Title: Stability Operations
1Stability Operations Support Operations
- FM 3-07 (100-20)
- DTD February 2002
2Three Block War
"In one moment in time, our service members will
be feeding and clothing displaced refugees -
providing humanitarian assistance. In the next
moment, they will be holding two warring tribes
apart - conducting peacekeeping operations.
Finally, they will be fighting a highly lethal
mid-intensity battle. All on the same day, all
within three city blocks. It will be what we
call the three block war." - General Charles C.
Krulak, USMC
3Terminal Learning Objective
- Action Describe the SOSO Environment
- Conditions Given a guided classroom discussion
and access to the appropriate publications. - Standards Described the SOS Environment
4Stability / SupportOperations
- Stability promote and protect US national
interests by influencing the threat, political,
and information dimensions of the operational
environment ...
- Support employ Armed Forces to assist civil
authorities (foreign or domestic) as they prepare
for or respond to crises and relieve suffering
5It is the intent of Congress to provide an Army
that is capable of ...
- Preserving peace and security, and providing for
the defense of the US, the Territories,
Commonwealths, possessions, and any areas
occupied by the US - Supporting the national policies
- Implementing the national objectives
- Overcoming any nations responsible for aggressive
acts that imperil the peace and security of the US
6Stability Operations(Ten Broad Types)
- Peace Operations
- Foreign Internal Defense
- Security Assistance
- Humanitarian and Civic Assistance
- Support to Insurgencies
- Support to Counterdrug Operations
- Combating Terrorism
- Non-Combatant Evacuation
- Arms Control
- Show of Force
7Support Operations(Two Broad Types)
- Domestic Support Operations
- Foreign Humanitarian Assistance
Relief Operations Support to WMD
Incidents Support to Civil Law Enforcement Communi
ty Assistance
8History(1866-1999)
- Indian Wars
- Philippines
- Haiti
- Germany
- Japan
- Korea
- Lebanon
- Dominican Republic
- Sinai
- Northern Iraq
- Cambodia
- Somalia
- Rwanda
- Haiti
- Peru-Ecuador
- East Timor
Since 1990 there have been 30 Operations
conducted
9Current Operations
- Sinai (MFO) 1982-?
- Kuwait (Southern Watch) 1991-?
- Macedonia 1992-?
- Croatia (Provide Promise) 1992-?
- Kuwait (Vigilant Warrior) 1994-?
- Haiti 1994-?
- Bosnia 1995-?
- Kosovo 1999-?
10Stability Operations
11Planning Considerations
12Planning Considerations
13Planning Considerations
14Foreign Internal Defense
- Categories
- Indirect Support - military exchange programs,
joint and multinational exercises, security
assistance - Direct Support - civil military operations,
intelligence and communications sharing,
logistics support - Combat Operations - temporary solution until HN
forces can stabilize - Counterinsurgency
- HN Security Force Operations - protect / isolate
the populations from insurgents and/or neutralize
/ defeat the guerrilla forces - The Role of the US Army - centers on
administering and execute security assistance
programs - Planning Considerations
15There is another type of warfare - new in its
intensity, ancient in its origin - war by
guerrillas, subversives, insurgents, assassins
war by ambush instead of by combat, by
infiltration instead of aggression, seeking
victory by eroding and exhausting the enemy
instead of engaging him It prays on unrest
Our forces, therefore, must fulfill a broader
role, as a complement to our diplomacy, as an
army of our diplomacy, as a deterrent to our
adversaries, and as a symbol to our allies of our
determination to support them.John F. Kennedy
16Peace Operations
- Forms of Peace Operations
- Peacekeeping
- Peace Enforcement
- Operations in Support of Diplomatic Efforts
- Concept of Employment
- Fundamentals of Peace Operations
- Command and Control
- Intelligence
- Information Operations
- Civil Law and Order
- Logistics
- Force Protection
17Peace Operations
- The broad term peace operations encompasses
peacekeeping operations and peace enforcement
operations conducted in support of diplomatic
efforts to establish and maintain peace. - The US Army will participate in PO, either as
part of a UN, NATO, multinational force, or
unilaterally.
18Peacekeeping
- Observation Missions - primarily performed by
unarmed military observers - observing, monitoring, verifying, and reporting
any alleged violation of the governing agreements - investigation alleged cease-fire violations,
boundary incidents, and complaints - conducting regular liaison visits within the
operational area - verifying the storage or destruction of certain
categories of military equipment specified in the
relevant agreements
19Peacekeeping
- Supervision and Assistance - lightly armed forces
- supervising cease-fires
- supervising disengagement's and withdrawals
- supervising prisoner of war exchanges
- assisting civil authorities
- providing military support to elections
- assisting in the maintenance of public order
- assisting in foreign humanitarian assistance
operations
20Peace Enforcement
- Normally conducted in several phases
- Phase I
- insertion of rapid deployable combat forces to
establish a significant and visible military
presence - Subsequent Phases
- stabilizing the area and transitioning from a
military presence to support for the development
of a competent civil authority
21Peace Enforcement(subordinate operations)
- Forcible Separation of Belligerents
- separate belligerents
- disarm belligerents
- demobilization
- internment/resettlement operations
- Establishment and Supervision of Protected Areas
- demilitarize areas that may contain residents,
refugees, or displaced persons
22Peace Enforcement (subordinate operations)
- Sanction and Exclusion Zone Enforcement
- Movement Denial and Guarantee
- Restoration and Maintenance of Order
- Protection of Humanitarian Assistance
23Operations in Support of Diplomatic Efforts
- Preventive diplomacy
- Peacemaking
- Peace building
24Concept of Employment
- Complex contingencies do not spring up overnight.
Identify the early symptoms and attempt
resolution, usually before the situation attracts
the attention of the international media
25Fundamentals of Peace Operations
- Consent
- Impartiality
- Transparency
- Restraint
- Credibility
- Freedom of Movement
- Flexibility
- Civil-Military Operations
- Legitimacy
- Perseverance
26Command and Control
- Command Relations
- Coordination
Its all about trust -- up, down, and all
around. MG C.F. Ernst
27Intelligence
- Human Intelligence
- Intelligence synchronization
- Tactical tailoring
- Broadcast dissemination
- Functions
- Indications and Warning
- Preparation of the Battlefield
- Situational Development
- Targeting and target Development
- Support for Force Protection
28Information Operations
- Nature and Fundamentals
- The commander takes the lead
- Support IO with intelligence
- Establish and sustain an integrated team approach
- Anticipate and respond with speed, accuracy, and
truth - Involve every soldier
- Maintain transparency
- Gain and maintain access to the information
environment - Prepare for IO before development
29Civil Law and Order
- Police - the HN or responsible international
authority requests introducing civilian police
and establishing a police training element - Judiciary - assist in establishing a workable
judicial system with JAG and CA support - Penal - establish and run temporary confinement
facilities until civilian agencies take the lead
if necessary - War Crimes and Criminals - US forces apply the
principles and spirit of the law of war to the
extent practical and feasible even when the
state of war does not exist
30- Logistics
- Rapid C2 and logistics planning capability
- Strategic and tactical airlift
- Emergency infrastructure repair support (port,
airfield, road)
- Force Protection
-
- Consistent with the risk assessment
- Maintaining neutrality and transparency in
operations enhances force protection
31Additional Stability Operations
- Security assistance - Equipment, Services,
Training, Types of programs assisted, and
Agencies Organizations - Humanitarian and Civic Assistance - medical,
construction of rudimentary surface
transportation systems, well drilling, etc. - Support to Insurgency - recruiting, organizing,
training, linkups, subversion, sabotage - Support to Counterdrug Operations - detection and
monitoring, host nation support, command,
control, reconnaissance - Combating Terrorism - counter-terrorism and
antiterrorism - Noncombatant Evacuation Operations - such as
Grenada (Operation Urgent Fury) 1983 getting
evacuees to safehavens - Arms Control - overarching goal is to prevent or
deter war - Show of Force - permanent forward deployment or
military forces, combined training exercises,
increase in readiness status
32Support Operations
33Support Operations
- Domestic Support Operations
- Foreign Humanitarian Assistance
- Forms of Support Operations
34Domestic Support Operations
- Domestic Emergencies - affect the public welfare
and occur within the 50 states or US possessions
and territories - Roles and Responsibilities - Secretary of Defense
retains approval authority for support to civil
authorities - Federal Response Plan - President declares a
major disaster
35Foreign Humanitarian Assistance
- Conducted to relieve or reduce the results of
natural or manmade disasters or other endemic
conditions such as human suffering, disease, or
privation that might present a serious threat to
life or that can result in great damage to or
loss of property
36Forms of Support Operations
- Relief Operations - respond to and mitigate the
effects of natural or manmade disasters - Support to domestic CBRNE consequence management
- assist local authorities - Support to civil law enforcement -
counter-terrorism, counter-drug operations, civil
disturbance - Community Assistance - apply needed assets to the
needs and interests of America and local
communities
37FM 3-07 Annexes
- A. Interagency Coordination
- B. The Law in SASO
- C. Rules of Engagement
- D. Characteristics of Insurgency
- E. Negotiation
- F. Refugees and Displaced Persons
38Interagency Coordination
- US Armed Forces as a whole, must be multi-mission
capable interoperable among all elements of US
Services and selected foreign militaries and
able to coordinate operations with other agencies
of government and some civil institutions.
Annex A
39Interagency Coordination
- National Level - The National Security Council
(NSC) advises and assists the President in
integrating all aspects of the national security
policy - Domestic Relief Operations - Federal Response
Plan, State Local Authorities provide disaster
assistance to support civil authorities
responding to domestic emergencies
Annex A
40Interagency Coordination
- Foreign Operations - Theater orientation, Dept.
of Defense, Dept. of State, CIA, US Agency for
International Development, Non-governmental
Organizations, Regional International
Organizations - Conducted in line with treaties, conventions, and
executive and other agreements to which the US is
a party relevant statute law relevant federal
and agency regulations
Annex A
41Interagency Coordination
- Civil Military Operations Center - facilitates
the coordination of activities of military forces
with US Government agencies - Liaison - maintains contact and communication
between elements of military forces and other
agencies
Annex A
42Law in SASO
- Legal and Regulatory Considerations
- Posse Comitatus Act
- Title 10 USC
- Foreign Assistance Act
- Economy Act
- Title 32 USC
- Appropriations and Authorization Acts
- Fiscal Law
- Executive Orders
- Law of Armed Conflict
- International Agreements
- Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief Act
- Applicable Bodies of Law
- International Law
- US Law
- Host Nation Law
Annex B
43- War Powers Resolution - requires the President to
consult with and report to Congress when
introducing US Armed Forces - Into hostilities
- Into imminent involvement in hostilities
- Into Foreign territories when equipped for combat
- In numbers that increase the number of US forces
equipped for combat in a foreign country - Claims Administration - occasions of personal
injuries, deaths, and property damage claims by
the foreign government - Use of Chemical Herbicides and Riot Control
Agents - need prior presidential approval
Annex B
44Rules of Engagement
- ROE provide guidance regarding the use of force
by commanders and individuals based on three
types of considerations operational
requirements, policy, and law
Annex C
45Rules of Engagement
- Self Defense - in all situations, soldiers and
commanders use force based on necessity and
proportionality - An effective ROE conforms to characteristics that
are - Understandable
- Tactically sound
- Legally sufficient
- Responsive
Annex C
46Rules of Engagement
- The standing ROE is a baseline guidance for US
forces provided by the joint chiefs of staff - Commanders and staffs at all echelons use the
four facets of the interpret, draft, disseminate,
and train methodology to incorporate ROE in
military operations
Annex C
47Rules of Engagement Considerations
- International Law
- Operational concerns
- Commanders intent
- Threat
- Tactics and weapons systems organic to the force
- Legal requirements
- US policy
Annex C
48Characteristics of Insurgency
- Leadership
- Ideology
- Objectives
- Environment and Geography
- External Support
- Phasing and Timing
- Organizational and Operational Patterns
Insurgency is not simply random political
violence it is directed and focused political
violence
Annex D
49Negotiation
- Considerations
- Negotiations do not exist in a vacuum
- Negotiation is an exercise in persuasion
- Study alternatives to negotiating an agreement
- Be attuned to cultural difference
- Procedures
- Establish communications
- Identify common ground on which to build dialogue
- Consider cultural implications
- Set clear goals and objectives
- Develop a plan and diagram the results of
analysis - Determine composition of negotiating team and
decision making mechanisms - Establish the venue
- Implementation
- Training - essential for military officers in
SASO needing a conceptual foundation in conflict
management and resolution
Annex E
50Refugees and Displaced Persons
- Role of the UN Office of the High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR) - Responsible to protect and
assist these refugees and asylum seekers - Displaced Populations - Refugees and Internally
Displaced Persons - Responsibilities of States - obligated to respect
the prohibition against forcible return and
protect refugees - Non-governmental Organizations - positioned to
support international organizations - Population Movement - preflight, flight, arrival,
asylum, repatriation, reintegration, etc. - Special Considerations - women, children,
elderly, etc.
Annex F
51Summary