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33 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
102.1 Discuss the responsibilities of the following:

a. Comamnder in Chief (President)
Barack Obama: The head of the Armed Forces as mandated by the Constitution. He is responsible for initiating military action in support of our national interests. He can submit to Congress the intent to declare war which Congress must approve in order to actually wage war.
102.1 Discuss the responsibilities of the following:

b. Secretary of Defense
Chuck Hagel: Principal defense advisor to President. Formulation of general defense policy and policy related to DoD.
102.1 Discuss the responsibilities of the following:

c. Secretary of the Navy
Honorable Ray Mabus: Policies and control of DON organization, admin, ops and efficiency.
102.1. Discuss the responsibilities of the following:

c. Chief of Naval Operations (CNO)
Admiral Jonathan Greenert: navy rep of Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS).
102.2 Discuss the role of the following:

a. Master Chief Petty Officer of the Navy (MCPON)
MCPON (AW/NAC) Michael Stevens: The function of the office is to provide a direct, unofficial channel of communication between enlisted personnel and the senior policy I level of DON.
102.2 Discuss the role of the following:

e. CMDCM
Enlisted advisor to the command on the formulation and implementation of policies pertinent to morale, welfare, job satisfaction, discipline, utilization and training of all enlisted personnel.
102.3 Discuss the purpose of Operational Plans (OPLANs), Operational Orders (OPORDs), and warning orders.

A. Operation Plan (OPLAN)
A detailed statement of a course of action to be followed to accomplish a future mission.
102.3 Discuss the purpose of Operational Plans (OPLANs), Operational Orders (OPORDs), and warning orders.

B. Warning Order (WARNORD)
The purpose of a Warning Order is to give advance notice that a unit is to be moved. 90 days in advance.
102.3 Discuss the purpose of Operational Plans (OPLANs), Operational Orders (OPORDs), and warning orders.

C. Operation Orders (OPORD)
a. An Operation Order puts an OPLAN into effect.
b. A 5 paragraph order (SMEAC) OPLANs and OPORDs detail the complete information and orders necessary to carry out the decision of the commander. They are written so understanding of the part each is to play in the operations.
102.4 Describe the responsibilities of the following personnel:

a. Commanding Officer
Absolute responsibility for the safety, well-being, and efficiency of his or her command.
102.4 Describe the responsibilities of the following personnel:

b. Executive Officer
Direct representative of the Commanding Officer, responsible for the organization, performance of duty, and good order and discipline.
102.4 Describe the responsibilities of the following personnel:

c. CMDCM
Enlisted advisor to the command on the formulation and implementation of policies pertinent to morale, welfare, job satisfaction, discipline, utilization and training of all enlisted personnel. CMDCM are also referred to as the COB chief of the Boat aboard ships.
CJTF-HOA Chain of Command
Commander: MG Terry Ferrell

Dep Commander: Brig Gen Scott Smith

SEL - SgtMaj Gary Smith

COS: CAPT Nathan Martin
Camp Lemonnier Chain of Command
CO: CAPT Peter Van Stee

XO: CDR James Kadow

CMDCM: BMCM(SW/AW/CM) Lloyd Johnson
102.5 State the purpose of the Enlisted Distribution Verification Report (EDVR).
Enlisted Distribution Verification Report (EDVR) is a monthly statement of a command's enlisted personnel account. This document lists all personnel assigned.
102.5 Discuss the contents of the Enlisted Distribution Verification Report (EDVR).
1 - Through 3 contain information that has been extracted from the account because it requires special attention or action by the activity. To assist activities in managing enlisted personnel, these sections also identify future personnel events. Additionally,
3 - Contains an alphabetic listing of all enlisted members assigned to the activity. (Alpha Roster)
4 - Contains the total personnel account of the activity, including those members reflected in sections 1 through
5 - Contains the Personnel Status Summary.
6 - Contains Distribution Navy Enlisted Classification Code (DNEC) Management.
7 - Contains NEC Billet and Personnel Inventory.
8 - Contains a list of individuals who are qualified in Navy Enlisted Classification Codes (NECs).
9 and 10 - contain the Diary Message Summary and Duty Preference Listing, respectively.
11 - Contains individual security data, citizenship code, involuntary extension months, Pay Entry Base Date (PEBD), Time in Rate (TIR), Advancement Effective Date, and FORMAN Status and Action Date.
12 - Contains a listing of both officer and enlisted personnel in an embarked or Temporary Additional Duty (TAD) status to augment normal manning. This listing also includes commands that are embarked onboard another command.
102.6

NAVAL MESSAGE
Written documents to pass or receive information to and from other units which requires an immediate response.
102.6 COMMON MESSAGE ELEMENTS

a. Time
Messages are normally identified and filed by either a date-time-group (DTG) or a Julian date, depending on the metod of transmission.
102.6 COMMON MESSAGE ELEMENTS

b. Date-Time-Group
The DTG is assigned for identification and file purposes only. The DTG consists of six digits, the time code Month, Month and a two digit year.

DDHHMMZ MMM YY
102.6 COMMON MESSAGE ELEMENTS

c. ZULU (Z)
ZULU (Z), for GMT, is used as the universal time for all messages.
102.6 COMMON MESSAGE ELEMENTS

d. Greenwich Mean Time
In Naval communications, the DTG is computed from a commond worldwide standard.
102.6 COMMON MESSAGE ELEMENTS

e. Julian Date
The Julian date consists of three digits. They represent the day of the year. The first day of the calendar year is Julian 001.
102.6 COMMON MESSAGE ELEMENTS

Precedence
1. ROUTINE (R) Processed within 6 hours
2. PRIORITY (P) Processed within 3 hours
3. IMMEDIATE (O) Processed within 30 minutes
4. FLASH (Z) Processed as fast as possible with an objective of less than 10 minutes.
102.6 COMMON MESSAGE ELEMENTS

Classification designators
1. Confidential

2. Secret

3. Top Secret
102.6 COMMON MESSAGE ELEMENTS

Non-classification designators
1. FOUO (For Official Use Only)
2. EFTO (Encrypt For Transmission Only)
3. UNCLAS (Unclassified)
4. NOFORN (No Foreign Nationals)
102.7

PAGE 2
Record of Dependent/Emergency Data
102.7

PAGE 4
Enlisted Qualification History
102.7

Page 13
Administrative Remarks
102.8

Operation Report (OPREP)
Operation Report (OPREP)
102.8

Logistical Requirements (LOGREQ)
Logistics Requirements (LOGREQ) Report Request sent by message at least 3 working days priort to ships ETA.
102.8

Status of Resources and Training System (SORTS)
Provide combat readiness data
102.8

Situation Report (SITREP)
This is a multipurpose, narrative report that keeps addressees informed and enables to the comamnds and services concerned to expect and prepare for potential effects.
1) Own situation, disposition, and/or status of forces
2) Situation Overview
3) Operations
4) Intelligence and reconnaissance
5) Logistics
102.9

LAWS OF ARMED CONFLICT
The Laws of Armed Conflict tells you what you can dna cannot do in combat situations. Only combatants are considered proper targets and may be fired upon.