force land component commander. The ARFOR is the Army component and senior
Army headquarters of all Army forces assigned or attached to a combatant command, subordinate joint force
command, joint functional command, or multinational command (FM 3-94). As a tactical echelon, a division
headquarters arranges multiple tactical actions of its subordinates in time, space, and purpose to achieve
significant military objectives. A division headquarters leverages joint force capabilities and conducts
shaping operations within its AO to create favorable conditions for the success of its subordinate units. A
division headquarters allocates resources, designates the main and supporting efforts, forecasts operational
requirements, and establishes the priorities of support within its task-organized forces. Sustainment, medical,
and functional units (including military police, engineer, air and missile defense, and military intelligence)
in command or support relationships with a division operate in accordance with established priorities.
CORPS
2-104. A corps is an echelon of command and tactical formation that employs divisions, multi-functional
brigades, and functional brigades to achieve objectives on land. Large-scale combat operations may require
a corps headquarters to function as a tactical land headquarters under an operational-level command, such as
a joint or multinational land component command. A corps headquarters is organized, trained, and equipped
to control the operations of two to five divisions, together with supporting theater-level organizations. The
distinguishing differences between corps and division operations are their scope and scale. During large-
scale combat operations, a corps conducting tactical operations operates as a large combined arms formation
employing capabilities within and across multiple domains, not just as a headquarters. Normally, a corps
exercises operational control over two or more Army divisions and a variety of multifunctional and functional
supporting brigades. It exercises tactical control over various Marine Corps units and multinational units, and
it is supported by various theater military intelligence, signal, and sustainment organizations and joint combat
support agencies. The corps has both operational and administrative responsibilities.
2-105. A corps receives capabilities and units from the theater army to conduct operations. There is no
standard organizational structure for a corps. However, a corps generally requires a maneuver enhancement
brigade, a combat aviation brigade, an expeditionary sustainment command, a field artillery brigade, and a
theater military intelligence brigade to conduct large-scale combat operations. Other units may provide direct
or general support.
2-106. Based on the tasks of the divisions and the allocation of brigades, the corps commander determines
the appropriate command and support relationships for subordinate divisions and brigades. A corps may
retain a division or some number of brigades in reserve or for consolidation of gains activities. (However, an
exception to this is that field artillery brigades are not retained in reserve or used for consolidation of gains
activities.)
FIELD ARMIES
2-107. A field army is an echelon of command that employs multiple corps, divisions, multi-functional
brigades, and functional brigades to achieve objectives on land. The field army is the only echelon above
the brigade that is only a headquarters. Large-scale combat operations involving multiple corps may require
the establishment of a field army to function as the senior tactical or operational-level command exercising
command and control over multiple corps-sized formations. The field army’s primary role is to serve as the
ARFOR or joint force land component command for multi-corps operations. When serving as the joint force
land component command, field armies require significant augmentation from the joint and multinational
force. They are most likely to be employed in theaters where peer and near-peer adversaries have the
capability of conducting large-scale ground combat. Field armies possess no standardized force structure.
The Army tailors each field army to the conditions prevailing in its assigned area of responsibility. The field
army receives the necessary capabilities and units from external sources based on its requirements.
This chapter discusses the basics of the offense. These basics include the purposes of
the offense, characteristics of the offense, types of offensive operations, common
offensive control measures, common offensive planning considerations, and
transitions. These basics apply to all types of offensive operations.
AUDACITY
3-4. Audacity is a willingness to take bold risks. The offense favors the bold execution of plans.
Commanders display audacity by accepting risks commensurate with the value of their objectives.
Commanders dispel uncertainty by acting decisively. They compensate for any lack of information by
developing the situation aggressively to seize the initiative, and then they continuously engage in combat to
exploit opportunities as they arise.
CONCENTRATION
3-5. Concentration is massing the effects of combat power in time and space at the decisive point to achieve
a single purpose. Concentration requires the coordination of unified action partner capabilities in multiple
domains to create opportunities that enable offensive land operations. Information systems provide relevant
information that helps commanders determine when to concentrate their forces. By massing combat power
rapidly along converging axes and synchronizing the effects of supporting assets in multiple domains,
attackers overwhelm enemy forces. Commanders adopt the tactics for the situation, protect the force, and
sustain the attack’s tempo.
3-6. To protect their forces before they concentrate, commanders apply joint assets to prevent enemy
detection and interdiction. They request ground, air, maritime, space, and cyberspace resources to delay,
disrupt, or destroy enemy reconnaissance capabilities. Commanders may keep their forces concentrated after
a successful attack to take advantage of their momentum or disperse them to avoid becoming vulnerable to
enemy counteraction.
SURPRISE
3-7. Commanders surprise enemy forces by attacking at a time or place or in a manner for which enemy
forces did not prepare or expect. Commanders achieve surprise by showing enemy forces what they expect
to see while actually doing something different. Surprise delays enemy reactions, overloads and confuses
enemy command and control systems, induces psychological shock, and reduces the coherence of an enemy
force’s defense. Correct assessment of an enemy commander’s intent and a clear sense of timing are
necessary to achieve surprise.
3-8. Operational and tactical surprise complement each other. Operational surprise creates the conditions
for successful tactical operations. Tactical surprise can cause an enemy force to hesitate or misjudge a
situation, creating operational opportunities. Effective commanders exploit surprise before an enemy force
realizes what is happening and can effectively react.
3-9. Modern surveillance and warning systems, the availability of commercial space-based imagery
products, and global commercial news and social networks make surprise more difficult to achieve than in
the past. Commanders deceive an enemy force as to the nature, timing, and objective of an attack by using
bad weather, seemingly impassable terrain, and military deception to shape enemy perceptions. Airborne, air
assault, and special operations forces attacks—combined with strikes by Army and joint fires against
objectives an enemy force regards as secure—create disruptive or debilitating cognitive effects on enemy
soldiers and commanders. The VII and XVIII Corps’ turning movement into the flank and rear of the Iraqi
Republican Guard during OPERATION DESERT STORM is a historical example of achieving operational
surprise during the offense.
TEMPO
3-10. Tempo is the relative speed and rhythm of military operations over time with respect to the enemy
(ADP 3-0). Controlling tempo is necessary to retain the initiative. An attack that achieves results more
quickly than enemy forces can respond disrupts enemy plans. Maintaining a high tempo requires initiative
on the part of subordinates within their commander’s intent. Mission orders allow subordinates the flexibility
to react swiftly to opportunities and threats and maintain a high tempo.
3-11. Commanders adjust tempo continuously. The flexibility of any tactical situation, sustainment realities,
or enemy actions affect tempo. Rapid tempo demands quick decisions informed by accurate running
estimates. Maintaining rapid tempo continually creates opportunities and reduces friendly vulnerabilities.
Maintaining rapid tempo also denies enemy forces the chance to rest or synchronize the employment of their
combat power.
3-12. By increasing tempo, commanders maintain momentum. They plan for rapid transitions and ensure
sustainment operations do not prevent premature culmination of the offense. Attackers shift combat power
quickly to widen penetrations, exploit exposed flanks, and reinforce successes. Friendly forces attack in depth
with fires and maneuver to destroy or disrupt an enemy commander’s ability to command and control enemy
forces. Commanders never permit enemy forces to recover from the shock of an initial assault. They prevent
defenders from massing effects against the friendly decisive operation.
MOVEMENT TO CONTACT
3-14. Movement to contact is a type of offensive operation designed to develop the situation and to
establish or regain contact. The goal of a movement to contact is to make initial contact with a small element
while retaining enough combat power to develop the situation and mitigate the associated risk. A movement
to contact creates favorable conditions for subsequent tactical actions. Commanders conduct a movement to
contact when an enemy situation is vague or not specific enough to conduct an attack. A movement to contact
may result in a meeting engagement. Meeting engagements are combat actions that occur when an
incompletely deployed force engages an enemy at an unexpected time and place. Once an enemy force makes
contact, the commander has five options: attack, defend, bypass, delay, or withdraw. Subordinate variations
of a movement to contact include search and attack and cordon and search operations.
ATTACK
3-15. An attack is a type of offensive operation that destroys or defeats enemy forces, seizes and secures
terrain, or both. Attacks incorporate coordinated movement supported by fires. They may be part of either
decisive or shaping operations. A commander may describe an attack as hasty or deliberate, depending on
the time available for assessing the situation, planning, and preparing. A commander may decide to conduct
an attack using only fires, based on an analysis of the mission variables. An attack differs from a movement
to contact because in an attack commanders know at least part of an enemy’s dispositions. This knowledge
enables commanders to better synchronize and employ combat power.
3-16. Variations of the attack are ambush, counterattack, demonstration, feint, raid, and spoiling attack. The
commander’s intent and the mission variables guide which of these variations of attack to employ.
Commanders conduct each of these variations, except for a raid, as either a hasty or a deliberate operation.
EXPLOITATION
3-17. An exploitation is a type of offensive operation that usually follows a successful attack and is
designed to disorganize the enemy in depth. Exploitations seek to disintegrate enemy forces to the point
where they have no alternative but to surrender or retreat. Exploitations take advantage of tactical
opportunities. Division and higher echelon headquarters normally plan exploitations as branches or sequels.
PURSUIT
3-18. A pursuit is a type of offensive operation designed to catch or cut off a hostile force attempting
to escape, with the aim of destroying it. There are two variations of the pursuit: frontal and combination.
A pursuit normally follows a successful exploitation. However, if enemy resistance breaks down and enemy
forces begin fleeing the battlefield, any type of offensive operation can transition into a pursuit. Pursuits
entail rapid movement and decentralized control. Bold action and calculated initiative are required in the
conduct of a pursuit. The Third U.S. Army’s actions in France between August and September 1944 during
World War II is an example of a pursuit.
respond to changes in the situation. Understanding and using commonly understood control measures enable
commanders and staffs to develop and publish clear and concise mission orders, as well as direct tactical
actions quickly, with minimal communication during execution.
ASSAULT POSITION
3-20. An assault position is a covered and concealed position short of the objective from which final
preparations are made to assault the objective. Final preparations include short halts to coordinate the final
assault, reorganizing to adjust to combat losses or to adjust the attacking force’s dispositions. Final
preparations can also involve technical activities, such as engineers performing their final prepare-to-fire
checks on obstacle clearing systems and the crews of plow- or roller-equipped tanks removing their locking
pins. An assault position may be located near a final coordination line or a probable line of deployment.
ASSAULT TIME
3-21. The assault time is the moment to attack the initial objectives throughout the geographical scope
of the operation. A higher echelon headquarters imposes this time during the offense to achieve
simultaneous results. It is similar to the time on target control method for fire mission processing used by the
field artillery. A commander uses it instead of a time of attack because of the different distances that different
elements of the force must traverse, known obstacles, and differences in unit tactical mobility.
ATTACK POSITION
3-23. The attack position is the last position an attacking force occupies or passes through before
crossing the line of departure. An attack position facilitates the deployment and last minute coordination
of an attacking force before it crosses the line of departure (LD). (See paragraph 3-31 for a discussion of the
LD.) It is located on the friendly side of the LD and offers cover and concealment. Whenever possible, units
move through their attack positions without stopping. If a unit occupies an attack position, it stays there for
the shortest amount of time possible to avoid offering the enemy a target.
AXIS OF ADVANCE
3-24. An axis of advance is the general area through which the bulk of a unit’s combat power must
move. When developing an axis of advance, a commander also establishes bypass criteria. Bypass criteria
are measures established by higher echelon headquarters that specify the conditions and size under
which enemy units and contact may be avoided. A commander uses an axis of advance—
First, to direct the bypass of locations that could delay the progress of an advancing force, such as
known contaminated areas.
Second, to indicate that a force is not required to clear the AO as it advances. The force will need
to clear the axis in accordance with specified bypass criteria.
Third, to indicate to a unit involved in offensive encirclement, exploitation, or pursuit operations
the need to move rapidly toward an objective.
passing unit in the supporting range of the forward combat elements of the stationary unit until the passage
of lines is complete. The area between the battle handover line and the stationary force belongs to the
stationary force commander. The stationary force commander may employ security forces, obstacles, and
fires in the area.
DIRECTION OF ATTACK
3-26. The direction of attack is a specific direction or assigned route a force uses and does not deviate
from when attacking. It is a restrictive control measure. A commander’s use of a direction of attack
maximizes control over a subordinate unit’s movement, and it is often used during night attacks, infiltrations,
and when attacking through obscurants. Unit commanders establish a direction of attack through a variety of
means, such as target reference points and checkpoints. When using a direction of attack, unit commanders
designate a point of departure. (See paragraph 3-33 for a discussion of the point of departure.)
LIMIT OF ADVANCE
3-29. The limit of advance is a phase line used to control forward progress of the attack. The attacking
unit does not advance any of its elements or assets beyond the LOA, but the attacking unit can push its
security forces to that limit. Commanders usually select a feature that is easily identifiable, perpendicular to
the direction of attack, and on the far side of the objective as the LOA. The use of an LOA prevents an
attacking force from overextending and reduces fratricide possibilities and friendly fire incidents by fires
supporting the attack. Unit commanders position an LOA far enough beyond an objective to allow their unit
to flexibly defend it. An LOA prevents units from exploiting success and launching a pursuit. Commanders
should only use LOAs if they do not want their units to conduct an exploitation or pursuit. An LOA and the
unit’s forward boundary should rarely coincide because of limitations that a forward boundary places on
supporting fires beyond that boundary.
LINE OF CONTACT
3-30. The line of contact is a general trace delineating the location where friendly and enemy forces
are engaged. Commanders designate the enemy side of the line of contact by the abbreviation “ENY.” In
the defense, a line of contact is often synonymous with the FLOT. A line of contact may be combined with
an LD in the offense.
LINE OF DEPARTURE
3-31. In land warfare, the line of departure is a line designated to coordinate the departure of attack elements
(JP 3-31). The purpose of an LD is to coordinate the advance of the attacking force, so that its elements strike
enemy forces in the order and at the time desired. An LD also marks where a unit transitions from movement
to maneuver. Commanders also use it to facilitate the coordination of fires. Generally, it should be
perpendicular to the direction the attacking force takes on its way to the objective. Units have different
movement rates based on their mobility characteristics and the terrain surrounding their assembly areas.
Commanders consider these different characteristics when establishing an LD to prevent these differences
from affecting synchronization. When possible, commanders select an LD that provides cover for the unit’s
deployment into a combat formation before crossing the LD. In many cases, an LD is also a line of contact
because the unit in contact is conducting the attack from its current positions.
OBJECTIVE
3-32. An objective is a location used to orient operations, phase operations, facilitate changes of
direction, and provide for unity of effort. An objective can be terrain or force oriented. Terrain-oriented
objectives should be easy to recognize. A higher echelon commander uses terrain-oriented objectives to focus
the operations of subordinates, focus phase operations, facilitate changes of direction, and provide for unity
of effort. Commanders determine force-oriented objectives based on known enemy positions. Commanders
may assign intermediate objectives as necessary; however, they generally only assign subordinate
commanders their final objectives.
POINT OF DEPARTURE
3-33. The point of departure is the point where the unit crosses the line of departure and begins moving
along a direction of attack. Units conducting patrols and other operations in a low-visibility environment
commonly use a point of departure as a control measure. Like an LD, it marks the point where the unit
transitions from movement to maneuver under conditions of limited visibility.
RALLY POINT
3-35. A rally point is an easily identifiable point on the ground at which units can reassemble and reorganize
if they become dispersed (ATP 3-21.20). Forces conducting a patrol or an infiltration commonly use this
control measure. The objective rally point is an easily identifiable point where all elements of the
infiltrating unit assemble and prepare to attack the objective. It is typically near the infiltrating unit’s
objective; however, there is no standard distance from the objective to the objective rally point. It should be
far enough away from the objective so that enemy forces will not detect the infiltrating unit’s attack
preparations.
sequence once the series is initiated. Commanders use target series and target groups in various combinations
as required. (A target can also be a person, place, or thing, such as a tank or a group of people against which
messages are directed.) Target control measures also apply in the defense.
TIME OF ATTACK
3-38. The time of attack is the moment the leading elements of the main body cross the line of departure,
or in a limited-visibility attack, the point of departure. A commander uses it when conducting
simultaneous operations where a shaping operation must accomplish its mission to create the conditions for
success of the decisive operation. When determining the time of attack, commanders consider the time
subordinates require to—
Conduct necessary reconnaissance, prepare plans, and issue orders.
Synchronize plans between all subordinate units.
Complete attack preparations, such as pre-combat checks and inspections.
Move to an LD or a point of departure.
Commanders designate the time of attack in orders. This is generally when the main body crosses an LD.
However, the headquarters planning the offense specifies the term’s exact meaning.
Operations Process
3-43. Commanders assign missions commensurate with the capabilities of the units in their task organization.
The commander’s role in the operations process is to understand, visualize, describe, direct, lead, and assess
the performance of tasks by their units.
3-44. All offensive planning addresses the mission variables. During offensive planning, commanders and
staffs place special emphasis on—
Missions and objectives, including task and purpose, for each subordinate element.
Commander’s intent.
Enemy positions, obstacles, strengths, and capabilities.
AOs for the use of each subordinate element with associated control graphics.
Time the operation is to begin.
Scheme of maneuver.
Targeting guidance and high-payoff targets.
Special tasks required to accomplish the mission.
Communicating risk.
Options for accomplishing the mission.
Transition to stability operations once large scale combat ceases.
3-45. Planning efforts must address the requirement for corps and divisions to conduct operations in their
deep areas to create conditions that allow subordinate BCTs to conduct successful combat operations in the
close area. BCTs and divisions assigned to consolidation areas likewise require planning support for those
aspects for which they have few organic capabilities, such as civil affairs.
3-46. Commanders and staffs translate a unit’s mission into specific objectives for all subordinates. (Reserve
forces have planning priorities, not objectives.) These objectives can involve the conduct of the offense. If
the assigned type of offensive operation has associated forms of maneuver, a commander may specify which
form to use, but effective commanders minimize actions that restrict subordinates’ freedom of action. (See
ADP 5-0 for a discussion of the military decision-making process.)
3-47. Commanders guide the actions of subordinates during execution. Based on their visualization of the
operation, commanders position themselves where they can best influence critical events and make critical
decisions, such as changing priorities of support or employing reserves. This normally means that
commanders are well forward, usually with the force conducting the decisive operation or designated as the
main effort. Once the decisive operation or main effort makes contact with enemy forces, the commander
assesses the situation and directs appropriate action as necessary.
3-48. Commanders consider how to exploit advantages that arise during the execution of the offense. They
anticipate requirements to shift the decisive operation or main effort during the offense to press an
engagement and keep enemy forces off balance. They develop decision points to support these changes and
use both human and technical means to validate the timing of these decisions.
3-49. Commanders consider the presence of civilians within their AOs on their operations and determine
what minimum-essential stability tasks their units need to perform. All units have the capability to perform
stability tasks if the tactical situation allows. These minimum-essential stability tasks generally involve some
aspects of civil control, civil security, and the restoration of essential services.
3-50. Units conduct offensive operations until they defeat the enemy forces in their AOs. Once major combat
operations cease, units may transition to consolidate gains. Commanders clearly articulate to their
subordinates this transition by changing the rules of engagement and allocating combat power
complementary to the shift in the operational environment from one characterized principally by offensive
and defensive operations, to another with greater emphasis on stability tasks.
3-51. Following the conclusion of large-scale combat in an AO, units perform security first and then progress
to stability-related tasks. Units first address the final defeat of all enemy means of resistance and secure key
terrain, infrastructure, and populations. Only then do units consider stability tasks above the minimum
required by the law of war. Planning to consolidate gains is primarily a corps and division responsibility that
occurs before, during, and after large-scale ground combat and includes allocating resources to consolidate
gains. When the shift to stability operations occurs, the staff disseminates the change in purpose down to the
lowest echelons.
Degraded Communications
3-53. All units conducting offensive operations should expect to operate in a contested and degraded
communications environment. Degradation may arise from environmental circumstances, enemy action
directed against friendly communications and information systems, or malfunctions. A degraded
communications environment may be permanent or temporary. The use of mission orders and commander’s
intent is critical to remaining effective in a degraded communications environment, regardless of the source
of the degradation. (See FM 6-02 for more information on how units receive signal support.)
3-54. Enemies use several methods to deny friendly use of the cyberspace domain and the electromagnetic
spectrum. These methods include cyberspace attack (digital attack against Army, joint, and other networks),
electronic attack (jamming of portions of the electromagnetic spectrum), and physical attack against
infrastructure and electronics. Units at each echelon require standard operating procedures and drills for
restoring functionality and connectivity.
3-55. A unit can employ any number of measures to restore functionality to degraded communications and
information systems. A unit may—
Use printed maps and overlays to maintain a common operational picture within a command post.
Use combat network radios to transmit orders and reports.
Increase the use of liaison officers.
Use couriers to transport orders, reports, and other information between headquarters and between
maneuver units, using written orders, overlays, or digital media.
Run fiber-optic and telephone cables between headquarters. (Commanders and staffs should be
aware that this technique increases the time required to establish and displace command posts.)
Displace to terrain that protects headquarters from enemy jamming.
Limit electronic emissions.
Lower echelon units have the responsibility to restore communications with their higher echelon. Each
impacted element restores communications using available resources and does not rely on protocols for
establishing communications and liaison (from higher to lower, left to right, supporting to supported) to
govern efforts to restore those communications. Units establish maximum time lapse interval standards for
contact to be reestablished and the methods used to reestablish them. Commanders normally direct this as
part of the operation order through a detailed primary, alternate, contingency, and emergency communication
(PACE) plan.
temporary partial mental paralysis that an individual or a unit can experience after a sudden upsetting or
surprising event and that prevents an immediate effective response to that event.
3-58. Seizing or retaining terrain that provides advantages to friendly force maneuver allows commanders
to gain and maintain positions of relative advantage. For military purposes, terrain includes physical
(geographic) and non-physical (virtual and cognitive) components. Commanders and staffs include the
cognitive and virtual considerations of an operational environment when describing terrain. Terrain that is of
importance to commanders is described as key or decisive terrain. Key terrain is an identifiable
characteristic whose seizure or retention affords a marked advantage to either combatant. Decisive
terrain is key terrain whose seizure and retention is mandatory for successful mission accomplishment.
If decisive terrain is present, commanders designate it to communicate its importance in the commander’s
concept of operations, first to the echelon staff and later to subordinate commanders.
Movement Formations
3-64. A movement formation is an ordered arrangement of forces for a specific purpose and describes
the general configuration of a unit on the ground. Commanders can use seven different movement
formations depending on the mission variables: column, line, echelon (left or right), box, diamond, wedge,
and vee. Terrain characteristics and visibility determine the actual arrangement and location of the unit’s
personnel and vehicles within a given formation. (FM 3-90-1 describes these combat formations.)
3-65. Movement formations allow a unit to move on a battlefield in a posture suited to the commander’s
intent and mission. A unit may employ a series of movement formations during the course of an attack; each
has its advantages and disadvantages. Subordinate units within a movement formation can also employ their
own movement formations, consistent with their particular situation. To determine the appropriate formation,
commanders consider the advantages and disadvantages of each formation in the areas of command, control,
maintenance, firepower orientation, ability to mass fires, and flexibility. All movement formations use one
or more of the three movement techniques: traveling, traveling overwatch, and bounding overwatch. (See
FM 3-90-1 for a description of the movement techniques.)
3-66. The use of standard formations allows units to shift from one formation to another, giving additional
flexibility when adjusting to changes in the tactical situation and terrain. By designating the movement
formation planned for use, commanders—
Establish the geographic relationship between units.
Indicate probable reactions once an enemy makes contact with the formation.
Indicate the level of security desired.
Establish the primary orientation of subordinate weapon systems.
Posture friendly forces for the attack.
The number of subordinate maneuver units available to a headquarters may make some movement formations
impractical.
Soldiers’ Load
3-67. The load that Soldiers carry is an important planning consideration. How much Soldiers carry, how
far, and in what configuration are critical mission considerations requiring command emphasis and
inspection. Historical experience and research show that Soldiers can carry 30 percent of their body weight
and retain much of their agility, stamina, alertness, and mobility. At times conditions dictate that a Soldier’s
load must exceed this recommended weight. Effective commanders and subordinate leaders account for how
excess weight influences the effectiveness of their units and adjust planning accordingly.
ASSURED MOBILITY
3-68. Assured mobility is a framework—of processes, actions, and capabilities—that assures the ability of a
force to deploy, move, and maneuver where and when desired, to achieve the commander’s intent
(ATP 3-90.4). The assured mobility fundamentals of prediction, detection, prevention, avoidance,
neutralization, and protection support framing staff planning of subordinate unit tasks and activities. The
assured mobility framework enables planners to recommend COAs that achieve the commander’s intent.
Assured mobility emphasizes integrated proactive mobility, countermobility, and protection tasks to increase
the probability of mission accomplishment.
3-69. While engineers are principal staff integrators for the assured mobility framework, all staff planners
are essential to ensuring the effective application and integration of mobility, countermobility, and protection
tasks. (See ATP 3-90.4 for more information on combined arms mobility.)
Mobility
3-70. Mobility tasks are those combined arms activities that mitigate the effects of obstacles to enable
freedom of movement and maneuver (ATP 3-90.4). Mobility has six primary tasks:
Conduct breaching.
Conduct clearing (areas and routes).
Countermobility
3-75. Countermobility operations are those combined arms activities that use or enhance the effects of
natural and man-made obstacles to deny enemy freedom of movement and maneuver (ATP 3-90.8). The
primary purposes of countermobility are to shape enemy movement and maneuver and to prevent enemy
forces from gaining a position of advantage. Countermobility supports the conduct of the offense, defense,
and stability or defense support of civil authorities across the range of military operations.
3-76. Commanders perform countermobility tasks to isolate objectives and prevent enemy forces from
repositioning, reinforcing, and counterattacking to support the offense. These tasks are also performed to
provide flank protection and to deny or delay an enemy force’s counterattack as the maneuver force
progresses into the depth of the enemy force’s defense. Commanders exploit terrain that offers natural flank
protection to an attacking force, such as rivers or ridgelines. Swamps, canals, lakes, forests, and escarpments
are natural terrain features that are easy to reinforce for flank security. Units can protect their flanks by
denying enemy mobility corridors by building man-made obstacles, such as tank ditches, abatis, or road
craters.
3-77. Countermobility during the offense requires rapid emplacement and flexibility. Obstacles deployed in
the offense, to include scatterable mines, are normally emplaced by engineers, rotary-winged aircraft, or
artillery. Engineers emplacing obstacles must keep pace with advancing maneuver forces and be prepared to
emplace obstacles. Commanders consider likely enemy reactions to friendly actions and then plan how to
block enemy avenues of approach or withdrawal. They also plan the use of obstacles to contain bypassed
enemy elements, prevent enemy forces from withdrawing, and hinder enemy counterattacks.
3-78. Commanders integrate and synchronize countermobility considerations as part of their concepts of
operations because obstacles can hinder both friendly and enemy maneuver. The control and accurate
reporting of minefields and other tactical obstacles are vital. Control of obstacle initiation is necessary to
prevent the premature activation of minefields and emplacement of obstacles. (See ATP 3-90.8 for
information on obstacle integration and JP 3-15 for information on mine warfare.)
3-79. While conducting offensive operations, commanders place special emphasis on protection tasks related
to survivability and detention operations. All units are responsible for improving their positions, regardless
of role or location. Survivability is a quality or capability of military forces which permits them to avoid or
withstand hostile actions or environmental conditions while retaining the ability to fulfill their primary
mission (ATP 3-37.34). Survivability operations consist of four tasks which enhance the ability to avoid or
withstand hostile actions by altering the physical environment: constructing fighting positions, constructing
protective positions, hardening facilities, and employing camouflage and concealment. (See ATP 3-37.34 for
additional information on survivability.)
INTELLIGENCE
3-83. Conducting military operations requires intelligence products regarding threats and relevant aspects of
an operational environment. These intelligence products enable commanders to—
Understand enemy capabilities and intent.
Visualize an operational environment.
Plan operations.
Identify and assess potential COAs.
Properly direct forces.
Employ effective tactics and techniques.
Protect friendly forces.
3-84. Generating intelligence is a continuous task, driven by unit commanders. It begins before mission
receipt and provides the knowledge required for the conduct of operations. Information is obtained through
intelligence reach, data mining, academic studies, open-source intelligence, and other information sources.
The information and intelligence obtained are refined for use in assessments, the intelligence preparation of
the battlefield (IPB) process, and mission analysis.
3-85. Commanders and staffs use the IPB process to identify aspects of the AO or area of interest across
relevant domains that affect enemy and friendly operations. The IPB process is collaborative and requires
information from staff elements and subordinate units. All staff and subordinate elements use the results and
products of the IPB process for planning. (See ADP 2-0 and ATP 2-01.3 for discussions of the IPB process.)
3-86. The intelligence process contributes to all warfighting functions. It helps commanders protect
subordinate forces and identify key terrain, obstacles, and trafficability. IPB provides the basis for line of
sight overlays and situation templates. Line of sight overlays help protect the force. If an enemy force cannot
observe a friendly force, that enemy force cannot engage the friendly force with direct fire weapons. Situation
templates also help protect the force. If they know how fast enemy forces can respond, commanders can
sequence their operations, so they occur at times and places where enemy forces cannot respond effectively.
Situation templates address terrain, mobility corridors, artillery range fans, movement times between enemy
reserve assembly area locations and advancing friendly forces, and other related intelligence variables.
FIRES
3-87. The targeting process ensures the collective and coordinated use of Army indirect fires, air and missile
defense, and joint fires to gain and maintain fire superiority. Commanders use a variety of methods and assets
to achieve lethal and nonlethal effects on enemy forces to enable friendly maneuver.
Protect attacking troops, systems, and supplies by only moving them into attack positions at the
last possible moment.
Counter enemy target acquisition efforts by effectively using counter-reconnaissance and security
operations, military deception, cover, and concealment.
Target enemy command and control nodes to disrupt them.
Exploit initial penetrations of enemy defensive positions to the maximum extent possible.
(Overrunning enemy artillery systems, command and control nodes, and sustainment assets will
seriously degrade a defending enemy force’s combat power.)
The method or methods attacking commanders employ depend on the applicable mission variables.
3-93. Preparation fires are normally high-volume fires delivered over a short period to maximize surprise
and shock effects. These preparation fires also include the conduct of electronic warfare and offensive
cyberspace operations. They can continue while ground maneuver elements are moving or maneuvering
during the conduct of the offense.
3-94. Artillery and mortars occupy positions that are well forward and within supporting range of the flanks
of attacking maneuver forces to provide responsive indirect fires. Commanders consider the effect that
movement has on the available amount of fire support. When facing an enemy with a highly sophisticated
integrated fires complex, disaggregation of friendly artillery to the section level may be required for
survivability. Commanders support their decisive operations by designating priority of fires. Their main
efforts before their initiation of their decisive operation generally have priority of fires. They place
coordinated fire lines as close to their units as possible without interfering with the maneuver of their forces.
They plan on-order coordinated fire lines that shift as their forces move and maneuver. This allows the rapid
engagement of targets beyond these coordinated fire lines by the maximum number of available systems.
3-95. The effective assignment of Army forward observers, joint fires observers, and target acquisition assets
to quick fire networks facilitates responsive fires. Quick fire networks allow the lead observers to
communicate directly with specific field artillery or mortar firing units. These communication arrangements
enhance responsiveness through streamlined networks and focused priorities. Communications planning also
includes the need for communications networks for the rapid clearing of targets for rotary- and fixed-wing
attacks.
3-96. Commanders conduct information operations to support the offense with both lethal and nonlethal
effects. Through their scheme of information operations, commanders establish objectives in the information
environment and synchronize information-related capabilities to achieve these objectives through the
creation of specific effects. Electronic warfare jamming resources and available supporting cyberspace assets
concentrate on neutralizing enemy fire control, target acquisition, and information collection assets as a
friendly force moves through an enemy’s disruption zone and closes into an enemy’s main defensive
positions in the battle zone. Commanders use military deception to prevent an enemy force from determining
the location and objective of a friendly decisive operation. In addition, intelligence sensors provide guidance
to both friendly jammers and lethal indirect fire weapon systems, so attacking units can destroy enemy
command and control nodes, reconnaissance and surveillance assets, artillery, and other high-payoff targets.
conducting passive air defense measures during offensive operations and supplement maneuver short-range
air defense systems coverage with combined arms for air defense measures using organic direct fire systems
against threat air systems. Passive air defense measures are an essential part of air and missile defense
planning at all levels and reduce the effectiveness of the enemy air threat. Effective commanders include
passive air defense measures in planning at all levels.
3-99. Commanders establish air defense priorities based on the concept of operations, scheme of maneuver,
air situation, critical and defended asset lists, and the air defense priorities established by higher echelon
headquarters. If commanders have Army air defense systems in direct support of their attack, their coverage
is generally weighted toward their unit’s decisive operation and establishing a protective corridor over the
terrain traversed by units conducting that decisive operation. Targets selected to support tactical air defense
efforts include—
Enemy unmanned aircraft systems.
Enemy rotary- and fixed-wing aircraft.
Enemy facilities supporting enemy air operations, such as airfields, launch sites, logistic support
facilities, forward arming and refueling points, and aerial command and control sites.
Enemy ground facilities are normally engaged by maneuver and fire support units and not air defense artillery
units. (See FM 3-01 for additional information on air defense measures.)
SUSTAINMENT
3-100. Sustainment enables tactical momentum in the offense, and it requires detailed planning.
Commanders attempt to take advantage of windows of opportunity and execute the offense with minimum
advance warning time. Therefore, sustainment—logistics, personnel services, and health service support—
planners and operators anticipate these events and maintain the flexibility to support an offensive plan
accordingly. Sustainment commanders must act, rather than react, to support requirements. The existence of
habitual support relationships facilitates the ability to anticipate.
Logistics
3-101. Logistics maintains the momentum of an attack by delivering supplies as far forward as possible.
Commanders can use throughput distribution and preconfigured packages of essential items to help maintain
offensive momentum and tempo. Commanders examine their unit’s basic load to determine its adequacy to
support an operation. The basic load is the quantity of supplies required to be on hand within, and moved by
a unit or formation, expressed according to the wartime organization of the unit or formation and maintained
at the prescribed levels (JP 4-09). Commanders determine the combat load—the supplies carried by
individual Soldiers and combat vehicles. A unit’s sustainment load consists of what remains of that unit’s
basic load once the combat load is subtracted. Unit tactical vehicles carry the sustainment load. Commanders
also determine the supplies required for likely contingencies, such as enemy use of CBRN agents.
3-102. Logistic units and materiel remain close to a maneuver force to ensure short turnaround time for
supplies and services. This includes uploading as much critical materiel—such as petroleum, oils, and
lubricants (known as POL), water, and ammunition—as possible. Commanders conceal logistic preparations
for an attack to deny enemy forces indications of their unit’s tactical plans.
3-103. The availability of adequate supplies and transportation to sustain an operation becomes more
critical as the operation progresses. Supply lines of communications (LOCs) lengthen, and the requirements
for repair and replacement of weapon systems increase. Sustainment units in direct support of maneuver units
must be as mobile as the forces they support. A way to provide continuous support is to task-organize
elements of sustainment units or complete sustainment units with their supported maneuver formations as
required by the mission variables.
3-104. A flexible and tailorable transportation system is necessary for widely dispersed forces and
lengthening LOCs. Required capabilities include movement control, in-transit visibility of carried supplies,
terminal operations, and transportation modes. Securing these LOCs and the units and convoys moving along
them is critical.
3-105. Field maintenance assets move as far forward as the tactical situation allows to repair inoperable and
damaged equipment as quickly as possible. Crews perform preventive checks and services as modified for
the climate and terrain. Rapid battle damage assessment and repair is critical to sustaining an attack.
3-106. Establishing aerial resupply and forward logistic bases may be necessary to sustain maneuver
operations conducted at great distance from a unit’s sustaining base. This often occurs during an exploitation
and pursuit.
3-107. Raids conducted by ground maneuver forces within the enemy force’s support areas tend to be
audacious, rapidly executed, and of short duration. Logistic support is normally minimal when units conduct
raids. Units conducting raids should carry as much petroleum, oils, and lubricants and ammunition as possible
and take advantage of any captured enemy supplies. Once a raiding force crosses its LD, only limited,
emergency aerial resupply of critical supplies and aeromedical evacuation are feasible because of the absence
of a secure ground LOC. Commanders must thoroughly plan for aerial resupply of a raiding force, since it
entails greater risk than normal operations. Under these conditions, units typically destroy damaged
equipment that is unable to maintain the pace of the operation.
PROTECTION
3-109. Protection preserves combat power. Commanders address the twelve protection tasks during their
planning, preparation, execution, and assessment of offensive operations. They protect their forces and
critical assets by synchronizing, integrating, and organizing protection capabilities and resources. The
synchronization and integration of area and local security tasks, operations security, air and missile defense,
and cyberspace and electronic warfare operations is essential to protecting the force.
3-110. Various military organizations provide complementary and reinforcing protection capabilities in an
economy-of-force role to protect LOCs, convoys, or critical fixed sites and radars. Bases and base clusters
employ local security measures, but they may remain vulnerable to bypassed enemy forces. These forces
may require commanders to employ tactical combat forces when their threat requires a friendly response
beyond the capabilities of base and base cluster defense forces.
3-111. During the conduct offensive operations, commanders place special emphasis on protection tasks
related to survivability and detention operations. All units are responsible for improving their positions,
regardless of role or location.
3-112. Commanders ensure that their units can perform assigned tasks in CBRN environments. They
establish, train, rehearse, and exercise their units under CBRN conditions before deploying into a theater of
operations and during temporary lulls to build Soldier confidence and competence in these environments.
Leaders and Soldiers know the challenges associated with wearing protective gear. Commanders integrate
CBRN reconnaissance and surveillance into their overall information collection plans.
3-113. Army forces execute combined arms operations for countering weapons of mass destruction (known
as CWMD) in an opportunistic manner during offensive operations when enemy forces present targets of
opportunity. Integrated teams made up of maneuver forces and enablers conduct combined arms countering
weapons of mass destruction at the tactical level. These teams provide integral, required capabilities to
perform countering weapons of mass destruction tasks to curtail the research, development, possession,
proliferation, use, and effects of weapons of mass destruction, related expertise, materials, technologies, and
means of delivery. (See ATP 3-90.40 for more information on combined arms countering weapons of mass
destruction.)
3-114. Units can expect to accumulate sizeable numbers of detainees during the conduct offensive
operations. To facilitate collecting enemy tactical information, military intelligence personnel co-locate
interrogation teams at detention facilities. (See FM 3-63 for additional information on detainee operations.)
TRANSITION
3-115. A transition occurs when a commander makes the assessment that units must change their focus
from one element of decisive action to another. A commander halts offensive operations only when attacking
units reach the echelon’s LOA, achieve victory and the end of hostilities, reach a culminating point, or receive
a change in mission from a higher echelon commander.
3-116. All types of offensive operations that do not achieve complete victory reach a culminating point
when the balance of combat power shifts from the attacking force to the defending force. Units conducting
offensive operations lose momentum and may culminate when—
They suffer heavy losses of personnel and equipment.
They encounter heavily defended areas they cannot bypass.
The resupply of fuel, ammunition, and other supplies fails to keep up with expenditures.
Soldiers become physically exhausted.
Equipment repairs and personnel replacements do not keep pace with losses.
The commander determines that advancing further is detrimental to the force. (Examples of this
include moving out of mutual supporting distance with adjacent units or determining that the force
lacks the enablers necessary to continue the advance.)
Attacking units may also slow or stop when reserves are not available to continue an advance, the defender
receives reinforcements, or the defender counterattacks. Several of these causes may combine to halt an
offense. When this occurs, the attacking unit can regain its momentum, but normally this only happens after
difficult fighting, the commitment of additional forces, or an operational pause.
3-117. If commanders cannot achieve their objectives before subordinate forces reach their culminating
points, they plan an operational pause to adjust the operation accordingly. Simultaneously, commanders
attempt to prevent an enemy force from knowing when friendly forces become overextended.
This chapter discusses the basics of defensive operations. These basics include the
purposes of the defense, characteristics of the defense, the three types of defensive
operations, common defensive control measures, common defensive planning
considerations, and transitions.
DISRUPTION
4-6. Defending forces seek to disrupt attacks by employing actions that desynchronize an enemy force’s
preparations. Disruption actions include deceiving or destroying enemy reconnaissance forces, breaking up
combat formations, separating echelons, and impeding an enemy force’s ability to synchronize its combined
arms. Defending forces conduct spoiling attacks to deny an enemy force’s ability to focus combat power.
They counterattack to deny an enemy force the ability to exploit. Defending forces employ electronic warfare
and cyberspace assets in addition to lethal systems to target enemy command and control systems and disrupt
enemy forces in depth by isolating forward echelons from their higher echelon headquarters.
FLEXIBILITY
4-7. Defensive operations require flexible plans that anticipate enemy actions and allocates resources
accordingly. Commanders shift the main effort as required. They plan battle positions in depth and the use
of reserves in spoiling attacks and counterattacks.
MANEUVER
4-8. Maneuver allows a defending force to achieve and exploit a position of advantage over an enemy force.
As described in paragraphs 1-23 through 1-32, even in the defense there are elements of the offense. The
defending force seeks opportunities to maneuver against the attacking force.
OPERATIONS IN DEPTH
4-12. Operations in depth is the simultaneous application of combat power throughout an area of
operations. Commanders plan their operations in depth. They create conditions by disrupting enemy
long-range fires, sustainment, and command and control. These disruptions weaken enemy forces and prevent
any early enemy successes. Operations in depth prevent enemy forces from maintaining their tempo. In the
defense, commanders establish a security area and the main battle area (MBA) with its associated FEBA.
(See paragraphs 4-31 and 4-33 for more information about the FEBA and MBA respectively.)
PREPARATION
4-13. Defending units prepare their AOs before attacking enemy forces arrive, or they establish the defense
behind a force performing a security operation. Commanders employ forward and flank security forces to
protect their defending forces from surprise and reduce the unknowns in any situation. Defending forces
study the terrain, study enemy forces, and prepare engagement areas. They combine natural and man-made
obstacles to canalize attacking forces into those engagement areas. Defending forces place information
collection assets throughout their AOs to provide intelligence and early warning of enemy actions. They
position combat multipliers, such as fires and sustainment assets, to support their defensive plans. Defending
forces improve the survivability of their units by constructing field fortifications, using camouflage, and
dispersing. Defending forces continue rehearsals and preparations until close combat begins.
SECURITY
4-14. Commanders secure their forces through the performance of security, protection, information
operations, and cyberspace and electronic warfare tasks. Security may include the provision of area security
for civilians, infrastructure, and LOCs. Security operations prevent enemy intelligence, surveillance, and
reconnaissance assets from determining friendly locations, strengths, and weaknesses. These operations also
provide early warning and continuously disrupt enemy attacks. They employ protection efforts to preserve
combat power. This includes protecting their forces from attrition by using available air and missile defense
assets. They conduct information operations to prevent civilian interference with their operations. They
perform military deception, cyberspace, and electronic warfare to inaccurately portray friendly forces’
locations, capabilities, and intentions to mislead enemy commanders and to deny those same enemy
commanders the ability to use cyberspace and the electromagnetic spectrum.
AREA DEFENSE
4-16. The area defense is a type of defensive operation that concentrates on denying enemy forces
access to designated terrain for a specific time rather than destroying the enemy outright. The focus of
an area defense is on retaining terrain where the bulk of a defending force positions itself in mutually
supporting, prepared positions. Units maintain their positions and control the terrain between the position of
enemy forces and the terrain they desire. The decisive operation focuses fires into engagement areas, possibly
supplemented by a counterattack. Commanders can use their reserve to reinforce fires, add depth, block, or
restore a position by counterattack; to seize the initiative; and to destroy enemy forces. Units at all echelons
can conduct an area defense. The Battle of Kursk in July 1943 is a historical example of an area defense by
the Soviets. (See FM 3-90-1 for a discussion of the advantages and disadvantages of the use of a defense in
depth and a forward defense during the conduct of an area defense.)
MOBILE DEFENSE
4-17. The mobile defense is a type of defensive operation that concentrates on the destruction or defeat
of the enemy through a decisive attack by a striking force. The mobile defense focuses on defeating or
destroying enemy forces by allowing them to advance to a point where they are exposed to a decisive
counterattack by a striking force. The striking force is a dedicated counterattack force in a mobile defense
constituted with the bulk of available combat power. A fixing force is a force designated to supplement
the striking force by preventing the enemy from moving from a specific area for a specific time. A
fixing force supplements a striking force by holding attacking enemy forces in position, by canalizing
attacking enemy forces into ambush areas, and by retaining areas from which to launch the striking force.
German General Manstein’s Donbas Operation in the Ukraine in February 1943 was a mobile defense.
4-18. A mobile defense requires an AO with considerable depth. Commanders shape their battlefields
causing enemy forces to overextend their LOCs, expose their flanks, and dissipate their combat power.
Commanders move friendly forces around and behind enemy forces to cut off and destroy them. Divisions
and larger echelon formations normally execute mobile defenses. BCTs and maneuver battalions participate
in a mobile defense as part of a fixing force or a striking force.
RETROGRADE
4-19. The retrograde is a type of defensive operation that involves organized movement away from the
enemy. An enemy force may compel these operations, or a commander may perform them voluntarily. The
higher echelon commander of a force executing a retrograde must approve the retrograde before its initiation.
A retrograde is not conducted in isolation. It is always part of a larger scheme of maneuver designed to regain
the initiative and defeat the enemy.
4-20. The three variations of the retrograde are delay, withdrawal, and retirement:
A delay is when a force under pressure trades space for time by slowing down the enemy’s
momentum and inflicting maximum damage on enemy forces without becoming decisively
engaged. In delays, units yield ground to gain time while retaining flexibility and freedom of
action to inflict the maximum damage on enemy forces.
Withdraw is to disengage from an enemy force and move in a direction away from the enemy.
Withdrawing units, whether all or part of a committed force, voluntarily disengage from an enemy
force to preserve the withdrawing force or release it for a new mission.
A retirement is when a force out of contact moves away from the enemy.
In each variation of a retrograde, a force not in contact with an enemy force moves to another location,
normally by a tactical road march. In all variations of the retrograde, firm control of friendly maneuver
elements is a prerequisite for success.
BATTLE POSITIONS
4-22. A battle position is a defensive location oriented on a likely enemy avenue of approach. A battle
position is not an AO. Battle positions symbols depict the locations and general orientations of defending
ground maneuver forces. A commander’s use of a battle position does not direct a subordinate to position
that subordinate’s entire force within its bounds. Units as large as battalion task forces and as small as squads
or sections use battle positions. Commanders select positions based on terrain, enemy capabilities, and
friendly capabilities. Commanders assign some or all subordinates battle positions. The unit occupying the
battle position prepares fighting and survivability positions for its weapons systems, vehicles, Soldiers, and
supplies to accomplish its mission.
4-23. Commanders assign subordinates to battle positions in situations when friendly forces need to retain a
greater degree of control than that provided through only using an AO. This greater degree of control occurs
because a commander controls maneuver outside the general location of the battle position. Multiple battle
positions may be assigned to a single unit, which allows that unit to maneuver between battle positions.
Commanders specify mission and engagement criteria to the unit assigned to a battle position. Security,
supporting artillery, and sustainment forces typically operate outside a unit’s battle position. Units occupying
a battle position do not automatically have all the doctrinal responsibilities associated with being assigned an
AO.
4-24. Units occupy or displace from battle positions as part of the overall plan. The commander assigning a
unit to a battle position specifies when and under what conditions the unit displaces from the position. If a
unit is ordered to defend a battle position, its commander has the option of moving off the battle position. If
that unit is directed to retain a battle position, its commander needs to know the specific conditions that must
exist before the unit can displace.
4-25. There are five kinds of battle positions:
The primary position is the position that covers the enemy’s most likely avenue of approach
into the area of operations. It is the best position from which to accomplish the defensive
mission, such as the overwatch of an engagement area to prevent enemy penetration.
An alternate position is a defensive position that the commander assigns to a unit or weapon
system for occupation when the primary position becomes untenable or unsuitable for
carrying out the assigned task. The unit commander locates alternate positions so the occupants
can continue to fulfill the original task, such as covering the same avenue of approach or
engagement area as the primary position. These positions increase a defending force’s
survivability by allowing the defending force to engage the enemy force from multiple positions.
DISENGAGEMENT LINE
4-28. A disengagement line is a phase line located on identifiable terrain that, when crossed by the
enemy, signals to defending elements that it is time to displace to their next position. Commanders use
disengagement lines in delays and defenses when they do not want a defending unit to become decisively
engaged. Commanders establish criteria for a disengagement, such as number of enemy vehicles by type,
friendly losses, or enemy movement to flanking locations. Commanders may designate multiple
disengagement lines, one for type of each weapon system or subordinate unit.
ENGAGEMENT AREA
4-29. An engagement area is an area where the commander intends to contain and destroy an enemy force
with the massed effects of all available weapons and supporting systems. In the defense commanders shape
the enemy approach and steer enemy formations into engagement areas. They then concentrate overwhelming
combat power in a focused area to defeat an enemy attack. The seven steps of engagement area development
are identify all likely enemy avenues of approach, determine likely enemy schemes of maneuver, determine
where to kill the enemy force, plan and integrate obstacles, emplace weapon systems, plan and integrate
indirect fires, and rehearse.
on most of these FSCMs. See FM 3-52 for discussions on airspace coordination areas.) Commanders can
also designate final protective fire (FPF). Final protective fire is an immediately available, prearranged
barrier of fire designed to impede enemy movement across defensive lines or areas (JP 3-09.3).
units typically employ field fortifications and obstacles to reinforce the terrain’s natural defensive aspects.
The MBA includes the area where a defending force counterattacks that defeats or destroys enemy forces.
4-34. In contiguous operations, the MBA extends from the FEBA to the rear boundary of a specific echelon’s
subordinate units. Commanders locate subordinate unit boundaries along identifiable terrain features and
extend them beyond the FLOT by establishing forward boundaries. Unit boundaries should not split avenues
of approach or key terrain. Commanders select the MBA based on the products of the IPB process and their
own analysis using the mission variables. The IPB anticipates how an enemy force will use the available
avenues of approach.
SECURITY AREA
4-35. A security area is that area occupied by a unit’s security elements and includes the areas of
influence of those security elements. It may be located as necessary to the front, flanks, or rear of a protected
unit, facility, or location. Forces in a security area furnish information on an enemy force; delay, deceive,
and disrupt that enemy force; and conduct counterreconnaissance. All units perform security operations
within their AOs, including the support area, to deny enemy reconnaissance and otherwise protect the force.
Units implement security operations and other information protection measures to deny the enemy force
information about friendly dispositions.
4-36. Commanders conduct security operations to provide their forces time and space to react to the approach
of enemy forces by causing the enemy to deploy prematurely. This reveals the enemy forces’ main effort and
which of the available avenues of approach the enemy is using. Commanders conduct security operations to
conceal the location of their main battle positions, prevent enemy observation of friendly preparations and
positions, and prevent enemy forces from delivering observed fire on these positions. Commanders can offset
an attacker’s inherent advantage of initiative regarding the time, place, plan, direction, strength, and
composition of the attack by forcing that enemy to attack into unexpected prepared defenses. They counter
enemy ground and air reconnaissance activities through both active and passive measures. Commanders must
not permit enemy reconnaissance and surveillance assets to determine the precise location and strength of
defensive positions, obstacles, engagement areas, and reserves.
4-41. The common defensive planning considerations addressed in paragraphs 4-42 through 4-110 apply to
all types of defensive operations. These considerations are in addition to those common offensive planning
considerations introduced in chapter 3, when appropriately modified for the defense. Defensive
synchronization is normally the result of detailed planning and preparation among the various units
participating in defensive operations. While these activities may be separated in time and space, they are
synchronized if enemy forces feel their combined consequences decisive times and places. The defense is a
mix of static and dynamic actions. As an operation evolves, the defending commander prepares to shift main
and supporting efforts and keep an enemy force off balance.
synchronize information-related capabilities to achieve these objectives and create specific effects.
Commonly synchronized information-related capabilities to support the defense include cyberspace
operations, electronic warfare, military deception, military information support operations, and operations
security.
positions in selected engagement areas. In a mobile defense, commanders use a striking force to generate
overwhelming combat power at the decisive point. Commanders can also mass effects by committing the
reserve. Commanders use economy of force measures in areas that do not involve the decisive operation.
Aviation Forces
4-60. Aviation forces with their mix of manned and unmanned systems are particularly valuable in the
defense because of their speed, mobility, and versatility. Their tasks can include—
Conducting intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance, as part of information collection.
Performing security operations.
Conducting shaping operations or supporting efforts to establish the necessary conditions for
decisive operations by other forces or the main effort through attriting, disrupting, and delaying
the enemy.
Conducting counterattacks and spoiling attacks.
Controlling ground for limited periods where a commander does not wish to irrevocably commit
ground forces; for example, forward of an executed obstacle.
Countering enemy penetrations.
Closing gaps in a defensive plan before the arrival of ground maneuver forces.
Facilitating the disengagement of ground forces.
Countering enemy activities in the echelon support areas, in particular enemy airborne or air
assault forces.
Resupplying a defending force or facilitating casualty evacuation.
Assisting in the countermobility effort by employing minefields.
Mobility
4-62. During a defense, mobility tasks include breaching obstacles, clearing routes, and constructing and
maintaining combat roads and trails to support counterattacks. Mobility tasks are those combined arms
activities that mitigate the effects of obstacles to enable freedom of movement and maneuver. Engineer units
usually perform these tasks. Enemy fires and friendly use accelerate the normal wear on routes. Engineers
maintain the trafficability of those routes. Enemy fires may necessitate deploying engineer equipment, such
as assault bridging and bulldozers, forward. During a counterattack, engineer breaching systems open closed
lanes or breach hasty minefields placed by a retrograding enemy force.
4-63. Commanders establish the priority of mobility support based on the mission variables. This support
consists mainly of reducing obstacles and improving or constructing combat roads and trails to allow tactical
support vehicles to accompany combat vehicles. Commanders coordinate carefully to ensure that units leave
lanes or gaps in their obstacles that allow for the repositioning of main body units and the commitment of the
counterattacking force. CBRN reconnaissance systems also contribute to a force’s mobility in a contaminated
environment by marking contaminated and clean routes as well as providing CBRN expertise while
developing alternate COAs.
Countermobility
4-64. Commanders designate obstacle zones, belts, and groups depending on their authority. When planning
obstacles, commanders and staffs also consider future operations. Commanders design obstacles for current
operations so they do not hinder planned future operations. Any commander authorized to employ obstacles
can designate certain obstacles to shape the battlefield. There are two categories of reinforcing obstacles:
tactical and protective. Tactical obstacles shape enemy maneuver to maximize the effects of fires. Tactical
obstacles deny the ability of a force to move, mass, and reinforce; therefore, they affect the tempo of
operations. There are three types of tactical obstacles: directed, situational, and reserved. Commanders
employ protective obstacles to protect people, equipment, supplies, and facilities against threats. Protective
obstacles have two roles, defense or security.
4-65. Obstacles can provide additional protection from enemy attacks by forcing an enemy force to spend
time and resources to breach or bypass them. Effective obstacles block, turn, fix, or disrupt, forcing an enemy
to attempt to breach or bypass them. A commander integrates reinforcing obstacles with existing obstacles
to halt or slow enemy movement, canalize enemy movement into engagement areas, and protect friendly
positions and maneuver. The primary purpose for integrating obstacles with fires is to enhance the
effectiveness of those fires. Obstacles that are not covered by fire generally disrupt only the leading elements
of an attacking force for a short time. When possible, units conceal obstacles from hostile observation. They
coordinate obstacle plans with adjacent units and conform to the obstacle zone or belts of higher echelons.
4-66. Commanders designate the unit responsible for creating and overwatching each obstacle. Commanders
may retain execution authority for some obstacles—called reserved obstacles—or restrict the use of some
types of obstacles to allow other battlefield activities to occur. All units must know which gaps or lanes—
through obstacles and crossing sites—to keep open for movements, as well as the firing and self-destruct
times of scatterable mines to prevent delays in movement. Commanders must be specific and clear in their
orders for executing reserved obstacles and closing lanes. As each lane closes, the closing unit reports the
lane’s closure to prevent displacing units from moving into active obstacle areas.
4-67. Commanders at all echelons track defensive preparations, such as establishing Class IV and V supply
points and start or completion times of obstacle belts and groups. Commanders plan how units will restore
obstacles that an enemy force has breached. Commanders use artillery, air, or ground systems to reseed
minefields. Given time and resources, a defending force constructs additional obstacles in depth, paying
special attention to its assailable flanks and rear. (See ATP 3-90.8 for additional information about obstacles
and obstacle integration.)
4-71. Two limited visibility conditions exist: those which mechanical aids, such as thermal sights, can
overcome or partially overcome and those which mechanical aids cannot overcome. The first category
includes darkness. The second category includes dense battlefield dust, obscurants, heavy rain, snow, fog, or
any other conditions which cannot be at least partially overcome by artificial illumination, image
intensification, radar, or other sensors. In this case, defending units may need to move closer to the avenues
of approach they are guarding. Sensors may still be of some value in these conditions.
4-72. Commanders use obscurants to disrupt an enemy force’s assault or movement formations and to deny
an enemy force’s use of target acquisition optics, visual navigation aids, air avenues of approach, landing
zones, and drop zones. Obscurants create gaps in enemy formations by separating or isolating attacking units
and disrupting their planned movement. Obscurants affect both friendly and enemy forces.
INTELLIGENCE
4-73. Just as in the offense, intelligence collection is continuous. Intelligence officers, in coordination with
the rest of the staff, develop a synchronized and integrated information collection plan that satisfies the unit
commander’s maneuver, targeting, and information requirements. These requirements in the defense are
similar to those in the offense. Intelligence analysis helps commanders decide on the precise time and place
to counterattack.
4-74. During planning, commanders use intelligence products to identify probable enemy objectives and
approaches. From those probable objectives and approaches they develop named areas of interest and targeted
areas of interest. In a defense, IPB should be able to determine an enemy force’s strength, COAs, and the
location of enemy follow-on forces. IPB products also identify cyberspace activities, cross-domain
capabilities, patterns of enemy operations and the enemy force’s vulnerabilities to counterattack, interdiction,
electronic warfare, air attacks, and canalization by obstacles. Commanders study an enemy force’s capability
to conduct air attacks against friendly forces, insert forces behind friendly units, employ CBRN and explosive
weapons or devices, and employ asymmetric or unconventional forces and tactics. The intelligence staff also
evaluates how soon enemy follow-on forces can be committed. Defending commanders can then decide
where to arrange their forces to defend and shape the battlefield.
4-75. Commanders designate targeted areas of interest and named areas of interest as necessary.
Commanders determine the most advantageous area for an enemy force’s main attack as well as other military
aspects of terrain, including observation and fields of fire, avenues of approach, key terrain, obstacles, and
cover and concealment. (See ATP 3-34.80 for a detailed discussion of observation and fields of fire, avenues
of approach, key terrain, obstacles, and cover and concealment.) A defending unit continuously performs
information collection tasks during a battle so that the defending commander can make the appropriate
decisions and adjustments to the defense.
4-76. Some information collection assets are susceptible to loss. Defensive plans must also address the
sustainment, replacement, and reconstitution of information collection assets throughout the execution of a
defense.
FIRES
4-77. The targeting process ensures the collective and coordinated use of Army indirect and joint fires to
gain and maintain fire superiority throughout defensive operations. In the defense, commanders use fires to
neutralize, suppress, or destroy enemy forces. Commanders can also use fires to delay or disrupt an enemy
force’s ability to execute a given COA and to enhance the effects of massed direct fires or the employment
of scatterable munitions.
4-81. Units conduct defensive operations and designate FPFs for each of their supporting artillery units and
mortar platoons. Both direct and indirect-fire weapons can provide FPFs. A direct fire weapon system’s final
protective line is a form of FPFs. Commanders can only assign each weapon, firing battery, or platoon a
single FPF. An FPF is a priority target for that weapon or unit, and those weapons or units are laid on that
target when they are not engaged in other fire missions. When an enemy force initiates its final assault into a
defensive position, a defending unit initiates its FPFs.
SUSTAINMENT
4-85. Commanders address several unique sustainment considerations in the defensive plan. Priorities for
replenishment normally include ammunition and materiel to construct obstacles and defensive positions.
There is usually a reduced need for bulk fuel. Some situations may have an increased demand for
decontaminants and CBRN collective and personal protective equipment. Commanders consider stockpiling
or caching ammunition and limited amounts of petroleum products in centrally located positions within the
MBA. Commanders plan to destroy those stocks if necessary as part of denial operations. The supply of
obstacle materials in a defense can be a significant problem that requires detailed coordination and long lead
times. Commanders consider the transportation and manpower required in obtaining, moving, and uncrating
barrier material and obstacle creating munitions.
4-86. Sustainment unit commanders and sustainment staff officers understand their supported commander’s
intent. They establish support priorities in accordance with that intent and plan sustainment operations to
ensure support for the overall operation. Commanders also address sustainment during branches and sequels
to a defensive plan, such as a counterattack into the flank of an adjacent unit. This allows sustainment units
to anticipate the needs of the maneuver units they support.
4-87. Maneuver units resupply regularly in case an enemy breakthrough disrupts sustainment. The
sustainment enterprise may deliver combat-configured loads to its maneuver units. Combat-configured loads
are typically packages of potable and non-potable water, CBRN defense supplies, barrier materials,
ammunition, petroleum, oil, and lubricants (collectively known as POL), medical supplies, and repair parts
tailored to a specific size unit. Sustainment organizations resupply their supported maneuver units until those
maneuver forces request otherwise. Commanders use information systems to accurately tailor these
combat-configured loads to the demands of supported maneuver units.
4-88. Commanders may need to infiltrate resupply vehicles to reduce detection chances when an enemy force
possesses a significant air, satellite, or unmanned aircraft capability. Commanders may also use military
deception, camouflage, concealment, and obscurants to help conceal logistic operations.
4-89. Terrain management is a critical consideration when establishing bases and base clusters in the support
area. Commanders position each sustainment unit where it can best fulfill its support tasks while using
minimal resources to maintain security in conjunction with other units located in an echelon support area. In
contiguous operations, commanders position echelon sustainment facilities farther away from the FEBA in a
defense than in the offense to avoid interfering with the movement of units between battle positions or the
forward movement of counterattack forces. Commanders locate these assets far enough behind friendly lines
that likely enemy advances will not compel the relocation of critical sustainment capabilities at inopportune
times. However, those sustainment capabilities supporting a unit must be close enough to provide responsive
support. In noncontiguous operations, commanders position sustainment assets in bases and base clusters
within the perimeters of ground maneuver units to provide security and avoid interrupting their sustainment
functions. Commanders distribute sustainment units with similar functions throughout the defensive area in
both environments. This distribution allows commanders to designate one sustainment unit to pick up the
workload of a displacing second sustainment unit until the second sustainment unit is once again operational.
(See ATP 3-91 for a discussion of the use of bases and base clusters within the division support area.)
4-90. A defending commander provides maintenance support as far forward as possible at maintenance
collection points to reduce the need to evacuate equipment. The goal of the maintenance effort is to fix as far
forward as possible damaged systems that can be quickly returned to a unit in combat-ready condition.
Commanders ensure that multifunctional forward logistic elements contain the maximum variety of
maintenance personnel with appropriate equipment, such as repair sets, kits, and outfits, to rapidly repair
weapon systems.
4-91. Medical support associated with the defense anticipates significant casualties, just as in the offense.
Commanders plan to augment available ambulances for mass casualty situations. Units plan for mass
casualties and have evacuation plans, including casualty collection points and ambulance exchange points,
and account for the use of both standard and nonstandard air and ground evacuation platforms.
PROTECTION
4-92. In defensive operations, commanders protect forces and critical assets by synchronizing, integrating,
and organizing protection capabilities and resources. Commanders incorporate available protection
capabilities as they understand and visualize threats and hazards in an operational environment. Commanders
then apply the elements of combat power to prevent or mitigate these threats or hazards from negatively
impacting friendly operations. Commanders use decision support tools and analysis to assess a unit’s critical
assets and key vulnerabilities. (See ADP 3-37 for additional information on protection.)
4-93. In defensive operations, commanders protect forces and critical assets by performing security
operations. Forces providing security in a defense can deter, detect, or defeat enemy reconnaissance efforts
while creating standoff distances from enemy direct- and indirect-fire systems. Commanders secure the
movement of combat trains and protect cached commodities.
4-94. Commanders clearly define responsibilities for the security of units within the support area. This
requires assigning an individual responsibility for defensive planning and risk mitigation in that support area.
That individual can designate the commanders of tenant units within support areas as base and base cluster
commanders (except medical corps officers). Base and base cluster commanders are responsible for the local
security of their respective bases and base clusters. A commander responsible for a support area can also
designate protection standards and defensive readiness conditions for tenant units and units transiting the
area. Higher protection standards may impact the ability of those supporting sustainment units to accomplish
their primary missions to support the operations of maneuver and other forces. The support area commander
coordinates to mitigate the effects of performing security operations on the primary functions of units located
within an echelon support area. (There are two approaches for arraying base camps: dispersed and
consolidated. See ATP 3-37.10 for the strengths and weaknesses of each approach.)
4-95. Troop movements and resupply convoys are critical. Staffs balance terrain management, movement
planning, convoy security requirements, and traffic-circulation control priorities. They plan multiple routes
throughout an AO and closely control their use. Commanders may allocate mobility resources to maintain
main supply routes to support units and supplies moving forward and to evacuate personnel and equipment
to the rear. Commanders coordinate movements with affected organic and external Army aviation, fire
support, air defense units, and ground maneuver units. As required, military police protect movements,
prevent congestion, and respond to maneuver plan changes. Military police can provide necessary convoy
escorts, or maneuver units can use their resources, to provide necessary convoy security. In some
circumstances transportation units can provide their own security.
Survivability Operations
4-96. An attacking enemy force usually has the initiative. A defending commander must take a wide range
of actions to reduce the risk of losses, including developing a survivability plan. Survivability in the defense
prioritizes hardening command posts, artillery positions, air and missile defenses, and other critical
equipment and supply areas. It also includes preparing individual, crew-served, and combat vehicle fighting
positions.
4-97. To avoid detection and destruction by enemy forces, units move frequently and quickly establish
survivability positions. To provide flexibility, units may need primary, alternate, and supplementary
positions. This is particularly true of units defending key or decisive terrain. Units enhance their survivability
using concealment, military deception, decoy or dummy positions, dispersion, and field fortifications.
Commanders increase security during defensive preparations because an enemy force will attack lightly
defended areas whenever possible.
4-98. When preparing area and mobile defenses, engineer units assist maneuver and supporting units prepare
survivability positions. Commanders locate these positions throughout a defending unit’s security area,
MBA, and support area. Requirements beyond the capabilities of BCT engineer battalions pass through a
higher headquarters to an attached Army maneuver enhancement brigade or any functional engineer brigade
supporting the division or corps. These engineer units also prepare any strong points required by the division
or corps concept of operations.
4-99. Survivability tasks include using engineer equipment to help in constructing trenches, command post
shelters, and artillery, firing, radar, and combat vehicle fighting positions. Commanders provide guidance on
the level of protection (such as hull defilade, turret defilade, or overhead cover), system priorities, and early
employment of specialized engineer equipment that can construct survivability positions. (See ATP 3-37.34
for additional information concerning the construction and maintenance of survivability positions.)
4-100. Commanders use dispersion to limit the damage done by enemy attacks. Enemy forces should never
be able to put a unit out of action with just a single attack. Dispersed troops and vehicles force attacking
forces to concentrate on a single small target that may be missed. The wider the dispersion of unit personnel
and equipment is, the greater potential for limiting damage it has. Commanders position forces and
installations to avoid congestion, but they do not disperse them to the extent that there is a risk of defeat in
detail by an enemy employing conventional munitions or weapons of mass destruction.
4-101. Commanders protect supply stocks against blast, shrapnel, incendiaries, and CBRN contamination
using dispersion and constructing survivability positions. Forces can protect vehicles carrying supplies
against almost anything but a direct hit by constructing berms large enough to accommodate the vehicles and
deep enough to keep supplies below ground level. The echelon staff advises sustainment operators about
storage area site selection that reduces the requirements for engineer survivability support without reducing
the required degree of protection.
4-102. Units also use cover to limit the amount of damage and casualties that they can receive because of
an enemy attack. Folds in the earth, natural depressions, trees, buildings, and walls offer cover. If a
commander deploys in flat terrain lacking cover, digging in or sandbagging can offer some protection. Units
employ obscuration if they are moving and cannot use natural cover or cannot build fortifications.
BREAKOUT
4-111. A breakout is an operation conducted by an encircled force to regain freedom of movement or
contact with friendly units. A breakout differs from other attacks only in that a simultaneous defense in
other areas of the perimeter must be maintained. An encircled force normally attempts to conduct a breakout
when—
Opportunity exists to attack.
An encircled force does not have sufficient relative combat power to defend itself against enemy
forces attempting the encirclement.
An encircled force does not have adequate terrain available to conduct its defense.
An encircled force cannot sustain itself long enough to be relieved by forces outside the
encirclement.
EXFILTRATION
4-112. If the success of a breakout attack appears questionable, or if it fails and a relief operation is not
planned, one way to preserve a portion of the force is through organized exfiltration. (See FM 3-90-1 for a
detailed description of exfiltration.)
LINKUP
4-115. A linkup is a meeting of friendly ground forces, which occurs in a variety of circumstances. It
happens when an advancing force reaches an objective previously seized by an airborne or air assault forces.
A linkup can also occur when an encircled element breaks out to rejoin friendly forces or a force comes to
the relief of an encircled force. It also occurs when converging maneuver forces meet by moving toward each
other, or when one force is stationary. Whenever possible, joining forces exchange as much information as
possible before starting a linkup operation. The headquarters ordering the linkup establishes—
The common operational picture.
The command and support relationship and responsibilities of each force before, during, and after
linkup.
FSCMs and direct fire control measures.
The linkup method.
Recognition signals and communication procedures.
Subsequent operations.
TRANSITION
4-116. Defending commanders assess the success of their defense and determine if they can transition to
the offense. If a defense is unsuccessful, defending commanders transition into retrograde operations.
Transition from one type of operation to another requires mental as well as physical agility from the involved
formations and an accurate understanding of the situation.
4-117. Commanders deliberately plan for the transition process and allow the setting of the conditions
necessary for a successful transition. Such planning addresses the need to control the tempo of operations,
maintain contact with both enemy and friendly forces, and keep enemy forces off balance. It establishes the
procedures and priorities by which a unit prepares for its next mission. It establishes the required organization
of forces and control measures necessary for success in accordance with the mission variables.
4-118. Prior planning decreases the time needed to adjust the tempo of combat operations when a unit
transitions from defensive operations to offensive operations. This planning allowing subordinate units to
conduct parallel planning and prepare for subsequent operations. Preparations include resupplying unit basic
loads and repositioning or reallocating supporting systems.
4-119. Planning also reduces the amount of time and confusion that arises when a unit is unsuccessful in its
defensive efforts and must transition to retrograde operations. Commanders designate units to conduct denial
operations and to evacuate casualties and equipment. Commanders use retrograde operations to preserve their
forces as combat-capable formations until they can establish those conditions necessary for a successful
defense. Plans should account for both failure and success, and they should account for a transition to
offensive or stability operations.
4-121. In a mobile defense, transitioning to an offense generally follows a striking force’s attack. In an area
defense, commanders designate a portion of their force to conduct the counterattack, selecting units based on
the commander’s concept of operations. However, commanders allocate available reserves to this
counterattack effort.
4-122. Commanders reorganize and resupply to support the offense. These actions require a transition in
the sustainment effort, with a shift in emphasis from ensuring a capability to defend from a chosen location
to an emphasis on ensuring a force’s ability to advance and maneuver. For example, in a defense the
sustainment effort may have focused on the forward stockage of Class IV and V items and the rapid
evacuation of damaged systems. In an offense, the sustainment effort may need to focus on providing
petroleum, oils, and lubricants; forward repair and maintenance; and replacement of combat losses. A
transition is often a time in which units can perform deferred equipment maintenance. Additional assets may
also be available on a temporary basis for casualty evacuation and medical treatment because of a reduction
in the tempo of operations.
4-123. Commanders should not wait too long to transition from defensive operations to offensive operations
as an enemy force approaches its culminating point. Enemy forces will be dispersed, extended in depth, and
weakened. At that time, any enemy defensive preparations will be hasty, and enemy forces will not be
adequately prepared for defense. Commanders want enemy forces weakened when transitioning to the
offense, and they do not want to give an enemy force time to prepare for the defense. Additionally, the
psychological shock on enemy soldiers will be greater if they suddenly find themselves defending on
unfavorable terms.
4-124. There are two methods for transitioning to an offense. The first, and generally preferred method, is
to attack using forces not previously committed to a defense. This method is preferred because defending
units may still be decisively engaged, tired, or depleted. These attacking forces may come from the reserve
or consist of reinforcements. Since these forces have not recently been actively involved in combat, they are
more likely to—
Be at authorized strength levels.
Have a higher combat system operationally readiness rate.
Have leaders and Soldiers who are more likely to be rested and more capable of prolonged,
continuous operations.
Have a complete basic load of supplies.
Have the time and energy to plan and prepare to conduct the offensive operations.
Be able to maneuver out of physical contact with an enemy force.
4-125. The second method is to perform a type of offensive operation using currently defending forces.
This method generally has the advantage of being more rapidly executed and thus more likely to catch an
enemy force by surprise. Speed of execution in this method results from not having to conduct an approach
or tactical road march from reserve assembly areas or, in the case of reinforcements, move from other AOs
and reception, staging, onward movement, and integration locations. Speed also results from not having to
conduct a forward passage of lines and performing the liaison necessary to establish a common operational
picture that includes knowledge of the enemy force’s patterns of operation.
4-126. If units in contact participate in an attack, commanders must retain sufficient forces in contact to fix
enemy forces. Commanders concentrate an attack by reinforcing select subordinate units so they can execute
the attack and, if necessary, maintain the existing defense. Commanders can also adjust the defensive
boundaries of subordinate units so entire units can withdraw and concentrate for an attack.
TRANSITION TO STABILITY
4-127. A force may transition from defensive operations to stability operations. This generally occurs if the
force reaches and establishes a defense along a LOA. Then, there may be a negotiated end to hostilities from
which the force transitions to stability. While improving its defensive preparations, the force may begin to
increase the amount of resources dedicated to stability.
The enabling operations discussed in this chapter are reconnaissance, security, troop
movement, relief in place, and passage of lines. Enabling operations apply to all
elements of decisive action. Other publications discuss other enabling operations. For
example, FM 3-13 discusses information operations, ATP 3-90.4 discusses mobility
operations, and ATP 3-90.8 discusses countermobility operations. Commanders direct
enabling operations to support the conduct of the offensive, defensive, and stability
operations and defense support of civil authorities tasks. Enabling operations are
usually conducted by commanders as part of their shaping operations or supporting
efforts.
RECONNAISSANCE
5-1. Reconnaissance is a mission undertaken to obtain, by visual observation or other detection methods,
information about the activities and resources of an enemy or adversary, or to secure data concerning the
meteorological, hydrographic, or geographic characteristics of a particular area (JP 2-0). Reconnaissance
accomplished by small units primarily relies on the human dynamic rather than technical means.
Reconnaissance is a focused collection effort. Units perform it before, during, and after operations to provide
commanders and staffs information used in the IPB process so they can formulate, confirm, or modify COAs.
5-2. Commanders orient their reconnaissance assets by identifying a reconnaissance objective within an
AO. The reconnaissance objective is a terrain feature, geographic area, enemy force, adversary, or
other mission or operational variable about which the commander wants to obtain additional
information. Every reconnaissance mission specifies a reconnaissance objective that clarifies the intent of
the effort and prioritizes those efforts by specifying the most important information to obtain. Commanders
assign reconnaissance objectives based on priority information requirements resulting from the IPB process
and the reconnaissance asset’s capabilities and limitations. As information about a specific location, such as
the cross country trafficability of a specific area, a reconnaissance objective can confirm a specific activity
or location of a threat. Furthermore, a reconnaissance unit uses the reconnaissance objective to guide it in
setting priorities when it lacks time to complete all the tasks associated with a specific type of reconnaissance
operation.
5-3. There are seven fundamentals of successful reconnaissance. Commanders—
Ensure continuous reconnaissance.
Do not keep reconnaissance assets in reserve.
Orient on reconnaissance objectives.
Report information rapidly and accurately.
Retain freedom of maneuver.
Gain and maintain enemy contact.
Develop the situation rapidly.
5-4. The responsibility for accomplishing reconnaissance does not reside solely with reconnaissance units.
Every unit has an implied mission to report information about the terrain, civilian activities, and friendly and
enemy dispositions. Troops in contact with an enemy and reconnaissance patrols of maneuver units, at all
echelons, collect information on enemy units and activities. In echelon support and consolidation areas,
reserve maneuver forces, functional and multifunctional support and sustainment elements, other
governmental agencies, and multinational forces observe and report civilian, adversary, and enemy activity
and significant changes in terrain trafficability. Although all units conduct reconnaissance, ground cavalry,
aviation attack reconnaissance units, scouts, and special forces are specifically trained to conduct
reconnaissance operations. Some branches, such as the Corps of Engineers and Chemical Corps, conduct
specific reconnaissance operations that complement the force’s overall reconnaissance effort. However,
BCT, division, and corps commanders primarily use their organic or attached reconnaissance—ground or
air—and intelligence elements to accomplish reconnaissance.
5-5. The five types of reconnaissance operations are—
Area reconnaissance is a type of reconnaissance operation that focuses on obtaining detailed
information about the terrain or enemy activity within a prescribed area. Commanders assign
an area reconnaissance when information on the enemy situation is limited or when focused
reconnaissance will yield specific information on the area in question. An area reconnaissance
differs from a zone reconnaissance in that the unit conducting an area reconnaissance starts from
an LD.
A reconnaissance in force is a type of reconnaissance operation designed to discover or test
the enemy’s strength, dispositions, and reactions or to obtain other information. A
commander assigns a reconnaissance in force when an enemy force is operating within an area
and the commander cannot obtain adequate intelligence by other means. The unit commander
plans for both the retrograde or reinforcement of the friendly force (in case it encounters superior
enemy forces) and for the exploitation of its success.
Route reconnaissance is a type of reconnaissance operation to obtain detailed information of
a specified route and all terrain from which the enemy could influence movement along that
route. Route reconnaissance provides new or updated information on route conditions, such as
obstacles and bridge classifications, and enemy, adversary, and civilian activity along the route.
Special reconnaissance is reconnaissance and surveillance actions conducted as a special
operation in hostile, denied, or diplomatically and/or politically sensitive environments to collect
or verify information of strategic or operational significance, employing military capabilities not
normally found in conventional forces (JP 3-05). Special reconnaissance provides an additional
capability for commanders and supplements other conventional reconnaissance and surveillance
actions.
Zone reconnaissance is a type of reconnaissance operation that involves a directed effort to
obtain detailed information on all routes, obstacles, terrain, and enemy forces within a zone
defined by boundaries. Obstacles include existing, reinforcing, and areas with CBRN
contamination. Commanders assign a zone reconnaissance mission when they need additional
information on a zone before committing other forces. Zone reconnaissance is the most time- and
resource-intensive form of reconnaissance.
SECURITY OPERATIONS
5-6. The main difference between conducting security operations and reconnaissance is that security
operations orient on the force or facility being protected while reconnaissance orients on the enemy and
terrain. Security operations aim to protect a force from surprise and reduce the unknowns in any situation.
Commanders conduct security operations to the front, flanks, or rear of a friendly force. Security operations
are shaping operations. As a shaping operation, economy of force is often a consideration when planning.
5-7. The four types of security operations are—
Area security is a type of security operation conducted to protect friendly forces, lines of
communications, and activities within a specific area. The security force may be protecting the
civilian population, civil institutions, and civilian infrastructure with the unit’s AO.
Cover is a type of security operation done independent of the main body to protect them by
fighting to gain time while preventing enemy ground observation of and direct fire against
the main body. Commanders use the cover task offensively and defensively. (Cover as a doctrinal
term also has other definitions.)
Guard is a type of security operation done to protect the main body by fighting to gain time
while preventing enemy ground observation of and direct fire against the main body. Units
performing a guard cannot operate independently. They rely upon fires, functional support, and
multifunctional support assets of the main body.
Screen is a type of security operation that primarily provides early warning to the protected
force.
5-8. The cover, guard, and screen security operations employ increasing levels of combat power and
provide increasing levels of security for a force’s main body. However, more combat power in the security
force means less combat power for the main body. Area security preserves a commander’s freedom to move
reserves, position fire support means, provide for command and control, and conduct sustaining operations.
5-9. All maneuver forces can conduct security operations. All three types of Army BCTs—armored,
infantry, and Stryker—conduct security operations as part of their mission-essential task lists. Commanders
ensure that subordinate units conduct security operations required by the situation. Habitual support
relationships with attachments and standard operating procedures are required to obtain proficiency in the
conduct of these operations.
5-10. Successful security operations depend on properly applying five fundamentals:
Provide early and accurate warning.
Provide reaction time and maneuver space.
Orient on the force, area, or facility.
Perform continuous reconnaissance.
Maintain enemy contact.
(See FM 3-90-2 and FM 3-98 for additional information on the conduct of security operations.)
TROOP MOVEMENT
5-11. Troop movement is the movement of Soldiers and units from one place to another by any available
means. The ability of a commander to posture friendly forces for a decisive or shaping operation depends on
the commander’s ability to move those forces. The essence of battlefield agility is the capability to conduct
rapid and orderly movement to concentrate combat power at decisive points and times. Successful movement
places troops and equipment at their destination at the proper time, ready for combat. The following are types
of troop movements:
Administrative movement is a movement in which troops and vehicles are arranged to
expedite their movement and conserve time and energy when no enemy ground interference
is anticipated. Commanders only conduct administrative movements in secure areas.
Commanders normally do not employ administrative movements once their units deploy into
combat operations. The echelon logistic staff officer usually supervises these types of moves. (See
FM 4-01 for a discussion of Army transportation operations.)
Approach march is the advance of a combat unit when direct contact with the enemy is
intended. An approach march emphasizes speed over tactical deployment. Armored, Stryker, and
infantry forces conduct tactical road marches and approach marches.
A tactical road march is a rapid movement used to relocate units within an area of operations
to prepare for combat operations. The primary use of a tactical road march is rapid movement.
However, the moving force employs security measures even when contact with enemy forces is
not expected. During tactical road marches, commanders are always prepared to take immediate
action if an enemy attacks. (See ATP 4-01.45 for a discussion of tactical convoy operations.)
sustainment requirements. When necessary, dismounted and mounted marches can be hurried by conducting
a forced march. (See FM 4-01 for a discussion of these various transportation modes.)
MOVEMENT CONTROL
5-13. Movement control is the dual process of committing allocated transportation assets and regulating
movements according to command priorities to synchronize distribution flow over lines of communications
to sustain land forces. Commanders’ priorities guide the conduct of movement control. Movement control
gives commanders the ability to deconflict troop movements with the distribution of supplies and services.
RELIEF IN PLACE
5-14. A relief in place is an operation in which, by direction of higher authority, all or part of a unit is
replaced in an area by the incoming unit and the responsibilities of the replaced elements for the mission and
the assigned zone of operations are transferred to the incoming unit (JP 3-07.3). (Note. The Army uses an
AO instead of a zone of operations.) The incoming unit continues the operation as ordered. Commanders
conduct a relief in place as part of a larger operation, primarily to maintain the combat effectiveness of
committed units. The higher echelon headquarters directs when and where to conduct a relief, and it
establishes the appropriate control measures. The commanders participating in the relief in place
communicate when the relieving commander has sufficient combat power and understanding of the AO to
assume responsibility of the area.
5-15. There are three types of relief in place operations:
A sequential relief in place occurs when each element within the relieved unit is relieved in
succession, from right to left or left to right, depending on how it is deployed.
A simultaneous relief in place occurs when all elements are relieved at the same time.
A staggered relief in place occurs when a commander relieves each element in a sequence
determined by the tactical situation, not its geographical orientation.
5-16. Simultaneous relief in place takes the least time to execute but is easily detected by the enemy.
Sequential or staggered reliefs can occur over a significant amount of time. These three relief techniques can
occur regardless of the mission and operational environment in which the unit is participating.
5-17. A relief in place can be characterized as either deliberate or hasty depending on the amount of planning
and preparation associated with the relief. The major differences are the depth and detail of planning and the
time available. Deliberate planning allows unit commanders and staffs to identify, develop, and coordinate
solutions to potential problems before they occur. (See FM 3-90-2 for additional information on the conduct
of a relief in place.)
PASSAGE OF LINES
5-18. A passage of lines is an operation in which a force moves forward or rearward through another force’s
combat positions with the intention of moving into or out of contact with the enemy (JP 3-18). A passage of
lines may be designated as a forward or rearward passage of lines. A passage of lines occurs under two
conditions:
A forward passage of lines occurs when a unit passes through another unit’s positions while
moving toward the enemy.
A rearward passage of lines occurs when a unit passes through another unit’s positions while
moving away from the enemy.
Ideally, a passage of lines does not interfere with conducting the stationary unit’s operations. (See FM 3-90-2
for additional information on passage of lines.)
5-19. A commander conducts a passage of lines to continue an attack or conduct a counterattack, retrograde,
or security operation when one unit cannot bypass another unit’s position. The conduct of a passage of lines
potentially involves close combat. It involves transferring the responsibility for an AO between two
commanders. That transfer of authority usually occurs when roughly two-thirds of the passing force has
moved through the passage point. If not directed by higher authority, the two unit commanders determine—
by mutual agreement—the time to transfer command. They disseminate this information to the lowest levels
of both organizations.
5-20. A commander’s reasons for conducting a passage of lines are to—
Sustain the tempo of the offense.
Maintain the viability of the defense by transferring responsibility from one unit to another.
Transition from a delay or security operation by one force to a defense.
Free a unit for another mission or task.
The headquarters directing the passage of lines is responsible for determining when the passage of lines starts
and finishes.
The glossary lists acronyms and terms with Army or joint definitions. Where Army and
joint definitions differ, (Army) precedes the definition. Terms for which ADP 3-90 is
the proponent are marked with an asterisk (*). The proponent publication for other
terms is listed in parentheses after the definition.
SECTION II – TERMS
*actions on contact
A series of combat actions, often conducted nearly simultaneously, taken on contact with the enemy to
develop the situation.
*administrative movement
A movement in which troops and vehicles are arranged to expedite their movement and conserve time
and energy when no enemy ground interference is anticipated.
airspace control
Capabilities and procedures used to increase operational effectiveness by promoting the safe, efficient,
and flexible use of airspace. (JP 3-52)
*alternate position
A defensive position that the commander assigns to a unit or weapon system for occupation when the
primary position becomes untenable or unsuitable for carrying out the assigned task.
*approach march
The advance of a combat unit when direct contact with the enemy is intended.
*area defense
A type of defensive operation that concentrates on denying enemy forces access to designated terrain
for a specific time rather than destroying the enemy outright.
area of influence
A geographical area wherein a commander is directly capable of influencing operations by maneuver
or fire support systems normally under the commander’s command or control. (JP 3-0)
area of interest
That area of concern to the commander, including the area of influence, areas adjacent thereto, and
extending into enemy territory. (JP 3-0)
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. (JP 3-0)
*area reconnaissance
A type of reconnaissance operation that focuses on obtaining detailed information about the terrain or
enemy activity within a prescribed area.
*area security
A type of security operation conducted to protect friendly forces, lines of communications, and
activities within a specific area.
ARFOR
The Army component and senior Army headquarters of all Army forces assigned or attached to a
combatant command, subordinate joint force command, joint functional command, or multinational
command. (FM 3-94)
Army personnel recovery
The military efforts taken to prepare for and execute the recovery and reintegration of isolated
personnel. (FM 3-50)
*art of tactics
Three interrelated aspects: the creative and flexible array of means to accomplish missions, decision
making under conditions of uncertainty when faced with a thinking and adaptive enemy, and the
understanding of the effects of combat on Soldiers.
*assailable flank
A flank exposed to attack or envelopment.
*assault position
A covered and concealed position short of the objective from which final preparations are made to
assault the objective.
*assault time
The moment to attack the initial objectives throughout the geographical scope of the operation.
assured mobility
A framework—of processes, actions, and capabilities—that assures the ability of a force to deploy,
move, and maneuver where and when desired, to achieve the commander’s intent. (ATP 3-90.4)
*attack
A type of offensive operation that destroys or defeats enemy forces, seizes and secures terrain, or both.
civil-military operations
Activities of a commander performed by designated military forces that establish, maintain, influence,
or exploit relations between military forces and indigenous populations and institutions by directly
supporting the achievement of objectives relating to the reestablishment or maintenance of stability
within a region or host nation. (JP 3-57)
clearance of fires
The process by which the supported commander ensures that fires or their effects will have no
unintended consequences on friendly units or the scheme of maneuver. (FM 3-09)
close combat
Warfare carried out on land in a direct-fire fight, supported by direct and indirect fires and other assets.
(ADP 3-0)
combat information
Unevaluated data, gathered by or provided directly to the tactical commander which, due to its highly
perishable nature or the criticality of the situation, cannot be processed into tactical intelligence in time
to satisfy the user’s tactical intelligence requirements. (JP 2-01)
combat power
(Army) The total means of destructive, constructive, and information capabilities that a military unit or
formation can apply at a given time. (ADP 3-0).
combined arms
The synchronized and simultaneous application of arms to achieve an effect greater than if each
element was used separately or sequentially. (ADP 3-0)
command and control warfighting function
The related tasks and a system that enable commanders to synchronize and converge all elements of
combat power. (ADP 3-0)
*committed force
A force in contact with an enemy or deployed on a specific mission or course of action, which
precludes its employment elsewhere.
*company
A unit consisting of two or more platoons, usually of the same type, with a headquarters and a limited
capacity for self-support.
*company team
A combined arms organization formed by attaching one or more nonorganic armor, mechanized
infantry, Stryker infantry, or infantry platoons to a tank, mechanized infantry, Stryker, or infantry
company, either in exchange for, or in addition to, its organic platoons.
concept of operations
(Army) A statement that directs the manner in which subordinate units cooperate to accomplish the
mission and establishes the sequence of actions the force will use to achieve the end state. (ADP 5-0)
consolidate gains
Activities to make enduring any temporary operational success and to set the conditions for a
sustainable security environment, allowing for a transition of control to legitimate authorities.
(ADP 3-0)
coordinating altitude
An airspace coordinating measure that uses altitude to separate users and as the transition between
different airspace control elements. (JP 3-52)
coordination level
A procedural method to separate fixed- and rotary-wing aircraft by determining an altitude below
which fixed-wing aircraft normally will not fly. (JP 3-52)
*corps
An echelon of command and tactical formation that employs divisions, multi-functional brigades, and
functional brigades to achieve objectives on land.
countermobility operations
(Army) Those combined arms activities that use or enhance the effects of natural and man-made
obstacles to deny enemy freedom of movement and maneuver. (ATP 3-90.8)
*cover
(Army) A type of security operation done independent of the main body to protect them by fighting to
gain time while preventing enemy ground observation of and direct fire against the main body.
*crew
A small military unit that consists of all personnel operating a particular system.
decisive operation
The operation that directly accomplishes the mission. (ADP 3-0)
*decisive terrain
Key terrain whose seizure and retention is mandatory for successful mission accomplishment.
*decisive engagement
An engagement in which a unit is considered fully committed and cannot maneuver or extricate itself.
defeat
To render a force incapable of achieving its objectives. (ADP 3-0)
*defeat in detail
Concentrating overwhelming combat power against separate parts of a force rather than defeating the
entire force at once.
defeat mechanism
A method through which friendly forces accomplish their mission against enemy opposition.
(ADP 3-0)
defensive operation
An operation to defeat an enemy attack, gain time, economize forces, and develop conditions favorable
for offensive or stability operations. (ADP 3-0)
*delay
When a force under pressure trades space for time by slowing down the enemy’s momentum and
inflicting maximum damage on enemy forces without becoming decisively engaged.
*deliberate operation
An operation in which the tactical situation allows the development and coordination of detailed plans,
including multiple branches and sequels.
*detachment
A tactical element organized on either a temporary or permanent basis for special duties.
*direction of attack
A specific direction or assigned route a force uses and does not deviate from when attacking.
*disengagement line
A phase line located on identifiable terrain that, when crossed by the enemy, signals to defending
elements that it is time to displace to their next position.
*division
An echelon of command and tactical formation that employs brigade combat teams, multi-functional
brigades, and functional brigades to achieve objectives on land.
economy of force
The judicious employment and distribution of forces so as to expend the minimum essential combat
power on secondary efforts to allocate the maximum possible combat power on primary efforts.
(JP 3-0)
*encirclement operations
Operations where one force loses its freedom of maneuver because an opposing force is able to isolate
it by controlling all ground lines of communications and reinforcement.
engagement
A tactical conflict, usually between opposing lower echelon maneuver forces. (JP 3-0)
*engagement area
An area where the commander intends to contain and destroy an enemy force with the massed effects
of all available weapons and supporting systems.
*exploitation
(Army) A type of offensive operation that usually follows a successful attack and is designed to
disorganize the enemy in depth.
*field army
An echelon of command that employs multiple corps, divisions, multi-functional brigades, and
functional brigades to achieve objectives on land.
*final coordination line
A phase line close to the enemy position used to coordinate the lifting or shifting of supporting fires
with the final deployment of maneuver elements.
final protective fire
An immediately available, prearranged barrier of fire designed to impede enemy movement across
defensive lines or areas. (JP 3-09.3)
fire support coordination measure
A measure employed by commanders to facilitate the rapid engagement of targets and simultaneously
provide safeguards for friendly forces. (JP 3-0).
fires warfighting function
The related tasks and systems that create and converge effects in all domains against the adversary or
enemy to enable operations across the range of military operations. (ADP 3-0)
*fire team
A small military unit typically containing four or fewer Soldiers.
*fixing force
A force designated to supplement the striking force by preventing the enemy from moving from a
specific area for a specific time.
*flank
The right or left limit of a unit.
*flanking position
A geographical location on the flank of a force from which effective fires can be placed on that flank.
*forms of maneuver
Distinct tactical combinations of fire and movement with a unique set of doctrinal characteristics that
differ primarily in the relationship between the maneuvering force and the enemy.
forward edge of the battle area
The foremost limits of a series of areas in which ground combat units are deployed to coordinate fire
support, the positioning of forces, or the maneuver of units, excluding areas in which covering or
screening forces are operating. (JP 3-09.3)
mobility tasks
Those combined arms activities that mitigate the effects of obstacles to enable freedom of movement
and maneuver. (ATP 3-90.4)
movement and maneuver warfighting function
The related tasks and systems that move and employ forces to achieve a position of relative advantage
over the enemy and other threats. (ADP 3-0)
*movement
The positioning of combat power to establish the conditions for maneuver.
movement control
(Army) The dual process of committing allocated transportation assets and regulating movements
according to command priorities to synchronize distribution flow over lines of communications to
sustain land forces. (ADP 4-0)
*movement formation
An ordered arrangement of forces for a specific purpose and describes the general configuration of a
unit on the ground.
*movement to contact
(Army) A type of offensive operation designed to develop the situation and to establish or regain
contact.
mutual support
That support which units render each other against an enemy, because of their assigned tasks, their
position relative to each other and to the enemy, and their inherent capabilities. (JP 3-31)
*objective
(Army) A location used to orient operations, phase operations, facilitate changes of direction, and
provide for unity of effort.
*objective rally point
An easily identifiable point where all elements of the infiltrating unit assemble and prepare to attack
the objective.
obscurant
Material that decreases the level of energy available for the functions of seekers, trackers, and vision
enhancement devices. (ATP 3-11.50)
operational framework
A cognitive tool used to assist commanders and staffs in clearly visualizing and describing the
application of combat power in time, space, purpose, and resources in the concept of operations.
(ADP 1-01)
operation
A sequence of tactical actions with a common purpose and a unifying theme. (JP 1)
*operations in depth
The simultaneous application of combat power throughout an area of operations.
passage of lines
An operation in which a force moves forward or rearward through another force’s combat positions
with the intention of moving into or out of contact with the enemy. (JP 3-18 )
*piecemeal commitment
The immediate employment of units in combat as they become available instead of waiting for larger
aggregations of units to ensure mass, or the unsynchronized employment of available forces so that
their combat power is not employed effectively.
*platoon
A subdivision of a company or troop consisting of two or more squads or sections.
*point of departure
The point where the unit crosses the line of departure and begins moving along a direction of attack.
position of relative advantage
A location or the establishment of a favorable condition within the area of operations that provides the
commander with temporary freedom of action to enhance combat power over an enemy or influence
the enemy to accept risk and move to a position of disadvantage. (ADP 3-0)
*primary position
The position that covers the enemy’s most likely avenue of approach into the area of operations.
*probable line of deployment
A phase line that designates the location where the commander intends to deploy the unit into assault
formation before beginning the assault.
protection warfighting function
The related tasks and systems that preserve the force so the commander can apply maximum combat
power to accomplish the mission. (ADP 3-0)
*pursuit
A type of offensive operation designed to catch or cut off a hostile force attempting to escape, with the
aim of destroying it.
rally point
An easily identifiable point on the ground at which units can reassemble and reorganize if they become
dispersed. (ATP 3-21.20)
*rearward passage of lines
Occurs when a unit passes through another unit’s positions while moving away from the enemy.
reconnaissance
A mission undertaken to obtain, by visual observation or other detection methods, information about
the activities and resources of an enemy or adversary, or to secure data concerning the meteorological,
hydrographic, or geographic characteristics of a particular area. (JP 2-0)
*reconnaissance in force
A type of reconnaissance operation designed to discover or test the enemy’s strength, dispositions, and
reactions or to obtain other information.
*reconnaissance objective
A terrain feature, geographic area, enemy force, adversary, or other mission or operational variable
about which the commander wants to obtain additional information.
reconstitution
Those actions, including regeneration and reorganization, commanders plan and implement to restore
units to a desired level of combat effectiveness commensurate with mission requirements and available
resources. (JP 3-02)
relief in place
An operation in which, by direction of higher authority, all or part of a unit is replaced in an area by
the incoming unit and the responsibilities of the replaced elements for the mission and the assigned
zone of operations are transferred to the incoming unit. (JP 3-07.3)
*reserve
(Army) That portion of a body of troops that is withheld from action at the beginning of an
engagement to be available for a decisive movement.
*retirement
When a force out of contact moves away from the enemy.
*retrograde
(Army) A type defensive operation that involves organized movement away from the enemy.
*route reconnaissance
A type of reconnaissance operation to obtain detailed information of a specified route and all terrain
from which the enemy could influence movement along that route.
rules of engagement
Directives issued by competent military authority that delineate the circumstances and limitations
under which United States forces will initiate and/or continue combat engagement with other forces
encountered. (JP 3-84)
*science of tactics
The understanding of those military aspects of tactics—capabilities, techniques, and procedures—that
can be measured and codified.
*screen
A type of security operation that primarily provides early warning to the protected force.
*section
(Army) A tactical unit of the Army and Marine Corps smaller than a platoon and larger than a squad.
*security area
That area occupied by a unit’s security elements and includes the areas of influence of those security
elements.
*security operations
Those operations performed by commanders to provide early and accurate warning of enemy
operations, to provide the forces being protected with time and maneuver space within which to react
to the enemy, and to develop the situation to allow commanders to effectively use their protected
forces.
*sequential relief in place
Occurs when each element within the relieved unit is relieved in succession, from right to left or left to
right, depending on how it is deployed.
*simultaneous relief in place
Occurs when all elements are relieved at the same time.
situational understanding
The product of applying analysis and judgment to relevant information to determine the relationships
among the operational and mission variables. (ADP 6-0)
special reconnaissance
Reconnaissance and surveillance actions conducted as a special operation in hostile, denied, or
diplomatically and/or politically sensitive environments to collect or verify information of strategic or
operational significance, employing military capabilities not normally found in conventional forces.
(JP 3-05)
*squad
A small military unit typically containing two or more fire teams.
*staggered relief in place
Occurs when a commander relieves each element in a sequence determined by the tactical situation,
not its geographical orientation.
*striking force
A dedicated counterattack force in a mobile defense constituted with the bulk of available combat
power.
*strong point
A heavily fortified battle position tied to a natural or reinforcing obstacle to create an anchor for the
defense or to deny the enemy decisive or key terrain.
*subsequent position
A position that a unit expects to move to during the course of battle.
*supplementary position
A defensive position located within a unit’s assigned area of operations that provides the best sectors
of fire and defensive terrain along an avenue of approach that is not the primary avenue where the
enemy is expected to attack.
*support by fire position
The general position from which a unit performs the tactical mission task of support by fire.
supporting distance
The distance between two units that can be traveled in time for one to come to the aid of the other and
prevent its defeat by an enemy or ensure it regains control of a civil situation. (ADP 3-0)
supporting range
The distance one unit may be geographically separated from a second unit yet remain within the
maximum range of the second unit’s weapons systems. (ADP 3-0)
survivability
(Army) A quality or capability of military forces which permits them to avoid or withstand hostile
actions or environmental conditions while retaining the ability to fulfill their primary mission.
(ATP 3-37.34)
*survivability move
A move that involves rapidly displacing a unit, command post, or facility in response to direct and
indirect fires, the approach of a threat or as a proactive measure based on intelligence, meteorological
data, and risk assessment of enemy capabilities and intentions.
sustainment warfighting function
The related tasks and systems that provide support and services to ensure freedom of action, extend
operational reach, and prolong endurance. (ADP 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. (JP 3-0)
*tactical mobility
The ability of friendly forces to move and maneuver freely on the battlefield relative to the enemy.
*tactical road march
A rapid movement used to relocate units within an area of operations to prepare for combat operations.
*tactics
(Army) The employment, ordered arrangement, and directed actions of forces in relation to each other.
tempo
The relative speed and rhythm of military operations over time with respect to the enemy. (ADP 3-0)
*terrain management
The process of allocating terrain by establishing areas of operations, designating assembly areas, and
specifying locations for units and activities to deconflict activities that might interfere with each other.
*time of attack
The moment the leading elements of the main body cross the line of departure, or in a limited-visibility
attack, the point of departure.
*troop
A company-size unit in a cavalry organization.
*troop movement
The movement of Soldiers and units from one place to another by any available means.
*uncommitted force
A force that is not in contact with an enemy and is not already deployed on a specific mission or course
of action.
warfighting function
A group of tasks and systems united by a common purpose that commanders use to accomplish
missions and training objectives. (ADP 3-0)
*withdraw
To disengage from an enemy force and move in a direction away from the enemy.
*zone reconnaissance
A type of reconnaissance operation that involves a directed effort to obtain detailed information on all
routes, obstacles, terrain, and enemy forces within a zone defined by boundaries.
REQUIRED PUBLICATIONS
These documents must be available to intended users of this publication:
DOD Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms. June 2019.
ADP 1-02. Terms and Military Symbols. 14 August 2018.
RELATED PUBLICATIONS
This publication references these publications.
JOINT PUBLICATIONS
Most joint publications are available online: https://www.jcs.mil/Doctrine/.
JP 1. Doctrine for the Armed Forces of the United States. 25 March 2013.
JP 2-0. Joint Intelligence. 22 October 2013.
JP 2-01. Joint and National Intelligence Support to Military Operations. 5 July 2017.
JP 3-0. Joint Operations. 17 January 2017.
JP 3-02. Amphibious Operations. 4 January 2019.
JP 3-03. Joint Interdiction. 9 September 2016.
JP 3-05. Special Operations. 16 July 2014.
JP 3-07.3. Peace Operations. 1 March 2018.
JP 3-08. Interorganizational Cooperation. 12 October 2016.
JP 3-09.3. Close Air Support. 10 June 2019.
JP 3-15. Barriers, Obstacles, and Mine Warfare for Joint Operations. 06 September 2016.
JP 3-18. Joint Forcible Entry Operations. 11 May 2017.
JP 3-31. Joint Land Operations. 24 February 2014.
JP 3-52. Joint Airspace Control. 13 November 2014.
JP 3-57. Civil-Military Operations. 9 July 2018.
JP 3-84. Legal Support. 02 August 2016.
JP 4-09. Distribution Operations. 14 March 2019.
ARMY PUBLICATIONS
Most Army doctrinal publications are available online: https://armypubs.army.mil/.
ADP 1-01. Doctrine Primer. 31 July 2019.
ADP 2-0. Intelligence. 31 July 2019.
ADP 3-0. Operations. 31 July 2019.
ADP 3-07. Stability. 31 July 2019.
ADP 3-28. Defense Support of Civil Authorities. 31 July 2019.
ADP 3-37. Protection. 31 July 2019.
ADP 4-0. Sustainment. 31 July 2019.
OBSOLETE PUBLICATION
Field Service Regulations United States Army. 2 November 1923.
http://cgsc.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/compoundobject/collection/p4013coll9/id/126/rec/2.
PRESCRIBED FORMS
This section contains no entries.
REFERENCED FORMS
Unless otherwise indicated, DA forms are available on the Army Publishing Directorate Web site:
https://armypubs.army.mil/.
DA Form 2028. Recommended Changes to Publications and Blank Forms.
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