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45 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
What is the Army National Guards duel role?
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Serve as a state military under the governor, and as a reserve Army component for the president.
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In DSCA, military forces support a primary civilian agency. What do commanders need to realize when achieving the military end state means?
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That local authorities will eventually be able to support themselves without military forces.
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How many state and territorial national guard units are there?
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There are 54 total
50 + Guam, Virgin Islands, Puerto Rico, and DC. |
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What ADP/ADRP covers Defense Support of Civil Authorities (DSCA) ?
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ADP/ADRP 3-28
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What are the 15 emergency support functions (ESF) ?
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1) Transportation
2) Communication 3) Public works and Engineering 4) Firefighting 5) Emergency Management 6)Mass Care Assistance, Human Services 7) Logistics Management and Resource Support 8) Public Health and Medical aid 9) Search and Rescue 10) Oil and Hazardous material response 11) Agriculture and National resources 12) Energy 13) Public Safety and Security 14) Long term recovery 15) External Affairs |
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What are the primary documents that contain national preparedness doctrines?
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The National preparedness goal
The National incident management system The National response framework |
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Which war-fighting function will the majority of DSCA stress?
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Sustainment
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While there are many potential missions for soldiers as part of DSCA, what are the overarching purposes of all DSCA missions?
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Save Lives
Protect Property Alleviate Suffering |
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What is one of the biggest mistakes that tactical commanders make in DSCA?
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Military forces operating with civilians risk upsetting the constitutional balance between military, civil authority, and the private sector
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What is the ADP/ADRP of Sustainment?
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ADP/ADRP 4-0
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What are the generating forces?
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Army organizations whose primary mission is to generate and sustain the operational Army capabilities
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What is the synchronization, coordination, and/or integration of the activities of government and non-governmental entities with military operations to achieve a unity of effort?
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Unified Action
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What is Logistics?
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Logistics is planning and executing the movement and support of forces
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What is the operating force?
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It's the primary mission to participate in combat and to support combat elements
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What is the sustainment war-fighting function?
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It's to provide support to ensure freedom of action, extend operational reach, and prolong endurance.
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What is purposeful reliance by one service members forces on another service's capabilities to maximize the complementary and reinforcing efforts of both?
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Joint Interdependence
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What do personnel services do?
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Personnel services maintain soldier and family readiness and enable the fighting qualities of the Army
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What are the principles of personnel services?
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Synchronization
Timeliness Stewardship Accuracy Cosistency |
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What are the sustainment principles?
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Integration
Anticipation Responsiveness Simplicity Economy Survivability Continuity Improvisation |
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What is the Army's institutional training and education system, which includes training base centers and schools that provide initial training and subsequent professional military education for soldiers, military leaders, and Army civilians?
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The Institutional Training Domain
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Where do soldiers build the fundamental skills, knowledge, and behaviors, which were developed in institutional training?
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Operational Assignments
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Who is responsible for training units and developing leaders?
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Commanders
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Where does training begin?
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Training begins in the generating force
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What ADP/ADRP covers Training Units and Developing Leaders?
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ADP/ADRP 7-0
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What is planned, goal oriented learning that reinforces and expands the depth and breadth of an individuals knowledge base, self awareness, and situational awareness; complements institutional and operational learning; enhances professional competence; and meets personal objectives?
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The Self_development training domain
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What do the training active organizations undertake while at home station at maneuver combat training centers, during joint exercises, at mobilization centers, and while operationally deployed?
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The Operational Training Domain
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What are the Army principles of unit training?
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Commanders and other leaders are responsible for training NCO's who train individuals, crews, and small teams
The standard, as we fight, while operating, fundamentals first, develop adaptability, understand operational environment, to sustain, maintain, and conduct multi-echelon training |
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What process do commanders apply to unit training and leader development?
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The operations process-planning, prepare, execute, and evaluate
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What does METL stand for and what is it?
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The unit's Mission-Essential Task List (METL) represents the doctrinal framework of fundamental tasks for which the unit was designed
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What are the two planning processes that are used in the Army?
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The Military Decision Making Process (MDMP)
Troop Leading Procedures (TLP) |
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What is MDMP?
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Military Decision Making Process
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What is meant by Operational art?
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The pursuit of strategic objectives through the arrangement of tactical actions in time, space, and purpose
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How are Army operations characterized?
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Flexibility
Integration Lethality Adaptability Depth Synchronization |
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What is the purpose of MDMP?
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It integrates the activities of the commander, staff, subordinate headquarters, and other partners to understand the situation and mission
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What are unified land operations?
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Their how the Army seizes, retains, and exploits the initiative to gain and maintain a position of relative advantage in order to prevent and deter conflict.
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What is the operational environment?
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Conditions, circumstances, and influences that effect the employment of capabilities and bear the decisions of the commander
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What does effective unified action require?
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Army leaders who can understand, influence, and cooperate with unified action partners.
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What ADP/ADRP covers unified land operations?
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ADP/ADRP 3-0
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What are the mission variables?
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Mission
Enemy Terrain and Weather Troops and support available Time available Civil considerations |
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What are operational variables?
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Political
Military Economic Social Information Infrastructure Physical Environment Time |
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What is the Army's war-fighting doctrine?
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Unified Land Operations (ADP/ADRP 3-0)
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What is a battle or engagement, employing lethal or non-lethal actions, designed for a specific purpose relative to enemy, terrain, friendly forces, or other entity?
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Tactical Action
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What is a military action, consisting of two or more related tactical actions, designed to achieve a strategic objective in whole or in part?
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An Operation
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What is a series of related major operations aimed at achieving strategic and operational objectives within a given time and space?
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A Campaign
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The most challenging potential enemy comes in two forms, what are they>
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1) The non-state entity possessing weapons of mass destruction or other unique methods to challenge US dominance by attacking public will.
2) Nuclear capable nation-states partnered with one or more non-state actors through ideological, religious, political, or other ties. |