Учебные публикации Сухопутных Войск
ATP 3-05.1 Unconventional Warfare, September 2013
ATP 3-05.1, Unconventional Warfare, is the Army’s doctrinal foundation for UW and is the broadest and most comprehensive United States Government (USG) doctrinal publication on the subject of UW. ATP 3-05.1 therefore provides doctrine directly useful to all users within the U.S. Army, but is deliberately intended to be useful to other Services in the Department of Defense (DOD) and joint, interagency, intergovernmental, and multinational (JIIM) audiences. Moreover, although UW is inherently a sensitive subject, ATP 3-05.1 is intentionally kept unclassified to make it accessible to civilian policy makers with a role in oversight and support of UW activities. ATP 3-05.1 is written to emphasize the strategic and operational utility of UW as a policy option available to national-level and theater-level decision makers. The ATP is therefore written for planners at the TSOC and SF group level who would be charged with recommending and planning strategic and operational options to geographic combatant commanders (GCCs), Ambassadors, and interagency decision makers at all levels of the USG. ATP 3-05.1 contains five chapters and six appendices that are summarized in the following paragraphs.
https://armypubs.us.army.mil/doctrine/DR_pubs/dr_c/pdf/atp3_05x1.pdf
ATP 3-05.1, C1 Unconventional Warfare, 25 November 2015
Army Techniques Publication (ATP) 3-05.1, Unconventional Warfare, provides the current United States (U.S.) Army Special Forces (SF) concept of planning and conducting unconventional warfare (UW) operations. ATP 3-05.1 describes UW fundamentals, activities, and considerations involved in the planning and execution of UW throughout the full range of military operations, and emphasize UW as a strategic policy option. This publication serves as the doctrinal foundation for subordinate Army special operations forces (ARSOF) UW doctrine, force integration, materiel acquisition, professional education, and individual and unit training. This publication also serves as the Army’s description of UW, which will be useful in the larger joint and interagency environment.
https://armypubs.us.army.mil/doctrine/DR_pubs/dr_c/pdf/atp3_05x1c1.pdf
ATP 3-18.20, (S//NF) Advanced Special Operations Techniques (ASOT) (U), 30 December 2015
Defines the Special Forces concept of planning and employing ASOT in support of special operations forces (SOF) core activities, describes the fundamentals, activities, and considerations for planning and employing ASOT, and serves as the doctrinal foundation for ASOT to Army special operations forces (ARSOF). ATP 3-18.20 applies to ARSOF and may apply to UW Pocket Guide
NAVSPECWARCOM and MARSOC Active, National Guard, and Reserve units, and is useful to the larger joint and interorganizational environment.
(SIPR ACCESS ONLY)
ATP 3-18.72 (S//NF) Special Forces Personnel Recovery (U), 13 January 2016
ATP 3-18.72 provides the doctrinal framework for U.S. Army special operations forces (ARSOF) personnel recovery operations from both the perspective of the recovery force, as well as that of the individual evader. It also provides an explanation of the various personnel recovery mission tasks, capabilities, limitations, general guidance, and employment techniques at both the strategic and tactical levels. Prepared under the direction of the Special Forces Doctrine Division, United States Army Special Operations Center of Excellence, USAJFKSWCS. This publication outlines the contributions of SF to the theater personnel recovery effort. SF personnel recovery missions seek to achieve specific, well defined and often sensitive results of strategic or operational significance. SF personnel recovery missions are conducted in support of their own operations , when directed by the joint task force commander to support combat search and rescue (CSAR) operation, when the threat to the recovery force is high enough to warrant the conduct of a special operation, and when SF are the only forces available or capable.
(SIPR ACCESS ONLY)
Познавательные журналы
TC 18-01 Special Forces Unconventional Warfare, January 2011
Training Circular (TC) 18-01, Special Forces Unconventional Warfare, defines the current United States (U.S.) Army Special Forces (SF) concept of planning and conducting unconventional warfare (UW) operations. For the foreseeable future, U.S. forces will predominantly engage in irregular warfare (IW) operations. TC 18-01 is authoritative but not directive. It serves as a guide and does not preclude SF units from developing their own standing operating procedures (SOPs) to meet their needs. It explains planning and the roles of SF, Military Information Support operations (MISO), and Civil Affairs (CA) in UW operations. There are appropriate manuals within the series that addresses the other primary SF missions in detail. The primary users of this manual are commanders, staff officers, and operational personnel at the team (Special Forces operational detachment A [SFODA]), company (Special Forces operational detachment B [SFODB]), and battalion (Special Forces operational detachment C [SFODC]) levels. This TC is specifically for SF Soldiers; however, it is also intended for use Army wide to improve the integration of SF into the plans and operations of other special operations forces (SOF) and conventional forces.
https://armypubs.us.army.mil/doctrine/DR_pubs/dr_c/pdf/tc18_01.pdf
TC 31-16 (S//NF) Special Forces Guide to Preparation of the Environment (U),
6 June 2007
This TC provides concepts, functions, and procedures for SF conducting PE to support current and future SOF operations.
(SIPRNET) https://intelshare.intelink.sgov.gov/site/usasocg3/uwpedia UW Pocket Guide V1.0, 5 April 2016
Научные исследования
USASOC Assessing Revolutionary and Insurgency Strategies (ARIS)
The Assessing Revolutionary and Insurgent Strategies (ARIS) project consists of research conducted for the US Army Special Operations Command by the National Security Analysis Department of The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory. Its goal is to produce academically rigorous yet operationally relevant research to develop and illustrate a common understanding of insurgency and revolution. Intended to form a bedrock body of knowledge for members of the Special Operations Forces, the ARIS studies allow users to distill vast amounts of material from a wide array of campaigns and extract relevant lessons, enabling the development of future doctrine, professional education, and training. The ARIS project follows in the tradition of research conducted by the Special Operations Research Office (SORO) of American University in the 1950s and 1960s, adding new research to that body of work, republishing original SORO studies, and releasing updated editions of selected SORO studies.
http://www.soc.mil/ARIS/ARIS.html
Casebook on Insurgency and Revolutionary Warfare, Volume I: 1933-1962, 25 January 2013 (Rev Ed.)
This casebook provides summary descriptive accounts of 23 revolutions that have occurred in seven geographic areas of the world, mostly since World War II. These areas include Southeast Asia, Latin America, North Africa, sub-Sahara Africa, Middle East, Far East and Europe. Each revolution is described in terms of the environment in which it occurred, the form of the revolutionary movement itself and the results it accomplished.
http://www.soc.mil/ARIS/CasebookV1S.pdf
Casebook on Insurgency and Revolutionary Warfare, Volume II: 1962-2009, 27 April 2012
This casebook provides summary descriptive accounts of 23 revolutions that have occurred since 1962. Many of these revolutions are still active-some in steady state violent conflict, others in decline, still others possibly approaching a complete resurgence. Each case presents a background of physical, cultural, social, economic and political factors that are relevant and important to understand the revolution.
http://www.soc.mil/ARIS/Casebook%20Vol%202%20%2004-27-12S.pdf
Undergrounds in Insurgency, Revolutionary, and Resistance Warfare, 25 January 2013 (2nd Ed.)
Since the original publication of Undergrounds in Insurgent, Revolutionary, and Resistance Warfare in 1963, much has changed yet much has remained the same. The internet, globalization,, social media, the demise of the Soviet Communism and the Cold War, and the rise of Islamic fundamentalism have all impacted the nature and functionality of undergrounds. The purpose of this book is to educate the student and practitioner of insurgency and counterinsurgency and to examine the anatomy of undergrounds in various insurgencies of recent history.
http://www.soc.mil/ARIS/UndergroundsS.pdf UW Pocket Guide
Human Factors Considerations of Undergrounds in Insurgencies, 25 January 2013 (2nd Ed.)
During the 1950s through the mid-1960s social scientists and military personnel researched relevant political, cultural, social, and behavioral issues occurring within the emerging nations of Asia, Africa and Latin America. The Army had a particular interest in understanding the process of violent social change in order to be able to cope directly or indirectly or indirectly through assistance and advice with revolutionary actions. This book, Human Factors Considerations of Undergrounds in Insurgencies, is the second edition to the 1966 book of the same name and delves deeper into theory and further into background materials and focuses less on operational details.
http://www.soc.mil/ARIS/HumanFactorsS.pdf
Irregular Warfare Annotated Bibliography, 2 June 2011
The aim of the bibliography is to provide readers and offering of both a more traditional military perspective as well as perspectives from social scientist, including political scientist, sociologist, psychologist and anthropologists studying similar phenomena. The following sources include general history and analysis related to each core task: operational or “how to” guides; and works discussing particular insurgencies.
http://www.soc.mil/ARIS/IWAnnotated_BibliographyS.pdf
Legal Implications of the Status of Persons in Resistance
Our nation requires a special warfare capability. That capability requires intellectual investment in evolving our understanding of the legal environment and how that environment impacts US policy options and potential UW campaigns. As the legal analysis demonstrates, there will be some cases in which both the person’s status as well as US government and international policy toward a resistance movement and its activities will be vague at best. This finding reinforces that strategists and practitioners must anticipate ambiguity in UW campaigns. Readers are encouraged read, analyze, debate, challenge, and consider how this analysis could impact Special Forces’ ability to perform its UW mission.
http://www.soc.mil/ARIS/ARIS_Legal_Status-BOOK.pdf
Case Studies in Insurgency and Revolutionary Warfare-Columbia (1964-2009)
This case study presents a detailed account of revolutionary and insurgent activities in Colom via during the period from 1964 until 2009. It is specifically intended to provide a foundation for Special Force personnel to understand the circumstances, environment, and catalyst for revolution; the organization of resistance or insurgent organizations and their development, modes of operation, external support, and successes and failures; the counterinsurgents’ organization, modes of operation, and external support, as well as their effects on resistance; and the outcomes and long-term ramification of the revolutionary/ insurgent activities.
http://www.soc.mil/ARIS/ARIS_Colombia-BOOK.pdf
Case Study in Guerilla War: Greece During World War II, 1961 (Rev Ed.)
Greece was selected as a logical subject for a pilot study on a guerrilla campaign by this Office for a number of reasons. Many similarities and cogent analogies exist between the guerrilla war in Greece in the early 1940’s and those conflicts which have since broken out in other areas. On the other hand, certain aspects of the Greek situation are unique and of specific value. A study of the UW Pocket Guide V1.0, 5 April 2016
guerrilla warfare in Greece provides extremely useful insights into various perplexing problems concerning the exploitation and countering of guerrilla groups.
http://www.soc.mil/ARIS/ARIS_Greece-BOOK-small.pdf
Casebook on Insurgency and Revolutionary Warfare: Algeria 1954-1962, 1963 (Rev Ed.)
The Algerian Revolution case study is not a chronological narrative of the revolution from beginning to end. That type of historical case study is valuable for many purposes and a number have been published (see Bibliography). Rather, this study attempts to analyze, individually and successively through time, a number of factors in the revolutionary situation and the revolutionary movement itself which, on the basis of prior studies of revolutions, have been identified as being generally related to the occurrence, form, and outcome of a revolution. The case study, then, is devised to test the “explanatory power” of certain statements of relationships in terms of their applicability to the Algerian Revolution in particular. For this reason the reader is urged to read the definition of terms and the conceptual framework underlying the study which appears in the Technical Appendix.
http://www.soc.mil/ARIS/ARIS_Algeria-BOOK-small.pdf
Casebook on Insurgency and Revolutionary Warfare: Cuba 1953-1959 1963 (Rev Ed.)
This report on the recent Cuban Revolution is the first in a series of studies analyzing the rapid, often violent, change in political and socioeconomic order which is usually called revolution. From the many instances of modern revolution, the Cuban revolution was selected for these reasons: Cuban interests and those of the West are closely related and have been so for a long time. Second, events subsequent to the revolution have shown that the action or the lack of action by powers outside Cuba had a profound effect on the outcome of the revolution. Third, because the external powers involved in the post-revolutionary situation in Cuba are Communist, there is concern that the Cuban Revolution becomes a prototype for Communist revolutions elsewhere in Latin America. Lastly, the final form of the Cuban Revolution was different from its initial manifestations. It appeared originally to be a political protest movement with moderate aims; it grew into a major upheaval which changed the foundations of Cuban life.
http://www.soc.mil/ARIS/ARIS_Cuba-BOOK-small.pdf
Casebook on Insurgency and Revolutionary Warfare: Guatemala 1944-1954, November 1964 (Rev Ed.)
The Guatemalan study examines and attempts to analyze the rise and demise of the Communist Party in relation to the political activities of Guatemalan military officers during a period between two revolutions: the 1944 revolution which brought to power a liberal government within which the Communist Party gained power; and the 1954 revolution which made a conservative military officer head of state. The study also examines economic, social, and political factors which have been identified as being generally related to the rise of communism in Guatemala.
http://www.soc.mil/ARIS/ARIS_Guatemala-BOOK-small.pdf UW Pocket Guide