CONTINGENCY PLAN OF ACTION FORMAT

Similar documents
EXAMPLE SQUAD OPERATION ORDER FORMAT. [Plans and orders normally contain a code name and are numbered consecutively within a calendar year.

CHAPTER 3 ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECTS ON OPERATIONS

Platoon. 10 o clock. 1 S d. 3rd Squad. PL moves forward with Recon Element (2) Recon Element clears ORP (3) o clock

THE STRYKER BRIGADE COMBAT TEAM INFANTRY BATTALION RECONNAISSANCE PLATOON

LONG-RANGE SURVEILLANCE RECONNAISSANCE

CHAPTER 10. PATROL PREPARATION

FM (FM ) Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures for the Field Artillery Battalion

Plans and Orders [CLASSIFICATION] Copy ## of ## copies Issuing headquarters Place of issue Date-time group of signature Message reference number

Department of Defense DIRECTIVE

CHAPTER 4 RECONNAISSANCE

5-DAY SMALL UNIT TACTICS RECONNAISSANCE AND SURVEILLANCE COURSE Forest Grove, Oregon

UNCLASSIFIED 1 UNCLASSIFIED ANNEX A SANDHURST 17 COMPETITORS WARNING ORDER

FM (90-6) MOUNTAIN OPERATIONS NOVEMBER 2000 HEADQUARTERS, DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY

Summary Report for Individual Task Supervise a CBRN Reconnaissance Status: Approved

150-LDR-5012 Conduct Troop Leading Procedures Status: Approved

Sandhurst 2018 Training Guidance. CPT Philip Anderson

United States Volunteers-Joint Services Command Official Headquarters Website

THE MEDICAL COMPANY FM (FM ) AUGUST 2002 TACTICS, TECHNIQUES, AND PROCEDURES HEADQUARTERS, DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY

Training and Evaluation Outline Report

Engineering Operations

Alaska State Defense Force Integration with the Joint Operations Center. By Brigadier General Roger E. Holl Commander Alaska State Defense Force

Training and Evaluation Outline Report

San Diego Operational Area. Policy # 9A Effective Date: 9/1/14 Pages 8. Active Shooter / MCI (AS/MCI) PURPOSE

ICS MANUAL CHAPTER 2 EMS OGP March 23, 2006 ICS POSITION DESCRIPTION AND RESPONSIBILITIES

Geographic Intelligence

Example of an Instructor s Battle Drill Exercise Lesson Guide

Environmental Standard Operating Procedure

California Regions: Travel Brochure Project Due: Nov. 11, 2013 Ms. Loch - 4 th Grade. Name: Region:

Introduction RESPONSIBILITIES

WHO'S IN AND WHO'S OUT

Airborne & Special Operations Museum

Afghanistan National Army uses Forest camouflage and Forests only cover two percent of the Country! In the past few months the media has been posting

CHAPTER 2 DUTIES OF THE FIRE SUPPORT TEAM AND THE OBSERVER

Active Shooter Guideline

Preparing to Occupy. Brigade Support Area. and Defend the. By Capt. Shayne D. Heap and Lt. Col. Brent Coryell

3. Situation 3.1 Emergency/Disaster Conditions and Hazards Refer to the Coos County Hazard Analysis report.

TACTICAL ROAD MARCHES AND ASSEMBLY AREAS

Engineering, Operations & Technology Phantom Works. Mark A. Rivera. Huntington Beach, CA Boeing Phantom Works, SD&A

POSTMISSION ACTIVITIES

USING TERRAIN MODELS B2B0331 STUDENT HANDOUT

17895 Infantry Squad Battle Course (ISBC) RANGE DESIGN GUIDE

Reconnaissance and Surveillance Leader s Course

Chapter 7 Battle Drills

ARMY RDT&E BUDGET ITEM JUSTIFICATION (R2 Exhibit)

150-MC-0006 Validate the Protection Warfighting Function Staff (Battalion through Corps) Status: Approved

WILDLIFE HABITAT CANADA

IDENTIFY THE TROOP LEADING PROCEDURE

APPENDIX B. Orders and Annexes

Department of Defense DIRECTIVE

Chapter III ARMY EOD OPERATIONS

* Appendix A Sample Tactical SOP for the Support Battalion and Support Squadron Command Post

RECRUIT SUSTAINMENT PROGRAM SOLDIER TRAINING READINESS MODULES Conduct Squad Attack 17 June 2011

STATEMENT OF MAJOR GENERAL BRUCE M. LAWLOR, USA COMMANDER, JOINT TASK FORCE CIVIL SUPPORT U. S. JOINT FORCES COMMAND

FAMILY DISASTER PLAN. Name: Date: 4 STEPS OF SAFETY LOCAL OFFICE:

SCOUTING AND PATROLLING OPERATIONS B2H0369XQ-DM STUDENT HANDOUT

2 Addendum - Response and Recovery Matrix

Emergency Support Function (ESF) 16 Law Enforcement

Chapter FM 3-19

DISTRIBUTION RESTRICTION:

OVERVIEW OF EMERGENCY PROCEDURES

COMBINED ARMS OPERATIONS IN URBAN TERRAIN

PREPARE ANALYSIS OF THE BATTLEFIELD AREA

Command, Control, and Troop-Leading Procedures

National Armed Forces Law

Environmental Management & Sustainable Development in Taiwan Cal Poly Global Program Summer 2018

WP6.2.6 Baltic CWA Contingency Plan: National contingency plans in Finland

TACTICAL EMPLOYMENT OF ANTIARMOR PLATOONS AND COMPANIES

AGI Technology for EW and AD Dominance

CHAPTER 5 SECURITY OPERATIONS

Support for Insurgency and Counterinsurgency

Family information brief Sun 26 Oct 14. Operation GRITROCK UK Defences support to Sierra Leone

FM MILITARY POLICE LEADERS HANDBOOK. (Formerly FM 19-4) HEADQUARTERS, DEPARTMENT OF THE ARMY

CHAPTER 4 MILITARY INTELLIGENCE UNIT CAPABILITIES Mission. Elements of Intelligence Support. Signals Intelligence (SIGINT) Electronic Warfare (EW)

RIFLE PLATOON NIGHT ATTACKS W3F0015XQ STUDENT HANDOUT

Field Research Safety Guidelines

Training and Evaluation Outline Report

COMMAND, CONTROL, COMMUNICATIONS, COMPUTERS, AND INTELLIGENCE. Section I. COMMAND AND CONTROL

DIGITAL CAVALRY OPERATIONS

Brief introduction of the emergency response mechanism of public health incidents the ministry of health of china

Intelligence Preparation of the Battlefield Cpt.instr. Ovidiu SIMULEAC

THE INFANTRY PLATOON IN THE ATTACK

Tactical Employment of Mortars

Public School Security Workshops

Toolbox Deployment Incident Overview

CHAPTER 2 Factors Affecting FOOT MARCHES

Command and staff service. No. 10/5 The logistic and medical support service during C2 operations.

805C-42A-3474 Review Casualty Reports Status: Approved

3. TIME AND PLACE The competition will take place in Pärnumaa County The competition will be conducted in three phases:

Kanawha Putnam Emergency Management Plan Functional Annex. (completed by plan authors) Local / County Office of Emergency Management

LESSON 2 INTELLIGENCE PREPARATION OF THE BATTLEFIELD OVERVIEW

MECHANIZED INFANTRY PLATOON AND SQUAD (BRADLEY)

Assembly Area Operations

The Rufford Foundation Final Report

AAC CADET INSTRUCTOR S HANDBOOK PATROLLING AND TRACKING

Department of Defense INSTRUCTION. Policy and Procedures for Management and Use of the Electromagnetic Spectrum

LAKE VALLEY FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT JOB DESCRIPTION Apprentice Firefighter/Paramedic

Appendix C. Air Base Ground Defense Planning Checklist

TACTICAL, OPERATIONAL, AND STRATEGIC INTELLIGENCE PREPARATION OF THE BATTLEFIELD

ORGANIZATION AND OPERATION OF THE COMPANY COMMAND POST

PATROLLING OPERATIONS B2H3317 STUDENT HANDOUT

Transcription:

CONTINGENCY PLAN OF ACTION FORMAT Properly planning for the possible contingencies that may occur during a mission is a positive step toward being able to cope successfully with the changes in situation. The contingency plan of action is a critical document to an individual soldier, or to a unit, faced with evading enemy forces. First, it is a plan that will provide evaders a starting point to begin operating effectively once evasion has begun. Second, it gives recovery forces the ability to know what the evaders are planning to do, thus making recovery, operations easier. A well-thought-out contingency plan of action that everyone can understand is an important document to the evader. Note: Upon deployment, you may carry with you the information compiled in A through E of the SITUATION paragraph only. H-0

I. SITUATION A. B. c. D. Country Climatic Zones 1. Tropical Rainy Climate 2. Dry Climate 3. Temperate Climate 4. Cold Climate (wet/dry) 5. Polar Climatic Land Zones (whatever is applicable) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Coasts - Seasons a. Temperature b. Precipitation c. General wind direction d. Cloud cover Plains (refer to coasts) Deserts (refer to coasts) Plateaus (refer to coasts) Mountains (refer to coasts) Swamps (refer to coasts) Light Data (BMNT, EENT, Moonrise, Moonset, Percent of Illumination) Terrain 1. Neighboring Borders 2. General Terrain Zones a. Coasts (1) General description and size (2) Vegetation (a) Natural 1. Tundra H-1

(3) (4) (a) (b) (c) 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Coniferous forest Deciduous forest Temperate grassland Marshland swamp Desert Pastoral and arable land Tropical forest 9. Savanna (b) Cultivated (c) Concealment (density) (d) Growing seasons (e) Edible 1. Food value 2. Procurement (young or mature) 3. Preparation 4. cooking (f) Poisonous (g) Medical use (h) Other uses Animals and fish (a) Domestic 1. Food values 2. Procurement 3. Preparation 4. Cooking 5. Medical use 6. Dangerous 7. Poisonous 8. Other uses (b) Wildlife (animals, fish, insects, and reptiles) (see domestic) Water sources Procurement Potability Preparation H-2

b. Plains (refer to coasts) c. Deserts (refer to coasts) d. Plateaus (refer to coasts) e. Mountains (refer to coasts) f. Swamps (refer to coasts) g. Rivers and lakes (refer to coasts) 3. Natural Land Barriers a. Mountain ranges b. Large rivers E. Civilian Population 1. Numbers of Population a. Totals and density (by areas) b. Divisions of urban, suburban, rural, and nomads 2. Dress and Customs 3. Internal Security Forces 4. Controls and Restrictions (explain) 5. Border Area Security F. Friendly Forces 1. FEBA/FLOT 2. Closest Units 3. Location of Friendly or Neutral Embassies, Liaisons, Consulates, etc. 4. Recovery Sites (explain), LZs En Route. G. Enemy Forces 1. Doctrine 2. Tactics 3. Intelligence Reports a. Identification H-3

b. Location c. Activity d. Strength e. Night sighting devices II. MISSION Conduct Avoidance of Capture on Order From-To III. EXECUTION A. Overall Plan 1. When Do You Initiate Movement? 2. Location of Initial Movement Point 3. Actions at Initial Movement Point 4. Location of Hide Areas 5. Movement to Hide Areas 6. Actions Around the Hide Sites 7. Movement to Hide Sites 8. Actions at Hide Sites a. Construction b. Occupation c. Movement out of hide site 9. Location of Hole-up Areas 10. Actions at Hole-up Areas 11. Location of Recovery Site(s) B. Other Missions 1. Movement a. Formation b. Individual positions c. Navigation d. Stealth/listening H-4

e. Security (1) Noise (2) Light (3) All around security f. Cover, concealment, and camouflage g. Actions at breaks (1) Listening (5-10 minutes) (2) Long h. Actions at danger areas (enemy observation or fire) i. Actions for enemy sighting/contact j. Rally points/rendezvous points (1) Locations (2) Actions 2. Actions in the Care of Sick or Injured a. Initial movement point b. Along the movement route 3. Actions for Crossing Borders 4. Actions at Recovery Site(s) 5. Other Actions 6. Training and Rehearsals 7. Inspections before starting movement IV. SERVICE AND SUPPORT A. Survival Aids 1. Health a. First aid b. Disease 2. Water a. Procurement H-5

b. Purification c. Carrying 3. Food a. Procurement b. Preparation c. cooking d. Carrying 4. Shelter and Comfort/Warmth 5. Fire Starting 6. Recovery 7. Travel B. Survival Kit(s) C. Special Equipment D. Inspections 1. Responsibilities 2. Equipment, Survival Items, and Kit(s) V. COMMAND AND SIGNAL A. Chain of Command 1. Senior Person 2. Team Leader B. Signals To Be Used by Movement Teams 1. Along the Route 2. Rally/Rendezvous Points C. Communications to Higher Headquarters (radio) H-6