Army Techniques Publication Atp 3-90.61


Book Description

This publication, Army Techniques Publication ATP 3-90.61 Brigade Special Troops Battalion August 2015, describes how the BSTB provides combat support to the BCT. The battalion contains military intelligence; communications; and chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear (CBRN) platoons and provides mission command for the units assigned and attached to the BCT. The BSTB is organic to the armored brigade combat team (ABCT) and the infantry brigade combat team (IBCT) that have not converted to brigade engineer battalions. ATP 3-90.61 provides doctrinal guidance for commanders and staffs who are responsible for planning and executing brigade special troops battalion (BSTB) missions in brigade combat teams (BCTs). It is designed to serve as a reference for the development of tactics, techniques, and procedures; materiel and force structures; institution and unit training; and standard operating procedures (SOPs). The principal audience for ATP 3-90.61 is all members of the profession of arms. Commanders and staffs of Army headquarters serving as joint task force or multinational headquarters should also refer to applicable joint or multinational doctrine concerning the range of military operations and joint or multinational forces. Trainers and educators throughout the Army will also use this publication.




Army Techniques Publication Atp 3-90.97


Book Description

Army Techniques Publication ATP 3-90.97 Mountain Warfare and Cold Weather Operations April 2016 The purpose of ATP 3-90.97 is the Army's doctrinal publication for operations in mountain warfare and cold weather operations. It provides doctrinal guidance and direction for how United States (U.S.) forces conduct mountain and cold weather operations and is to arm leaders and Soldiers with the information necessary to operate in mountain and cold weather environments. The information contained in this manual applies to all Soldiers, regardless of rank or job specialty. This manual is designed to work in conjunction with and complement Training Circular on military mountaineering TC 3-97.61 and Army Tactics and Techniques Publication ATTP 3-21.50. This manual will enable leaders and Soldiers to understand mountain and cold weather environments, their effects on military weapons and equipment, impacts these environments have on personnel, and most importantly, how units employ the elements of combat power in mountain and cold weather environments. This publication supersedes FM 3-97.6, dated 28 November 2000 and ATTP 3-97.11, dated 28 January 2011




Army Techniques Publication ATP 3-90. 5 Combined Arms Battalion July 2021


Book Description

This United States Army Maneuver Center of Excellence manual, Army Techniques Publication ATP 3-90.5 Combined Arms Battalion July 2021, describes the techniques and procedures to tactically employ the combined arms battalion (CAB), the primary maneuver force of the Armored brigade combat team (ABCT) in unified land operations. This publication provides techniques and procedures appropriate for the CAB to effectively exercise the warfighting functions of command and control, movement and maneuver, intelligence, fires, sustainment, and protection, in the conduct of sustained combined arms and close combat operations. The techniques and procedures described herein are intended as a guide and are to be viewed as flexible in application, depending on the factors of mission, enemy, terrain and weather, troops and support available, time available, and civil considerations. Each situation in combat must be resolved by adaptable leaders who exercise initiative to intelligently interpret and apply the doctrine set forth herein. The principal audience for ATP 3-90.5 is the commander and staff of the CAB and its subordinate units. This publication emphasizes CAB operations with related information at the Armor and mechanized Infantry company team level. Greater details and techniques on Armor and mechanized Infantry company team operations can be found in ATP 3-90.1.




Army Techniques Publication Atp 3-90.5 Fm 3-90.6 Combined Arms Battalion February 2016


Book Description

Army Techniques Publication ATP 3-90.5 FM 3-90.6 COMBINED ARMS BATTALION FEBRUARY 2016 While providing basic doctrinal principles, it attempts to refer tactical discussion out to the Brigade Combat Team Operations Field Manual (FM 3-90.6) and other appropriate manuals. This manual provides techniques and procedures appropriate for the CAB to effectively exercise the warfighting functions of mission command, movement and maneuver, intelligence, fires, sustainment, and protection, in the conduct of sustained combined arms and close combat operations.




Army Techniques Publication Atp 3-90.5


Book Description

This Army Techniques ATP 3-90.5 COMBINED ARMS BATTALION FEBRUARY 2016 describes the techniques and procedures to tactically employ the combined arms battalion (CAB), the primary maneuver force of the Armored brigade combat team (ABCT) in unified land operations. While providing basic doctrinal principles, it attempts to refer tactical discussion out to the Brigade Combat Team Operations Field Manual (FM 3-90.6) and other appropriate manuals. This manual provides techniques and procedures appropriate for the CAB to effectively exercise the warfighting functions of mission command, movement and maneuver, intelligence, fires, sustainment, and protection, in the conduct of sustained combined arms and close combat operations.




Army Techniques Publication Atp 3-09.90 Division Artillery Operations and Fire Support for the Division


Book Description

Army Techniques Publication ATP 3-09.90 Division Artillery Operations and Fire Support for the Division OCTOBER 2017 Effective DIVARTY operations and fire support require leadership, knowledge, and situational understanding. Situational understanding is the product of applying analysis and judgement to relevant information to determine the relationship among the operational and mission variables to facilitate decisionmaking (ADP 5-0). DIVARTY staff members must possess an in depth understanding of the functions associated with the planning, employment, targeting, and execution techniques necessary to ensure fires are available and delivered when and where they are needed. ATP 3-09.90 builds on the collective knowledge and experience gained through recent operations, and numerous exercises. Fires assist Army forces in seizing, retaining and exploiting the initiative, defeating adaptive threats, and succeeding in a wide range of contingencies. Fires and external air support enhance freedom of action, movement and maneuver for ground forces. Fires are available to commanders via the following delivery formats: surface to surface, surface to air, air-to surface and electronic attack. Available weapon systems provide commanders a wide range of possible effects, generally classified as lethal and nonlethal. The ability to scale fires enables the successful engagement of high-payoff targets (HPTs) while mitigating collateral damage. The fire support planning team at all levels have the responsibility to plan for the delivery of an appropriate mix of lethal and nonlethal effects. Taking account of mission variables, enemy intentions, and available resources, commanders apply the necessary mix of force to accomplish the assigned mission. The division commander relies on information obtained from fires personnel to determine the necessary effects required to achieve the desired endstate. The DIVARTY commander oversees planning and execution of fires to support the division. Integrated fires support the division commander's scheme of maneuver. The DIVARTY, when allocated fires capabilities, provides fires in support of offensive, defensive, and stability tasks. For more information related to the use of fires in support of offensive, defensive, and stability tasks see FM 3-09.




Army Techniques Publication Atp 3-55.4


Book Description

ATP 3-55.4 Techniques for Information Collection During Operations Among Populations APRIL 2016 This publication provides time-tested, coherent, and easily understood techniques for Soldiers and Department of the Army (DA) Civilians who collect information while interacting with the public during the conduct of their duties. Many of the techniques described are designed specifically for patrols, checkpoints, roadblocks, cordon and searches, and other missions in which Soldiers interact with the populace. This manual is a compilation of techniques to help all Soldiers collect information while interacting with the population through voluntary questioning, detainee handling, tactical questioning, and document and equipment handling. Introduces the basics of interacting with the population and describes the reporting procedures while providing some tools for patrols and intelligence staffs (S-2s). Provides the doctrinal framework for Soldiers and leaders at all echelons and forms the foundation for soldier sensor mission curricula within the Army Education System. Its audience is broad, from Soldiers and leaders to civilians. This manual supersedes FM 2-91.6, dated 10 October 2007.




The Official Us Army Tactics Handbook


Book Description

FASTER - STRONGER - SMARTER: HOW TO WIN ANY BATTLE The #1 battlefield playbook for winners everywhere. Created & trusted by US military forces, honed over decades of fighting and overcoming the most deadly ruthless enemies in the world. FULL-SIZE FORMAT - biggest edition available anywhere: giant 8.5" x 11" size means large, clear print. Complete, current edition - 420+ pages: contains ADP 3-90, FM 3-90.1, FM 3-90.2. "Batteries last hours, books last decades. Get the print edition!" IMPORTANT: unlike other versions available, this is NOT the old, outdated FM 3-90; this edition contains the Army's current tactical documentation: ADP 3-90, FM 3-90-1, and FM 3-90-2 - all in one volume. Thinking tactically is the key to gaining a fully four-dimensional understanding of the challenges facing you, and overcoming them - whatever they may be. The tactical level is where the rubber meets the road and elaborate plans are often necessarily discarded in favor of brutal realism, cunning, ruthless leverage of any and all assets on the battlefield, and a visceral grasp of the realities of victory - or defeat. Tactics is an art and a science, and none can teach it better than the United States Army, whose personnel daily experience the knife-edge possibilities of tremendous success or terrible failure and who must therefore train to be the fittest, best-equipped tacticians in the fight. Whatever your role, whatever your organization - using this fascinating and revealing book to train yourself to think tactically will pay dividends when you next find yourself in a conflict, whether it is a battle of wills, words, or weapons. ADP 3-90: TACTICS COMMON TACTICAL CONCEPTS & ECHELONS THE OFFENSE THE DEFENSE TACTICAL ENABLING TASKS FM 3-90.1: BASICS OF THE OFFENSE MOVEMENT TO CONTACT ATTACK EXPLOITATION PURSUIT BASICS OF THE DEFENSE THE AREA DEFENSE MOBILE DEFENSE THE RETROGRADE BASIC TACTICAL CONTROL MEASURES TACTICAL MISSION TASKS FM 3-90.2: RECONNAISSANCE SECURITY OPERATIONS TROOP MOVEMENT RELIEF IN PLACE PASSAGE OF LINES ENCIRCLEMENT OPERATIONS Search for 'CARLILE MILITARY LIBRARY' to find more TOP-FLIGHT, SQUARED-AWAY publications for your professional bookshelf! Information purposes only. Proudly published in the U.S.A. by CARLILE MEDIA.




Army Techniques Publication ATP 3-21.50 Infantry Small-Unit Mountain and Cold Weather Operations August 2020


Book Description

This manual, Army Techniques Publication ATP 3-21.50 Infantry Small-Unit Mountain and Cold Weather Operations August 2020, provides the Infantry small-unit leader with doctrinal guidance on how company-sized units and below conduct combat operations in mountain and cold weather regions. Commanders and subordinate leaders combine the basic doctrine described in ATP 3-21.10 and ATP 3-21.8, with tactics, techniques, and procedures specific to missions in mountain and cold weather areas of operations. This publication supersedes ATTP 3-21.50. The principal audience for ATP 3-21.50 is the commanders, staff, officers, and noncommissioned officers within the Infantry battalion. The audience includes the United States Army Training and Doctrine Command institutions and components and the United States Army Special Operations Command. This publication serves as an authoritative reference for personnel developing doctrine, materiel and force structure, institutional and unit training, and standard operating procedures for the Infantry small-unit operations.




Army Techniques Publication ATP 3-21.11 Stryker Brigade Combat Team Infantry Rifle Company November 2020


Book Description

This United States Army Infantry manual, Army Techniques Publication ATP 3-21.11 Stryker Brigade Combat Team Infantry Rifle Company November 2020, provides doctrinal framework for techniques for the Stryker brigade combat team (SBCT) Infantry rifle company within the SBCT Infantry battalion. This publication describes relationships, organizational roles and functions, capabilities and limitations, and responsibilities within the SBCT Infantry rifle company. Techniques, non-prescriptive ways or methods used to perform missions, functions, or tasks (CJCSM 5120.01A) are discussed in this publication and are intended to be used as a guide. They are not prescriptive. This Army techniques publication provides doctrinal guidance for commanders, staff, and leaders who are responsible for planning, preparing, executing, and assessing operations of the SBCT Infantry rifle company. It serves as an authoritative reference for personnel developing, materiel and force structure, institutional and unit training, and standard operating procedures for SBCT Infantry rifle company operations. This Army techniques publication supplements the doctrinal material found in FM 3-96. ATP 3-21.11 uses joint terms where applicable. Selected joint and Army terms and definitions appear in both the glossary and the text. Terms and definitions for which ATP 3-21.11 is the proponent publication (the authority) are boldfaced in the text and are marked with an asterisk (*) in the glossary. For definitions shown in the text, the term is italicized and the number of the proponent publication follows the definition. ATP 3-21.11 applies to the Active Army, the Army National Guard/Army National Guard of the United States, and the United States Army Reserve unless otherwise stated.