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Civil Information Management 2005 Army Geospatial Conference

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Civil Information Management 2005 Army Geospatial Conference MSG Tony Minor and SFC Curtis Allen US Army Civil Affairs and Psychological Operations Command (Airborne) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Civil Information Management 2005 Army Geospatial Conference


1
Civil Information Management
  • 2005 Army Geospatial Conference
  • MSG Tony Minor and SFC Curtis Allen
  • US Army Civil Affairs and Psychological
    Operations Command (Airborne)

2
USACAPOC Mission
Train, validate, monitor readiness, and prepare
assigned Active Component (AC), Reserve Component
(RC), Civil Affairs (CA), and Psychological
Operations (PSYOP) force for deployment to
conduct worldwide special operations, across the
range of military operations in support of
regional Combatant Commanders, U.S. Ambassadors,
and other agencies, as directed.
3
Civil Affairs Operational Concept
  • The primary functions of all Army CA units are to
    conduct CA Operations (CAO) in support of
    Civil-Military Operations.
  • CA Soldiers (generalist and functional
    specialist) conduct CAO through planning,
    execution, and transition, with, by, and through
    indigenous populations and institutions (IPI),
    U.S. government agencies, international
    organizations, and other non-governmental
    organizations. CA Activities support building of
    Host Nation capacities to deter or defeat threats
    to internal stability.

4
CA is More Than Just an Army Asset
  • CA supports the National Security Strategy
    through the integration of both DoD and
    interagency initiatives across all elements of
    national power diplomatic, informational,
    military, and economic
  • CA resources and activities can be applied across
    the strategic, operational, and tactical levels
    of operation
  • These activities can take the form of Army
    Stability and Support operations, Joint Strategic
    Deterrence and Stability operations, and/or
    Interagency Reconstruction and Stabilization
    operations.
  • Strengthening CA capability requires cooperative,
    synergistic effort by
  • Army (DA)
  • US Special Operations Command (USSOCOM)
  • Joint Forces Command (JFCOM)
  • Geographic Combatant Commands (GCC)
  • Joint Staff (JS)
  • Office of the Secretary of Defense (OSD)
  • Other Services and US government agencies (OGA)

5
CA Capabilities/Missions
  • Tactical
  • Civil Affairs Teams (CAT-As), conduct civil
    reconnaissance, provide project management, and
    engage key leaders collects and disseminates
    information
  • CA BN establishes Civil Military Operations
    Center (CMOC) in Support of UEx
  • Provides 1st Tier Civil Information Management
    (CIM) capabilities
  • Assigned Functional Specialists provide unique
    government, economic, infrastructure, and other
    key subject matter expertise
  • Operational
  • CA BDE Provides CA Planners/Operations Staff
    modularity (plug play) into the UEy Forward
    Command Post
  • CA BDE establishes CMOC in Support of UEy
  • Provides CIM Data Fusion and builds operational
    Civil COP
  • Provides data layers to information and
    intelligence community
  • Provides analysis of tactical civil-military
    operations as related to their effects analysis
    utilized by planners for future operations
  • Assigned Functional Specialists provide unique
    government, economic, infrastructure, and other
    skills

6
CA Capabilities/Missions
  • Strategic
  • Provide CMO Planning Teams to the COCOM CDR
    during all phases of the Battle
  • Provide inputs and data layers for Cultural
    Preparation of the Battlefield/ Environment (CPE)
    during Phase 0/1
  • CACOM Establishes CMOC in Support of RCC/COCOM
  • Provides Strategic-Level CIM and builds
    strategic Civil COP
  • Provides Strategic-level analysis of aggregate
    operational CMO
  • Provides input into the Theater Campaign Plan,
    Effects Board Process
  • Establishes Civil information environment ISO
    transition to NGO, HN, or civilian based
    operations
  • Establishes bridging relationships between
    transition elements (NGO, HN, other) IOT allow
    for open source (OS) information transfer after
    cessation of DoD based operations

7
Civil Military Operations Center (CMOC)
Functional Capabilities
Capability Functions ________ ________________
___ CMOC Combination of
operations, civil liaison, and civil information
capabilities Analyzes and
focuses Civil Common Operational Picture (CCOP)
Plans, coordinates, directs, and controls
select CMO/CAO functions in the supported
Commanders battlespace C4IM of forces
Oversight of project management Focal point
for civil-military coordination, collaboration,
and consensus
Facilitates military transition plan to
Civil Authorities Manages CIM enterprise
systems Civil Liaison Team Civil-Military
interface public face of the CMOC The
CMOCs Civil Affairs Team (CAT) Store
Front Extends physical outreach of
CMOC Civil Information Performs civil
information fusion develops and manages the
civil COP Management Cell Analytic node
for all CA sensors
Provides the product for direct
input into supported Commanders COP Provides
desensitized civil information on unclassified
networks

SUSTAINMENT
INTEL Maneuver
Civil Liaison Team
CMOC
C4IM

Civil-Info Management
Functional Specialty Cell
USACAPOC, G8
8
The CMOC and the Role of Civil Information
  • Civil Information is confused with intelligence
    by most Commanders
  • Civil Information is directly linked to OSINT
    and is a required aspect of the total Intel
    picture to include IPB OPB
  • DRAFT / PRE-DECISIONAL Definition
  • Civil Information Raw data, gathered by or
    provided directly to military sensors in an
    organized system, with relations to persons,
    organizations, places, or things, within the
    civil component of the Commanders battlespace
    that can be fused or processed to increase DOD/
    Interagency/ NGO/ IO/ IPI situational awareness,
    situational understanding or situational
    dominance.

USACAPOC, G8
9
Civil Information not Intelligence
Civil Information Management
10
Purpose of Civil Information Management (CIM)
  • Facilitate the Joint Commanders situational
    awareness, situational understanding and
    full-spectrum dominance.
  • Develop the Civil COP to achieve civil
    information dominance to support Effects Based
    Operations.
  • Civil Information Management must also support
  • Interagency (DOS, DHS, USAID, etc)
  • Coalition Partners (NATO, PFP, GWOT, etc)
  • Partner/Host Nation (PN/HN/IPI)
  • International Organizations (UN, World Bank,
    IMF, OAS, etc)
  • Nongovernmental Organizations (Red Cross, World
    Vision, etc)
  • Transition civil information enterprises to
    above organizations to support stability and
    reconstruction operations.

USACAPOC, G8
11
CIM Desired Endstate
A capability within CA tactical / operational
elements to quickly, easily, and effectively
collect, catalog, and fuse civil component
information and create a Civil Common Operating
Picture (COP).
At the operational and strategic level, a core
capability within CA HQs elements/CMOCs at all
levels to collect and develop civil information
into a Civil COP and then fuse that information
with the supported maneuver unit at his or her
level to support effects-based operations and
targeting within the Joint Commanders
battlespace.
USACAPOC, G8
12
Proposed Doctrinal Concept for CIM
  • Civil Military Operations Center (CMOC) from
    Companies (Co) to CA Commands (CACOM) responsible
    for collecting, analyzing and fusing civil
    information into a civil common operating picture
    (COP)
  • Primary CA sensors
  • - Civil Affairs Teams (CAT)
  • - Civilian Liaison Teams (CLT)
  • - Civil Affairs Functional Specialists
  • Examples of Other sensors (not all inclusive)
  • - Maneuver elements (Infantry, SOF, etc)
  • - Interagency
  • - Coalition Countries
  • - Indigenous Populations and Institutions (IPsI)
  • - Commercial/Contract entities

USACAPOC, G8
13
Proposed Doctrinal Concept for CIM (cont)
  • CA has identified requirement for CMOCs to
    declassify/desensitize aggregate CAT-A reports
    for dissemination.
  • CMOCs must filter reports with embedded
    classified information i.e. Key Leader
    Engagements.
  • Reports reside on SIPRNET backbone
  • Filtered civil information must reside on
    unclassified, accessible domains for access by
    interagency, UN, NGOs, IOs, and indigenous
    organizations.
  • CA currently developing structured reporting
    models to ease filtering process
  • CA as a key agent to Army Stability and
    Reconstruction Ops shall transition information
    enterprises to interagency, host nation
    agencies/organizations.

14
Framework for Civil Information Grid
Information Flow
Strategic Level
  • Facilitate rapid CMO decision-making
  • Maximizes efficiencies of military and
    non-military resources
  • Technical line of communication tied into Army
    communication backbone at the UA/UEx level
  • Objective provide civil information input into
    the supported Commanders common operating
    picture
  • Requirement for CMOCs to operate outside the LAN
    distance of supported unit
  • Civil information management cell at each level
    fuses and redirects data up, down, and across the
    CA line of communication
  • Careful analysis of the Common operating picture
    should guide the commanders project priorities
  • Requires CAT to transmit data via remote
    capability
  • CMOC and CMO cells are key nodes

National Level
CMOC
CMO Cell
Operational Level
Regional Level
Inter- agency
CMOC
CMO Cell
HN
IO/NGO
CMOC
CMO Cell
Local Level
Tactical Level
CMOC
CMO Cell
II
BN
15
CHAMPION facilitates Joint Task Force (JTF) CI
HUMINT capabilities
J2X
COCOM
Asset Visibility Collection Mgmt Requirements
Mgmt
Joint Intel Data Fusion and Analysis
SOJICC
CMOC
others
DIA
NSA
NGA
CIFA
JSOTF
Civil Affairs
Special Operations
THT Teams
Marine Corps HUMINT
NCIS
PSYOP
CI Teams
AFOSI
16
Conclusion
  • Instant and continuous knowledge of the
    battlespace is invaluable to our forces.our
    communications systems and networks must focus on
    quickly and effectively sharing information and
    data among the collective team members and
    various organizational communication and command
    and control nodes.
  • - Dr. Dale Uhler
  • USSOCOM Acquisition Executive
  • January 2005
  • ----ODAs, CATs need to be linked into the
    effort.
  • - Col(P) David Morris
  • DCG, USACAPOC
  • April 2005

USACAPOC, G8
17
Backup
18
Critical Concerns
  • We are a unique capability that supports both
    Conventional and SOF forces with a majority of
    forces in the Reserves
  • We will require support, training, equipping, and
    championship of preceding concepts from DA and
    SOCOM
  • Current community of Interest (Info Intel)
    recognize the need for civil and cultural layers
    to be incorporated into the COP. In order for
    this to occur, information exchange needs to
    happen at the lowest level round trip to
    tactical end user.
  • How is Horizontal fusion at the lowest tactical
    level required with critical focus on the end
    tactical user (CATA, ODA, THT, etc) ensured?
  •  
  • Integration with ongoing Joint/Army C4ISR
    architecture
  • How is inclusion and leverage of existing
    concepts, programs, and initiatives in order to
    move forward executed?
  • How do we align ourselves to an existing
    acquisition program to reduce timelines, provide
    rapid fielding?

USACAPOC, G8
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