Army Regulation AR 700-142 Type Classification, Materiel Release, Fielding, and Transfer 17 January 2013


Book Description

This publication is a major revision to the previous version of this regulation. It prescribes Department of the Army policy and responsibilities for the Army's type classification, materiel release, fielding, and transfer processes. This regulation applies to the Active Army, the Army National Guard/Army National Guard of the United States, and the U.S. Army Reserve, unless otherwise stated. It also applies to all personnel involved in materiel acquisition, materiel release, and the fielding of new, product improved, or displaced materiel systems developed, acquired, or used by the Army. During mobilization, procedures in this publication may be modified to support policy changes, as necessary. The proponent of this regulation is the Assistant Secretary of the Army (Acquisition, Logistics and Technology). The proponent has the authority to approve exceptions or waivers to this regulation that are consistent with controlling law and regulations. The proponent may delegate this approval authority, in writing, to a division chief within the proponent agency or its direct reporting unit or field operating agency, in the grade of colonel or the civilian equivalent. Activities may request a waiver to this regulation by providing justification that includes a full analysis of the expected benefits and must include formal review by the activity's senior legal officer. All waiver requests will be endorsed by the commander or senior leader of the requesting activity and forwarded through their higher headquarters to the policy proponent. Refer to AR 25-30 for specific guidance.





Book Description













Army Regulation AR 70-38 Research, Development, Test and Evaluation of Materiel for Worldwide Use June 2020


Book Description

This United States Army policy, Army Regulation AR 70-38 Research, Development, Test and Evaluation of Materiel for Worldwide Use June 2020, prescribes policies, responsibilities, and planning guidance for inclusion of the global operational environment climatic and natural environment factors in the research, development, test and evaluation of materiel used in combat by the Army. This regulation applies to the Regular Army, the Army National Guard/Army National Guard of the United States, and the U.S. Army Reserve, unless otherwise stated. It also applies to items of materiel developed for use by the Army unless otherwise stated. It applies to items of materiel developed by another Service to meet Army requirements and where the Army approves the capability requirements documents; has budget responsibility; and is the user.This regulation establishes policy, identifies responsibilities, and provides climate and terrain factors to ensure mission capable and reliable Army materiel for worldwide operation. In addition to design guidance, this regulation describes a global operational environment (GOE) framework and operational environment (OE) analogs defined by climate and terrain factors to provide direct comparisons of areas of the world from the aspect of performance of Army materiel wherever based or potentially deployed. Application of this regulation ensures that the research, development, test and evaluation (RDTE) decision-making process considers the natural environmental factors that affect equipment performance when preparing capability requirements documents, operation mode summary/mission profile (OMS/MP), and design criteria for acquisition specifications. Early consideration of design criteria and the OE reduces program risk and lowers life-cycle costs by addressing environmental challenges and potential reliability shortfalls early in the RDTE process when corrective actions have minimum overall impact. Army equipment tends to remain in the active inventory for extended periods and is likely to be exposed to severe environmental conditions during its lifetime. Consequently, durability, operational costs, and performance over a full range of environmental factors must be considered during RDTE process.




Handbook of Systems Engineering and Risk Management in Control Systems, Communication, Space Technology, Missile, Security and Defense Operations


Book Description

This book provides multifaceted components and full practical perspectives of systems engineering and risk management in security and defense operations with a focus on infrastructure and manpower control systems, missile design, space technology, satellites, intercontinental ballistic missiles, and space security. While there are many existing selections of systems engineering and risk management textbooks, there is no existing work that connects systems engineering and risk management concepts to solidify its usability in the entire security and defense actions. With this book Dr. Anna M. Doro-on rectifies the current imbalance. She provides a comprehensive overview of systems engineering and risk management before moving to deeper practical engineering principles integrated with newly developed concepts and examples based on industry and government methodologies. The chapters also cover related points including design principles for defeating and deactivating improvised explosive devices and land mines and security measures against kinds of threats. The book is designed for systems engineers in practice, political risk professionals, managers, policy makers, engineers in other engineering fields, scientists, decision makers in industry and government and to serve as a reference work in systems engineering and risk management courses with focus on security and defense operations.




Army Training and Leader Development


Book Description

This regulation prescribes policies, procedures, and responsibilities for developing, managing, and conducting Army training and leader development.




AR 350-1 Army Training and Leader Development


Book Description

Army Regulation 350-1 is the keystone training regulation for all US Army units. This regulation is the source reference for all training conducted within units across the US Army. This continent 6x9 paperback is designed with commanders, executive officers, and company grade NCOs in mind for portability and ease of use.




Deep Maneuver


Book Description

Volume 5, Deep Maneuver: Historical Case Studies of Maneuver in Large-Scale Combat Operations, presents eleven case studies from World War II through Operation Iraqi Freedom focusing on deep maneuver in terms of time, space and purpose. Deep operations require boldness and audacity, and yet carry an element of risk of overextension - especially in light of the independent factors of geography and weather that are ever-present. As a result, the case studies address not only successes, but also failure and shortfalls that result when conducting deep operations. The final two chapters address these considerations for future Deep Maneuver.