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UNCLASSIFIED FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY UNCLASSIFIED FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Canadian Forces School of Military Intelligence L’École du Renseignement Militaire des Forces Canadiennes Collection Coordination and Intelligence Requirements Management (CCIRM) Integrated Coalition Environment Common Access Portal (ICECAP) and RFI Procedures Intelligence Function Codes 2006 As of 03 May 2006

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Page 1: Intelligence Function Codes

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Canadian Forces School of Military Intelligence L’École du Renseignement Militaire des Forces Canadiennes

Collection Coordination and Intelligence Requirements Management (CCIRM) Integrated Coalition Environment Common Access Portal (ICECAP) and RFI Procedures

Intelligence Function Codes 2006

As of 03 May 2006

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PREFACE This document contains the original J2 DG INT Intelligence Function Code Book 1996-97. This manual also contains DIA IFC updates 1999 and the new three-letter country code system. The IFC Manual has been further revised to reflect the current interim Naval CCIRM collation requirements. This document is now the collation standard for the Military Intelligence Community and supersedes all others. Intelligence staffs are to ensure all other copies are destroyed in accordance with unit policy.

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RECORD OF AMENDMENTS TO INTELLIGENCE FUNCTION CODES 2005

Change Number

Effective Date

Amendment Details

002/06

27 Feb 06 Changed page to include Eastern Europe. General format change to book.

003/06

03 May 06 Includes NATO RFI format.

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2000-0902 (CDI) 23 February 2006 CCIRM, ICECAP, & INTELLIGENCE FUNCTION CODES References: a. OSCP OIS/TRINITY INT Function Codes 2004 b. OSCP OIS INT Annex C 2003 to MARPAC OPORD 01/01 c. B-GJ-005-200/FP-000 Joint Intelligence Doctrine 2003 e. J2/DG INT File Index 04 November 2003 f. AJP – 2.1 Intelligence Procedures March 2002 g. DIA INT Function Codes 1999 h. BI-SC Reporting Directive (BI-SCD 80-3), Volume II, Intelligence Reports i. J2 DG INT Function Codes 1998 Chapter 1 – Introduction Chapter 2 – The Collection Coordination and Intelligence Requirements Management (CCIRM) Concept Chapter 3 – Integrated Coalition Environment Common Access Portal (ICECAP) and RFI Procedures Chapter 4 – IFC General Usage Chapter 5 – Intelligence Function Code Definitions Chapter 6 – Authorized Region and Country Codes Chapter 7 – Using IFCs for Standardisation of Hard and Soft Copy Databases and Websites Chapter 8 – Guidelines to be followed for Vetting and Destruction of Intelligence Data Annex A – Glossary Annex B – J2/DG INT File Index Annex C - CCIRM RFI Format Annex D - Customer Information Sheet

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CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION PURPOSE 1. This document provides listings and definitions for Intelligence Functional Codes (IFCs). This document also focuses on the units Collection Coordination and Intelligence Requirements Management (CCIRM) team and how they will employ the IFCs. The codes provide a standard for soft and hard copy data management, inventory, and cataloguing of all source intelligence topics as a type of shorthand in place of the titles and definitions. IFCs will also be used when submitting a Request for Intelligence (RFIs) with Allied nations.

GENERAL 2. IFCs provide a standard subject heading and sub heading of the groupings into which information and intelligence is placed in individual collation systems. All formations and formation headquarters should conform to the IFC standard set out by the Intelligence staff at the formation headquarters. The use of the IFCs by all Intelligence staffs and formations for the categorizing of information and intelligence and of a standard structure for intelligence databases will simplify and speed processing where time is valuable and will facilitate the exchange of information and intelligence across the formation.

INTELLIGENCE CYCLE 3. Direction. Direction is the first stage in the intelligence cycle and consists of “Determination of intelligence requirements, planning the collection effort, issuance of orders and requests to collection agencies and maintenance of a continuous check on the productivity of such agencies”. All Intelligence Information Management sections use the IFCs in support of the Intelligence Cycle. Each Intelligence organisation is responsible for managing the intelligence consumer's Standing of Intelligence Requirements (SIR). The SIR consists of the consumer's intelligence collection and dissemination requirements, mission description and administrative data. 4. Collection. Collection is the second stage in the intelligence cycle. It is “the exploitation of sources by collection agencies and the delivery of the information obtained to the appropriate processing unit for use in the production of intelligence”. Collection requirements are registered using the IFCs for intelligence products. The IFC codes are paired with the area/three letter country code.

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5. Processing. Processing is that part of the intelligence cycle where the information which has been collected in response to the direction of the commander is converted into intelligence. Processing is a structured series of actions which, although set out sequentially, may also take place concurrently. It is defined, in a definition, which sets out the component parts of processing, as “the production of intelligence through collation, evaluation, analysis, integration and interpretation of information and/or other intelligence.” 6. Collation is defined as “a step in the processing phase of the intelligence cycle in which the grouping together of related items of information or intelligence provides a record of events and facilitates further processing”. In practice, it is made up of the procedures for receiving, grouping and recording all reports arriving in an intelligence office, at any level and it involves:

a. The IFC supports the basic task of allocating an identifying number to and registering the receipt of each incoming piece of information and intelligence;

b. The placing of each piece of information or intelligence into an

appropriate IFC category or group through logging, marking on a map or chart, filing or card indexing or through the entry into an electronic database of each piece of information or intelligence, as appropriate; and

c. The maintenance of the IFC system for conducting these

operations, which is designed so that any member of the Intelligence or operations staff can operate it rapidly and efficiently.

7. Dissemination. Dissemination is defined as “The timely conveyance of intelligence, in an appropriate form and by any suitable means, to those who need it”. Dissemination consists of both “push” and “pull” control principles. The “push” concept allows the higher echelons to push information down to satisfy existing lower echelon requirements or to relay other relevant intelligence to the lower level. The “pull” concept involves direct electronic access to databases, intelligence files, or other repositories by intelligence organizations at all levels. Web-based technologies/standards are now the most commonly used method to organize and present related intelligence products together facilitating “one-stop shopping”. IFCs assist in the dissemination process through a standard structured format that is easily recognisable to the client or client unit.

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INTELLIGENCE PRODUCTS 8. The collection of intelligence is based upon the need to support the mission of force commanders at all levels. Information and intelligence from all sources must be processed into products that present the most complete, accurate, and objective view possible. Joint operations in particular require complete and composite views of the current situation and of the status of an adversary’s land, sea, air and space forces. This is facilitated through the intelligence requirement process. This process ensures that timely and accurate information is passed to intelligence staffs, allowing them to make assessments, based on accurate information, essential to the stated mission. It also reduces the quantity of non-essential information collected. Intelligence areas of interest are extensive and include but are not necessarily limited to:

a. Armed forces' capabilities, limitations, orders of battle, and facilities; b. The production of military materiel; c. Basic economic and industrial resources available to support

military operations;

d. Environmental and transportation factors affecting military operations;

e. Assessments of Trans-attack and post-attack reconstruction and recovery capabilities of military, economic, and political elements;

f. Sociological factors; g. Intelligence and security issues; h. Scientific and technical characteristics, capabilities, and limitations

of all weapons systems, subsystems, and associated materiel;

i. Developments in applied and basic sciences; j. Technologies with warfare potential; k. Research, development, testing, and evaluation programs;

production methods used in systems manufacture; and

m. Overall systems and equipment effectiveness.

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DEFINITIONS 9. Definitions for each IFC are contained in Chapter Two Intelligence Functional Code Definitions.

CHANGING IFCS 10. Intelligence must be continuously reviewed and where necessary revised, taking into account all new information and comparing it with that which is already known. The Canadian and Allied intelligence community is changing as world dynamics evolve at a rapid pace. As a result, codes and definitions must be updated from time to time to reflect these changes. Recommendations for changes, deletions, or additions of IFCs should be submitted through the chain-of-command to CFSMI Training Platoon CCIRM Subject Matter Expert (SME). For each recommendation for a new code, forward the recommended code number, title, definition, and justification. Changes to existing codes should include the code number, title, changes recommended, and the justification. The request will be validated and submitted to IFC Managing Authority at Defence Intelligence Agency (DIA) in Washington DC.

THREE LETTER COUNTRY CODES 11. The world has been broken down into geographical/geopolitical regions. The nation state is the smallest unit covered by the index system. Countries are grouped into continental and/or subcontinent areas. Occasionally, countries are placed into political groupings. Large bodies of water have been separated into regions. This system is hierarchical allowing a user to refine requirements to cover a specific area or region. Intelligence Index Three Letter Country Codes are listed in Chapter 3.

REQUESTING INTELLIGENCE PRODUCTS 12. Intelligence must be centrally controlled to avoid unwarranted duplication of work, provide mutual support and ensure the efficient, economic use of all resources. The Intelligence Unit’s CCIRM controls the distribution of intelligence material through the Intelligence Collection Plan (ICP) and units Standing Intelligence Requirements (SIR). To request intelligence products from Intelligence Units, clients units are to request an account on ICECAP. Once an Intelligence Requirement (IR) has been validated by Intelligence Staff and actioned, the RFI Manager will contact the customer by email or phone and will inform the requesting client of its status. The RFI process is explained further in Chapter 3.

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13. Standing Intelligence Requirements. Before ordering intelligence products, determine the scope of intelligence required and validate it through the Intelligence Staff chain of command. IFCs can help identify and focus the Unit SIR. Cross-reference topics for additional material. Select the geographic/geopolitical code(s). Complete the SIR employing the IFC and entering the Index Code and Index Country Code for each requirement. 14. Customer Information. It is recommended that a Customer Information Sheets be sent out to sub units from each CCIRM is responsible to support. Completion of Annex D, the Customer Information Sheet, is mandatory. This allows Intelligence Staff CCIRMs to control the flow of intelligence information to your office and to protect the integrity of the information provided. The form is generally self-explanatory. It is import that full return mail addresses be complete and includes the proper routing for your position. This document can be sent via email or mailed. 15. Security Guidelines. You may only receive classified material if you have an equivalent, or higher, clearance and if you have access to storage facilities approved to secure material to the level of protection required. You should contact your local security officer for assistance in determining the level of protection provided by your secure storage facilities. 16. Economy. Request only that information which is essential to the performance of your duties. Conduct initial research of available Intelligence websites before submitting requests. An intelligence product may have already been created that will fulfill your requirement. Ensure that all that all requirements are validated through the chain of command. Contact your unit librarian to obtain DND manuals; available from the local supply system and open source material such as magazines.

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CHAPTER 2 - THE COLLECTION COORDINATION AND INTELLIGENCE REQUIREMENTS MANAGEMENT (CCIRM) CONCEPT 17. General. Once a unit’s Commander’s Critical Intelligence Requirements (CCIRs) and Priority Intelligence Requirements (PIRs) have begun to be identified, the process of planning how to collect the information and intelligence to answer them can also begin. The methodology, which has been developed to make the ICP and to manage its conduct in the most effective manner, is CCIRM. CCIRM includes information management in the broadest sense since the CCIRM function should also include the management of production and dissemination of all source intelligence products to users, verification of customer satisfaction, etc. Intelligence is all about managing information and satisfying the consumer’s (Commander’s) demands for knowledge. This is an end-to-end process from finding out (or anticipating) what the Commander needs to know to ensuring that he has received the answer that he needs – and every stage in between. 18. CCIRM encompasses those activities that result in the effective and efficient employment of intelligence collection, processing, exploitation and reporting to satisfy tactical, operational, strategic and national Intelligence Requirements. CCIRM consists of two major components: the co-ordination of the collection effort and the management of the intelligence requirements arising from particular operations, missions or deployments. Effective intelligence architecture will allow for rapid and efficient tasking and re-tasking of sources and agencies. The making of an effective ICP in accordance with the principles of Intelligence is the key to the answering of the CCIR and PIR. 19. The ICP must be seen as a continuous process in that it will task sources and agencies, and react, by re-tasking or by tasking different sources and agencies, to changes in the information and intelligence requirements. These will emerge as the operation progresses and in some cases, will result from the information and intelligence derived from the original tasking. 20. Centralized Control. Intelligence must be centrally controlled to avoid unwarranted duplication of work, provide mutual support and ensure the efficient, economic use of all resources. 21. Intelligence Requests. The primary intent of utilizing the chain-of-command and centralizing unit ICP and taskings in the CCIRM are to evaluate the validity, relevance and prioritize intelligence requests. By following this procedure all levels of the chain-of-command are able to verify the availability and existence of information/intelligence, which may satisfy the Request for Intelligence (RFI). This will reduce redundancy of processing;

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permitting tasked agencies/directorates to concentrate their efforts on newly identified and prioritized gaps in national collection plans. 22. CCIRM will also verify existence of information/intelligence before assigning a task. If information or intelligence is not available, the CCIRM will task the request to an appropriate agency, coordinating and monitoring due dates for the request. Further, the use of chain-of-command will allow superior HQ's to be aware of subordinate formations/units' requests. Although formal intelligence taskings will follow this procedure, it is stressed that informal liaison between requesting agencies and subject matter experts (SMEs) may still occur, as is the norm in intelligence practices. 23. IRs will be forwarded by customers to their appropriate CCIRM staff with an information copy distributed to the wider CCIRM network. IRs must state:

a. What information is needed? b. By whom? c. By what time/date? d. In what format? e. By what means (website, message, brief etc)?

24. Upon receipt at a CCIRM desk all IRs will be logged on a Collection Worksheet or in an online RFI log (ICECAP) used for this purpose. The RFI is the format in which an IR is passed to CCIRM authorities at higher, lower or adjacent levels. 25. Once an IR is recorded CCIRM staffs will validate, clarify and refine it. They will also conduct a priority assessment with the staff to determine its importance relative to other operations and plans, and thus its urgency of handling; this will be based on the commander’s PIRs. If an IR has to be rejected for any reason, the customer will be informed by the Intelligence Staff CCIRM Manager. Once this initial validation process has been carried out, the CCIRM Intelligence Staff will:

a. In the first instance, arrange for a search of existing databases and publications to which they have access. This will ensure that the answer is not already extant in existing records. The CCIRM staff will then determine if they can meet the requirement by tasking their own assets, or, if not, the request will be passed through the chain of command for validation in the format of a RFI until CCIRM staffs at a higher level can satisfy it.

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b. If their own assets can meet the IR as a new collection effort, the

CCIRM staffs will identify and task the source or agency that will best provide the answer.

26. Collection Co-Ordination. This is the development and control of the ICP, which sets out how the information and intelligence needed to meet the IRs is to be collected. The IRs are converted into taskings, which are the specific questions that are put to organic sources and agencies or, where no suitable organic collection system is available, into RFIs. The ICP is constantly revised and updated and Intelligence staffs must also closely monitor the productivity of sources and agencies as they fulfil the ICP. Collection Coordination has two parts:

a. The exploitation of sources by collection agencies; and b. The delivery of the information obtained to the appropriate

processing unit for use in the production of intelligence. 27. Once a collection task has been completed the answers are sent directly to the customer. This may be either a higher, lower or adjacent formation or the organic processing unit. The only CCIRM involvement will be to consult both the producer and customer near to the LTIOV to confirm that the remit has been or will be met. If there is doubt as to whether the timescale can be achieved, the CCIRM Intelligence Staff (RFI Manager) will consult the customer to ascertain if a later delivery is acceptable or the task should be cancelled, releasing assets for other tasks. If a product does not arrive at the customer by the LTIOV, the appropriate CCIRM staff should be alerted. 28. CCIRM Staff Procedures. The CCIRM concept is underpinned by the principles of intelligence, in particular centralised control, timeliness, systematic exploitation, accessibility, responsiveness and continuous review. It encompasses both Collection Co-ordination and Intelligence Requirements Management and has as its principal objective the timely provision of the best possible intelligence. 29. CCIRM staffs at the customer headquarters carry out the following actions:

a. Create and manage the ICP; b. Convert the IRs into a series of taskings or RFIs (Taskings of

organic collection assets or RFIs to other formations); c. Provide answers to requirements where possible from within it’s

own resources; and

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d. Send RFIs through the CCIRM chain, in order to acquire

information that is unavailable through that headquarters’ own resources.

30. CCIRM staffs at the higher levels conduct the following actions:

a. Validate and prioritise the requests; b. Record the incoming RFIs on the Collection Worksheet and

annotate their ICP accordingly; c. Answer those they can from within their own resources; and d. Place collection-tasking requests to agencies and sources that fall

within their level of authority. These should report directly to the customer, and not through CCIRM staffs.

31. Summary. Central to the CCIRM methodology is the identification of a focus within existing intelligence staffs at their level of command. Each CCIRM focus acts as the interface between other CCIRM foci within the intelligence chain of command. A CCIRM Manager is responsible for the day-to-day co-ordination of work and represents CCIRM on behalf of the commander. The flexibility of CCIRM must not detract from the underlying principle that the responsibility for intelligence reporting and the information flow must parallel the chain of command. 32. CCIRM is a tool for the harmonisation of a range of interrelated management activities whose objective is the meeting of the commander’s PIR in the most efficient and effective manner. A central element of CCIRM is ensuring that the product answers the customer’s requirements. CCIRM must always be customer focused and responsible for quality control of intelligence products.

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CHAPTER 3: INTEGRATED COALITION ENVIRONMENT COMMON ACCESS PORTAL (ICECAP) AND RFI PROCEDURES 33. Background. A request for Intelligence (RFI) is intended to clearly identify and answer an intelligence requirement and to determine the manner and format in which to get disseminate intelligence to units and personnel. The new ICECAP RFI process was designed by J2/Director General Intelligence (J2 DG INT) with the intent of streamlining requests for intelligence and to facilitate their management by Intelligence Staff. 34. The new RFI management system, ICECAP, was implemented by J2 DG INT on the 30th of January 2004. While the methodology of RFI management has not changed, the new process does improve the RFI system and will eventually include a one-click solution for the retrieval of RFI responses. To access the new RFI management tool, users will require a username & password available through J2 DGINT CCIRM. 35. Conduct. Units and personnel will submit RFI's via ICECAP. In situations where this is not possible RFI's can still be sent by message or email on TITAN only. RFI's sent by message or email, will be logged into the ICECAP RFI Manager by J2 CCIRM on the behalf of the requesting unit. When submitting RFI's ensure sufficient lead-time is provided so that Intelligence Staff have adequate time to research, analyze, produce and disseminate the required finished intelligence product. 36. The role of higher Intelligence Staffs in the request process is to validate the request and to act as the focal point within their group for all RFIs. This process seeks to ensure that operational authorities are submitting consolidated requests to reduce duplication of work. 37. Since RFI's represent intelligence gaps of operational units it is imperative that users send their RFIs at the minimum-security classification of CONFIDENTIAL. RFIs should not be sent via the DIN or Internet. These RFIs will not be accepted and maybe considered a transmission security violation/incident in accordance with CIS/01/03.

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38. Essential Elements. Ensure that RFI's sent are clear and concise noting the exact details of your request. Justification for request should either be placed in the correct section on the RFI Form (i.e. operational planning in support of your task). The RFI shall include the following elements:

a. PRIORITY:

b. TARGET COORDINATES: (1) Country Code; (2) Location Type; (3) Location Category; (4) Location Identification; (5) Location Name; (6) Coordinates; and (7) Geographic Data.

c. INFORMATION REQUIRED: A free text explanation of what information is requested.

d. COLLECTION DATES:

(1) Frequency Of Reporting; (2) Start Collecting At; (3) End Collecting At; (4) Last Time Information Of Value; and (5) Last Report Date.

e. LOCATION ACCURACY REQUIRED:

f. JUSTIFICATION: Why the information is needed.

g. BACKGROUND: Any relevant background information to support the request.

h. COMMENT:

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i. MEDIA: The communication media desired for delivery of the

information.

j. PRODUCT TYPE AND CLASSIFICATION: The type of report desired, and the highest usable security classification.

k. GUIDELINES: This paragraph is not part of the RFI format. It is included to provide information particular to the construction of RFIs.

a. An RFI is used to request information related to the

Commander's stated Priority Intelligence Requirements.

b. All rules for military writing apply to RFIs. Font and size Arial 12 should be used. Caps lock shall not be used for text.

c. The file number for Intelligence Reports (2075) shall be

used, plus the applicable Intelligence Function Code. In this example, the generic IFC for Intelligence Reports (0905) is used. If appropriate, a country or region code can be included (IFC).

d. The title RFI shall be followed by a reference number and

the DTG that the request is made.

e. All paragraphs must be included. If there is nothing to report for a particular topic, 'NTR' shall be used.

39. RFI Submission / Management. While some RFIs are routine or continuous, others may be operationally imperative and are important to process quickly. During a normal working day RFI's will be processed by day Intelligence Staff CCIRM. It is during silent hours, weekends and holidays that Intelligence Staff will make other arrangements to action the RFI when it is received. The intent is that the Ops Staff that are 24/7 will contact Intelligence Staff by phone to report when an RFI has been received during silent hours. Either Senior IO or designated IO will assess the RFI and determine what is required. If both of these officers are out of the area, the Intelligence Staff CCIRM Manager should be contacted. The same process for silent hour contact is to be followed regardless of the RFI arrival route, ICECAP or MSG. Once sent, Intelligence Staff will automatically receive the RFI. The RFI template can be found in ANNEX C: RFI FORM.

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40. Summary. In summary, RFIs can be submitted in three ways, by:

a. ICECAP RFI Manager; b. TITAN email; and c. ADDN Message to next higher unit (see format above).

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CHAPTER 4: IFC GENERAL USAGE 42. Intelligence Functional Codes Development Logic and Hints for Use General. There has been a concerted effort made during the development of the codes to use some basic logic to make the codes easier to understand and to find a specific topic. That logic includes:

a. There are 22 major IFC topics. Every subtopic will be found under the most appropriate major topic (major IFCs end in "00");

b. Those topics most directly related to a given force will be found

under the major force designation (1000 = missile forces, 1100 = ground forces, 1200 = naval forces, 1300 = air forces, and 1400 = space forces);

c. All joint, combined, international forces; regional topics, political

topics, and range of hostilities (since almost all hostilities are conducted by joint forces) are found in the 1500s. Note that each separate service is covered in traditional or then the joint/integrated/national level topics are listed;

d. Topics that are not normally force/service specific are then listed.

These major IFC topics include NBC warfare, electronics, sciences, economics and industry, military geography, transformation, counterintelligence, counter-terrorism, counter-drugs, sociological factors, information warfare issues, and targeting issues. There will be some apparent duplication of topics between these worldwide topical listings and those topics listed in the forces;

e. Where possible, subcategories below the major headings are in the

same order. For example, most forces (missile, ground, naval, air, and space - with missile and naval having some exceptions) use the XX10 series for national issues, XX20 series for service issues, and XX30 series for theatre/deployed force topics, etc;

f. The most detailed and specific IFC topics end in " 1 through 9" and

where this level exists, it must be used for production assignments;

g. Information warfare, infrastructure warfare, modeling and simulation, indications and warning, targeting, etc., are not considered substantive intelligence topics, but either operational concepts or media based products that contain substantive intelligence or require substantive intelligence contributions. For example, computer developments to support information warfare will be found under the IFC code on computer technology and developments (1730s) rather than information warfare issues

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(2700). It is true for indications and warning. The most applicable topics are politics (1510s) and hostilities (1580s); and

h. Where the term "national" is used, it means the topic is being

addressed above the individual services and any theatre or deployed forces that report to the national government such as a defence department or ministry of defence. Where the term “service” is used, it means the topic has to do with the preparation of the single service force to be deployed or fight to include training, force modernization, etc.. Where the term "theatre" is used, it refers to the deployed force whose mission is the actual defence of the nation.

43. So, if you are looking for a topic, select the major IFC title topic that you believe is most likely to cover your issue. The 19 major IFC topics are:

MAJOR IFC TOPICS 1000 Ballistic Missile Forces 1100 Ground Forces 1200 Naval Forces 1300 Air Forces 1400 Space Forces 1500 National Issues 1600 Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Warfare 1700 Electronics 1800 Sciences and Technologies 1900 Resources and Economics 2000 Transportation 2100 Physical Environment 2200 Illicit Activities and Law Enforcement 2300 Intelligence and Security 2400 Terrorism 2500 Counter-drugs 2600 Sociological Factors and Biographies 2700 Information Warfare Intelligence Issues 2800 Target Intelligence Issues 3000 NATO Reports 3100 Canadian Forces Attaché Reports

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44. Once you have selected the major IFC topic (XXOOs), select the most appropriate executive-level topic (XXXOs). Once you determine the appropriate executive-level IFC code, go to the following complete IFC topic listing and select the most detailed sub code appropriate for the topic. An IFC definition of this sub code will be found in Chapter Five. 45. Major IFC Topic - 1800 Sciences and Technologies Executive-level Topics - 1810 Medical Sciences Detailed Sub-code -1816 Environmental Health IFC Definition -1816 Environmental Health. Environmental health factors posing threats to military capabilities and as forecasting elements in emerging disease patterns.

EXECUTIVE-LEVEL IFC TOPICS 1000 Ballistic Missile Forces Systems 1010 National Force Issues. 1020 Ballistic Missile Force Order of Battle, Capabilities, Operations and Tactics. 1030 Ballistic Missile Forces Combat Systems Technologies Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation Characteristics and Performance. 1040 Ballistic Missile Forces Combat Support Element Order of Battle, Capabilities, Operations and Tactics. 1050 Ballistic Missile Forces Combat Support Systems Technologies Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation Characteristics and Performance. 1060 Theatre Missile Forces Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) Systems and Logistics Capabilities. 1100 Ground Forces and Systems 1110 National Forces Issues. 1120 Ground Service Issues. 1130 Theatre Ground Force Order of Battle, Capabilities, Operations and Tactics. 1140 Ground Forces Combat Systems Characteristics and Performance. 1150 Theatre Ground Combat Support and Combat Service Support Force Order of Battle, Capabilities, Operations and Tactics. 1160 Ground Force Combat Support and Combat Service Support Systems Characteristics and Performance. 1170 Ground Force Sensors and Electronics.

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1200 Naval Forces and Systems 1210 National Force Issues. 1220 Naval Service Issues. 1230 Naval Operations. 1240 Naval Orders of Battle, Bases, and Related Facilities. 1250 Naval Platform Characteristics and Performance. 1260 Naval Sensors and Electronics Characteristics and Performance. 1270 Naval Weapons Characteristics and Performance. 1280 Naval Tactics. 1300 Air Forces and Systems 1310 National Force Issues. 1320 Air Force Service Issues. 1330 Theatre Air Force Order of Battle, Capabilities, Operations and Tactics. 1340 Air and Air Defence Forces Combat Systems Technologies Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation Characteristics and Performance. 1350 Theatre Combat Support Force Order of Battle, Capabilities, Operations and Tactics. 1360 Air Force Combat Support Systems Technologies Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation Characteristics and Performance. 1370 Theatre Air Force Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence and Logistics Capabilities. 1400 Space Forces and Systems 1410 National Force Issues. 1420 Space Service Issues. 1430 Space Forces Order of Battle, Capabilities and Operations. 1440 Space System Technologies, Characteristics, and Performance. 1450 Scientific Space Programs. 1500 National Issues 1510 National Security Policies, Programs, Objectives, and Decision-making. 1520 National Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) and Electronic Warfare. 1530 National Military Issues. 1540 Multi-service and Multinational Forces. 1550 Arms Control and Treaties. 1560 Proliferation of Technology and Weapons Transfer. 1570 Regional and Global Military Issues. 1580 Hostilities. 1590 Foreign Relations.

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1600 Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Warfare 1610 Nuclear Programs. 1620 Nuclear Warhead Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation. 1630 Nuclear Warheads Production and Dismantlement. 1640 Nuclear Warheads Employment. 1650 Chemical and Biological Warfare Programs and Facilities. 1660 Chemical and Biological Warfare Forces. 1670 Chemical and Biological Warfare Agents and Weapons Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation. 1680 Chemical and Biological Warfare Production, Storage, Transport, and Stockpiles. 1690 Chemical and Biological Demilitarization and Destruction Technology. 1700 Electronics 1710 Electronic Devices. 1720 Lasers (Non-weapon) and Electro-Optics. 1730 Computers and Related Systems Technology. 1740 Sensor Technologies. 1750 Electronic Combat/Electronic Warfare. 1800 Sciences and Technologies 1810 Medical Sciences. 1820 Mathematical and Physical Sciences. 1830 Technology Base and Technologies. 1840 Propulsion and Explosives Technology (Less Nuclear). 1850 Energy Conversion and Power Technology. 1860 Directed-Energy and Kinetic-Energy Weapons. 1870 Low Observable, Stealth, and Counter-stealth Technologies. 1880 Resource and Environmental Issues. 1890 Non-lethal and Incendiary Weapon Characteristics and Performance. 1900 Resources and Economics 1910 Economics. 1920 Industrial Production and Facilities. 1930 Basic Resources. 1940 Fuels and Lubricants (Non-nuclear). 1950 Electric Power. 1960 Construction Materials Production. 1970 Strategic Materials Production. 1980 Subsistence Production and Distribution.

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2000 Transportation 2010 Highways. 2020 Railways. 2030 Inland Waterways. 2040 Ports. 2050 Civil Fleets. 2060 Airfields. 2070 Transportation Logistic Forces. 2080 Transit Rights, Authorizations, and Facilities Arrangements Availability. 2100 Physical Environment 2110 Terrain. 2120 Oceanography. 2130 Coasts and Landing Beaches. 2140 Meteorology, Climatology, Ionospheric and Space Environment. 2150 Urban Areas. 2160 Evasion and Recovery. 2180 Climatic and Environmental Disasters. 2190 Minable Water Areas. 2200 Illicit Activities and Law Enforcement 2210 International Organized Crime. 2220 Industrial Espionage. 2230 Law Enforcement 2300 Intelligence and Security 2310 Intelligence and Security Programs and Capabilities. 2320 Security Services. 2330 Security Forces. 2340 Counterintelligence Services. 2350 Positive Intelligence Operations. 2360 Camouflage, Concealment, and Deception. 2370 Civil Defence. 2380 Threats to Developing Canadian and Allied Systems and Technologies. 2390 Security Environment. 2400 Terrorism 2410 International Terrorism. 2420 Counter-terrorism. 2430 International Piracy. 2440 Terrorism Related Facilities.

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2500 Counter Drugs 2510 Drug-Related Activities. 2520 Drug Organization Command, Control, Communications, and Computers (C4) Concepts and Doctrine. 2530 Drug Organization Operating Tactics. 2540 Drug Transhipment Methods and Routes. 2550 Military Policy Response to Drug Activity. 2560 Drug Network Security and Intelligence. 2570 Essential Chemicals. 2580 Drug Production/Processing Facilities. 2600 Sociological Factors and Biographies. 2610 Biographies. 2630 Sociological Factors. 2640 Psychological Operations. 2700 Information Operations/Information Warfare Intelligence Issues. 2710 National-level Information Operations/Information Warfare Intelligence Issues. 2720 Ground Forces Information Operations/Information Warfare Intelligence Issues. 2730 Naval Forces Information Operations/Information Warfare Intelligence Issues. 2740 Aerospace Forces Information Operations/Information Warfare Intelligence Issues. 2750 Theatre/Joint Command Information Operations/Information Warfare Intelligence Issues. 2800 Target Intelligence Issues 2810 Physical Vulnerability. 2820 Battle Damage Assessments. 2830 Target Signatures. 2890 Target Materials. 3000 NATO Reports 3001 - NATO Administrative Reports 3002 - Summary Record Of Meeting Of The Military Committee 3003 - Report Of The NATO Intelligence Steering Committee 3005 - Military Committee Reports 3006 - MC 67 - NATO Precautionary System 3007 - MC 101 - NATO Signals Intelligence Policy - Working Papers 3008 - MC 114 - Production Of Military Committee Intelligence Estimates - Working Papers 3009 - MC 114 - Production Of Military Committee Intelligence Estimates- Final 3010 - MC 128 - Guidance For Intelligence Support For NATO - FINAL 3011 - MC 128 - Guidance For Intelligence Support For NATO - Working Papers

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3012 - MC 161 Reports 3013 - MC 161 Intelligence Working Group Conference - Working Papers (MC 161/A/B/C) 3014 - MC 161/A - NATO Strategic Intelligence Estimate (NSIE) 3015 - MC 161/B - Armed Forces Intelligence Assessment (AFIA) 3016 - MC 161/C - NATO Intelligence Proliferation Assessment (NIPA) 3017 - MC 165 - Related Scientific And Technological Trends 3018 - MC 166 - NATO Indications And Warning System - Final 3019 - MC 166 - NATO Indications And Warning System - Working Papers 3020 - MIP Reports - General 3021 - MIP - Land CD 3022 - MIP - Air CD 3023 - MIP - Navy CD 3024 - MIP 210 - Ground Forces Structure And Capabilities 3025 - MIP 210 Series Working Papers 3026 - MIP 211 - Ground Forces Structure And Capabilities 3027 - MIT 221 - Air And Air Defence Forces Order Of Battle 3028 - NUP 230A - Naval Organization, Manpower, Training And Naval Tactics 3029 - MIP 230B - Mine Warfare 3030 - MIP 230C - Naval Aviation 3031 - MIP 230 A/B/C - Working Papers 3032 - MIP 231 - Naval And Naval Air Orders Of Battle 3033 - MIP 232 - Naval Ports And Facilities 3034 - MIP 240 - Logistic Assessment 3035 - MIP 240 - Logistic Assessment - Working Papers 3036 - MIP 241 - Transportation Study - Rail 3037 - MIP 242 - Inland Waterways Study 3038 - MIP 244 - Ammunition Depot Study Vol. I - Ground Forces 3039 - MIP 244 - Ammunition Depot Study Vol. 11 And III- Air & Naval Air Ammunition Depots And Naval Forces Depots 3040 - MIP 250 - Major Ground Forces Weapons And Combat Equipment 3041 - MIP 250 Series Working Papers 3042 - MIP 253A - Missile Systems (Ship borne) 3043 - MIP 253B - Missile Systems (Airborne) 3044 - MIP 253C - Missile Systems (Land-Based) 3045 - MIP 254A - Electronic Equipment (Ship borne) 3046 - MIP 254B - Electronic Equipment (Airborne) 3047 - MIP 254C - Electronic Equipment (Land based) 3048 - MIP 255 - Space Systems 3049 - MIP 256 - Naval Armaments (Less Missiles) 3050 - MIP 260A - Intelligence Warning Problems 3060 - NATO Standardization 3061 - MAS Air Standardization 3062 - MAS Army Standardization 3063 - Intelligence Doctrine - AINTP-1 3064 - Security Doctrine - AINTP-2

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3065 - Military Intelligence Data Management Exchange Concept - AINTP - 3 3066 - AIRCENT Reporting Directive 80-50 (AIREP) 3067 - NATO Armaments Committee (AC) Reports 3068 - NATO Security Committee - AC/35 3069 - AIR GROUP I On Manned And Unmanned Aircraft And Aircraft/Weapons Interoperability - AC/224 (AG/1) 3070 - AIR GROUP 11 On Air Weapons - AC/224 (AG/II) 3071 - AIR GROUP III On Air Aspects Of Electronic Warfare - AC/224 (AG/III) 3072 - AIR GROUP IV On Tactical Air Reconnaissance And Intelligence - AC/224 (AG.IV) 3073 - NATO Army Armaments Group Working Papers (AC/225) 3074 - Long Term Scientific Studies - AC/243 (PANEL 1) 3075 - NATO Glossary Of Terms And Definitions For Military Use (FR/ENG) - AAP-6 (Q) 3076 - Intelligence Briefing (IM) 3077 - Current Intelligence, Group Summary 3080 - SHAPE Reports 3081 - SHAPE Weekly INTSUM (IAI) 3085 - SACLANT Reports 3086 - SACLANT Weekly INTSUM (IM) 3090 - NATO IM/IT Reports 3091 - BICES 3092 - Data Base Working Group (DBIWG) 3093 - LOCE 3100 Canadian Defence Attaché Officer (CDAO) Reports 3101 - CDAO Argentina Intelligence Reports 3102 - CDAO Australia Intelligence Reports 3103 - CDAO Brazil Intelligence Reports 3104 - CDAO China Intelligence Reports 3105 - CDAO Colombia Intelligence Reports 3106 - CDAO Czech Republic Intelligence Reports 3107 - CDAO Egypt Intelligence Reports 3108 - CDAO France Intelligence Reports 3109 - CDAO Germany Intelligence Reports 3110 - CDAO Hungary Intelligence Reports 3111 - CDAO India Intelligence Reports 3112 - CDAO Indonesia Intelligence Reports 3113 - CDAO Israel Intelligence Reports 3114 - CDAO Italy Intelligence Reports 3115 - CDAO Japan Intelligence Reports 3116 - CDAO Kenya Intelligence Reports 3117 - CDAO Korea Intelligence Reports 3118 - CDAO Mexico Intelligence Reports 3119 - CDAO Netherlands Intelligence Reports 3120 - CDAO Norway Intelligence Reports 3121 - CDAO Pakistan Intelligence Reports

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3122 - CDAO Poland Intelligence Reports 3123 - CDAO Russia Intelligence Reports 3124 - CDAO Saudi Arabia Intelligence Reports 3125 - CDAO South Africa Intelligence Reports 3126 - CDAO Syria Intelligence Reports 3127 - CDAO Turkey Intelligence Reports 3128 - CDAO Ukraine Intelligence Reports 9000 - Indications and Warning

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CHAPTER 2: INTELLIGENCE FUNCTIONAL CODE DEFINITIONS 0000 - Non-Intelligence Subjects 0900 - Intelligence General 1000 - Ballistic Missile Forces 1100 - Ground Forces 1200 - Naval Forces 1300 - Air Forces 1400 - Space Forces 1500 - National Issues 1600 - Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Warfare 1700 - Electronics 1800 - Sciences and Technologies 1900 - Resources and Economics 2000 - Transportation 2100 - Physical Environment 2200 - Elicit Activities and Law Enforcement 2300 - Intelligence and Security 2400 - Terrorism 2500 - Counter-Drugs 2600 - Sociological Factors, and Biographies 2700 - Information Warfare Intelligence Issues 2800 - Target Intelligence Issues 3000 - NATO Reports 3100 - Canadian Defence Attaché Officer (CDAO) Reports 9000 - Indications and Warnings

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0000 NON-INTELLIGENCE SUBJECTS Intelligence related policies, procedures, priorities, guidance, and other management topics to include system and methodology handbooks that support the intelligence cycle that results in finished intelligence. 0900 Intelligence General A general subject category for the study, production, storage and dissemination of all source intelligence, which includes all administration File Index, Access to Information, Policy, MOUs, and reports. 0901 - On Line Test Retrieval Program (OLTRP) 0902 - J2/DG Int File Index This J2/DG Int produced periodic report outlines the filing system used with J2/DG Int. 0903 - J2/DG Int Intelligence Index Basic Structure This J2/DG Int produced document provides a listing of the J2/DG Int Intelligence Index basic structure upon which the Intelligence Index is derived and a brief explanation of the general topics is provided to clarify what is meant by the topic heading. 0904 - Intelligence Analysts Handbook Guide to Intelligence Analysis 0905 - Intelligence Reports A general subject category for intelligence reporting on individual or multiple subjects. 0905.0001 - Overnight Intelligence Highlights Daily products produced by J2 Current and sent out by message and hard format. 0905.0002 - J2/DG Int Daily Intelligence Bulletin (DIB) This is a daily bulletin produced by NDIC, which goes out to the world, by message. 0905.0003 - Current Intelligence Daily CURRENT INTELLIGENCE DAILY is a SECRET report generated by the NDIC and as on a wide variety of subjects. 0905.0004 - DGWS Weekly Warning Forecast Summary Weekly warning forecast message sent out by NDIC.

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0905.0005 - Force Protection Strategy, doctrine, plans, policies, and other directives and guidance provided from the national military structure for force protection to include resources and issues that impact on force protection measures. To include the fusion of protective security and CI measures to enhance the protection and survivability of forces. 0905.0006 - Threat Assessment All information that FP analysis provides planners and policy makers with threat knowledge about any adversary or area of the world in which the CF may operate. Information and intelligence acquired from security intelligence, counter- HUMINT activities, and military police service or criminal intelligence sources and agencies. 0905.0007 - Situation Reports (SITREPs) These reports, which are produced periodically for particular operations are designed to provide detailed updates to previous reporting. 0905.0008 - Intelligence Summaries (INTSUMs) The INTSUM is a concise periodic summary of intelligence on the current enemy situation within a Commander's area of intelligence responsibility, designed to update the current intelligence picture and highlight important developments during the reporting period. It should therefore include any information, which may be relevant to the intelligence requirements of any Commander to whose unit it is disseminated, and should also contain an appraisal based on evaluation and interpretation of that information. At the higher echelons, emphasis should be placed on appraisal and not on detail. 0905.0009 - Intelligence Reports (INTREPs) An INTREP is a report, which is sent spontaneously, without regard to a specific time schedule. Whenever the information it contains is considered likely to require the urgent attention of the receiving Commander, or his staff. The INTREP should include any relevant deductions that can be made in the time available. 0905.0010 - Intelligence Annex's Documents produced as part of a unit Operations Order (OPORD), which outline unit Intelligence directives. Intelligence Annex's set standard operating procedures, priorities, TORs, and the way intelligence units will conduct their operations and reporting. 0905.0011 - Post Port Visit Reports Detailed reports from HMC Ships in regards to all the pertinent data about foreign port collected by MARCOM personal and assets while conducting port visits.

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0905.0012 – Boarding Party Reports (BPREP) A BPREP is a report, which is sent after an HMC Ship, without regard to a specific time schedule, has done a boarding. The BPREP should include any relevant deductions that can be made in the time available. 0905.0013 - High Seas Drift Net Correspondence, reports, briefs, and products related to intelligence collection planning and support for High Seas Drift Net enforcement operations. 0905.0014 – Asymmetric Warfare In military affairs and national security, asymmetry is acting, organizing and thinking differently from opponents to maximize relative strengths, exploit opponents' weaknesses or gain greater freedom of action. It can be political-strategic, military-strategic, operational or a combination, and entail different methods, technologies, values, organizations or time perspectives. It can be short-term, long-term, deliberate or by default. It also can be discrete or pursued in conjunction with symmetric approaches and have both psychological and physical dimensions. 0905.0015 – Intelligence Estimate Assessments Worldwide estimate from J2 DG INT Directorate of Strategic Intelligence in regards to future military and political trends and there affects on Canada and alliances. 0905.0016 – Contact Report A Contact Report is a report, which is sent immediately, without regard to a specific time schedule. It contains basic information on the type of contact, its position, direction of travel, speed and the time of contact; it also contains any necessary supporting information. 0906 – Intelligence Briefings General A general subject category for the production, storage and dissemination of all source intelligence briefs. 0910 - Intelligence Assessment Committee (1AC) Reports Intelligence reports originating from The Intelligence Assessment Committee. 0911 - Intelligence Advisory Committee Minutes Of Meeting This weekly product provides a record of discussions at the interdepartmental coordinating committee. 0920 - Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) Reports Intelligence reports originating from the Canadian Security Intelligence Service.

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0930 - Department Of Foreign Affairs And International Trade (DFAIT) Reports Intelligence reports originating from The Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade. 0931 - DFAITASO Morning Brief This daily DFAIT report provides reporting on current intelligence items on a worldwide basis. 0932 - DFAIT Post Reporting DFAIT reports from external posts on various topics related to the subject country. 0933 - United Nations United Nations Reports. 0934 - Canadian Delegation To NATO, Brussels DFAIT reports originating from Canadian Delegation to NATO. 0935 - ISIW Interview Reports DFAIT ISIW interview reports on various topics related to the subject country. 0940 - Communications Security Establishment (CSE) Reports Intelligence reporting from Communications Security Establishment. 0941 - SIGINT on-line Routing Indicator (SOI-191) This publication contains a list of routing indicators authorized for used within the SIGINT network and DSSCS. 0942 - Catalogue Of Canadian SIGINT End Product (CSE/2118) This CSE produced document provides a listing of all CSE produced SIGINT products and the distribution assigned to these products. 0943 - SIGINT End-Product Serial Numbers And Source And Subject Coding (The TAG) System (CSED/P-3003) This CSE produced document provides a listing of subject Tags in SIGINT products. 0950 - Canadian MOUs Memorandums of understanding between Canadian governmental agencies and with international government agencies. This includes national agency cooperation as well. 0960 - Access To Information Access to, Information requests and responses.

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0970 - Information Management/Technology Policy Policy for the use of information technology and management of that technology in support of intelligence operations at all levels.

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1000 BALLISTIC MISSILE FORCES AND SYSTEMS 1000 Ballistic Missile Forces and Systems Capabilities, vulnerabilities, and system characteristics and performances of ballistic missile forces. Includes directives and guidance from the national defence structure to the training and development organizations, the deployed war-fighting units and all support organizations, activities and facilities to include C4I at all levels. 1010 National Force Issues. Strategy, doctrine, plans, policies, and other directives and guidance provided from the national military structure to the force to include resources that impact on force modernization and any response from the force on the national level guidance to include the force leadership's ability to influence the national military structure. 1011 National Strategy, Doctrine, Plans, And Threat. National strategies, doctrine, plans, or policies to enhance ballistic missile force capabilities or employ ballistic missile forces, either internally or externally in pursuit of national goals. 1012 National Force Estimates and Trends. Organizational and modernization plans and policies for long-term enhancement of ballistic missile forces except where the country classifies such systems tactical or operational (e.g. Russia or China). This includes projected trends, force employment concepts, major combat and combat support systems, resulting changes in capabilities to include critical support structures. 1013 National Command and Control. The national decision-making system for planning, directing, and controlling ballistic missile forces in peacetime and crisis. For national decision architecture and technologies see 10 18. 1014 National Leadership and Participation in National Affairs. The role of the ballistic missile forces and leadership in national/ministry of defence policies and plans. Includes relations with civil organizations, subordination to legal civilian authority, national security decision-making process, and impact on domestic and international policies. 1016 National Training and Exercises. It includes nationally directed exercises and training of ballistic missile force units as part of a joint or combined force.

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1018 National C4I Architecture and Systems. The national-level (i.e. Defence Ministry and General Staff) C4I architecture (facilities, systems, and procedures). Service headquarters level and below are contained in 1060 series. Theatre C4I order of battle and capabilities are contained in 1043. 1019 National Nuclear Missile Security Policies, Procedures and Threats. Nationally directed and developed policies and procedures designed to safeguard nuclear missiles, warheads, delivery platforms, and control mechanisms. Includes potential threats from groups seeking to accomplish an unauthorized launch or seizure of a nuclear missile. 1020 Ballistic Missile Force Order of Battle, Capabilities, Operations and Tactics. Quantitative and qualitative assessment of the capabilities of the deployed force. Includes organization, strength, order of battle, assigned equipment, current operations, related facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function), active and reserve component force mix, force planning, doctrine of deployment and employment, C4I, level of training, state of readiness to include logistics, materiel, and equipment, mobility, and dispersal areas. 1021 Intercontinental Ballistic Missile Forces Capabilities. Capabilities of the deployed war-fighting organizations of the force to include the tactics used, the organizational structure, and deployment to include garrison and wartime. 1022 Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missile Forces Capabilities. Capabilities of the deployed war-fighting organizations of the force to include the tactics used, the organizational structure, and deployment to include garrison and wartime. 1023 Medium- and Intermediate-Range Ballistic Missile Forces Capabilities. Capabilities of the deployed war-fighting organizations of the force to include the tactics used, the organizational structure, and deployment to include garrison and wartime. 1024 short-range Ballistic Missile Forces Capabilities. Capabilities of the deployed war-fighting organizations of the force to include the tactics used, the organizational structure, and deployment to include garrison and wartime.

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1030 Ballistic Missile Forces Combat Systems Technologies Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, multi-spectral signatures, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of ballistic missile combat systems (e.g., ICBM, SLBM, IRBM, MRBM, SRBM), their materials, C4I, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. Technical aspects of combat systems, hardware, and facilities designed for, and normally considered a part of, operational ballistic missile forces. 1031 Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles System Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of ICBM combat systems, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. Technical aspects of combat systems, hardware, and facilities designed for, and normally considered a part of, operational ballistic missile forces. 1032 Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missiles System Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of SLBM combat systems, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. Technical aspects of combat systems, hardware, and facilities designed for, and normally considered a part of, operational ballistic missile forces. 1033 Medium- and Intermediate-Range Ballistic Missiles System Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of NMM and IRBM combat systems, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. Technical aspects of combat systems, hardware, and facilities designed for, and normally considered a part of, operational ballistic missile forces. 1034 short-range Ballistic Missiles System Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of SRBM combat systems, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. Technical aspects of combat systems, hardware, and facilities designed for, and normally considered a part of, operational ballistic missile forces.

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1040 Ballistic Missile Forces Combat Support Element Order of Battle, Capabilities, Operations and Tactics. Capabilities and vulnerabilities of ballistic missile forces combat support (transport, utility, C4I, engineer, weather, maintenance) units and formations. Includes assessments of combat support tactics, force planning, force deployment, order of battle, and facilities. 1041 Missile Force Transport and Utility Capabilities. Capabilities and vulnerabilities of transport/utility units assigned to ballistic missile forces. 1042 Missile Force Engineer Capabilities. Capabilities and vulnerabilities of engineer units and formations assigned to ballistic missile forces. 1043 Missile Force Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) Capabilities. Capabilities and vulnerabilities of units and formations conducting C41 (e.g., signal intelligence) assigned to ballistic missile forces. 1044 Missile Force Logistics Capabilities. Logistic factors Capabilities and vulnerabilities of units assigned to sustain ballistic missile units and formations. Includes logistic doctrine, force, and material planning, maintenance and repair, and other factors associated with force sustainability. 1050 Ballistic Missile Forces Combat Support Systems Technologies Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, multi-spectral signatures, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of ballistic missile combat support systems (e.g., transport/utility, engineer, weather, maintenance), their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. Includes all combat support systems, hardware, and facilities designed for, and normally considered a part of, operational ballistic missile forces. 1051 Missile Forces Transport and Utility Systems Characteristics and Performance (ICBM, IRBM, MRBA). Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of ICBM, IRBM, and MRBM combat support systems, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. Includes all facilities designed for, and normally considered a part of, operational ICBM, IRBM, or NERBM combat support forces.

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1052 Missile Forces Transport and Utility Systems Characteristics and Performance (SLBM). Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of SLBM combat support systems, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. Includes all facilities designed for, and normally considered a part of, operational SLBM combat support forces. 1053 Missile Forces Transport and Utility Systems Characteristics and Performance (SRBM). Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of SRBM combat support systems, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. Includes all facilities designed for, and normally considered a part of, operational SRBM combat support forces. 1055 Missile Forces Engineer Systems Characteristics and Performance (ICBM, IRBM, MRBM). Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of ICBM, IRBM, and MRBM engineer systems, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. Includes all facilities designed for, and normally considered a part of, operational ICBM, IRBM, or MRBM engineer forces. 1056 Missile Forces Engineer Systems Characteristics and Performance (SLBM). Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of SLBM engineer systems, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. Includes all facilities designed for, and normally considered a part of, operational SLBM engineer forces. 1057 Missile Forces Engineer Systems Characteristics and Performance (SRBM). Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of SRBM engineer systems, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. Includes all facilities designed for, and normally considered a part of, operational SRBM engineer forces. 1060 Theatre Missile Forces Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) Systems and Logistics Capabilities. Deployed force C4I systems capabilities, doctrine for use, and the C4I facilities. The logistic support organizations, facilities, doctrine followed, and capabilities to support the force.

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1061 Theatre Missile Forces Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) Systems Capabilities (ICBM, IRBM, NMM). Deployed ICBM, IRBM, and MRBM force C4I systems capabilities, doctrine for use, and the C4I facilities. 1062 Theatre Missile Forces Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) Systems Capabilities (SLBM). Deployed SLBM force C4I systems capabilities, doctrine for use, and the C4I facilities. 1063 Theatre Missile Forces Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) Systems Capabilities (SRBM). Deployed SRBM force C4I systems capabilities, doctrine for use, and the C4I facilities. 1065 Theatre Missile Forces Logistics Capabilities (ICBM, IRBM, MRBM). Deployed ICBM, IRBM and MRBM force logistic support organizations, related facilities, doctrine followed, and capabilities. 1066 Theatre Missile Forces Logistics Capabilities (SLBM). Deployed ICBM, IRBM and MRBM force logistic support organizations, related facilities, doctrine followed, and capabilities. 1067 Theatre Missile Forces Logistics Capabilities (SRJBM). Deployed SRBM force logistic support organizations, related facilities, doctrine followed, and capabilities.

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1100 GROUND FORCES AND SYSTEMS 1100 Ground Forces and Systems Capabilities, vulnerabilities, and system characteristics and performances of ground forces. Includes directives and guidance from the national defence structure to the training and development organizations, the deployed war-fighting units and all support organizations, activities and facilities to include C4I at all levels. 1110 National Forces Issues. Strategy, doctrine, plans, policies, and other directives and guidance provided from the national military structure to the force to include resources that impact on force modernization and any response from the force on the national level guidance to include the force leadership's ability to influence the national military structure. 1111 National Strategy, Doctrine, and Plans. National-level strategy, doctrine, or plans to enhance ground force capabilities or deploy ground forces either internally or externally in pursuit of national goals. 1112 National Force Estimates and Trends. Organizational and modernization plans and policies for long-term enhancement of ground forces. This includes projected trends, force employment concepts, major combat and combat support systems, resulting changes in capabilities to include critical support structures. 1113 National Command and Control. The national decision-making system for planning, directing, and controlling ground forces in peacetime and crisis. For national decision architecture and technologies see 1118. 1114 National Leadership and Participation in National Affairs. The role of the ground forces and leadership in national/ministry of defence policies and plans. Includes relations with civil organizations, subordination to legal civilian authority, national security decision-making process, and impact on domestic and international policies. 1116 National Training and Exercises. Includes nationally directed ground force exercises and training. It also may include multi-corps, echelon above corps, joint, or combined arms exercises.

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1118 National C4I Architecture and Systems. The national-level (i.e. Defence Ministry and General Staff) C4I architecture (facilities, systems, and procedures). Service headquarters level and below are contained in 1128. Theatre C4I order of battle and capabilities are contained in 1138. 1120 Ground Service Issues. Force strategy, doctrine, plans, policy, development, and resource planning to include training and system based acquisition planning to prepare service members and equipment for assignment to the deployed force. 1121 Ground Service Doctrine and Plans. Strategies, plans, or policies to enhance ground force capabilities or deploy ground forces internally or externally in pursuit of national goals. 1122 Ground Service Estimates, Trends, and Force Modernization. Strategies, plans, and policies for the long-term mission, capabilities enhancement, and deployment of ground forces. Includes projections of doctrine, force structure, TO&E, operational concepts, force utilization, composition, equipment, systems, capabilities, and potential areas of future conflict. 1123 Ground Service Organization. The decision-making system for planning, directing, and controlling ground forces. 1124 Ground Service Leadership. The capabilities and backgrounds of ground forces commanders. 1125 Ground Service Personnel Policies, Readiness, and Resources. Policies, strategies, and procedures used by the ground service to prepare and maintain the force for missions assigned to the nations' military forces. 1126 Ground Service Training and Exercises. The conduct and results of ground force exercises and training undertaken to train and maintain the capabilities of the force. 1127 Ground Service Tactics Development. The development of ground force tactics to include staff developments and proposals, experimental systems and exercises. Includes goals and effectiveness of the experiment or exercise, and any assessed change to the threat or capabilities of the ground force if the new tactics are adopted.

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1128 Ground Service Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I). Organization, doctrine, procedures, training facilities, and mobile units used by ground forces to command, control, and communicate with other units and organizations. 1130 Theatre Ground Force Order of Battle, Capabilities, Operations and Tactics. Quantitative and qualitative assessment of the ground component of Theatre or deployed forces capabilities. Includes organization, strength, order of battle, assigned equipment, current operations, related facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function), active and reserve component force mix, force planning, doctrine of deployment and employment, C4I, level of training, state of readiness to include logistics, materiel, and equipment, mobility, and dispersal areas. 1131 Armour Unit Capabilities. Organization, strength, order of battle, assigned equipment, related facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function), active and reserve component force mix, force planning, doctrine of deployment and employment, C4I, level of training, state of readiness to include logistics, materiel, and equipment, mobility, and dispersal areas. 1132 Infantry Unit Capabilities. Organization, strength, order of battle, assigned equipment, related facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function), active and reserve component force mix, force planning, doctrine of deployment and employment, C4I, level of training, state of readiness to include logistics, materiel, and equipment, mobility, and dispersal areas. 1133 Artillery and Rocket Unit Capabilities. Organization, strength, order of battle, assigned equipment, related facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function), active and reserve component force mix, force planning, doctrine of deployment and employment, C4I, level of training, state of readiness to include logistics, materiel, and equipment, mobility, and dispersal areas. 1134 Air Defence Unit Capabilities. Organization, strength, order of battle, assigned equipment, related facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function), active and reserve component force mix, force planning, doctrine of deployment and employment, C4I, level of training, state of readiness to include logistics, materiel, and equipment, mobility, and dispersal areas. Includes integrated air defence systems, mobile tactical and man-packed SAM's.

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1135 Anti-Armour Unit Capabilities. Organization, strength, order of battle, assigned equipment, related facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function), active and reserve component force mix, force planning, doctrine of deployment and employment, C4I, level of training, state of readiness to include logistics, materiel, and equipment, mobility, and dispersal areas. 1136 Airborne, Air Assault, and Army Aviation Unit Capabilities. Organization, strength, order of battle, assigned equipment, related facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function), active and reserve component force mix, force planning, doctrine of deployment and employment, C4I, level of training, state of readiness to include logistics, materiel, and equipment, mobility, and dispersal areas. 1137 Special Operations Unit Capabilities. Organization, strength, order of battle, assigned equipment, related facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function), active and reserve component force mix, force planning, doctrine of deployment and employment, C4I, level of training, state of readiness to include logistics, materiel, and equipment, mobility, and dispersal areas. Does not include counter-terrorist forces. 1138 Theatre Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) Capabilities. Organization, strength, order of battle, assigned equipment, procedures, mobile units, related facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function), active and reserve component force mix, force planning, doctrine of deployment and employment, level of training, state of readiness to include logistics, materiel, and equipment, mobility, and dispersal areas. 1139 Paramilitary Force Capabilities. Organization, strength, order of battle, assigned equipment, procedures, mobile units, related facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function), active and reserve component force mix, force planning, doctrine of deployment and employment, level of training, state of readiness to include logistics, materiel, and equipment, mobility, and dispersal areas for paramilitary forces assigned to target country ground forces. 1140 Ground Forces Combat Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, multi-spectral signatures, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of ground combat systems (e.g., combat vehicles, helicopters, artillery, AAA, infantry weapons), their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. All conventional combat systems, hardware, and facilities designed for, and normally considered a part of, operational ground forces including all rotary wing aircraft and AAA gun systems.

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1141 Armour and Anti-Armour Systems Characteristics and Performance (Less Antitank Guided Missiles [ATGM's]). Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of armoured combat vehicles (e.g., tanks and armoured personnel carriers/infantry fighting vehicles), and vehicular mounted, towed, or man-portable anti-armour weapons, except antitank guided missile systems. 1142 Infantry Weapons Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of infantry force weapons (e.g., small arms, grenades, mortars, recoilless rifles, and crew-serviced/man-packed antitank weapons). 1143 Artillery and Rocket Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of artillery and rockets systems (e.g., tube artillery, and rocket launchers). Includes artillery and rocket delivered, ordnance to include conventional, improved conventional, dual-purpose improved conventional, guided, terminally guided, hit-to-kill, sensor-fused, shoot-to- kill, smart, brilliant, and anti-armour. 1144 Air Defence Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of tactical air defence weapons to include integrated AAA/SAM systems. Includes those antiaircraft artillery and munitions designed to be employed with ground forces in the defeat of aerial targets, their design, associated technology, and manufacture. See 1346 for SAM and related system characteristics and performance. 1145 Antitank Guided Missiles System Characteristics and Performance (ATGM's). Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of ATGM systems. Includes vehicular-mounted, towed, heli-borne, and man-portable weapons. 1146 Airborne, Air Assault, Army Aviation and Helicopter Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of airborne, attack, helicopter, parachutist, assault forces employing specialized weapons that are not standard infantry but are specifically designed for airborne/assault operations. Includes technical and performance characteristics of RDT&E on and employment doctrine for test, measurement, and diagnostic equipment (TMDE), fuelling, arming, all radar equipment types (e.g., early warning, surveillance, detection, tracking and acquisition, navigation, and missile and gun fire control) that are mounted on helicopters, and sustaining material for ground aviation systems. Includes technical and performance characteristics of and RDT&E programs and status of both armed and support

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helicopters, light fixed-wing, and ultralights that are either engaged in or directly supporting military operations. Includes the same factors for unmanned aerial vehicles specifically supporting ground force operations. 1147 Ground Service Special Operations Weapon Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of specialized weapons that are not standard infantry but are designed specifically for special operations. Includes the RDT&E programs, associated technologies, and designs with the resulting performance and capabilities for specialized equipment for airborne and airdrop operations. 1148 Ground Service Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of command, control, communications, computers, and intelligence systems including related technologies, production techniques, and RDT&E programs for all levels. 1149 Soldier Systems Characteristics and Performance. The RDT&E programs as well as the design and resulting capabilities and performance of systems for training, sustaining, and other factors affecting soldier performance. Includes assessments of capabilities and vulnerabilities and of individual combatants. 1150 Theatre Ground Combat Support and Combat Service Support Force Order of Battle, Capabilities, Operations and Tactics. Quantitative and qualitative assessment of the combat support and combat service support component of Theatre or deployed forces capabilities. Includes the organization, strength, order of battle, assigned equipment, current operations, related facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function), active and reserve component force mix, force planning, doctrine of deployment and employment, level of training, state of readiness of ground component of Theatre or deployed force combat support and combat service support units and formations. 1151 Theatre Ground Force Engineer Capabilities. Organization strength, order of battle, assigned equipment, related facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function), active and reserve component force mix, force planning, doctrine of deployment and employment, level of training, state of readiness of engineer units and formations.

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1152 Theatre Explosive Ordinance Disposal Capabilities. Quantitative and qualitative assessment of explosive ordinance disposal unit capabilities. Includes development and fielding of EOD tools and equipment (including remote robotics vehicles), render safe procedures (RSPs) of all conventional explosive ordnance, and technical and physical characteristics of all conventional ordnance from all services (ground, naval, and air) that is of EOD interest in countering hazards or developing RSPs. The design, components, emplacement, technological advancement and render safe of improvised terrorist conventional devices. For nuclear, biological, and chemical weapon EOD see IFC1620. 1153 Theatre Ground Force Electronic Warfare Capabilities. Organization, strength, order of battle, assigned equipment, related facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function), active and reserve component force mix, force planning, doctrine of deployment and employment, level of training, and state of readiness of electronic warfare units and formations assigned to Theatre ground forces, including technologies and RDT&E programs. 1154 Theatre Ground Force Logistic Capabilities. Organization, strength, order of battle, assigned equipment, related facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function), active and reserve component force mix, force planning, doctrine of deployment and employment, level of training, and state of readiness of logistic units assigned to Theatre ground forces. Includes force and materiel planning, maintenance and repair, and other factors associated with force sustainability. 1156 Theatre Ground Force Landmine and Countermine Warfare Capabilities. Organization, strength, order of battle, assigned equipment, related facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function), active and reserve component force mix, force planning, doctrine of deployment and employment, level of training, and state of readiness of Theatre units responsible for conducting landmine warfare. 1158 Theatre Ground Force Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) Capabilities. Organization, strength, order of battle, assigned equipment, procedures, mobile units, related facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function), active and reserve component force mix, force planning, doctrine of deployment and employment, level of training, and state of readiness of units and formations conducting C4I (e.g., signals intelligence) assigned to target country ground forces.

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1160 Ground Force Combat Support and Combat Service Support Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, multi-spectral signatures, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of ground forces combat service support systems (e.g., ordnance, general supplies, transport vehicles, recovery and repair equipment), their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. 1161 Ground Force Engineer Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of engineer weapons and equipment systems including barrier breaching, mobility, counter-mobility, and obstacles. 1162 Military Materiel Radioactive Items Characteristics and Performance. Identification, technical characteristics, performance, safety hazards and special handling procedures associated with radioactive items used with, mounted on, or mounted within military materiel. 1163 Ground Force Electronic Warfare Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of ground force tactical-level electronic warfare systems and equipment. 1164 Ground Force Logistics and Transportation Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of ground force tactical logistic support systems. 1165 Ground Force Recovery and Maintenance Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of ground force recovery and maintenance support systems. 1166 Ground Force Landmine and Countermine Warfare Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of equipment and systems utilized in conducting mine warfare. Includes mine laying or dispensing equipment, mine-clearing systems, mine detectors, landmines, signal mines, demolitions and demolition equipment, pyrotechnics, and associated fuses.

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1170 Ground Force Sensors and Electronics. The development, fielding, and system characteristics of all ground and helicopter based sensor and electronic systems used to locate hostile forces and/or hostile force weapon and support systems or used for the control of friendly weapon systems. Includes other than electronic systems used for the same purpose. 1171 Ground Force Battlefield Support Radar. All radar equipment types, including detection, tracking and acquisition, and missile and gun fire control that are found on ground-based vehicles or in facilities within a battlefield environment and directly supporting ground forces. 1172 Ground Force Electronics. Developments and use of electronic devices and technology in ground forces equipment. 1173 Ground-Based Optical Systems. Development and use of optical devices and technology in ground forces equipment.

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1200 NAVAL FORCES AND SYSTEMS 1200 Naval Forces and Systems Capabilities, vulnerabilities, and system characteristics and performances of naval forces. Includes directives and guidance from the national defence structure to the training and development organizations, the deployed war-fighting units and all support organizations, activities and facilities to include C4I at all levels. 1210 National Force Issues. Strategy, doctrine, plans, policies, and other directives and guidance provided from the national military structure to the force to include resources that impact on force modernization and any response from the force on the national level guidance to include the force leadership's ability to influence the national military structure. 1211 National Strategy, Doctrine and Plans. Naval plans, policies, and missions to develop force capabilities and operate those forces in support of national objectives and military strategy and doctrine, to include general naval operational war-fighting concepts. Also includes para-/quasi-military forces (e.g., coast guards) that are designated by the host country as "naval" forces or that in wartime will be seconded to naval or military command and control. 1212 National Force Estimates and Trends. Organizational and modernization plans and policies for long-term enhancement of naval forces. This includes projected trends, force employment concepts, major combat and combat support systems, resulting changes in capabilities to include critical support structures. 1213 National Command and Control. The national decision-making system for planning, directing, and controlling naval forces in peacetime and crisis. For national decision architecture and technologies see 1218. 1214 National Leadership and Participation in National Affairs. The role of the naval forces and leadership in national/ministry of defence policies and plans. Includes relations with civil organizations, subordination to legal civilian authority, national security decision-making process, and impact on domestic and international policies. 1216 National Training and Exercises. Naval participation in national and multinational training and exercise events, including leadership, planning, and execution.

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1218 National C4I Architecture and Systems. The national-level (i.e. Defence Ministry and General Staff) C4I architecture (facilities, systems, and procedures). Service headquarters level and below are contained in 1228. 1220 Naval Service Issues. Force strategy, doctrine, plans, policy, development, and resource planning to include training and system based acquisition planning to prepare service members and equipment for assignment to the deployed force. 1221 Naval Service Doctrine and Plans. Strategies, plans, or policies to enhance naval force capabilities or deploy forces internally or externally in pursuit of national goals. 1222 Naval Service Force Estimates, Trends, and Force Modernization. Strategies, plans, and policies for the long-term mission, capabilities enhancement, and deployment of naval forces. Includes projections of doctrine, force structure, TO&E, operational concepts, force utilization, composition, equipment, systems, capabilities, and potential areas of future conflict. 1223 Naval Service Command and Control. The decision-making system for planning, directing, and controlling naval forces. 1224 Naval Service Leadership. The capabilities and backgrounds of naval forces commanders. 1225 Naval Service Personnel Policies, Readiness, and Resources. Policies, strategies, and procedures used by the naval service to prepare and maintain the force for missions assigned to the nations' military forces. 1226 Naval Service Training and Exercises. The conduct and results of naval force exercises and training undertaken to train and maintain the capabilities of the force. 1227 Naval Service Tactics Development. The development of naval force tactics to include staff developments and proposals, experimental systems and exercises. Includes goals and effectiveness of the experiment or exercise, and any assessed change to the threat or capabilities of the naval force if the new tactics are adopted. 1228 Naval Service Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligent (C4I). Organization, doctrine, procedures, training facilities, and mobile units used by naval forces to command, control, and communicate with other units and organizations.

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1229 Marine and Naval Infantry Forces. Force strategy, doctrine, plans, policy, structures, development and resource planning of Marine and Naval Infantry forces. Includes training, exercises, system based acquisition planning, mission areas, and assessments of current and projected capabilities. 1230 Naval Operations. Day-to-day deployed naval force training and exercises to develop single and multiship operational capabilities and creation/maintenance of combat readiness of ships and organizations, to include peacetime deployment practices and events; the strengths and weaknesses of operational leadership, forces, and supporting resources. Includes factors such as command, control, and intelligence support; electronic warfare; and plans for joint operations with other services' assets as well as multinational operations. Includes platform and organizational readiness, means and methods of conducting marine salvage, and the military/naval and civil assets seconded to military/naval control for that purpose. Also includes para-quasi-military forces (e.g., coast guards) that are designated by the host country as "naval" forces or that in wartime will be seconded to naval or military command and control. 1231 Anti-surface Operations. Day-to-day training and exercises to develop single and multiship operational capabilities and creation /maintenance of combat readiness of ships and organizations, to include peacetime deployment practices and events; the strengths and weaknesses of operational leadership, forces, and supporting resources. 1232 Antisubmarine Operations. Day-to-day training and exercises to develop single and multiship operational capabilities and creation/maintenance of combat readiness of ships and organizations, to include peacetime deployment practices and events; the strengths and weaknesses of operational leadership, forces, and supporting resources. 1233 Naval Air strike and Counter-air Operations. Day-to-day training and exercises to develop operational capabilities and creation/ maintenance of combat readiness of aircraft and organizations, to include peacetime deployment practices and events; the strengths and weaknesses of operational leadership, forces, and supporting resources. 1234 Amphibious Assault Operations. Day-to-day training and exercises to develop single and multi organization operational capabilities and creation/maintenance of combat readiness of ships and organizations, to include peacetime deployment practices and events; the strengths and weaknesses of operational leadership, forces, and supporting resources.

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1235 Naval Mine and Countermine Operations. Day-to-day training and exercises to develop single and multiship operational capabilities and creation/maintenance of combat readiness of ships and organizations, to include peacetime deployment practices and events; the strengths and weaknesses of operational leadership, forces, and supporting resources. 1236 Naval Logistics, Maintenance, and Repair Operations. Day-to-day training and exercises to develop operational capabilities and creation/maintenance of combat readiness of ships and organizations, to include ashore and at-sea processes, methods, and means to provide naval combat and auxiliary platforms with logistics, maintenance, and repair support during peacetime or wartime. 1237 Naval Special Warfare Operations. Day-to-day training and exercises to develop operational capabilities and creation/maintenance of combat readiness of systems and organizations, to include the strengths and weaknesses of operational leadership, forces, naval special warfare strategy, tactics, forces, force manning levels, and combat and key support equipment and delivery capabilities and capacities. Includes use of marine mammals. 1238 Naval Service Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) Operations. Strengths and weaknesses of plans, training and capabilities to control and support forces during combat and other complex situations. 1239 Ocean Surveillance, Underwater Reconnaissance, and Fishing Fleets Operations. Assets and activities to support detection, identification, tracking, monitoring, and targeting of surface and subsurface ships, including operations by naval auxiliaries, civilian research ships, submersibles, ships in support of space launch operations, and oceanographic research ships in support of counter antisubmarine warfare and certain submarine operations. Includes the use of satellites (regardless of controlling agency) to support naval operations in warning, location, tracking, and targeting functions. Operations by naval auxiliaries, specialized civilian research ships, purpose-built or specially modified submarines and submersibles in support of clandestine military and naval operations. Includes ships dedicated to commercial fishing and scheduled and unscheduled peacetime operations by a few ships as an organized fleet. Also includes fishing ship ownership, administrative operations, types of craft, and their capabilities.

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1240 Naval Orders of Battle, Bases, and Related Facilities. Specific naval orders of battle by type/class of applicable ship/craft, the strength and structure of personnel, both ships' crews and naval infantry/marine troops/equipment, and associated bases and facilities (including capacities) for weapons, POL storage; maintenance and repair installations for surface ships/craft, submarines, and naval aircraft. Includes strengths and weaknesses of naval ports and ashore logistic infrastructure capabilities to provide wartime support to ships and aircraft. Also includes para-/quasi-military forces (e.g., coast guards) that are designated by the host country as "naval" forces or that in wartime will be seconded to naval or military command and control. 1241 Surface Combatants Order of Battle. Specific order of battle by type/class of ships (includes aircraft carriers, cruisers, destroyers, frigates, corvettes, and patrol combatants and craft), crew strength, and associated bases and facilities (including capacities) for weapons, POL storage; maintenance and repair installations. Also includes the surface combatants assigned to para-/quasi-military forces (e.g., coast guards) that are designated by the host country as "naval" forces or that in wartime will be seconded to the navy. 1242 Submarines Order of Battle. Specific order of battle by type/class of boats (includes ballistic and cruise missile, nuclear and non-nuclear attack, specialized submarines, and combat and non-combat submersibles), crew strength, and associated bases and facilities (including capacities) for weapons, POL storage; maintenance and repair installations. Also includes the surface combatants assigned to para/quasi-military forces (e.g., coast guards) that are designated by the host country as "naval" forces or that in wartime will be seconded to the navy. 1243 Naval Aviation Order of Battle. Specific order of battle by type/class of aircraft (includes naval subordinated bombers, maritime patrol including ASW and targeting, fighter-bombers, interceptors and fighters; as well as transport and training fixed-wing and helicopters), organization personnel strength, and associated bases and facilities (including capacities) for weapons, POL storage; maintenance and repair installations. Also includes the aviation assets assigned to para-/quasi-military forces (e.g., coast guards) that are designated by the host country as "naval" forces or that in wartime will be seconded to the navy. 1244 Amphibious Lift/Naval Infantry Order of Battle. Specific order of battle by type of navy- subordinated amphibious ship or craft and naval infantry unit (includes TO&E), crew or unit personnel strength, and associated bases and facilities (including capacities) for weapons, POL storage; maintenance and repair installations. Also includes the amphibious assets assigned to para-/quasi-military forces (e.g., coast guards) that are designated by the host country as "naval" forces or that in wartime will be seconded to the navy.

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1245 Mine Warfare Order of Battle. Specific order of battle by type of navy-subordinated mine warfare capable ship or craft, crew or unit personnel strength, and associated bases and facilities (including capacities) for weapons, POL storage; maintenance and repair installations. 1246 Auxiliary Ships and Bases, Logistics, Maintenance, and Repair Facilities. Specific order of battle by type/class of direct combat support auxiliary ships and craft and related bases, logistics, maintenance, and repair facilities, organization personnel strength, and associated bases and facilities (including capacities) for weapons, POL storage; maintenance and repair installations. 1247 Specialized Facilities. RDT&E facilities subordinate to the naval service. Includes the purpose, function, and relationships to other facets of the RDT&E service or national establishment and to the pertinent design and production organizations. Includes marine mammal training and operational facilities and emergency military use of civil ports. 1248 Relocation and Dispersal Areas. Strategy and process of dispersal or relocation of forces as a country moves from a peacetime to wartime posture, to include the strengths and weaknesses of the methods and means and the vulnerabilities of the process to interdiction. 1250 Naval Platform Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics and multi-spectral signatures of platform structures and their weapons and sensors fit, propulsion systems, radiated noise characteristics, performance, manning, and consumables capacities of all classes of naval- and paramilitary-subordinated ships, submarines, and craft. 1251 Surface Combatants Characteristics and Performance. The structure, weapons and sensors fit, propulsion systems, performance, manning, and capacities of all classes of aircraft carriers through patrol craft. 1252 Submarines Characteristics and Performance. The structure, weapons and sensors fit, propulsion systems, performance, manning, and capacities of all classes of ballistic missile through diesel attack and military/ paramilitary submersibles. 1253 Naval Aviation Characteristics and Performance. Technical description of naval aircraft structures, weapons and sensors (to include avionics, radars, and other electronic-based devices), propulsion systems, performance, manning, and consumables capacities of specific naval air systems not covered under 13XX and 11XX. Also includes technical descriptions of mission specific equipment associated with naval helicopters.

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1254 Amphibious Lift Characteristics and Performance. The structure, weapons and sensors fit, propulsion systems, performance, manning, and capacities of the various naval- subordinated vessels (LHA, LPD, LST) including wing-in-ground and air-cushion types. 1255 Naval Mine Warfare Vessels Characteristics and Performance. The structure, weapons and sensors fit, propulsion systems, performance, manning, and capacities of all classes of mine laying and mine countermeasure ships and craft. 1256 Auxiliary Vessels Characteristics and Performance. The structure, weapons and sensors fit, propulsion systems, performance, manning, and capacities of all classes of the various logistic, support, and special-purpose non-combat naval/paramilitary ships and craft. 1257 Specialized Merchant Ships Characteristics and Performance. The structure, weapons and sensors fit, propulsion systems, performance, manning, and capacities of all classes of civil merchant and scientific research ships, designs, and characteristics that have been influenced/dictated by military organizations and requirements. Includes supplemental equipment for retrofit to enable use in military role, such as C3 vans or reinforced-deck and support modules to allow combat helicopter or VSTOL operations. 1258 Militarized Fishing Ships Characteristics and Performance. The structure, weapons and sensors fit, propulsion systems, performance, manning, and capacities of all classes of fishing ships whose design has been militarily influenced. Includes supplemental equipment for retrofit to enable use in military role, such as mine-laying or sweeping equipment. 1259 Underwater Radiated Noise Characteristics. The technical description of the underwater noise radiated by ships, submarines, submersibles, weapons, and sensor systems; including that noise/acoustic energy coupled into the water column by the operation of aircraft, missiles, and other weapons (e.g. gunfire). 1260 Naval Sensors and Electronics Characteristics and Performance. The development, testing, operational parameters and applications, including strengths and weaknesses, of surveillance, detection, fire control, electronic warfare, weapons guidance, data links, infrared (IR), Electro-optic, and electronic countermeasure/electromagnetic protection devices fitted to naval platforms or that are deployed ashore, in the sea, or on the seabed.

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1261 Naval Surveillance and Early Warning Systems Characteristics and Performance. The technical description, operational parameters and applications, including strengths and weaknesses, of electromagnetic detection equipment and subsystems fitted 'in the sea, on the seabed, or on naval aircraft (less those covered in 134X and 136X). 1262 Naval Acoustic Detection Systems Characteristics and Performance. The development, testing, operational parameters and applications, including strengths and weaknesses, of acoustic detection systems fitted to naval platforms or that are deployed ashore, in the sea, or on the seabed. 1263 Naval Non-acoustic Detection Systems Characteristics and Performance. The development, testing, operational parameters and applications, including strengths and weaknesses, of non-acoustic detection systems fitted to naval platforms or that are deployed ashore, in the sea, or on the seabed. 1264 Naval Air Sensors and Avionics Systems Characteristics and Performance. The development, testing, operational parameters and applications, including strengths and weaknesses, of air sensors and avionics such as electronic-based detection and protection equipment and subsystems, flight control on the various avionics, including those for monitoring aircraft systems and performance and which are used discretely in naval aircraft and helicopters. 1265 Naval Fire Control Systems Characteristics and Performance. The development, testing, operational parameters and applications, including strengths and weaknesses, of fire control systems fitted to naval platforms or that are deployed ashore, in the sea, or on the seabed. 1266 Naval Weapons Guidance Systems Characteristics and Performance. The development, testing, operational parameters and applications, including strengths and weaknesses, of weapons guidance systems fitted to naval platforms or that are deployed ashore, in the sea, or on the seabed. 1267 Naval Data Links Systems Characteristics and Performance. The development, testing, operational parameters and applications, including strengths and weaknesses, of data links fitted to naval platforms or that are deployed ashore, in the sea, or on the seabed. 1268 Naval Infrared and Electro-Optics Systems Characteristics and Performance. The development, testing, operational parameters and applications, including strengths and weaknesses, of infrared JR) and Electro- optic devices fitted to naval platforms or that are deployed ashore, in the sea, or on the seabed.

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1269 Naval Electronic Warfare Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of naval electronic warfare equipment. Covers all equipment operating across the electromagnetic spectrum. 1270 Naval Weapons Characteristics and Performance. The technical and operational characteristics, multi-spectral signatures, performance, and applications (including strengths and weaknesses), of antiship cruise missiles, antiship and antisubmarine torpedoes, sea and very-shallow-water/riverine mines, non-torpedo antisubmarine weapons, naval guns, and naval surface-to-air missiles designed or modified to be carried by naval platforms. 1271 Naval Anti-ship Cruise Missiles Characteristics and Performance. The technical and operational characteristics, performance, and applications (including strengths and weaknesses), of anti-ship cruise missiles designed or modified to be carried by naval platforms. 1272 Torpedoes Characteristics and Performance. The technical and operational characteristics, performance, and applications (including strengths and weaknesses), of anti-ship and antisubmarine torpedoes designed or modified to be carried by naval platforms. 1273 Sea Mines Characteristics and Performance. The technical and operational characteristics, performance, and applications (including strengths and weaknesses), of sea mines designed or modified to be carried by naval platforms. 1274 Non-torpedo Antisubmarine Weapons Characteristics and Performance. The technical and operational characteristics, performance, and applications (including strengths and weaknesses), of non-torpedo antisubmarine weapons designed or modified to be carried by naval platforms. 1275 Naval Guns Characteristics and Performance. The technical and operational characteristics, performance, and applications (including strengths and weaknesses), of naval guns designed or modified to be carried by naval platforms. 1276 Naval Combined Systems Characteristics and Performance. The technical and operational characteristics, performance, and applications (including strengths and weaknesses), of combined gun and surface- to-air missile systems (such as gun/SAM and fire control radar on a single mount) designed or modified to be carried by naval platforms.

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1277 Very-Shallow-Water/Riverine Mines Characteristics and Performance. The characteristics and performance of very-shallow-mines/riverine mines including the identification and operational use of mines used in very-shallow water in an anti-invasion/landing role. Also includes the technical analysis of such mines including capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of equipment and systems that are used in very shallow water mine systems. 1280 Naval Tactics. Force planning and employment and specific warfare discipline tactical execution plans, training, and exercise testing; strengths and weaknesses of tactical leadership, forces, and supporting resources; includes factors such as command and control, intelligence support, electronic warfare, and plans for joint operations with other services as well as multinational operations. Also includes para-/ quasi-military forces (e.g., coast guards) that are designated by the host country as "naval" forces or that in wartime will be seconded to naval or military command and control. 1281 Anti-surface Warfare Tactics. Force planning and employment and tactical execution plans, training, and exercise testing; strengths and weaknesses of leadership, forces, and supporting resources; includes factors such as command and control, intelligence support, electronic warfare, and plans for joint operations and multinational operations. 1282 Antisubmarine Warfare Tactics. Force planning and employment and tactical execution plans, training, and exercise testing; strengths and weaknesses of leadership, forces, and supporting resources; includes factors such as command and control, intelligence support, electronic warfare, and plans for joint operations and multinational operations. 1283 Naval Air strike and Counter-air Warfare Tactics. Force planning and employment, tactical execution plans, training, and exercise testing; strengths and weaknesses of leadership, forces, and supporting resources; includes factors such as command and control, intelligence support, electronic warfare, and plans for joint operations and multinational operations. 1284 Amphibious Warfare Tactics. Force planning and employment, tactical execution plans related to expeditionary/amphibious warfare in launching an attack from the sea by naval and landing forces against a hostile or potentially hostile shore. Includes training, and exercise testing; strengths and weaknesses of leadership, forces, and supporting resources; includes factors such as command and control, intelligence support, electronic warfare, and plans for joint operations and multinational operations.

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1285 Naval Mine and Countermine Warfare Tactics. Force planning and employment and tactical execution plans, training, and exercise testing; strengths and weaknesses of leadership, forces, and supporting resources; includes factors such as command and control and intelligence support. 1286 Naval Logistics, Maintenance, and Repair Tactics. Force planning and employment, training, and exercise testing; strengths and weaknesses of leadership, forces, and supporting resources such as the ashore and at-sea processes, methods, and means to provide naval combat and support platforms, logistics, and repair support during both peacetime and wartime. 1287 Naval Special Warfare Tactics. Force planning and employment and tactical execution plans, training, and exercise testing; includes factors such as command and control, intelligence support, electronic warfare, and naval special warfare strategy, tactics, forces, strengths and weaknesses, delivery capabilities, and capacities. Does not include counter-terrorist forces. 1288 Naval Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) Tactics. Force planning and employment and tactical execution plans, training, and exercise testing; strengths and weaknesses of capabilities to control and support forces during combat and other complex situations, to include linkages and pathways effecting capabilities. 1289 Wartime Roles of Civil Fleets (Merchant, Fishing, and Scientific). Force planning and employment and tactical execution plans, training, and exercise testing; includes factors such as command and control, intelligence support, electronic warfare, and plans for joint operations and multinational operations.

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1300 AIR FORCES AND SYSTEMS 1300 Air Forces and Systems Capabilities, vulnerabilities, and system characteristics and performance of air forces. Includes directives and guidance from the national defence structure to the training and development organizations, the deployed war-fighting units and all support organizations, activities and facilities to include C4I at all levels. 1310 National Force Issues. Strategy, doctrine, plans, policies, and other directives and guidance provided from the national military structure to the force to include resources that impact on force modernization and any response from the force on the national level guidance to include the force leadership's ability to influence the national military structure. 1311 National Strategy, Doctrine, Plans, and Threat. Strategic-level strategies, doctrine, plans, or policies to enhance air and air defence forces' capabilities or to deploy air and air defence forces either internally or externally in pursuit of national goals. 1312 National Force Estimates and Trends. Organizational and modernization plans and policies for long-term enhancement of air forces. This includes projected trends, force employment concepts, major combat and combat support systems, resulting changes in capabilities to include critical support structures. 1313 National Organization and Command and Control. The national decision-making system for planning, directing, and controlling air forces in peacetime and crisis. For national decision architecture and technologies see 1318. 1314 National Leadership and Participation in National Affairs. The role of the air forces and leadership in national/ministry of defence policies and plans. Includes relations with civil organizations, subordination to legal civilian authority, national security decision-making process, and impact on domestic and international policies. 1316 National Training and Exercises. Nationally directed exercises and training of air and air defence forces units, to include participation in joint or combined arms exercises.

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1318 National C41 Architecture and Systems. The national-level (i.e. Defence Ministry and General Staff) C4I architecture (facilities, systems, and procedures). Service headquarters level and below are contained in 1328. Theatre C4I order of battle and capabilities are contained in 1358. 1320 Air Force Service Issues. Force strategy, doctrine, plans, policy, development, and resource planning to include training and system based acquisition planning to prepare service members and equipment for assignment to the deployed force. 1321 Air Force Service Doctrine and Plans. Strategies, plans, or policies to enhance air/air defence force capabilities or deploy air and air defence forces internally or externally in pursuit of national goals. 1322 Air Force Service Force Estimates, Trends, and Force Modernization. Strategies, plans, and policies for the long-term mission, capabilities enhancement, and deployment of air and air defence forces. Includes projections of doctrine, force structure, TO&E, operational concepts, force utilization, composition, equipment, systems, capabilities, and potential areas of future conflict. 1323 Air Force Service Organization. The decision-making system for planning, directing, and controlling air and air defence forces. 1324 Air Force Service Leadership. The capabilities and backgrounds of air and air defence force commanders. 1325 Air Force Service Personnel Policies, Readiness, and Resources. Policies, strategies, and procedures used by the air and air defence forces to prepare and maintain the force for missions assigned to the nations' military forces. 1326 Air Force Service Training and Exercises. The conduct and results of air and air defence force exercises and training undertaken to train and maintain the capabilities of the force.

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1327 Air Force Service Tactics Development. The development of air and air defence force tactics to include staff developments and proposals, experimental systems and exercises. Includes goals and effectiveness of the experiment or exercise, and any assessed change to the threat or capabilities of the forces if the new tactics are adopted. 1328 Air Force Service Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I). Organization, doctrine, procedures, training facilities, and airborne and ground mobile units used by air and air defence forces to command, control, and communicate with other units and organizations. 1330 Theatre Air Force Order of Battle, Capabilities, Operations and Tactics. Force capabilities and vulnerabilities. Includes organization, strength, equipment, current operations, active and reserve component force mix, doctrine of deployment and employment, C4I, level of training, state of readiness, combat operations, mobility, dispersal areas, logistics, material, mobilization capability, and facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function) less airfields and airfield capabilities, which are covered by IFC2060. Applies to a country's forces stationed both inside and outside the homeland. 1331 Theatre Bomber Force Capabilities. Force capabilities and vulnerabilities. Includes organization, strength, equipment, active and reserve component force mix, doctrine of deployment and employment, level of training, state of readiness, combat operations, mobility, dispersal areas, logistics, material, mobilization capability, and facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function). 1332 Theatre Fighter Force Capabilities. Force capabilities and vulnerabilities. Includes organization, strength, equipment, active and reserve component force mix, doctrine of deployment and employment, level of training, state of readiness, combat operations, mobility, dispersal areas, logistics, material, mobilization capability, and facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function). 1333 Theatre Combat Support Aircraft Force Capabilities. Capabilities and vulnerabilities of special mission aircraft (e.g., tankers, reconnaissance, AWACS, gunships, airborne command posts) units assigned to a country's air and air defence forces. Includes organization, strength, equipment, active and reserve component force mix, doctrine of deployment and employment, level of training, state of readiness, combat operations, mobility, dispersal areas, logistics, material, mobilization capability, and facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function). 1334 Theatre Transport Aircraft Force Capabilities.

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Force capabilities and vulnerabilities. Includes organization, strength, equipment, active and reserve component force mix, doctrine of deployment and employment, level of training, state of readiness, combat operations, mobility, dispersal areas, logistics, material, mobilization capability, and facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function). 1335 Theatre Air Force Antiaircraft Artillery Force Capabilities. Force capabilities and vulnerabilities to include integrated gun and surface-to-air missile systems. Includes organization, strength, equipment, active and reserve component force mix, doctrine of deployment and employment, level of training, state of readiness, combat operations, mobility, dispersal areas, logistics, material, mobilization capability, and facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function). 1336 Theatre Aerodynamic Missiles Capabilities (Less SAM's). Capabilities and vulnerabilities of air-to- air, air-to-surface, and surface-to-surface cruise missiles. Includes organization, strength, equipment, active and reserve component force mix, doctrine of deployment and employment, level of training, state of readiness, combat operations, mobility, dispersal areas, logistics, material, mobilization capability, and facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function). 1337 Theatre Surface-to-Air Missiles Capabilities. Capabilities and vulnerabilities of surface-to-air missile units assigned to a country's air defence forces. Includes organization, strength, equipment, active and reserve component force mix, doctrine of deployment and employment, level of training, state of readiness, combat operations, mobility, dispersal areas, logistics, material, mobilization capability, and facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function). 1338 Theatre Antiballistic Missiles and Anti-tactical Ballistic Missiles Capabilities. Capabilities and vulnerabilities of antiballistic missile units assigned to a country's aerospace forces. Includes organization, strength, equipment, active and reserve component force mix, doctrine of deployment and employment, level of training, state of readiness, combat operations, mobility, dispersal areas, logistics, material, mobilization capability, and facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function). 1339 Theatre Air Force Special Warfare Force Capabilities. Capabilities and vulnerabilities of the Theatre air forces' special warfare elements. Includes strategy, tactics, forces, strengths and weaknesses, delivery capabilities, and capacities. Does not include counter terrorist forces.

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1340 Air and Air Defence Forces Combat Systems Technologies Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, multi-spectral signatures, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of air and air defence combat systems (e.g., bombers, fighters, special mission aircraft, AAA, aerodynamic missiles, SAMs, and ABM/ASATs), their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. Also includes development and use of electronic devices and technology; avionics systems, including navigation, communications, flight controls, controls and displays, airborne computers and their associated interconnecting systems; all radar equipment types such as early warning, surveillance, detection, tracking and acquisition, navigation, missile and gun fire control, and weather that are found in the equipment listed above. All conventional combat systems, hardware, and facilities designed for, and normally considered a part of, operational air and air defence forces. 1341 Bomber Aircraft Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of strategic and tactical bomber aircraft, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. Includes development and use of electronic devices and technology; avionics systems, including navigation, communications, flight controls, controls and displays, airborne computers and their associated interconnecting systems; all radar equipment types such as early warning, surveillance, detection, tracking and acquisition, navigation, missile and gun fire control, that are found in the bomber aircraft. 1342 Fighter Aircraft Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of interceptor or tactical fighter aircraft, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. Includes development and use of electronic devices and technology; avionics systems, including navigation, communications, flight controls, controls and displays, airborne computers and their associated interconnecting systems; all radar equipment types such as early warning, surveillance, detection, tracking and acquisition, navigation, missile and gun fire control. 1343 Combat Support Aircraft Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of special mission aircraft, such as tankers, reconnaissance, AWACS, gunships, and airborne command posts, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. Includes development and use of electronic devices and technology; avionics systems, including navigation, communications, flight controls, controls and displays, airborne computers and their associated interconnecting systems; all radar equipment types such as early warning, surveillance, detection, tracking and acquisition, navigation, missile and gun fire control.

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1344 Transport Aircraft Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of transport aircraft, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. Includes development and use of electronic devices and technology; avionics systems, including navigation, communications, flight controls, controls and displays, airborne computers and their associated interconnecting systems; and radar equipment such as weather and navigation. 1345 Air - and Ground-Launched Cruise Missile Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of air-to-air, air-to-surface ordnance, and cruise missiles, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. Includes development and use of electronic devices and technology. 1346 Surface-to-Air Missile Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of surface-to-air missiles, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. Includes development and use of electronic devices and technology; all radar equipment types such as early warning, surveillance, detection, tracking and acquisition. 1347 Land-Based Air and Space Surveillance, Early Warning, Target Acquisition, and Air Traffic Control Radar Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of land-based radar equipment, standalone or not integral to the system, including early warning, standalone surface-to-air missile acquisition radars, standalone anti-tactical ballistic missile acquisition radars, surveillance, ballistic missile early warning/over-the-horizon, and navigation radars, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. 1348 Antiballistic, Anti-tactical, Ground-Based Anti-satellite, and Surface-to-Air Missiles Radar Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of defence missile systems fire control, target acquisition, and target search radars integral to the system, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs.

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1349 Antiballistic, Anti-tactical, and Ground-Based Anti-satellite Missile Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of ABM, ATBM, and ground-based ASAT missiles, RDT&E programs. Includes development and use of electronic devices and technology. 1350 Theatre Combat Support Force Order of Battle, Capabilities, Operations and Tactics. Capabilities and vulnerabilities of unmanned aerial vehicles, C4I, electronic warfare, ground-controlled intercept (GCI) radar, engineer, helicopters, civil air, weather, logistics, maintenance units and formations. Includes organization, strength, equipment, active and reserve component force mix, doctrine of deployment and employment, C4I, level of training, state of readiness, mobility, dispersal areas, material, mobilization capability, and facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function). Applies to a country's forces stationed both inside and outside the homeland. 1351 Theatre Air Force Unmanned Aerial Vehicles Capabilities. Capabilities and vulnerabilities of unmanned aerial vehicle units and formations. Includes organization, strength, equipment, active doctrine of deployment and employment, level of training, state of readiness, and mobility. 1352 Theatre Air Force Engineer Capabilities. Capabilities and vulnerabilities of engineer units and formations. Includes organization, strength, equipment, active and reserve component force mix, doctrine of deployment and employment, C4I, level of training, state of readiness, mobility, dispersal areas, material, mobilization capability, and facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function). 1353 Theatre Air Force Electronic Warfare Capabilities. Capabilities and vulnerabilities of electronic warfare units and formations. Includes organization, strength, equipment, active and reserve component force mix, doctrine of deployment and employment, level of training, state of readiness, mobility, dispersal areas, material, mobilization capability, and facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function). 1354 Theatre Air Force Logistics and Maintenance Capabilities. Capabilities and vulnerabilities of logistics and maintenance units and formations. Includes organization, strength, equipment, active and reserve component force mix, level of training, state of readiness, mobility, dispersal areas, material, mobilization capability, and facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function).

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1355 Theatre Air Force Helicopters Capabilities. Capabilities and vulnerabilities of helicopter units and formations. Includes organizations, strength, equipment, active and reserve component force mix, doctrine of deployment and employment, C4I, level of training, state of readiness, mobility, dispersal areas, material, mobilization capability, and facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function). 1356 Civil Air Capabilities. Capabilities and vulnerabilities of civil air organizations. Includes strength, equipment, level of training, state of readiness, and mobilization capability. 1358 Theatre Air Force Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) Capabilities. Capabilities and vulnerabilities of C4I units and formations. Includes organization, strength, equipment, and doctrine of deployment and employment, level of training, state of readiness, mobility, and facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function). 1360 Air Force Combat Support Systems Technologies Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of air and air defence combat support systems (e.g., UAV's, C4I, electronic warfare, GCI radar, engineer, helicopter, civil air, weather, logistics, and maintenance), their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. All combat support systems, hardware, and facilities designed for, and normally considered a part of, operational air and air defence forces. 1361 Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of fixed wing unmanned aerial vehicles, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. 1362 Air Force Engineer Systems Characteristics and Performance (Except SAM's). Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of engineer systems (except those supporting SAM's), their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. 1363 Air Forces Engineer Systems Characteristics and Performance (SAM's). Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of engineers supporting SAM's, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. 1364 Air Force Ground-Controlled Intercept (GCI) and Air-Controlled Intercept (ACI) Radar Systems Characteristics and Performance.

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Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of ground controlled intercept and air-controlled intercept radar systems, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. 1366 Civil Air Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of civil air systems, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. 1367 Weather Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of weather systems, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. 1368 Air Force Electronic Warfare Systems Characteristics and Performance (Except SAM's). Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of electronic warfare equipment or systems (except those supporting Sam's) that emit electromagnetic radiation or protect against enemy use of the electromagnetic spectrum, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. 1369 Air Force Electronic Warfare Systems Characteristics and Performance (SAM's). Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of equipment and systems that emit electromagnetic radiation or protect against enemy use of the electromagnetic spectrum in support of SAM forces, their materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. 1370 Theatre Air Force Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence and Logistics Capabilities. Deployed force C4I systems capabilities, doctrine for use, and the C4I facilities. The logistic support organizations, facilities, doctrine followed, and capabilities to support the deployed force. 1371 Theatre Air Force Unit Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) Capabilities (Less SAM's, AAA, ABMs, ATBMs, and Ground-Based ASATs). Deployed force C4I systems capabilities, facilities, and doctrine for use.

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1372 Theatre Air Force Surface-to-Air Missile Unit Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) Capabilities. Deployed force C4I systems capabilities, facilities, and doctrine for use. 1373 Theatre Anti-Aircraft Artillery Unit Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) Capabilities. Deployed force C4I systems capabilities, facilities, and doctrine for use. 1374 Theatre Antiballistic, Anti-tactical, and Ground-Based Anti-satellite Missile Unit Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) Capabilities (ABM/ATBM/ASAT). Deployed force C4I systems capabilities, doctrine for use, and facilities. 1375 Theatre Air Force Logistics and Maintenance Unit Capabilities (Less SAM's and AAA). The logistic support organizations, facilities, doctrine followed, and capabilities to support the deployed force. 1376 Theatre Air Force Surface-to-Air Missile Unit Logistics and Maintenance Capabilities. The logistic support organizations, facilities, doctrine followed, and capabilities to support the deployed force. 1377 Theatre Air Force Anti-Aircraft Artillery Unit Logistics and Maintenance Capabilities. The logistic support organizations, facilities, doctrine followed, and capabilities to support deployed force.

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1400 SPACE FORCES AND SYSTEMS 1400 Space Forces and Systems Capabilities, vulnerabilities, and system characteristics and performance of space forces. Includes directives and guidance from the national defence structure to the training and development organizations, the deployed war-fighting units and all support organizations, activities and facilities to include C4I at all levels. 1410 National Force Issues. Strategy, doctrine, plans, policies, and other directives and guidance provided from the national military structure to the force to include resources that impact on force modernization and any response from the force on the national level guidance to include the force leadership's ability to influence the national military structure. 1411 National Strategy, Doctrine, and Plans. Strategies, doctrine, plans, or policies to enhance space forces' capabilities, either internally or externally, in pursuit of national goals. 1412 National Force Estimates and Trends. Organizational and modernization plans and policies for long-term enhancement of space forces. This includes projected trends, force employment concepts, major combat and combat support systems, resulting changes in capabilities to include critical support structures. 1413 National Organization and Command and Control. The national decision-making system for planning, directing, and controlling space forces in peacetime and crisis. For national decision architecture and technologies see 1418. 1414 National Leadership and Participation in National Affairs. The role of the space forces and leadership in national/ministry of defence policies and plans. Includes relations with civil organizations, subordination to legal civilian authority, national security decision-making process, and impact on domestic and international policies. 1416 National Training and Exercises. Includes nationally directed exercises and training of space forces units.

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1418 National Architecture and Systems. The national-level (i.e. Defence Ministry and General Staff) C4I architecture (facilities, systems, and procedures). Service headquarters level and below are contained in 1428. 1420 Space Service Issues. Force strategy, doctrine, plans, policy, development, and resource planning to include training and system based acquisition planning to prepare service members and equipment for assignment to the deployed force. 1421 Space Service Doctrine and Plans. Strategies, plans, and policies to enhance space force capabilities. 1422 Space Service Trends and Force Modernization. Strategies, plans, and policies for the long-term mission and capabilities enhancement of space forces. Detailed projections and assessments of future foreign space force doctrine, force structure, TO&E projections, operational concepts, force utilization, composition, equipment, systems, capabilities, and potential areas of future conflict. 1424 Space Service Leadership. The capabilities and backgrounds of space services commanders. 1425 Space Service Personnel Policies and Resources. Policies and directives on the retention and welfare of space services personnel. Weapons, equipment, and supplies held for distribution to space services during crisis. 1426 Space Service Training and Exercises. Launch unit and crew training and exercises. 1428 Space Service Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I). Organization, procedures, facilities, and units used by a launch unit to command, control, and communicate with support units and space services crewmembers. 1430 Space Forces Order of Battle, Capabilities and Operations. Quantitative and qualitative assessment of space force's capabilities. Includes organizational structure, capabilities, current operations, support facilities, and space system capabilities and performance to include employment, operational vulnerabilities.

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1431 Space Imaging Systems Capabilities. Structure within space forces and their capabilities, employment, and operational vulnerabilities of imaging systems launched by a country. 1432 Space SIGINT and ELINT Systems Capabilities. Structure within space forces and capabilities, employment, and operational vulnerabilities of SIGINT/ELINT systems launched by a country. 1433 Space Launch Detection Systems Capabilities. Structure within space forces and their capabilities, employment, and operational vulnerabilities of launch detection systems employed by a country. 1434 Space Communications and Data Relay Systems Capabilities. Structure within space forces and capabilities, employment, and operational vulnerabilities of communications and data relay systems employed by a country. 1435 Space Navigation Systems Capabilities. Structure within space forces and capabilities, employment, and operational vulnerabilities of navigation systems launched by a country. 1436 Manned Space Systems Capabilities. Structure within space forces and capabilities, employment, and operational vulnerabilities of manned systems launched by a country. 1437 Space Launch Facilities. Structure within space forces and capabilities, employment, and operational vulnerabilities of launch facilities used by a country. 1438 Space Mission Control Facilities. Structure within space forces and capabilities, employment, and operational vulnerabilities of mission control facilities used by a country. 1439 Space Object Surveillance and Identification (SOSI) Tracking Facilities and Capabilities. Structure within space forces and capabilities, employment, and operational vulnerabilities of SOSI tracking facilities used by a country. 1440 Space System Technologies, Characteristics, and Performance. Technical characteristics, multi-spectral signatures, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, vulnerabilities, and employment of all systems, sensors, facilities, and hardware designed for, and normally considered part of, current and projected military or civil space, anti/counter space platforms programs, networks, and support systems. Includes integration of requirements, strategy, doctrine, intentions, political, and economic considerations.

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1441 Military Space Systems Technologies, Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, vulnerabilities, and employment of current and projected military space systems, anti/counter space systems, networks, and programs. 1442 Military Space Support Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, vulnerabilities, and employment of current and projected military space support systems, launch vehicles, facilities, networks, and programs. Includes integration of requirements, strategy, doctrine, intentions, political, and economic considerations. All systems, sensors, and hardware designed for, and normally considered part of, military space support systems. 1443 Civil Space Systems Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, vulnerabilities, and employment of current and projected civil space systems, networks, and programs. Includes integration of requirements, strategy, doctrine, intentions, political, and economic considerations. All systems, sensors, and hardware designed for, and normally considered part of, civil space systems. 1444 Civil Space Support Systems Technology, Characteristics and Performance. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, vulnerabilities, and employment of current and projected civil space support systems, launch vehicles, facilities, networks, and programs. Includes integration of requirements, strategy, doctrine, intentions, political, and economic considerations. All systems, sensors, and hardware designed for, and normally considered part of, civil space support systems. 1450 Scientific Space Programs. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of a country's non-military scientific space programs. Includes systems, materials, production techniques, and related RDT&E programs. All systems and hardware designed for, and normally considered a part of, non-military scientific space programs.

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1500 NATIONAL ISSUES 11500 National Issues National politics, foreign relations, strategy, and policy impacting on civil and military activities, as well as regional and global issues such as proliferation, arms control, and technology/weapons transfer as well as the impact of sociological factors on national policy. Includes national C4I systems and doctrine, integrated or joint military force organizations, relationships, operations, and force modernization trends as well as combined military operations and organizations. Also includes sanctions and embargoes as well as hostilities from insurgency through regional war. 1510 National Security Policies, Programs, Objectives, and Decision-making. National-level aspects of foreign military forces, includes multi-service issues as well as their participation and operation in multinational forces. The national security decision-making process and military participation in national affairs. The policies, objectives, programs, and actions that affect national militaries, such as military sociology, arms control, proliferation, technology and weapons transfers, and the full spectrum of hostilities. Also includes analysis of regional and global issues impacting or including national/multinational military forces. 1511 Foreign National Security. Foreign national security policy objectives, programs, and actions. Includes long-range goals of major political movements that relate to Canadian and Allied policies. 1512 Mutual Military Defence. Policies, objectives, programs, and actions regarding foreign national participation in military alliances and alignments, and the security components of non-military alliances and organizations. Includes military treaties and agreements authorizing troop deployments, transit rights, and facility arrangements. 1513 National Decision-making. The organization and process, national security interests and strategy; threat perception; civilian control of the military; and civil-military relations.

1 OSCP OIS ATHENA/ TRINITY OP INT Comment: Maritime INT Sections use this IFC for all Country Studies.

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1514 Government Control. State capabilities to control a nation's material and manpower resources essential for the prosecution of general war, reconstitution, and for trans-attack and post-attack recovery or for handling major natural or economic disaster. Includes identification and precise location of national, intermediate, and local government control personnel, facilities, and supporting communications of peacetime and wartime installations. 1515 Military Participation in National Affairs. The role of the armed forces in national affairs and their influence on national policy. It includes such factors as loyalty to regime, military cliques, relationship of military and civilian political groups, political officers in armed forces, subversive activities by or against armed forces, coup d'etats, military governments, national security decision-making process, and actual or potential conflict situations within the armed forces that could significantly affect national relationships with the United States, including creation of a favourable environment for Canadian and Allied security arrangements. 1516 Internal Political Affairs. Domestic policy objectives, programs, and actions (other than national security and economic programs having international implications), which could significantly affect relationships with or attitudes and policies toward the US. Internal political developments, particularly those involving elements of instability or vulnerability in relationships among the ruling hierarchy, the political party or parties, labour unions, ethnic and religious groups, changes in the representation and roles of politically significant parties, factions, and mass organizations; differences in perspectives on domestic and international developments and key influences, domestic and foreign, on the internal decision making process. Includes democratization and election process/evaluation/analysis. 1517 Participation in Multilateral Organizations. National policy objectives, programs, negotiating positions, and actions likely to support or conflict with political and economic interests of other nations as they relate to the functioning and activities of international organizations of all types except military alliances (e.g. the United Nations and its organizations, regional groupings such as the EC and the OAS, multilateral financing institutions, and economic groupings such as OPEC). Intentions, plans, and actions with respect to the international peacemaking and peacekeeping efforts of the UN and regional organizations are included in 1549.

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1518 International Communications Issues. National policy objectives, programs, negotiating positions, and actions likely to support or conflict with international broadcasting and telecommunications interests. Current and potential attitudes of countries that host US broadcasting facilities towards this US activity. Capabilities and efforts to place controls on the free flow of broadcast information; effectiveness of controls. Space-related developments affecting telecommunication interests. 1519 National Science Policies and Programs. The administration and organization of S&T work in the governmental, industrial, and academic sectors, i.e., the decision process, research planning, programs, priorities, funding, and resource allocations; research management and methods; the promotion of S&T education, S&T cooperation and exchanges, and international participation; the supply and quality of S&T manpower, facilities, and equipment. Efforts aimed at obtaining the services of foreign scientists and technicians with special expertise through immigration or payments for information or services in place; the success of such efforts; related personnel marketing mechanisms. 1520 National Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) and Electronic Warfare. C4I support to the national command authorities to include doctrine, systems, structure, organization, procedures, and facilities and electronic warfare factors. 1521 National Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I). The decision-making structure, organizations, procedures, and facilities (including their characteristics, capabilities, and vulnerabilities) used by a country's national command authorities, high command, general staff, or joint command(s) to command and control the armed forces. Facilities include headquarters, command posts, communications sites, and intelligence collection/processing installations that support strategic warfare execution. Includes the identification and characterization of all fixed and mobile C4I facilities at the joint command and national levels.

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1522 National Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) Equipment. Detailed technical parametric and performance characteristics and capabilities of C4I equipment, including transmitters, receivers, antennas, power sources, encryption gear, switching devices, cables, associated computers and processors, sensors, for example, of telecommunications media, such as telephone, telegraph, teletype, voice, facsimile, radio broadcast, television, radio relay, data link, telemetry, and reconnaissance and warning sensor systems for fixed and mobile equipment operating from ground sites as well as aboard aircraft, ships/submarines, land-mobile vehicles, and satellites. Spectral interest for C4 equipment covers the RF spectrum (ELF to EHF) plus Electro-optical, acoustic, and other regions of the electromagnetic spectrum. 1523 National Command, Control, Communications, Computers, and Intelligence (C4I) Technologies. Research and development programs covering standard and advanced technologies directed toward the operational deployment of improved C4I systems, including laser communications, burst communications; spread-spectrum (frequency hopping, direct sequence, and hybrid) communications; long-range acoustic communications; sensor advancements; communications and decision-making automation; communications developments resulting from scientific advancements in areas such as ionosphere heating and ducting, lithosphere research, surface ducting, and meteor trail ionization; and other means as appropriate. 1524 National Telecommunications. National civil and military telecommunications networks, organizations, procedures, and facilities, to include all telecommunications systems and means in use on a national scale (telephone, telegraph, teletype, facsimile, radio broadcast, television, wire and cable, radio relay, satellite and computer). 1525 National Telecommunications Technologies. The technical capabilities, performance characteristics, and vulnerabilities of national civil and military telecommunications networks and equipment, to include all telecommunications systems and means in use on a national scale (telephone, telegraph, teletype, facsimile, radio broadcast, television, wire and cable, radio relay, satellite, and computer). 1527 Electronic Order of Battle. Location, type, and function of land-based radars and other non-communications emitters in place at an EOB site.

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1528 National Electronic Warfare Operations, Systems and Technologies. The organization and facilities used to employ electromagnetic energy at millimetre or greater wavelengths to attack enemy combat capabilities or to protect friendly combat capabilities against any use of the electromagnetic spectrum, including associated doctrines and strategies for these employments. Does not include non-weapon-laser or directed-energy systems, (see 1720 and 1860, respectively). Includes the technical performance characteristics and capabilities of this electromagnetic energy. Some methods use the technical aspects of the capabilities to search for, intercept, identify, and locate such sources of radiated energy for the purpose of immediate threat recognition. Other methods employ technical aspects of the capabilities to use electromagnetic energy to attack personnel, facilities, and/or equipment to degrade, neutralize, or destroy the enemy's combat capability or to prevent or reduce the enemy's use of the electromagnetic spectrum, including jamming, deception, use of the enemy's radiations for weapon terminal homing, etc. Technical aspects of capabilities are used to protect personnel, facilities, and/or equipment from any use of the electromagnetic spectrum to degrade, neutralize, or destroy friendly combat capabilities. Also includes R&D programs covering standard and advanced technologies directed toward the operational deployment of improved military and civilian electromagnetic warfare systems, including such areas as advanced sensors for collection and warning, methods for reducing radiations/cross-sections, increased efficiency of reflective materials, advanced processors for response determination, higher powered noise sources, and improved means to achieve deceptive realism. 1530 National Military Issues. Strategy, doctrine, plans, policies, and other directives and guidance provided from the national military structure to the force to include resources that impact on force modernization and any response from the force on the national level guidance to include the force leadership's ability to influence the national military structure. 1532 National Force Estimates and Trends. Integrated organizational and modernization plans and policies for future (3 years and beyond), long-term enhancement of national forces. This includes national forces projected trends, levels of development, employment concepts, and national aggregate totals of end items. Describes impact of national goals, resource limitations, and strategy on critical national support structures, systems, and services. 1535 National Military Personnel Policies and Resources, Mobilization, and Reserves. Policies and directives on the recruitment, retention, retirement education, welfare, and mobilization of military forces personnel to include reserves. Includes weapons, equipment, and supplies held at the national level for distribution to military forces during crisis.

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1540 Multi-service and Multinational Forces. Joint military forces composed of several or all-military services in one or more countries. Also includes integrated forces, combined forces, and national or international military operations to support peacekeeping or humanitarian efforts. 1541 Joint Military Forces. Multi-service forces within a nation includes plans, policy, programs, doctrine, threat perception, military capabilities and vulnerabilities, organization, force structure, logistics, readiness, mobilization capability, C4I, and projection of power. 1542 Joint Military Forces Employment. Joint force plans and capabilities to deploy forces and weapons to operate within its own territory or in foreign countries, international waters, and airspace or space. Includes the composition and disposition of a multi-service military force and exercises involving multiple services and the mission of foreign forces of one nation deployed and/or operating in another country. 1543 Integrated Air Defence Forces, Operations, and Systems. The fusion of air defence weapon systems and organizations to effect integrated, coordinated, and cooperative air defence operations (early warning and acquisition; air defence command, control, communications, and intelligence within a zone, sector, region, or country). Includes planning, organizing, equipping, and operating under a centralized and/or decentralized command and leadership structure to orchestrate strategic and tactical missile fires, fighter operations, radar operations, passive detection operations, air defence intelligence operations, and air defence electronic warfare against aerodynamic vehicles. Also includes the characteristics and performance of the systems and weapons used in the IADS operations. 1546 Coastal and Anti-landing Defence. Strategy, forces, commands and control, and systems involved in complex, multi-service operations to protect against attacks from the sea. Coastal defence normally occurs only in littoral waters, while anti-landing defence may begin with operations against assault ships/assault craft much further out to sea. 1547 Combined Military Forces. Multinational force plans, capabilities, and intent to deploy forces and weapons for operations or exercises in foreign countries, international waters, airspace, or space within an international command structure to include mission and objectives, composition, and disposition. Includes organization, force structure, C4I, logistics, mobilization capability, force availability, C2 and leadership, military plans and programs, and the capabilities of total force.

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1549 Peacekeeping and Humanitarian Operations. Current and projected national or international military force capabilities and employment in peacekeeping and humanitarian operations, including plans, policy, doctrine, intentions, military capabilities and vulnerabilities, organization, logistics, and readiness and employment as it applies to a country's military forces involved or potentially involved in national, regional, or international peacekeeping or humanitarian operations. Includes host-nation receptivity, support, and potential hostility toward such operations as well as donor nation attitudes, military and political, toward such operations. It also includes the peacekeeping and humanitarian operations military/security decision-making, planning, and operating abilities of any umbrella organization, such as the UN, NATO, non-governmental organizations, and private volunteer organizations. 1550 Arms Control and Treaties. Motivations, strategy, and goals of treaty negotiation. Also includes intent or actual treaty infractions, plus the country ability to monitor treaty provisions. 1551 Arms Control Formulation. Key individuals involved in foreign national arms control policies, foreign national intentions regarding compliance with existing and future agreements, and the evaluation of the effects of treaty compliance provisions, such as routine and challenge inspections. Includes assessments of the value of negotiated and proposed cooperative monitoring means with national intelligence means to determine confidence levels of monitoring treaty compliance. 1552 Arms Control Negotiations. Key individuals, technical data on weapons involved, detailed force data, and the means available for negotiated ways of treaty monitoring for compliance. Includes foreign national attitudes and actions concerning proposals and negotiations involving Canadian and Allied policy objectives or of interest to the United States. 1553 Arms Limitations and Force Reduction. The effect of arms limitations and force reductions on relevant military force balances, and regional and strategic security. 1554 Arms Control Agreement Compliance. Compliance with the provisions of arms control treaties. Includes information on treaty-relevant weapon development, production, acquisition, transfer, stockpiling, and destruction/Dismantlement; treaty-relevant military organizations and their numerical strength, deployment, and activities; and the results of negotiated monitoring means. 1555 Arms Control and Treaty Monitoring. Overt activities as agreed upon in treaties to verify treaty provisions through monitoring activities.

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1556 Force Withdrawal Progress and Costs. The progress and costs of the withdrawal of a country's military presence in accordance with agreements. Agreed and estimated timetables. Security, legal, economic, and operational issues and obstacles. Implementing agreements, including financial arrangements. (Priority applies, as appropriate to the country where the foreign forces are located or to the country or countries making the withdrawal and/or bearing the costs of withdrawal.) 1560 Proliferation of Technology and Weapons Transfer. The worldwide spread and/or transfer of all military-related technologies and weapon systems. Includes global proliferation of weapon technologies and systems for weapons of mass destruction (VVNM) and advanced conventional weapons (ACW's). Includes the indigenous development, foreign acquisition or supply of complete systems, components, materials, equipment, enabling technologies, and know-how to countries with, or countries that desire, WMD and/or ACW's. Includes a country's strategic personality: proliferate country motives, national goals, threat perceptions, policy objectives, attitudes toward international non-proliferation regimes and export controls, acquisition strategy, procurement networks, budget and funding, sources, organization and plans for indigenous research and development, testing, production, deployment, doctrine, and military strategy. 1561 Technology Transfer. Transfer of all military-related technologies. Specifically includes information on the worldwide transfer, legal or illegal, of technology (including technology supplied or acquired for conventional or non-conventional WMD weapon programs), goods, services, and munitions (TGSM) to, from, within, or through foreign countries, irrespective of mechanism of origin. It includes but is not necessarily limited to information on national attitudes, policies, programs, plans, needs, targets, priorities, preferred sources and methods, and funding related to acquiring foreign TGSM; specific transfers; personalities and organizations involved in transferred or use of transferred TGSM; mechanisms for and progress in absorption and diffusion of acquired foreign TGSM; impact of successful acquisition (as well as failure to acquire foreign TGSM) on the scientific and technical (S&T) base, S&T infrastructure and state-of-the-art, military, economic, and industrial capabilities, foreign policy and domestic politics, and national goals and objectives; national attitudes and policies regarding transfer and protection of TGSM, laws and regulatory basis for their protection and control, enforcement capabilities, and performance (to include patents and other forms of intellectual property rights); specific risk factors, to include in-transit trade, foreign presence, visitors such as students and scholars, and agreements covering science and technology, trade and commerce, and security assistance. Includes impact of the acquisition on Canadian and Allied war-fighting capabilities, regional balances, and risk assessments and threats posed by foreign acquisition of Canadian and Allied firms/technologies.

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1562 Military Assistance and Sales Programs and Arms Transfer. The provision or receipt of conventional arms and military assistance. This type of intelligence specifically includes reference to transfers, negotiations, contracts, sales, loans and grants, and deliveries of military and military-related equipment, services, and/or support involving subject country as donor, supplier, broker, buyer, or recipient. Amounts and types of such assistance, dates of delivery or transhipment, financial terms and arrangements, personnel involved; assistance for the development or production of arms or military equipment; data on specific equipment nomenclature and prices, extent of support packages, and means of delivery; and status of competing negotiations or systems, to include effect on any possible ongoing negotiations for Canadian and Allied equipment. 1563 Chemical Weapons Proliferation. Acquisition or supply of chemical warfare technology, materials, components, expertise, and the networks and mechanisms used to accomplish this. Includes information on key individuals, financial resources, and relative national priority and rationale for building chemical weapons programs. Covers the indigenous development aspect of the acquisition of chemical warfare technology for dual use purposes. 1564 Biological Weapons Proliferation. Acquisition or supply of biological warfare technology, materials, components, expertise, and the networks and mechanisms used to accomplish this. Includes information on key individuals, financial resources, and relative national priority and rationale for building biological weapons programs. Covers the indigenous development aspect of the acquisition of biological warfare technology for dual use purposes. 1565 Nuclear Weapons Proliferation. The indigenous development; foreign acquisition or supply of technology, materials, components, know-how, and the networks and the mechanisms used to accomplish this; stockpiling; Dismantlement; and use of nuclear weapons by nations. Includes information on key individuals, financial resources, and relative national priority for building nuclear weapons programs and acquiring nuclear weapons. Includes national approaches to negotiations for nuclear and nuclear-related arms control agreements, national intentions with regard to compliance with existing or proposed arms control agreements, and evaluations of the effect of treaty compliance provisions such as routine and challenge inspections. 1566 Missile Proliferation. The indigenous development; foreign acquisition or supply of technology, materials, components, and know-how; stockpiling; Dismantlement; and use of missiles by nations. Includes information on key individuals, financial resources, and relative national priority for building missile and/or space launch vehicle programs and acquiring missiles and/or space launch vehicles. Includes national approaches to negotiations for missile and space launch vehicle and related

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arms control agreements, national intentions with regard to compliance with existing or proposed arms control agreements, and evaluations of the effect of treaty compliance provisions, such as routine and challenge inspections. 1567 Space Systems Proliferation. The indigenous development; foreign acquisition or supply of technology, materials, components, know-how, and the networks and the mechanisms used to accomplish this; stockpiling; Dismantlement; and use of space systems by nations. Includes information on satellite payloads, such as imagery/reconnaissance capabilities and technologies, and COMSAT capabilities; critical capabilities, such as tasking and ground processing; key military, political, and technical individuals; space systems-related research institutes and production facilities; financial resources; relative national priority for building space system programs and acquiring space systems; impact of successful acquisition (as well as failure to acquire foreign space systems) on the scientific and technological base; military; domestic politics; and national goals and objectives. It also includes the implications for Canadian and Allied force deployments, and regional military capabilities and balances. 1568 Advanced Conventional Weapons Proliferation. Information relating to proliferation of conventional weapons or technologies that are advanced by US standards and challenge US military technical superiority or require significant changes in US operational or contingency planning (including development of protective counter-measures), as well as those other key conventional weapons or technologies that are relatively advance in a regional context and who acquisition could significantly alter the capabilities of military forces of concern to the US. Advanced conventional weapons (ACW) proliferation includes indigenous production; foreign acquisition or supply of complete systems, weapons, or weapons production technology, materials, components, or know how. Key issues are: identification of ACW weapons programs and production issues; funding status and schedules; decision-making on ACW and related technologies; export/import control policy; negotiations, sales, procurement, deliveries, and the transfer and shipping networks. 1569 Counter-proliferation. The intelligence supporting options to deny the production, transfer, acquisition, or use of VV-NM (biological, chemical, nuclear), their missile delivery systems, and materials, and Ace's, including technology denial, interdiction, targeting, or recovery. Includes procurement networks, organizations (governmental, commercial, educational), and individuals involved in negotiations, contracting, purchasing, providing banking/financial services, providing transportation/distribution services (to include shipping, Trans-shipping, insurance, routing, packaging, etc.) support WMD programs or procurement.

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1570 Regional and Global Military Issues. Comparison of military capabilities among nations in environments beyond individual national borders, including assessments of regional and global trends in forces, platform, weapon, and sensor developments. 1571 Regional and Global Military Balances. Comparison of military capabilities among nations, neighbours, regions, contiguous regions, or globally. It also addresses issues such as the comparison of defence base including industrial, manpower, and infrastructure among nations, neighbours, regions, contiguous regions, or globally. 1572 Integrated Threats to Canadian and Allied Army Acquisition Programs. Integration of existing, developing, or projected threat as required to provide basic intelligence to the Canadian or Allied acquisition process. 1573 Integrated Threats to Canadian and Allied Navy Acquisition Programs. Integration of existing, developing, or projected threat as required to provide basic intelligence to the Canadian or Allied acquisition process. 1574 Integrated Threats to Canadian and Allied Air Force Acquisition Programs. Integration of existing, developing, or projected threat as required to provide basic intelligence to the Canadian or Allied acquisition process. 1575 Integrated Threats to Canadian and Allied Marine Acquisition Programs. Integration of existing, developing, or projected threat as required to provide basic intelligence to the Canadian or Allied acquisition process. 1576 Integrated Threats to Canadian and Allied Space Acquisition Programs. Integration of existing, developing, or projected threat as required to provide basic intelligence to the Canadian or Allied acquisition process. 1580 Hostilities. Present and projected conditions undermining national stability and security, leading to hostilities, elements involved in military conflict, and ongoing hostilities. Covers situations ranging from sanctions and embargoes to insurgencies, civil war, and regional conflict.

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1581 Sanctions (Military Issues). Military impact of economic and military sanctions against targeted countries. Impact of sanctions on domestic support for the regimes of targeted countries. Efforts of targeted countries to circumvent sanctions. Support for and compliance with sanctions by non-targeted countries. Companies and individuals involved in circumventing sanctions, trade routes and financial methods used, and individual shipments of unauthorized goods. 1582 Embargoes (Military Issues). Military support/involvement in the enforcement of an embargo (a legal prohibition on commerce against a country. Impact on domestic support for the regime of the country. Planned, anticipated, and actual efforts of targeted countries to circumvent embargoes, including military and political actions aimed at breaking the embargoes. 1583 Incipient Insurgency Situation. Political, military, economic, social, and geographic factors supporting potential insurgency. Includes the characteristics and capabilities of potential guerrilla elements, the extent of foreign support to antigovernment elements, and the likelihood of involvement of insurgents in the event of major natural or economic disaster. 1584 Active Insurgency. All factors in hostilities in a country carried on by dissident elements aiming at overthrow of the constituted government. Includes the size, composition, organization, equipment, and overall capabilities of the insurgent groups and foreign involvement in the conflict. 1585 Civil War. All factors in hostilities between the legitimate government of a country and parties or regions within the country conducted at a higher level of combat and intensity than an insurgency. May involve secession of a region. Includes the size, composition, organization, equipment, and overall capabilities of the combatants and any foreign involvement in the conflict. 1586 Regional Conflict. All factors in low levels of conflict, ranging from a small border war to hostilities between two or more nations in a region. 1587 Prisoners-of-War and Missing-in-Action Issues. A nation's policies, procedures, programs, organization, and operations for treatment, handling, and confinement of prisoners of war (POWs). It includes any overt policies or statements of treating types or different nationalities of prisoners differently and the reasons for the difference. It also includes the identification and treatment of POWs and civilian detainees, identification and description of places of detention, and analyses of the status of personnel missing in action.

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1588 Search and Rescue. Possible or actual search for crafts or persons involving the use of aircraft, surface craft, other sea, land, air or space vehicles and systems or specialized rescue teams, and equipment for search and rescue of personnel in distress on land or at sea. 1589 War Crimes. A violation of the international laws of war. This includes, but is not restricted to the principal international treaties making up the body of the international laws of war to include the eight 1907 Hague Conventions relating to war on land and at sea, the 1925 Geneva Protocol prohibiting the use of poisonous gases and bacteriological methods of warfare, and the four 1949 Geneva Conventions (often referred to as the "humanitarian" rules). 1590 Foreign Relations. National foreign policy intentions, objectives, programs, negotiating positions, and actions likely to support or conflict with US foreign policies and programs and with US political and security interests. Bilateral relations with the US, including perceptions of US policy intentions and resolve, reactions to US policy, and cooperation with US law enforcement efforts and actions. National assessments of the foreign and domestic policies and programs of other countries. National attitudes and actions to cooperate with or obstruct these policies and programs.

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1600 NUCLEAR, BIOLOGICAL, AND CHEMICAL WARFARE 1600 Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Warfare National strategy, doctrine, plans, forces, programs, infrastructure, RDT&E, production, stockpile, Dismantlement, logistics, security, employment, training, capabilities, equipment, systems, technology, force modernization, and defensive equipment for nuclear, chemical and biological weapons to include smoke, obscurants, flame, and incendiary weapons. 1610 Nuclear Programs. Characteristics and capabilities of foreign nuclear programs and the applications of such programs in support of military programs. 1615 Nuclear Infrastructure. The scientific, engineering, and technical personnel and expertise required to produce nuclear weapons and materials. Includes the industrial capabilities and facilities required to support the production of nuclear weapons and materials. 1620 Nuclear Warhead Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation. Nuclear warhead RDT&E, including X-rays, gamma's, neutrons, electromagnetic; pulse outputs, design characteristics, technologies, vulnerabilities, use of control devices, hardening, and safing-arming-fuzing-firing systems. 1625 Nuclear Materials. The technologies and facilities used to produce, enrich, and process special nuclear materials, including (but not limited to) uranium-235, plutonium-239, and tritium and stockpiles of these materials. Storage of highly radioactive products resulting from nuclear fuel cycle operations. 1626 Radiological Weapons and Devices. Characteristics and capabilities of weapons or devices utilizing radiological material, including special nuclear material and other radioactive material, primarily designed to contaminate specific areas. Includes both weapons designed for use by military forces and devices fabricated by terrorist or criminal elements. 1630 Nuclear Warheads Production and Dismantlement. Technologies and facilities used to manufacture nuclear warhead components, to assemble those components into warheads, and to disassemble warheads that are outdated or eliminated for arms reduction.

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1631 Nuclear Material and Warheads Smuggling. Incidents of illegal sale and/or movement of weapons- grade nuclear material in contravention of international agreements. 1635 Nuclear Warheads Stockpile, Logistics, and Security. Number and type of warheads that a country possesses; where and how those warheads are stored and maintained; when and how warheads are transported to and from operational units, nuclear warhead storage sites, and assembly/disassembly facilities; and the passive and active measures taken to prevent theft or unauthorized use of warheads. 1640 Nuclear Warheads Employment. Intentions, policy, doctrine, strategy, and tactical procedures for the employment of nuclear warheads. 1644 Nuclear Explosion Detection Systems. The system enabling national leadership to detect, monitor, and analyze nuclear explosions to: identify nuclear test events, perceive that a nuclear attack is taking place against its forces or territory under its control and to identify the attacker; determine the origin, type, and magnitude of forces being used in the attack; determine which targets are under attack, ascertain that others are not under attack, and estimate the magnitude of damage inflicted; and estimate the attacker's objective or intentions. Coverage includes associated structures, facilities, and their vulnerabilities. 1645 Reactor Technology for Nuclear Power and Propulsion. The nuclear reactor technology involved in the production of electric power or propulsion. 1650 Chemical and Biological Warfare Programs and Facilities. National objectives and strategy of foreign chemical and biological weapons programs and ability to achieve related objectives. Includes relationship of facilities to the programs and their relevant priority in regard to contingency targeting objectives. 1651 National Strategy for Chemical and Biological Warfare. National goals for chemical and biological weapons programs. Includes evaluation of resources allocated to pursue chemical and biological weapons programs. Also includes key individuals, financial resources, relative national priority for chemical and biological arms acquisition, and the national criteria for chemical and biological weapons employment. 1652 Chemical Warfare Doctrine and Plans. Integration of chemical weapons into operational art and strategy and use of chemical weapons in context of use of other WMD.

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1653 Biological Warfare Doctrine and Plans. Integration of biological weapons into operational art and strategy and use of biological weapons in context of use of other WMD. 1654 Chemical Facilities. Civilian and military installations associated with the R&D, production, storage, stockpiling, demilitarization, and destruction of chemical warfare related products, to include precursor chemicals. Characteristics related to the targeting process, such as location, defences, and key vulnerabilities, weapons capability to meet targeting objectives. Includes plant and site identification, vulnerabilities, and limitations as associated with the targeting process. 1655 Biological Facilities. Civilian and military installations associated with the R&D, production, storage, stockpiling, demilitarization, and destruction of biological warfare related products. Characteristics related to the targeting process, such as location, defences, and key vulnerabilities, weapons capability to meet targeting objectives. Includes plant and site identification, vulnerabilities, and limitations as associated with the targeting process. 1660 Chemical and Biological Warfare Forces. Resource allocation and deployment of chemical and biological assets, to include troop strengths, training, and readiness levels to operate in a chemical or biological environment and the capabilities and vulnerabilities of national forces to employ chemical and biological weapons and to defend against their use. Includes organization, strength, order of battle, active and reserve component force mix, C4 level of training, state of readiness, reliability, combat operations, mobility, dispersal areas, logistics, materiel and equipment, mobilization and defence capabilities. 1661 Chemical and Biological Warfare Force Employment. Plans to integrate chemical and/or biological fires into comprehensive fire support plan. Tactics and doctrine for chemical and/or biological weapon attack. Tactical and doctrinal plans and procedures taken to deter or mitigate a chemical or biological attack. 1662 Chemical and Biological Warfare Force Estimates, Trends, and Modernization. Provides projections of the potential use of chemical and biological weapons and the ability of forces to conduct operations in chemical and biological warfare environments. 1663 Chemical and Biological Warfare Offensive Force Structure. Considers the location, subordination, organization, personnel and equipment strength, and types of equipment used to support offensive operations by dedicated offensive chemical and biological warfare units.

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1664 Chemical and Biological Warfare Defensive Force Structure. Considers the location, subordination, organization, personnel and equipment strength, and types of equipment associated with defensive chemical and biological warfare units. 1665 Chemical and Biological Warfare Training and Exercises. The measures designed to prepare forces to conduct operations in chemical and biological warfare environments. Includes the frequency, scope, and realism of individual and collective chemical and biological warfare training. Assessment of chemical and biological warfare readiness levels. 1666 Chemical and Biological Warfare Threat to Naval Forces and Supporting Infrastructure. Resource allocation and deployment of chemical and biological naval assets to employ chemical and biological weapons against naval combatants, sea-lanes of communications, and supporting naval infrastructures to include ports, supply depots, and propositioned naval supplies and equipment. Also includes weapons and agents unique to the maritime environment and the doctrine, planning, and tactics for the use of these type of weapons or devices. 1670 Chemical and Biological Warfare Agents and Weapons Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation. Activities related to the research, development, test, and evaluation applicable to chemical and biological warfare. Includes both offensive and defensive systems and materiel. Also includes advancements in technology related to aerosolization, and micro encapsulation. 1671 Chemical Warfare Agents and Weapons Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation. The spectrum of research and development activities, to include indigenous capabilities, to produce chemical weapons and agents effectively; the development of chemical weapons and devices specific to the use of the weapons; and current and projected technical characteristics of chemical agents and weapons performance. Research development testing and evaluation processes necessary to improve existing chemical weapons and to establish new agents and weapons for adoption by target countries. Includes science and technology needed for research, development, test, and evaluation, and specific devices for those activities. 1672 Biological Warfare Agents and Weapons Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation. The spectrum of research and development activities to include: indigenous capabilities to develop biological agents including current and emerging infectious organisms (naturally occurring and/or altered), bioregulators, biochemicals, toxins (naturally occurring, synthesized and/or altered), and all

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other mid-spectrum agents of biological origin, and use biological weapons effectively; the development of biological warheads or devices specific to the use of those weapons; and current and projected technical characteristics of biological agents and weapons performance. Research development testing and evaluation processes necessary to improve existing chemical weapons and to establish new agents and weapons for adoption by target countries. Includes science and technology needed for research, development, test, and evaluation and specific devices for those activities. 1673 Chemical, Biological, and Radiological Defensive Equipment. Technical characteristics, capabilities, limitations, effectiveness, and vulnerabilities of tactical chemical, biological, and radiological defence equipment and systems, (e.g., detection and identification, individual and collective tactical protection and decontamination). Includes RDT&E, design programs, materials, production techniques, and philosophy to render military equipment and systems less vulnerable to destruction or impairment from the effects of nuclear (e.g. blast, radiation, electromagnetic pulse, thermal, and transient radiation effects), biological (e.g. bacterial viral, and toxin agents), or chemical (e.g. liquid, vapour, and aerosol agents) weapons. Also includes use of protective equipment such as filters, detectors, and radiation liners and techniques for contamination avoidance and for decontamination. 1674 Chemical Processes and Production Technology. Industrial and military manufacturing processes and technologies applicable to chemical warfare. Includes industrial, pilot, and laboratory production capabilities of chemical precursors, scheduled chemicals, and associated raw materials, as well as fielded, experimental, and new chemical agents in research, development, test, and evaluation phases. Includes description and function of manufacturing processes and technologies applicable to chemical agent and weapons production. Includes production process of chemical agents, feedstock/precursor chemicals, and dissemination aides and additives. 1675 Biological Processes and Technology. Industrial and military biological or biochemical processes and technologies applicable to biological warfare. Includes industrial, pilot, and laboratory processes for biological warfare materials, as well as fielded, experimental, and potential new biological agents, including current and emerging infectious organism (naturally occurring and/or altered), bioregulators, biochemicals, toxins (naturally desiring, synthesized, and/or altered), and all other mid-spectrum agents of biological origin. Includes production process of biological agents, dissemination aides and additives. 1680 Chemical and Biological Warfare Production, Storage, Transport, and Stockpiles. Includes production rates of chemical and biological agents, precursor, and weapons warheads and device types deployed or stored at associated facilities.

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1681 Chemical Production Capacity. Production capacities of precursor chemicals bulk chemical agents, and weapons. Includes potential rates of production of chemical agents and feedstock/precursor chemicals. 1682 Chemical Production and Stockpiles. Quantity, types and agent fills for weapons, precursors, and bulk chemical agent deployed or located at chemical facilities. Includes actual numbers of warheads and device types. Specifies quantities deployed or stored at locations. 1683 Biological Production and Stockpiles. Quantity, types and agent fills for weapons and bulk biological agent deployed or located at biological facilities. Includes actual numbers of warheads and device types. Specifies quantities deployed or stored at locations. 1684 Chemical Storage and Transport Technology. Specialized equipment development and characteristics for logistics associated with chemical weapons and agents, including storage and transportation. Description of dual-use technology used in chemical weapons logistics. Specify structural and environmental requirements. Includes methods and attempts to preclude monitoring of transport and storage. 1685 Biological Storage and Transport Technology. Specialized equipment development and characteristics for logistics associated with biological weapons and agents, including storage and transportation. Description of dual-use technology used in biological weapons logistics. Specify structural and environmental requirements. Includes methods and attempts to preclude monitoring of transport and storage. 1690 Chemical and Biological Demilitarization and Destruction Technology. Demilitarization and destruction procedures, technology, and assessments of destroyed chemical and biological agents and/or precursor materials.

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1691 Chemical Demilitarization and Destruction Technology. Technology that could be used or is used for demilitarization and destruction of chemical warfare materiel. Identification and function of specialized equipment, utility requirements for equipment operation, and key operator skills and abilities. Includes rated capacity for demilitarization and destruction processes. 1692 Chemical Destruction. Methodologies for and actual quantities and type of chemical agents, precursors, and associated materiel destroyed. 1693 Biological Demilitarization and Destruction Technology. Technology that could be used or is used for demilitarization and destruction of biological warfare materiel. Identification and function of specialized equipment, utility requirements for equipment operation, and key operator skills and abilities. Includes rated capacity for demilitarization and destruction processes. 1694 Biological Destruction. Methodologies for and actual quantities and type of biological agents, precursors, and associated materiel destroyed.

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1700 ELECTRONICS 1700 Electronics Microelectronics, lasers, Electro-optics, infrared, computer, sensor, and electronic combat or warfare technologies. 1710 Electronic Devices. Developments of new electronic devices, availability, and production processes. (Electronics integral to operational weapon systems are covered under the appropriate "system" requirement categories 1000-1400). 1711 Microelectronics Research and Development. Technologies and related RDT&E on microelectronic devices, production capability, and performance capabilities. 1712 Microelectronics Materials and Manufacturing Technology. Characteristics of the elements and compounds, processes, and equipment used to fabricate integrated circuits and discrete semiconductor devices. 1713 Electron Devices. Devices in which conduction is principally by electrons moving through a vacuum or gas, including vacuum integrated circuits, and high-power radio frequency (RF) tubes. 1720 Lasers (Non-weapon) and Electro-Optics. Technologies, concepts, and applications of passive optical and Electro-optical components, subassemblies, equipment (e.g., television, computers, infrared surveillance guidance and detection, and night-vision devices), and counter-equipment. Includes infrared signatures of foreign weapon systems for use in weapon systems and countermeasures designs and technologies, concepts, and application of lasers and active Electro-optical equipment, counter-equipment, and processes that use lasers (e.g., laser radar and ranging, laser guidance and homing, laser communications, laser gyros, laser imaging and data processing, laser isotope separation, and laser fusion). Also includes associated personalities and facilities. 1721 Helicopter and Ground-Based Optics, Electro-Optics, and Laser Systems (Less ATGM's). Design, description, technologies, and resulting characteristics and performance of optical and Electro-optical devices and non-weapon laser devices that are employed on the battlefield, in the production of military equipment, or have the possibility of dual-use applications. This includes sensors used for fire control, ranging, tracking, night vision, and intrusion detection and laser systems integral

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to equipment belonging to army aviation (helicopters, light fixed-wing aircraft, ultralights, and army UAV's). 1722 Low-Energy Laser and Electro-Optics Missile Systems. Low-energy lasers and sensor-based subsystems or components that fall within the near-, mid-, or far-infrared and visible portions of the electromagnetic spectrum for use in missile applications. 1723 Low-Energy Laser and Electro-Optics Maritime Systems Weapon Support and Non-weapon. Low- energy lasers and sensor-based subsystem or components that fall within the near-, mid-, or far-infrared and visible portions of the electromagnetic spectrum for use in naval warfare. 1724 Low-Energy Laser and Electro-Optics Aerospace Systems, Weapon Support, and Non-weapon (Aircraft, ASM's, AAM's, CM's). Low-energy lasers and sensor-based subsystem or components that fall within the near-, mid-, or far-infrared and visible portions of the electromagnetic spectrum for use in air or space warfare. 1725 Night Vision Enhancement and Low-Energy Laser Technology. Designs and technologies important to military infrared and night-vision devices. Includes infrared detection, infrared detector arrays, infrared imaging, low-light-level technology, component technologies (e.g., cryogenics, filters, infrared trans-missive materials), and low power laser technologies. 1730 Computers and Related Systems Technology. All aspects of computer design and use having an impact on military-related functions. Includes R&D, fabrication and manufacturing technologies, and processes and techniques associated with advanced computer design. 1731 Computer Science and Information Technology. Sciences and technologies specifically applicable to the design, development, utilization and countermeasures of computers, computer systems, and software with a link of theoretical and general application areas to actual and potential military applications. 1732 Cybernetics. The science of control and communication in animals and machines, specifically purposive regulation for adaptive system survival. 1733 Computer Science Resources. Resources available to a country to allow the increase of computing capability.

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1734 Instrumentation Technologies. Information on flat panel displays that are visual subsystems utilizing glass compounds that display organic and inorganic material illuminated by electricity. 1735 Computer and Communications Security Technologies. Technological advances in security equipment and systems to include communications, computers, explosive detection, access control systems, electronic terrorism devices, and counter-security devices. Status of research and technology development; resources, facilities, and organizations involved. National support and requirements for R&D to include the extent of government support. 1740 Sensor Technologies. Sensor systems and technologies for reconnaissance, surveillance, target acquisition, identification, and active protection systems. 1741 Advanced Sensor Systems for Ground Applications. Advanced systems and associated technologies with application to ground forces. Includes two broad groupings: 1) identification and targeting of low-observable/stealth helicopters, remotely piloted vehicles, and ground weapon systems; and 2) radar/sensors for active protection systems for ground systems and helicopters. 1742 Advanced Sensor Systems for Air Applications. Advanced systems and associated technologies with application to air forces. Includes two broad groupings: identification and targeting of low- observable/stealth aircraft, SAM's, and AAM's and radar/sensors for active protection systems for aircraft. 1743 Advanced Sensor Systems for Sea Applications. System capabilities and associated technologies for advanced sensors on maritime platforms. Includes two broad categories: 1) sensors for detecting and identifying targets to include low observable/stealth platforms, helicopters, unmanned aerial vehicles, small surface craft/boats, and submarine periscopes and 2) sensors associated with weapon systems for targeting, tracking, and weapon guidance. Applied to sensors, which operate in any portion of the electromagnetic spectrum. 1744 Battlefield Reconnaissance, Surveillance, and Target Acquisition Systems. Current and projected capabilities to collect and analyze tactical and operational intelligence and reconnaissance data on ground force targets. Included are Electro-optics, acoustics, battlefield radars, SIGINT, and aerial reconnaissance. 1745 Advanced Sensor Systems for ABNVATBM, ATGM, SAM, SRBM, ASAT-Ground, and DEW- Ground.

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Advanced sensor systems and associated technologies with application to ABM/ATBM, ATGM, SAM, SRBM, and ASAT/DEW-ground. 1746 Identification Friend-or-Foe (IFF). All equipment types used to establish the nationality or IFF status of targets detected by early warning, targeting, surveillance, or fire control sensors. Includes active interrogation and response systems, and non-cooperative target recognition systems operating at any wavelength in the electromagnetic or acoustic spectra. 1750 Electronic Combat/Electronic Warfare. Operational doctrine, organizational structure, tactics, and equipment used for electronic combat, electronic warfare across the electromagnetic spectrum. 1751 Airborne (Fixed-Wing) Electronic Combat. Airborne electromagnetic combat equipment, such as ECM, ESM, flare, chaff, and related systems found on fixed-wing aircraft. 1752 Airborne (Rotary-Wing) Electronic Combat. Airborne electromagnetic combat equipment, such as ECM, ESM, flare, chaff, and related systems found on rotary-wing aircraft. 1753 Ground-Based Electronic Combat. Ground-based electromagnetic combat equipment, such as ECM, ESM, flare, chaff, and related systems found on ground-based platforms. 1754 Maritime-Based Electronic Combat. Electronic combat/electronic warfare associated with maritime platforms.

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1800 SCIENCES AND TECHNOLOGIES 1800 Sciences and Technologies. Medical, mathematical, physical, propulsion and explosives, ecological, directed-energy and kinetic energy, and low observable sciences and technologies. 1801 Non-medical Biotechnology Research. Research and developments in biotechnology related to non- biological warfare and non-medical applications. Includes biomaterial, bioelectronics, and bioprocessing. 1802 Biotechnology of Military Medical Significance. Accomplishments in biotechnology with potential applications to military medicine and/or biological warfare. Technologies specifically included are recombinant DNA and cell-fusion technology, including hybridomas, somatic cell genetics, and novel bioprocess techniques. 1803 Biological Effects of Electromagnetic Radiation. Research on biological, physiological, morphological, and behavioural effects of electronic radiation and its application to human vulnerability. Covers the entire electromagnetic spectrum, with specific emphasis on radio wave, microwave, infrared, and ultraviolet radiation and military exploitation of directed-energy (laser) technology. 1810 Medical Sciences. Medical capabilities, facilities, transportation, and RDT&E to support the country's armed forces during peacetime and hostilities to include the indigenous threat of infectious disease, environmental health, and AIDS. 1811 Medical Sciences Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation. The study of health and medical situations in foreign countries, to include RDT&E on those aspects of the biological and medical sciences having military significance, especially those involving nuclear materials. Includes the physiological and psychological effects of both natural and induced environments on man, research on the exploitation of biophysical and psychological phenomena, and advances in health and medical care. 1812 Infectious Disease Risk and Occurrence. Infectious disease risk and occurrence, focusing on those infectious diseases that degrade the effectiveness of military forces. Includes the risk from infectious diseases to military personnel when deployed to other countries.

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1813 Medical Capabilities. The assessment of military and civilian public health infrastructure; health care delivery systems; domestic and transnational public health networking; medical education, training, logistics, supplies, and equipment; medical and pharmaceutical research, development and acquisition systems; clinical laboratory, blood banking and diagnostic services and systems; and the impact on support and sustainment of military potential and other national security issues. 1814 Medical Facilities. Identification and location of blood banks, medical schools, materiel manufacturers, and treatment facilities. Identification and assessment of the capability of foreign medical facilities to support indigenous military capabilities and an influx of foreign military personnel, such as during coalition operations and humanitarian operations. 1815 Veterinary Capabilities. The assessment of agricultural capabilities, animal infectious diseases, food safety programs, and civilian and military veterinary services. 1816 Environmental Health. Environmental health factors posing threats to military capabilities and as forecasting elements in emerging disease patterns. 1817 Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS). Incidence and prevalence of Human immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) and AIDS cases within key groups. Statistics (new and total) on the number of persons infected, clinical AIDS cases; risk groups, and local and international transmission modes. Estimated spread of HIV/AIDS in selected population groups, national surveillance and diagnostic capabilities. Impact of HIV/AIDS on military organizations and capabilities, health systems, and national budget, social, economic conditions. National responses to the perceived domestic or regional public health threat posed by HIV/AIDS. 1818 Pharmaceutical Facilities and Capabilities. Facilities where research, development, testing, licensing distribution, and stockpiling of pharmaceutical products occurs. Includes evaluation of importation, exportation and/or stockpiling of pharmaceutical products. Pharmaceutical industry infrastructure is determined along with the quality and quantity of medical products to help assess the industry's impact upon the quality of civilian and military health care delivery, military medical readiness, and the potential for host nation support during Canadian and Allied deployments.

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1819 Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Warfare Antidotes and Medical Treatment. Research, development, testing, production, medical treatment, licensing, and stocks of medical material for the treatment of biological or chemical warfare agents or radiation exposure to include antibiotics, anti-sera, immune system modifiers, monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies, physiological active compounds, pre-treatment compounds, and vaccines developed and produced by traditional or genetic engineering methods. 1820 Mathematical and Physical Sciences. Physical and environmental science; physics, control theory, operations research; and applied mathematics. Includes mapping, navigation, and geophysical, and geographic activities. Focus is on those areas that have weapons potential or that contribute to a country's military capability. 1821 Physical and Environmental Sciences. R&D in the physical and environmental sciences, with particular emphasis on those areas that have weapons potential including environmental effects on weapons performance or those that contribute to a country's military capability. 1822 Mapping, Navigation, and Geophysical and Geographic Sciences. Current and projected state of the art in mapping, charting, and geodetic infrastructure. Includes navigation systems, their subsystems, and associated technologies designed to provide ground forces positional or survey data. 1823 Physics Research. Developments and achievements in physics research, including solid-state superconductivity that has potential military applications. 1824 Control Theory. Developments and achievements in control theory, to include guidance systems, robotics, and large-scale systems with military applications or impact on military operations. 1825 Operations Research. Developments and achievements in operations research. Includes theoretical aspects (representative areas include decision theory, queuing theory, mathematical programming, simulation, and related mathematical research) along with the military applications and the applicability of operations research techniques in land, air, and sea systems.

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1826 Applied Mathematics. Developments and achievements in applied mathematics with potential applications to military issues and problems; representative issues are fuzzy-set theory, residue number systems, signal processing, catastrophe theory, and chaos theory. 1830 Technology Base and Technologies. Organizational structure; R&D resources, strategies, policies, decisions, practices, and priorities of the country's weapons acquisition process from concept definition through prototype construction; plus the materials, structures, and manufacturing technologies used to manufacture military weapons and systems. 1831 Country Technology Base and Capabilities. Multi-force base technological capabilities of selected countries in terms of their R&D resources, including research institutes, design bureaus and test facilities, R&D manpower, and the R&D organizational structure that manages and directs the country's R&D programs. Includes the weapons acquisition process from concept definition through prototype construction and details on such areas as foreign R&D strategies, policies, decisions, practices, resource allocations, and priorities. 1832 Missile Forces Technology Base. Missile forces technological base capabilities of countries in terms of their R&D resources, including research institutes, design bureaus, test facilities, R&D manpower, and the R&D organizational structure that manages and directs R&D programs. Includes the weapons acquisition process from concept definition through prototype construction and details on such areas as R&D strategies, policies, decisions, practices, resource allocations, and priorities. 1833 Ground Forces Technology Base. Ground forces technological base capabilities of countries in terms of their R&D resources, including research institutes, design bureaus, test facilities, R&D manpower, and the R&D organizational structure that manages and directs R&D programs. Includes the weapons acquisition process from concept definition through prototype construction and details on such areas as R&D strategies, policies, decisions, practices, resource allocations, and priorities. 1834 Maritime Forces Technology Base. Maritime forces technological base capabilities of countries in terms of their R&D resources, including research institutes, design bureaus, test facilities, R&D manpower, and the R&D organizational structure that manages and directs R&D programs. It includes the weapons acquisition process from concept definition through prototype construction and details on such areas as R&D strategies, policies, decisions, practices, resource allocations, and priorities.

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1835 Aerospace Forces Technology Base. Aerospace forces technological base capabilities of countries in terms of their R&D resources, including research institutes, design bureaus, test facilities, R&D manpower, and the R&D organizational structure that manages and directs R&D programs. Includes the weapons acquisition process from concept defamation through prototype construction and details on such areas as R&D strategies, policies, decisions, practices, resource allocations, and priorities. 1836 Materials, Structures, and Manufacturing Technologies. Science and technology of materials (except nuclear) associated with current and projected military weapon systems, subsystems, and devices; the analytical techniques that define the structures of these systems, subsystems, and devices; and the manufacturing processes used to translate materials into military systems, subsystems, and devices. 1837 Materials, Structures, and Manufacturing Technologies for Ground Forces-Specific Applications. Science and technology of materials (except nuclear) associated with current and projected ground weapon systems, subsystems, and devices; the analytical techniques that define the structures of these systems, subsystems, and devices; and the manufacturing processes used to translate materials into military systems, subsystems, and devices. 1838 Materials, Structures, and Manufacturing Technologies for Maritime Forces-Specific Applications. Science and technology of materials (except nuclear) associated with current and projected maritime weapon systems, subsystems, and devices; the analytical techniques that define the structures of these systems, subsystems, and devices; and the manufacturing processes used to translate materials into military systems, subsystems, and devices. 1839 Materials, Structures, and Manufacturing Technologies for Aerospace Forces-Specific Applications. Science and technology of materials (except nuclear) associated with current and projected aerospace weapon systems, subsystems, and devices; the analytical techniques that define the structures of these systems, subsystems, and devices; and the manufacturing processes used to translate materials into military systems, subsystems, and devices.

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1840 Propulsion and Explosives Technology (Less Nuclear). Research and advancements in propellants, explosives, pyrotechnics, fuel and lubricants, conventional and advanced propulsion technology, and propulsion systems of aircraft, ground, marine, missile, and space systems. 1841 Ground Propulsion Systems Technologies. Research, development, and advancements in propulsion; fuels' and lubricants' impacts on machine design; and propulsion systems related to ground vehicles. Propulsion relates to the engines and transmissions, as well as to the cooling, lubrication, filtration, and other supporting subsystems. Inherent in ground propulsion analysis are soil mechanics, including the wheel/track-ground interface. 1842 Aerospace Propulsion System Technologies, Programs, and Facilities. Propulsion systems component technologies (including application of propellants and grain design), hardware component development, test, and production programs, and associated facilities supporting weapon systems and space programs. Propulsion technologies for air breathing and rocket systems with chemical (solid, liquid, and hybrid), electric, and other advanced propulsion. Test and production facilities are analyzed for their role and ability in supporting propulsion programs. 1843 Propellant, Explosives, and Pyrotechnics Technologies. Research, development, technology, and advancements in the synthesis, formulation and processing/production of chemical propellants, explosives, and pyrotechnics for all military applications. Included are solid, liquid, and hybrid propellants for use in guns, mortars, rockets, and missiles; solid, liquid, gaseous, and heterogeneous explosive materials, and pyrotechnic materials. 1844 Fuels and Lubricants Technology. RDT&E issues as well as the technologies for production, refining, and the resulting performance of fuels, oils, and lubricants used in automotive, aircraft, and marine military systems. Includes conventional as well as emerging alternate sources of energy such as natural gas, liquefied petroleum gas, alcohol's, bio diesel, and hydrogen. 1850 Energy Conversion and Power Technology. R&D trends and developments in power conversion, storage and conditioning. Includes solar concentrators, thermo-electrics, thermionics, magneto hydrodynamics, rotary generators, thermal and mechanical energy storage, and hydrogen technology.

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1851 Energy Conversion and Power Technology for Ground Forces Applications. Ground forces- specific R&D in power conversion, storage, and conditioning technology. It includes batteries, fuel cells, solar cells, solar concentrators, thermo electrics, thermionics, magneto hydrodynamics, rotary generators, thermal and mechanical energy storage, and hydrogen technology. It includes tactical power-generation and related technologies having significant potential for military application, improving or affecting military system performance, or facilitating the development of future military systems. 1852 Energy Conversion and Power Technology for Maritime Forces Applications. Maritime forces- specific R&D in power conversion, storage, and conditioning technology. It includes batteries, fuel cells, solar cells, solar concentrators, thermo electrics, thermionics, magneto hydro-dynamics, rotary generators, thermal and mechanical energy storage, and hydrogen technology. 1853 Energy Conversion and Power Technology for Aerospace Forces Applications. Aviation forces- specific R&D in power conversion, storage, and conditioning technology. It includes batteries, fuel cells, solar cells, solar concentrators, thermoelectric s, thermionics, magneto hydro-dynamics, rotary generators, thermal and mechanical energy storage, and hydrogen technology. 1860 Directed-Energy and Kinetic-Energy Weapons. Technologies, components, and systems used in the delivery of destructive or disruptive energy levels to a target by means of a highly directional beam or hypervelocity projectile (except for rockets and conventional guns). Includes research, developments, and trends in the concepts, techniques, and application of beam generating, forming, and pointing-related technologies to beam weapons, as well as beam propagation and target interaction. Includes development of energetic lasers, charged-particle beams, plasma beams, intense RF generation, and non-nuclear electromagnetic-pulse beams. Includes the technologies, components, and systems inherent in kinetic-energy weapons (electromagnetic launch and non-chemical other means) for delivery of hypervelocity projectiles. It also includes associated personalities, organizations, and facilities. 1861 Ground Combat Directed-Energy Weapons Development. Directed-energy weapons intended for ground-combat missions, to include heli-borne applications. Except for high-energy laser, radio frequency, and particle beam weapons, technologies, components, and systems used in the delivery of destructive or disruptive energy levels to a target by means of a highly directional beam. Includes research, developments, and trends in the concepts, techniques, and application of beam generating, forming, and point interrelated technologies to beam weapons, as well as beam propagation and target interaction. Includes

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development of lasers, charged-particle beams, plasma beams, intense RF generation, and non-nuclear electromagnetic-pulse beams. It also includes associated personalities, organizations, and facilities. 1862 Ground-Based Directed-Energy Weapons Development. Directed-energy weapons intended for ground-based strategic and tactical air defence, strategic and ATBM, and ASAT to include technologies, components, and systems used in the delivery of destructive or disruptive energy levels to a target by means of a highly directional beam. Except for high-energy laser, radio frequency, and particle-borne weapons, also includes research, developments, and trends in the concepts, techniques, and application of beam generating, forming, and pointing-related technologies to beam weapons, as well as beam propagation and target interaction. It also includes associated personalities, organizations, and facilities. 1863 Naval Directed-Energy Weapons Development. Ship-based directed-energy weapons to include technologies, components, and systems used in the delivery of destructive or disruptive energy levels to a target by means of a highly directional beam. Except for high-energy laser, radio frequency, and particle-borne weapons, includes research, developments, and trends in the concepts, techniques, and application of beam generating, forming, and pointing-related technologies to beam weapons, as well as beam propagation and target interaction. It also includes associated personalities, organizations, and facilities. 1864 Air-Based Directed-Energy Weapons Development. Aircraft-based directed-energy weapons to include technologies, components, and systems used in the delivery of destructive or disruptive energy levels to a target by means of a highly directional beam. Except for high-energy laser, radio frequency, and particle-beam weapons, also includes research, developments, and trends in the concepts, techniques, and application of beam generating, forming, and pointing-related technologies to beam weapons, as well as beam propagation and target interaction. It also includes associated personalities, organizations, and facilities. 1865 Space-Based Directed-Energy Weapons Development. Space-based directed-energy weapons to include technologies, components, and systems used in the delivery of destructive or disruptive energy levels to a target by means of a highly directional beam. Except for high-energy laser, radio- frequency, and particle-borne weapons, also includes research, developments, and trends in the concepts, techniques, and application of beam generating, forming, and pointing-related technologies to beam weapons, as well as beam propagation and target interaction. It also includes associated personalities, organizations, and facilities.

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1866 High-Energy Laser Technologies and Applications. High-energy laser and associated technologies and their applications to directed-energy weapon development. It also includes associated personalities, organizations, and facilities. 1867 Radio-Frequency Weapons Technologies and Applications. RDT&E, deployment, employment, and activities related to PF-directed-energy systems, including those intended and designed for hard kill, softball, and unconventional jamming missions. Includes research, developments, and trends in the concepts, techniques, and application of beam generating, forming, and pointing-related technologies to beam weapons, as well as beam propagation and target interaction. It also includes associated personalities, organizations, and facilities. 1868 Particle-Beam Weapons Technologies and Applications. Particle beam technologies and their applications to directed-energy weapon development. Includes research, developments, and trends in the concepts, techniques, and application of beam generating, forming, and pointing-related technologies to beam weapons, as well as beam propagation and target interaction. It also includes associated personalities, organizations, and facilities. 1869 Kinetic Energy Weapons. Technologies, components, and systems used in the delivery of destructive energy to damage or destroy targets by striking the target with a hypervelocity projectile launched from ground, naval, or aerospace platforms. Includes the technologies, components, and systems inherent in (except for rockets and conventional guns) kinetic-energy weapons (electromagnetic launch and other non-chemical means) for delivery of hypervelocity projectiles. It also includes associated personalities, organizations, and facilities. 1870 Low-Observable, Stealth, and Counter-stealth Technologies. Scope and capability of efforts to reduce delectability of military weapon systems through special design shaping, materials, coatings, and other technologies. Scope and status of approaches to counter low-observable/stealth technology through equipment enhancements, signals processing advances, and other techniques. 1871 Missile-Based Low-Observable Technologies (SRBM's, SAM's, ATGM's, ABMs/ATBM's, ASAT). Scope and capability of efforts to reduce deductibility of military missile systems through special design shaping, materials, coatings, and other technologies. 1872 Ground-Based Low-Observable Technologies. Scope and capability of efforts to reduce deductibility of ground-based military systems through special design shaping, materials, coatings, and other technologies.

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1873 Sea-Based Low-Observable Technologies. Scope and capability of efforts to reduce deductibility of naval military systems through special design shaping, materials, coatings, and other technologies. 1874 Air-Based Low-Observable Technologies. Scope and capability of efforts to reduce deductibility of military aviation systems through special design shaping, materials, coatings, and other technologies. 1875 Counter-Low-Observable Technologies. Scope and status of approaches to counter low- observable/stealth technology through equipment enhancements, signals processing advances, and other techniques. 1880 Resource and Environmental Issues. National interest in and actions to cooperate with or obstruct multilateral efforts: to deal with environmental problems, especially pollution of the environment from toxic and nuclear wastes; to reverse or ameliorate long-term ecological trends that may threaten US national interests; to regulate exploitation of polar, ocean, and sea bed resources; to promote favourable action on Law of the Sea is to protect endangered species. 1881 Ecological Contamination. Ecological contamination of the environment including damage resulting from military- industrial production. Dimensions and impact of environmental problems in civil and military sectors, particularly the safety of nuclear reactors and the handling of nuclear, biological, chemical, and other hazardous waste. The impact of environmental contamination (including illness and disease) on local and national support of the government to include the military, operations, budgets, and programs. Effectiveness in dealing with adverse environmental concerns. Environmental contamination/hazards that could affect Canadian and Allied military operations, humanitarian relief programs, and peacekeeping deployments. 1882 Environmental Organizations and Issues. National interest in and actions to cooperate with or obstruct multilateral efforts: to reverse or ameliorate long-term ecological trends that may threaten US national interests; to regulate exploitation of polar, ocean, and sea bed resources; to promote favourable action on Law of the Sea issues; and to protect endangered species.

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1883 Environmental Technologies. Technological advances in environmental engineering including programs to develop clean burning technology for combustion of fossil fuels, enhance efficiency of energy use, develop cleaner transportation systems, and to develop chlorofluorocarbon substitutes. Status and details of research and technology development; resources, facilities, programs, and organizations involved. National support and requirements for R&D in this sector to include extent of government support. 1890 Non-lethal and Incendiary Weapon Characteristics and Performance. Technical performance, technologies, and employment concepts of non-lethal weapons and technologies, and for flame and incendiary weapons and technologies. 1891 Non-lethal Weapons and Technologies Characteristics and Performance. All weapons and systems using non-lethal technologies to deter, subdue, or otherwise temporarily incapacitate individuals that have a military or law enforcement application. 1892 Flame and Incendiary Weapons. Technical performance, technologies, and employment concepts for flame and incendiary weapons.

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1900 RESOURCES AND ECONOMICS 1900 Resources and Economics A country's resources to include strategic materials and industrial capabilities, the economic capability to project power and influence, and the impact of sanctions or embargoes on a country's economic capabilities. 1910 Economics. Economic and basic industrial capabilities supporting the countries extant and future ability for development. Includes allocation priorities, budgets, economic strengths, weaknesses, mobilization capacities, and recovery capabilities. 1911 Military Economics. The economic and basic industrial capabilities supporting a country's current and future ability to develop, equip, and sustain armed forces; conduct military operations; and project power and influence. Includes civil-military resource allocation priorities; economic, industrial, and trade policies and performance as they affect the ability to support military programs; and the role of foreign economic- industrial linkages and assistance. Includes identification of economic strengths, weaknesses, and economic mobilization capacities and postwar recovery capabilities. 1912 Military Expenditures. Level, trends, and purpose of expenditures for present and projected military forces. Includes identification of defence expenditures by major resource category procurement, R&D, personnel, operations and maintenance (O&M), construction b by major forces or programs, and by funding sources. Also, defence spending as a share of national budgets and overall economic output, assessments of defence-economic decision-making structures and processes, and evaluations of defence planning and budgeting mechanisms. 1913 Civilian Economics. The economic strategy and capabilities supporting a country's political policies for development internally and to project power and influence in the international arena. Includes resource allocation priorities; economic, industrial, and trade policies and performance; and the role of foreign economic- industrial linkages and assistance. Includes identification of economic strengths, weaknesses, and economic mobilization capacities.

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1914 Foreign Trade. Trade policies, agreements, negotiating strategies; laws, regulations affecting trade policies; domestic pressures on trade policies; industrial organizations of trading partners --- affects of industry on trade such as one country's need of another country's raw materials. Subsidies trade programs. Plans and intentions of trading partners/countries to include finance organizations. Commodity dependence and vulnerability. Subversive targeting of US markets and technologies by competitors. Existence of cartels or other actions among competitors to hamper US access to foreign markets; any government role in or knowledge of such activities. 1915 Banking and Finance. Fiscal, monetary policies, capabilities and practices, market activities, management of international debt to includes terms given and received and performance on meeting those terms of repayment. Government's reaction to US, other country, and multilateral lending institutions' initiatives. 1916 Investments. Statistical trends in the country's investment and cost of capital. Country's available sources of development capital. The extent they are public or private, domestic or foreign. 1917 Sanctions (Non-military Issues). Impact on the civilian sector of economic and military sanctions against targeted countries. Impact of sanctions on domestic support for the regimes of targeted countries. Efforts of targeted countries to circumvent sanctions. Official position versus actual support for and compliance with sanctions by non-targeted countries. Companies and individuals involved in circumventing sanctions, trade routes and financial methods used, and individual shipments of unauthorized goods. 1918 Embargoes (Non-military Issues). Impact on the civilian sector of an imposed embargo against a country. Impact on domestic support for the regime of the country. Planned, anticipated, and actual efforts of targeted countries to circumvent embargoes, including political actions aimed at breaking the embargoes. Official position versus actual support for and compliance with sanctions by non-targeted countries.

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1920 Industrial Production and Facilities. Industrial production capabilities and facilities essential to a country's economic ability to project power and influence. Includes importance and criticality to the economy of industrial organization; raw materials; production processes and flows; products and markets; requirements for capital, labour, services, and technology; interrelationships with other industries and components of the same industry; industrial and plant growth patterns; facility descriptions and characteristics; capacity levels and production rates; potential for surge production, prices, trade relationships, and R&D efforts to expand capabilities and products. 1921 Military Materiel Production. Industrial-industrial capabilities and performance, including production and procurement of ground, naval, and aerospace forces materiel and key components, as well as forecasts of future trends. Encompasses analysis of production rates; surge capacities; weapon acquisition decision-making; sector organization, restructuring, and conversion; cooperative production arrangements with other countries; and defence- industrial networks and proliferation links. Includes defence- industrial operations at various levels and program analysis to assess the pace and direction of significant weapon development and production efforts. Also covers key manufacturing sites; vulnerabilities for installation targeting; and compliance with arms control agreements, manufacturing technology control regimes, and military-related sanctions. 1922 Ground Forces Materiel Production. Rates of production and procurement of foreign ground forces materiel. Includes major armour programs, infantry weapons, ammunition, artillery, explosives, vehicles (e.g., transport, armoured, and special purpose), engineer equipment, and Electro-optical equipment. 1923 Naval Forces Materiel Production. Rates of production and procurement of foreign naval force materiel, focusing on surface combatant and submarine construction. Encompasses naval ordnance, fire control devices, torpedoes, depth charges, mines, harbour defence gear, detection and warning systems, and naval vessels. Includes the production, repair, and conversion of naval and merchant ships and major shipyard facilities and production methods. 1924 Aerospace Forces Materiel Production. Rates of production and procurement of foreign aerospace force materiel. Encompasses military and civil aircraft, air ordnance, missiles, and space systems. Includes the production of significant components and propulsion elements as well as the manufacturing base, operations, and facilities.

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1925 Military Materiel Identification. Weapon producers, types, output, timeframes and supporting defence industrial infrastructures. Disposition of materiel subject to arms control agreements, and the monitoring of treaty compliance. Identification and tracing of selected terrorist, insurgent, and narco-trafficker weapons." 1926 Essential Industrial Production and Facilities. Industrial production capabilities and facilities essential to a country's military and economic ability to project power and influence. Includes importance and criticality to the economy of industrial organization; raw materials; production processes and flows; products and markets; requirements for capital, labour, services, and technology; interrelationships with other industries and components of the same industry; industrial and plant growth patterns; facility descriptions and characteristics; capacity levels and production rates; potential for surge production and conversion to military production; product prices; structure of production costs; trade relationships, including reliance on foreign technology; industry and plant vulnerabilities; and industrial protection programs, such as plant dispersal, industrial hardening, and stockpiling. It also includes factors that provide immediate or sustained support to a country's capability to conduct major military operations, to project power and influence, or to provide highest continuity value during and after a nuclear attack; products that are important to a surviving economy; those essential industries that can recover from attack; and other countries' economic resources that could contribute to postwar recovery. Includes R&D effort to expand those capabilities. 1927 Civil Industries. Rates of production, efficiency, surge capabilities, and key facilities and programs. 1928 Service Industries. Current and planned resources and capabilities of service industries such as banking, insurance, security trading, media, foreign trade, and tourism. Includes the economic contribution to domestic economy, government support and control, and domestic and foreign commercial operations. 1930 Basic Resources. Availability, production, and use of basic resources. Includes import and export needs and production flow. Also includes vulnerability of resources to national disaster.

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1940 Fuels and Lubricants (Non-nuclear). Involves capabilities of non-nuclear fuels and lubricants industries to support military forces and war- supporting/war-sustaining civil and economic sectors. Encompasses activities and infrastructures on petroleum, natural gas, coal, and other fuels. Includes organization and operation of the industries, planned developments, exploration, production, import and export flows, consumption, stocks, onshore and offshore (fixed platform) processing facilities, refineries, storage, pipeline systems, and use of other modes of transport. Encompasses vulnerabilities, including facility systems infrastructures, and potential for post crisis/war recovery. 1950 Electric Power. Capabilities of the electric power industry to support military forces and war-supporting/war sustaining civil and economic sectors. Encompasses electric power generation (e.g., thermal, hydroelectric, and nuclear), transmission, and distribution facilities, including associated industrial and other consumer relationships. Includes organization and operation of the industry, production and consumption, imports and exports, energy sources for power plants, and planned developments. Encompasses vulnerabilities, including facility systems infrastructures, and potential for post crisis/war recovery. 1960 Construction Materials Production. The major natural, processed, and fabricated materials used by the construction industry for building, rebuilding, or repairing structures and facilities (e.g., sand, building stone, brick, structural glass, lime, gypsum, cement, roofing materials, natural asphalt, lumber, and structural steel). Includes production and consumption, imports and exports, production plants and their capacities, and material sources and stockpiles, including plans to use the material in a post attack environment. 1970 Strategic Materials Production. The strategic basic resources required to support military and economic needs. Includes production of chemicals; iron and steel; nonferrous metals; non-metallic, composite, and other special materials. Includes types of materials produced, production rates, capacities of manufacturing plants, location and physical characteristics of the plants, import/export data, support to military or civilian sectors, associated industrial relationships, organization and operation of industry, and dependence on other resources.

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1980 Subsistence Production and Distribution. Nature of the agricultural labour force to include performance and self-sufficiency. Type of agriculture that must be imported. Extent of country's agricultural resources and technology and the impact of technology on the country's overall productivity. The amount of land under cultivation, its capacity for production and arability, the types of crops grown and annual yields. Imminence of famine or severe food shortage, extent that foreign food assistance is being sought/obtained. Extent that a country is dependent on water resources of adjacent jurisdictions.

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2000 TRANSPORTATION 2000 Transportation Capabilities and vulnerabilities of highways, railways, inland waterways, ports, civil maritime fleets, civil aviation, and transportation logistic forces. 2010 Highways. Highway transportation includes all types of roads and tracks from multilane superhighways to unpaved pack trails. Includes administrative operations, details on all associated structures and facilities, and the relationship of highways to other modes of transport in a country, as well as to international connections. Includes appropriate inventories of civilian road transport by type, origin, condition, and capability for use by the military. 2020 Railways. Railroad transportation includes all railroads in a given country, including primary, secondary, feeder, and industrial lines. Includes administrative operations, details on all associated structures and facilities, and the relationship of railroads to other modes of transport in a country, as well as to international connections. Includes appropriate inventories of civilian locomotives and rolling stock by type, origin, condition, and capability for use by the military. 2030 Inland Waterways. Inland waterways include a country's rivers, inland lakes and land-locked seas, ships and barge canals, and intercostals waterways used as avenues of transport. Includes administrative operations, fixed structures, such as locks, dams, aqueducts, landing, and loading facilities, and other structures that affect the movement of vessels. 2040 Ports. Specific places on the water (improved and unimproved) that provides a harbour for ships taking or discharging cargo and/or passengers. Includes administrative operations as well as port size, depth, capacity, clearance, condition, handling equipment, personnel, internodal connections and environmental characteristics such as tied, current, anchorage types, typical sea state, hurricane havens, etc.

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2050 Civil Fleets. Civilian maritime craft types to include all craft designed to carry cargo, passengers, and equipment or to engage in fishing, oil, or other resource exploitation. Also, scheduled or unscheduled services by a few ships or a large organized liner service. Includes ownership, administrative operations, inventories by types of craft, condition, origin, and capabilities to support an individual country or international operations, ship tracking, localization, and specific identification via visual, electronic, or acoustic means. Wartime roles and capabilities are included in 1289. 2060 Airfields. Airfield capabilities to include: military, dual-use airfields, non-military-government, private civilian, and commercial aviation facilities that could support military operations. The complexes and all the facilities necessary to support air activity. Specifically includes runways, taxiways, aprons, maintenance facilities, terminals, and on base fuel/oil storage facilities and operational capabilities under various weather conditions. 2070 Transportation Logistic Forces. Military forces specifically assigned transportation-related functions. Includes forces whose activities consist of lines of communication construction, maintenance, and repair, or augmentation of civilian transportation personnel in time of war or crisis. Also includes forces whose mission is liaison between civil transportation authorities and the military. 2080 Transit Rights, Authorizations, and Facilities Arrangements Availability. National attitudes and actions regarding the granting of transit rights, fishing rights, authorizations, and facilities arrangements (including base rights) to major foreign powers. National attitudes regarding foreign nuclear weapons transit.

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2100 PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENT 2100 Physical Environment Terrain, oceanography, coasts and landing beaches, meteorology, urban areas, and geography. Effects of physical, cultural and security environment on geographic areas. 2110 Terrain. Natural terrain factors, to include surface configuration, surface materials, hydrology, and vegetation and their subtopics/elements (e.g., topography, geomorphology, landforms, soils, geology, surface and subsurface water); and cultural attributes of a country or given area and their evaluation for and effects on military operations. 2120 Oceanography. Aspects of the world's oceans, seas, and their bottoms; embracing and integrating all knowledge pertaining to the sea, its dynamics and interactions with the coastal regions, and its physical boundaries; the chemistry and physics of seawater; and marine biology. 2130 Coasts and Landing Beaches. Natural terrain and hydrographic factors and related subjects and their evaluation for and effects on amphibious operations; includes supporting helicopter and airdrop operations. Includes the physical characteristics of the beach, surf, breakers, currents, tides, offshore and near-shore approach conditions, beach exits, terrain inland, and weather and climate characteristics. 2140 Meteorology, Climatology, Ionospheric and Space Environment. Science and data of and pertaining to the atmosphere, ionosphere, near space, and deep space and their evaluation for and effects on military operations. Includes long-term manifestations of weather and oceanography in a specified area, represented by the statistical collection of weather and/or oceanographic conditions during a specified interval of time. 2150 Urban Areas. Housing and population distribution; external communications; utilities; services and facilities; and significant military, industrial, and other installations of urban areas. 2151 Urban Area Boundaries. Specifically identifies urban-area boundary delineation.

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2152 Structural Specification of Operationally Relevant Facilities. Technical survey information regarding the configuration, geographic orientation, ingress and egress routes, material and physical composition, utilization, status, relationship to facilities in the immediate vicinity, and equipment for fixed and temporary structures, transit routes and associated facilities, open areas, water, and land-based platforms. 2153 Urban Complexes. Physical characteristics, accessibility, vulnerability, infrastructure, significance, and other related factors of an urban area to include the effects on military operations 2160 Evasion and Recovery. The effects of the physical, cultural, and security environment in an enemy-held or hostile geographic area on the ability of isolated personnel to survive and evade capture. The designation, within a geographic area of locations where an evader can establish contact with friendly forces or individuals. Effects of the environment on the ability to recover evading personnel and return them to an area under friendly control. 2180 Climatic and Environmental Disasters. Land degradation, economic dislocation, earthquake, fire, flood, hurricane, tornado, and other emergencies that endanger life and property or that disrupt the usual process of government that in turn causes social strife, conflict, and other conditions of instability. 2190 Minable Water Areas. The portions of navigable waterways where mining is most effective against sea-going vessels. Minable waterways are those the denial of which would harass, deter, or interrupt waterway transport through major sea/river-sea routes or to and from primary port facilities or military facilities. These waterways include: channels affording access to or from port facilities, anchorages associated with port facilities, approaches that control access to or from port facilities, passages, and straits that serve as significant sea routes or combination river-sea routes.

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2200 ILLICIT ACTIVITIES AND LAW ENFORCEMENT 2200 Illicit Activities and Law Enforcement International organized crime groups and activities, industrial espionage, and law enforcement organizations and capabilities. 2210 International Organized Crime. Includes local, regional and international criminal organizations engaged in illegal activities such as finance, narcotics, tech transfer, arms deals, illegal immigration, and counterfeiting products such as documents, food, drugs and medical equipment. Includes structure of organization, territorial divisions, weapons and equipment used, communications intercept capabilities and cooperation between criminal organizations, between criminal organizations and government agencies. Does not include industrial espionage (2220) or terrorism (2400). 2211 Maritime-Borne Illegal Allen Smuggling. Sea-borne movement of illegal aliens to the US. Routes, methods, scale and other related information on movement from major source and transit countries, including alien smuggling and mass migration. 2212 Air-Borne Illegal Alien Smuggling. Air-borne movement of illegal aliens to the US. Routes, methods, scale and other related information on movement from major source and transit countries, including alien smuggling and mass migration. 2213 Ground-Borne Illegal Alien Smuggling. Ground-borne movement of illegal aliens to the US. Routes, methods, scale and other related information on movement from major source and transit countries, including alien smuggling and mass migration. 2220 Industrial Espionage. Threats to government classified information, controlled, critical technology, and electronic information held/maintained/being developed by US industry. Subversive targeting of US industry to acquire technology or information that may be detrimental to US security interests/policies or economic markets/policies.

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2230 Law Enforcement Includes enforcement of export laws, protection of persons, property, environment (to include fisheries enforcement and protection of marine mammals), interdiction of illegal aliens and enforcement of immigration laws, arms, narcotics or narcotic and border enforcement strategy. Organizations, operations, capabilities, and vulnerabilities of foreign law enforcement activities, policies/management and organizational structure, territorial divisions, weapons and equipment used by law enforcement agents, communications intercept capabilities, and evidence of cooperation with insurgent groups or government agencies. Coordination and cooperation of international investigations with law enforcement counter-parts in foreign countries including sharing of databases, link analysis, and telephone analysis. Organizations, policy, leadership, human/civil rights stance, and law enforcement capabilities. 2231 Law Enforcement Capabilities. Capabilities to enforce export laws, protection of persons, property, environment, interdiction of illegal aliens and enforcement of immigration laws, arms, narcotics or narcotic and border enforcement strategy. Includes communications intercept capabilities, and evidence of cooperation with insurgent groups or government agencies. Level of coordination with international investigations with law enforcement counterparts in foreign countries including sharing of databases, link analysis, and telephone analysis. Also includes policy, leadership, and law enforcement capabilities. 2232 Law Enforcement Organizations. Management and organizational structure, territorial divisions, weapons and equipment used by law enforcement agents. Also includes deployment locations and facilities.

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2300 INTELLIGENCE AND SECURITY 2300 Intelligence and Security Intelligence, counterintelligence and security countermeasures programs, capabilities and activities of a foreign country. 2310 Intelligence and Security Programs and Capabilities. Certain programs and capabilities of a country related to ensuring its security. 2320 Security Services. Organizations, elements, and capabilities (other than intelligence or counterintelligence services) for sustaining public order and ensuring regime protection, VIP protection, sensitive/key facilities/installation protection, criminal/security investigations, monitoring internal dissidents, monitoring foreign visitors, information and computer security, and customs. Includes organizations, personnel, training, targeting, equipment, strength, disposition, communications, liaison/exchange relationships, and readiness to perform mission. 2330 Security Forces. Character, mission, and capabilities of quasi-military and paramilitary forces (e.g., police, militia, border guards, internal security forces). Includes relationships with armed forces, strength disposition, weaponry, facilities, organization, communications, and readiness to perform a military mission or civil disaster operation. 2340 Counterintelligence Services. Organizations, operations, and capabilities of a country to control or deny intelligence penetration of itself and guard against sabotage and subversion at home and abroad. Capabilities for offensive counterintelligence operations. 2350 Positive Intelligence Operations. Organizations, operations, and capabilities of foreign intelligence activities concerned with the development of intelligence on other countries. Addresses HUMINT, SIGINT, IMINT, MASINT, and OPINT programs and other technical collection programs. Includes targets, projects, personnel, contacts, coverage, espionage, training, collection, processing, evaluation, analysis, and production capabilities. Evidence of foreign intelligence service or government success at penetrating, or inability to penetrate, Canadian and Allied government-affiliated physical, personnel, document, computer, or communications security programs; technical surveillance systems; or other security countermeasures.

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2360 Camouflage, Concealment, and Deception. Capabilities and vulnerabilities to employ forces to accomplish deception or denial activities in country or outside the homeland. Includes organization, strength, order of battle, doctrine for employment, C4, level of training, state of readiness, combat operations, mobility, dispersal areas, logistics, tactics, operational art and strategy, special operations capabilities, materiel and equipment, mobilization capability, defences, systems' characteristics and performance, RDT&E, and facilities (location, physical characteristics, and function), to include wartime reserve mode (WARM) use of the electromagnetic spectrum. 2361 Camouflage, Concealment, and Deception Doctrine, Tactics and Capabilities. Capabilities and vulnerabilities to employ forces to accomplish deception or denial activities in country or outside the homeland. Includes organization, strength, order of battle, doctrine for employment, C4, level of training, state of readiness, combat operations, mobility, dispersal areas, logistics, tactics, operational art and strategy, special operations capabilities, materiel, mobilization capability, and defences. 2362 Ground Forces Camouflage, Concealment, and Deception Systems Characteristics and Performance. Characteristics and performance of systems and technologies used to camouflage, conceal, or otherwise deceive threat intelligence acquisition means. Includes materials, employment, effectiveness, keys to identification, and vulnerabilities. Includes the more simple applications such as boron impregnated rubber skirts, infrared and radar absorbing netting, rotating comer reflectors, mock ups, and other systems very likely to be encountered in even lesser developed countries' ground forces. 2363 Naval Forces Camouflage, Concealment, and Deception Systems Characteristics and Performance. Characteristics and performance of cisterns and technologies used to camouflage, conceal, or otherwise deceive threat intelligence acquisition means. Includes materials, employment, effectiveness, keys to identification, and vulnerabilities. Includes the more simple applications such as boron impregnated rubber skirts, infrared and radar absorbing netting, rotating comer reflectors, mock ups, and other systems very likely to be encountered in even lesser developed countries' naval forces.

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2364 Air Forces Camouflage, Concealment, and Deception Systems Characteristics and Performance. Characteristics and performance of systems and technologies used to camouflage, conceal, or otherwise deceive threat intelligence acquisition means. Includes materials, employment, effectiveness, keys to identification, and vulnerabilities. Includes the more simple applications such as boron impregnated rubber skirts, infrared and radar absorbing netting, rotating comer reflectors, mock ups, and other systems very likely to be encountered in even lesser developed countries' air forces. 2365 Naval Infantry or Marine Forces Camouflage, Concealment, and Deception Systems Characteristics and Performance. Characteristics and performance of systems and technologies used to camouflage, conceal, or otherwise deceive threat intelligence acquisition means. Includes materials, employment, effectiveness, keys to identification, and vulnerabilities. Includes the more simple applications such as boron impregnated rubber skirts, infrared and radar absorbing netting, rotating comer reflectors, mock ups, and other systems very likely to be encountered in even lesser developed countries' marine or naval infantry forces. 2366 Smoke and Obscurants. Technical characteristics, performance, and employment of obscurants as well as the basic technologies of those materials. 2370 Civil Defence. Civil defence plans and programs, to include organization, personnel, facilities, equipment, training, warning and alert procedures, evacuation, and overall capabilities to limit casualties and damage resulting from war or natural disaster. Includes standardized fatality assessments and capabilities and plans to reconstitute key worker groups to facilitate post-attack recovery of the economy. Embodies protection of key industries through industrial hardening or dispersal programs and adequacy of food and medical supplies in the event of major natural or economic disaster. 2380 Threats to Developing Canadian and Allied Systems and Technologies. Foreign capabilities or intentions to penetrate Canadian and Allied development programs to identify system specific capabilities and technological vulnerabilities during the system's development process.

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2381 Threats to Developing Canadian and Allied Ground Systems and Technologies. Foreign capabilities or intentions to penetrate Canadian and Allied Army acquisition programs. Includes the identification of system-specific vulnerabilities and weaknesses to foreign penetration during the development process. 2382 Threats to Developing Canadian and Allied Naval Systems and Technologies. Foreign capabilities or intentions to penetrate Canadian and Allied Army acquisition programs. Includes the identification of system-specific vulnerabilities and weaknesses to foreign penetration during the development process. 2383 Threats to Developing Canadian and Allied Aerospace Systems and Technologies. Foreign capabilities or intentions to penetrate Canadian and Allied Army acquisition programs. Includes the identification of system-specific vulnerabilities and weaknesses to foreign penetration during the development process. 2390 Security Environment. The integrated threat to friendly forces at a specific installation or within a specified country from indigenous or external directed activities where friendly forces are targeted or vulnerable. Includes threats from activities based on political motivation of police or paramilitary forces, terrorism, illegal drug trade, intelligence gathering, and acts of war from insurgency through regional conflict.

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2400 TERRORISM 2400 Terrorism Indigenous or international terrorist organizations with a capability to threaten Canadian and Allied interests including: intentions, weapons, capabilities, finances, extent of support by host or other nations; relations with other terrorist groups; transportation of terrorists or terrorist munitions, and impact of activities on host or other nations' policies toward the United States. Also includes international piracy and the police, military, and paramilitary counter-terrorist forces. 2410 International Terrorism. Organization, intentions, weapons and capabilities, finances, and activities of international and indigenous terrorist elements worldwide with an emphasis on their ability to threaten Canadian and Allied citizens, facilities, and interests. Includes support to terrorist organizations and activities including state sponsorship issues, and potential for terrorist acquisition/use of VVNM. 2420 Counter-terrorism. Policies and actions of individual countries to counter terrorism threats. Organization, capabilities, and plans to respond to threat of terrorist actions or actual incidents. Includes police, military, and paramilitary counter-terrorism forces. 2430 International Piracy. The illegal appropriation of goods and materials from licensed/flagged civil ships on the high seas or in littoral or estuarial waters. 2440 Terrorism Related Facilities. Facilities used for the housing, training, storage of equipment, and other terrorism activities.

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2500 COUNTER DRUGS 2500 Counter Drugs C41, operating tactics, transhipment methods and routes, network security and intelligence essential chemicals, production and processing facilities, and all related drug activities to include military and police policy and response to drug activity. 2510 Drug-Related Activities. The production, trafficking, and abuse of drugs that have the capability to threaten Canadian and Allied security interests. It includes activities, capabilities, and extent of support by host government military forces or policies toward the United States. 2520 Drug Organization Command, Control, Communications, and Computers (C4) Concepts and Doctrine. Detailed on the organization, procedures, facilities, systems, and equipment used by drug trafficking networks to command, control, and communicate with all elements of the organization and non-affiliated traffickers. 2530 Drug Organization Operating Tactics. Money-laundering operations used by drug trafficking organizations. Includes the identification of front companies and key personnel. 2540 Drug Transhipment Methods and Routes. Identification of methods and routes used by drug trafficking organizations to smuggle drugs into the US, to include maritime and air routes in the Transit Zone. This category includes data on transhipment sites, transportation companies, and methods of concealment. 2550 Military Policy Response to Drug Activity. Focuses on current operations and addresses host nation military and government policies and responses to ongoing drug-related activities. 2560 Drug Network Security and Intelligence. Identification of security personnel tasked with the tactical and operational security aspects of major drug networks, to include structure and modus operandi. Data on intelligence acquisition, to include access to/infiltration of host nation government institutions.

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2570 Essential Chemicals. Acquisition, shipment, and third-party purchase of key essential chemicals used in drug processing, to include ether, methyl ethyl ketone (NMK), and acetic anhydride. 2580 Drug Production/Processing Facilities. Detailed data on drug processing facilities, to include location, description of site, and manpower strength. Includes cocaine hydrogen chloride (HCI) and heroin HC1 laboratories and all intermediary production sites.

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2600 SOCIOLOGICAL FACTORS AND BIOGRAPHIES 2600 Sociological Factors and Biographies Population characteristics that impact on political stability and military capabilities. Include loyalty, support to civilian leadership by military members, vulnerabilities to psychological operations, and the background of key individuals that provide insight on their negotiating and leadership style to include personal vulnerabilities. Includes a country's and military forces' capabilities to employ and vulnerabilities to psychological operations. 2610 Biographies. Information on key personnel indicating personality type, personal history, educational background and training, personal habits and traits. Special emphasis on past, present and future roles and positions, affiliations, attitudes, and influence within the relevant sphere (e.g. political or military). 2611 National Military Biographies. Biographic data on key national-level military personnel (military force service chiefs and above) to include: career pattern; education and training; operational experience (especially war-fighting); ethnic, religious and familial ties of significance; loyalty to the regime; command style and doctrinal innovations. 2612 Military Service Biographies. Biographic data on military service personnel (below military force service chiefs) to include: career pattern; education and training; operational experience (especially war-fighting); ethnic, religious and familial ties of significance; loyalty to the regime; command style and doctrinal innovations. 2613 Political and Diplomatic Biographies. Data on leading and potentially important personnel associated with political parties, national level leadership, and the diplomatic corps. Includes vital statistics, education and training, positions held, participation in political campaigns, foreign affairs, competency, political affiliation and/or attitudes, honours awarded, languages spoken, marital status, religion, personal characteristics, attitude toward the United States, and state of health and/or disabilities. 2614 Science and Technology Biographies. Data on leading and potentially important personnel associated with science and technological developments, programs, and facilities. Includes vital statistics, education and training, positions held, participation in national or international organizations, competency, political affiliation and/or attitudes, languages spoken, marital status, religion, personal characteristics, attitude toward the United States, and state of health and/or disabilities.

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2615 Key Criminal Biographies. Data on leading and potentially important individuals associated with major international criminal organizations. Includes vital statistics, personal characteristics, education and training, positions held, competency, attitudes, languages spoken, marital status, religion, personal characteristics, and state of health and/or disabilities. 2616 Law Enforcement Biographies. Data on leading and potentially important individuals associated with foreign law enforcement organizations. Includes vital statistics, personal characteristics, education and training, positions or commands held, participation in important anti-criminal campaigns, competency, political affiliation, attitudes, decorations received, languages spoken, marital status, religion, personal characteristics, attitude toward the United States, and state of health and/or disabilities. 2617 Terrorist Biographies. Data on leading and potentially important personnel associated with terrorist activities and groups. Includes vital statistics, education and training, positions held, participation in terrorist operations, competency, political affiliation and/or attitudes, languages spoken, marital status, religion, personal characteristics, attitude toward the United States, and state of health and/or disabilities. 2618 Counterintelligence Biographies. Data on leading and potentially important personnel associated with foreign intelligence services and security forces. Includes vital statistics, education and training, positions or commands held, participation in military campaigns, intelligence operations, competency, political affiliation and/or attitudes, decorations held, languages spoken, marital status, religion, personal characteristics, attitude toward the United States, and state of health and/or disabilities. 2619 Key Drug-Related Figures Biographies. Data on leading and potentially important individuals associated with major drug trafficking organizations. Includes vital statistics, personal characteristics, and affiliations to key host nation politicians. 2630 Sociological Factors. Population characteristics that impact on political stability and military capabilities to include loyalty and support to the civilian government and the vulnerabilities to psychological operations. 2631 Military Demography. Population characteristics of military manpower as related to countries/regions, to include composition based on ethnic, linguistics, religious groups, labour force, displaced populations, and the political, economic, and social impact.

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2632 Non-military Demography. Population characteristics of countries/regions, to include urban projections, ethnic, linguistics, religious groups, labour force, displaced populations, and their political, economic, and social impact. 2633 Education. Capability of a country to provide higher education, vocational/technical training, and pre-military training to support economic growth, and S&T research & development. Includes management, policy, finance/budget, infrastructure, trends on a country's education and training programs, and overseas education programs. Includes statistics on personnel/manpower resources, quality of education/training provided, and placement of graduates. Also includes literacy of the national population. 2634 Culture, Religion, and Ethnicity. Impact of culture, religion, and ethnicity on local, national, regional politics and security issues. Includes percentages of total population each identifiable group composes. 2635 Media Relations. Role and influence of media, its affects on public opinion, and on a country's foreign and domestic policy. Includes various mass media organizations/agencies in existence, the techniques and themes of propaganda used by the media and the presence of government control. 2636 Related Military Issues. Corruption, support for human rights, support for democracy, attitudes toward foreign governments, attitudes toward ties to foreign militaries, and attitude toward civilian leadership control of the military within the armed forces. 2637 Foreign Efforts to Exert Influence. Those capabilities, intentions, and current activities to influence events and the behaviour of foreign planners, decision makers, and groups in other countries to enhance their military posture and that could affect Canadian and Allied military posture. Includes foreign perception management, psychological operations, disinformation, active measures and military deception operations. 2640 Psychological Operations. Overall psychological operations environment as well as vulnerabilities of populations and military forces to psychological operations and capabilities to conduct psychological operations.

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2641 Vulnerabilities to Psychological Operations. Vulnerability of key segments of the population to psychological operations. Includes morale and loyalty of population, vulnerabilities of critical leadership and other influence groups, issues that resonate with important sectors of the population, effectiveness of ideological indoctrination of the population, and best conduits for reaching different target audiences. 2642 Forces Vulnerabilities to Psychological Operations. Degree to which forces are vulnerable to psychological operations. Includes significant issues, lines of approach, and best conduits for reaching target audiences. 2643 Psychological Operations Capabilities. Includes structure, methodology and effectiveness of psychological operations conducted internally and externally by foreign countries. 2644 Psychological Operations Environment. Attitudes, propaganda, misinformation, disinformation, and other informational activities that may have a direct or indirect effect on US or allied military deployments and the potential for employing countering psychological operations.

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2700 INFORMATION OPERATIONS/INFORMATION WARFARE INTELLIGENCE ISSUES 2700 Information Operations/Information Warfare Intelligence Issues. The synergistic integration of substantive intelligence to support offensive and defensive Information Operations and Information Warfare. Support to offensive operations includes factual and assessed factors for operations security, denial and deception, psychological operations, electronic warfare, physical attack and/or destruction, and special information operations, and may include computer network attack, designed to affect adversary decision makers and achieve or promote specific objectives. Support to defensive operations includes the integration and coordination of policies and procedures, operations, personnel, and technology to protect information and defend information systems through information assurance, operations security, physical security, counter-deception, counter-psychological operations, counterintelligence, electronic warfare countermeasures, and special information operations activities. 2710 National-level Information Operations/Information Warfare Intelligence Issues. The Information Operations/Information Warfare programs, capabilities, and vulnerabilities of foreign nations, non-state actors (such as terrorist groups and drug cartels), and individuals. Covers the composite Information Operations threat, including the computer network attack threat, presented by these foreign entities to US and allied national-level systems and decision makers. Intelligence Operations indications and warning support is a key focus of threat analysis and foreign intelligence and security service activity is a special subset. Also includes these foreign entities' leadership operations and decision making processes and patterns; cultural, psychological, behavioural, and other human factors affecting decision making; and the Information Operations-specific capabilities, vulnerabilities, and physical and electronic signatures of supporting leadership/telecom-communications facilities, communications and computer networks, and information/infrastructure control systems.

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2720 Ground Forces Information Operations/Information Warfare Intelligence Issues. The composite Information Operations threat, including computer network attack, posed by an adversary to US and allied ground forces systems and operations. Information operations indications and warning support is a key focus of the threat analysis. Foreign intelligence and security service activity is a special subset. Includes the capabilities and vulnerabilities of the decision making processes, communications, and computer networks for foreign ground forces battle management functions linking the national command authority, military leadership, strategic and Theatre intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance systems, and ground forces. Includes Information Operations related research and development activities, information operations systems characteristics and performance, and estimation of the threat to developing US and allied ground systems. Emphasis is on the synergistic threat at the force level and on the time-sensitive response of the battle management process to potential immediate threats or operations. Also includes analysis of foreign ground-related supervisory control and data acquisition systems. 2730 Naval Forces Information Operations/Information Warfare Intelligence Issues. The composite Information Operations threat, including computer network attack, posed by an adversary to US and allied naval forces systems and operations. Information Operations indications and warning support is a key focus of the threat analysis. Foreign intelligence and security service activity is a special subset. Includes the capabilities and vulnerabilities of the decision making processes, communications, and computer networks for foreign naval battle management functions linking the national command authority, military leadership, strategic and Theatre intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance systems, and naval forces. Emphasis is on the synergistic threat at the Theatre level and on the time-sensitive response of the battle management process to potential immediate threats or operations. Also includes analysis of foreign naval-related supervisory control and data acquisition systems.

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2740 Aerospace Forces Information Operations/Information Warfare Intelligence Issues. The composite Information Operations threat, including computer network attack, posed by an adversary to US and allied aerospace forces systems and operations. Information Operations indications and warning support is a key focus of the threat analysis. Foreign intelligence and security service activity is a special subset. Includes the capabilities and vulnerabilities of the decision making processes, communications, and computer networks for foreign air and space battle management functions linking the national command authority, military leadership, strategic and Theatre intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance systems, and air defence, offensive air, ballistic missile, and space control forces. Includes research and development and estimation of the threat to developing US and allied aerospace systems. Emphasis is on the synergistic threat at the aerospace force level and the time-sensitive response of the battle management process to potential immediate threats or operations. Also includes analysis of foreign aerospace-related supervisory control and data acquisition systems. 2750 Theatre/Joint Command Information Operations/Information Warfare Intelligence Issues. The composite Information Operations/Information Warfare threat, including computer network attack, posed by an adversary to Joint Command planning and current operations. Emphasis is on time-sensitive Information Operations/Information Warfare threat to Theatre and joint task force OPLAN/CONPLAN development and current and near term operations. Foreign intelligence and security service activity is a special subset. Includes the decision making process capabilities and vulnerabilities, communications, computer networks, battle management functions/linkages, military leadership, strategic and tactical intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance systems, supervisory control and data acquisition systems, and forces of adversaries in near-term or current operations faced by US Theatre or allied combined forces.

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2800 TARGET INTELLIGENCE ISSUES 2800 Target Intelligence Issues. Infrastructure vulnerabilities to destruction, battle damage assessment, target signatures, and tactical target materials. 2810 Physical Vulnerability. Identification of functionally critical components of industries, installations, or specific facilities and the relationships among these components; the determination of the mechanism for damaging these critical components to desired levels; and the development of vulnerability numbers based upon the weapon effects necessary to produce the desired damage levels that will make it possible to estimate the potential damage to specific targets. 2820 Battle Damage Assessments. Weapons effectiveness measured against targeting objectives and to determine re-strike recommendation to support military operations. Includes development of BDA doctrine and methodology. 2830 Target Signatures. Indications and specific signature information to permit the location of mobile or hidden activities, systems, and facilities that support military operations. 2831 Strategic Relocatable Targets. Critical enemy mobile assets, such as high-level C3 or mobile missile launchers. 2832 Underground Facilities. Underground facilities and tunnels used to protect and conceal critical war- supporting functions. Included are underground production and storage of military materiel and ammunition, weapons research and development, command and control facilities, and key industrial production and strategic materials storage. 2890 Target Materials. Materials that support a wide range of targeting-related functions such as mission planning and execution, training, weaponeering, and battle damage assessment; and review of data to support production of these materials.

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2891 Traditional Target Materials. Target materials listed in DIAM 57-24 to include: Basic Target Graphic (BTG), Enhanced Target Graphic (ETG), Gridded Airfield Photo (GAP), Gridded Illustration Photo (GIP), Hard Target Graphic (HTG), Infrared Target Graphic (ITG), Operational Target Graphic (OTG), Positional Target Graphic (PTG), Quick Response Graphic (QRG), Radar Target Graphic (RTG), Seasonal Target Graphic (STG), and Training Target Graphic (TTG). 2892 Non-traditional Target Materials. Products which support a variety of targeting applications and have documented production specifications, to include: Aimpoint Graphic (APG), Contingency Imagery Support Print (CISP), Facilities Reference Point Graphic (FRPG), Joint Exercise Target Training Aid (JETTA), Large Scale Graphic (LSG), Mensurated Point Graphic (MPG), Quick Installation Reference Guide (QIRG), Revalidation Graphic (RVG), Supplemental Graphic (SG), Target Aimpoint Graphic (TAG), and Training Operational Support Package (TOSP). 2893 Target Data Certification. Certification and update of facility data to be included in production of target materials.

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3000 NATO REPORTS 3000 NATO Reports Reporting on a single or multiple subjects that originates within NATO. 3001 - NATO Administrative Reports Reporting originating from NATO on administrative matters including reporting from Deputy Heads of Delegation (DHODs) and NATO Intelligence Board (NIB). 3002 - Summary Record Of Meeting Of The Military Committee These minutes of the Military Committee provide information on developments within NATO. 3003 - Report Of The NATO Intelligence Steering Committee Reports on the meetings and discussions of the NATO Intelligence Steering Committee, which examine various issues related to intelligence produced by and for NATO. 3005 - Military Committee Reports Reporting on a single or multiple subjects that originates within the Military Committee. 3006 - MC 67 - NATO Precautionary System 3007 - MC 101 - NATO Signals Intelligence Policy - Working Papers This document states the Military Committee policy for handling and protection of this uniquely sensitive subject and gives recognition to existing activities in support of NATO. 3008 - MC 114 - Production Of Military Committee Intelligence Estimates - Working Papers This NATO produced document provides the rules, procedures, organization and policy for the production on MC intelligence estimates. 3009 - MC 114 - Production Of Military Committee Intelligence Estimates- Final This NATO produced document provides the rules, procedures, organization and policy for the production on MC intelligence estimates. 3010 - MC 128 - Guidance For Intelligence Support For NATO - FINAL This NATO report provides guidance on the use, coordination, and management provision of NATO originated intelligence. This category is for the final draft document. Working papers and reports, conference planning are contained in 3011.

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3011 - MC 128 - Guidance For Intelligence Support For NATO - Working Papers This NATO report provides guidance on the use, coordination, and management provision of NATO originated intelligence. This category is for conference planning, basic working papers and reports. Final documents in 3010. 3012 - MC 161 Reports Reporting that deals specifically with MC 161 conferences, basic working papers and reports. 3013 - MC 161 Intelligence Working Group Conference - Working Papers (MC 161/A/B/C) This NATO produced document provides a general intelligence estimate of threats and risks to NATO from various countries, including types of threats, risk assessment criteria, risk assessments and country categorization lists. This includes all working papers for Part A; B; C 3014 - MC 161/A - NATO Strategic Intelligence Estimate (NSIE) This NATO produced document provides a general intelligence estimate of threats and risks to NATO from various nations, including types of the risk assessment criteria, risk assessment and country/area categorization lists, foreign policy, armed forces, operations and future outlook. 3015 - MC 161/B - Armed Forces Intelligence Assessment (AFIA) This NATO produced document provides a general intelligence estimate, including policies, foreign policy, armed forces, operations and future outlook. 3016 - MC 161/C - NATO Intelligence Proliferation Assessment (NIPA) This NATO produced document provides a general intelligence estimate of threats and risks to NATO from various nations, including types of risk assessment criteria, risk assessments and country/area categorization lists. 3017 - MC 165 - Related Scientific And Technological Trends This NATO produced document provides basic intelligence on developments in military related scientific developments. 3018 - MC 166 - NATO Indications And Warning System - Final This NATO produced document provides strategic warning to the Alliance of a developing risk, threat or crisis as early as possible with the least ambiguity. Working papers and reports, conference plans and administration papers are contained in 3019.

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3019 - MC 166 - NATO Indications And Warning System - Working Papers This NATO produced document provides strategic warning to the Alliance of a developing risk, threat or crisis as early possible with the least ambiguity. This category contains conference planning, working papers and reports. Final document is under 3018. 3020 - MIP Reports - General Reporting that deals specifically with Military Intelligence Publications, conference, basic working papers and reports. 3021 - MIP - Land CD This will replace all land MIEPs. 3022 - MIP - Air CD This replaces all air NFFPs 3023 - MIP - Navy CD This CD replaces all Naval MIPs 3024 - MIP 210 - Ground Forces Structure And Capabilities This NATO produced document provides a detailed ORBAT for the ground forces of Russia, Eastern European countries, and selected Middle Eastern nations. 3025 - MIP 210 Series Working Papers This NATO produced document provides a detailed ORBAT for the ground forces. This category is for working group administration, conference planning and working papers and reports. Final documents are in 3024. 3026 - MIP 211 - Ground Forces Structure And Capabilities This NATO produced document provides a detailed ORBAT for the ground forces of Russia, Eastern European countries, and selected Middle Eastern nations. 3027 - MIT 221 - Air And Air Defence Forces Order Of Battle This NATO produce document provides order of battle information on selected nations. 3028 - NUP 230A - Naval Organization, Manpower, Training And Naval Tactics This NATO produced document provides an over-view of the naval capabilities of selected navies.

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3029 - MIP 230B - Mine Warfare This publication (formerly SN 12) is a basic source book on Mine Warfare (MIW) capabilities of the Russian Navy as well as selected other countries, currently including Yugoslavia, Syria, Iraq, Iran, and Albania. 3030 - MIP 230C - Naval Aviation This publication, (formerly SN-7) is designed to provide in a single volume a balanced summary of Russian Naval Aviation. As information comes available, chapters will be established to cover Ukraine and the maritime support capabilities of the air forces of other countries of interest to NATO. 3031 - MIP 230 A/B/C - Working Papers This NATO produced document provides an overview of the naval capabilities of selected European navies. This category is for working party papers, reports, and conference planning and administration reports. 3032 - MIP 231 - Naval And Naval Air Orders Of Battle This SACLANT produced report provides a naval order of battle of Eastern European and African Navies. Countries covered are Russia, Former Yugoslavia, Croatia, Albania, Romania, Bulgaria, Syria, Algeria, Libya, Iran, Iraq, and Sudan. THIS DOCUMENT REPLACES SN 1. 3033 - MIP 232 - Naval Ports And Facilities This publication (formerly SN-10) contains intelligence on naval ports facilities of the former Soviet Union. As 'information is obtained on other risk countries, this publication will be expanded to include them. 3034 - MIP 240 - Logistic Assessment This NATO produced report provides intelligence on the logistic capabilities of the military forces of Russia, and the countries of Greater and Lesser Risk as describe in MC 161. 3035 - MIP 240 - Logistic Assessment - Working Papers This NATO produced periodic report provides intelligence on the logistics capabilities of military forces. This code is for working papers only. Final document is contained under 3034. 3036 - MIP 241 - Transportation Study - Rail This NATO produced report provides an assessment of the rail capability of various countries of interest to NATO.

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3037 - MIP 242 - Inland Waterways Study This NATO publication provides detailed intelligence on the Former Soviet Union, selected Eastern European, Middle East and North African inland waterway transportation systems. 3038 - MIP 244 - Ammunition Depot Study Vol. I - Ground Forces This NATO produced document provides detailed data on location, subordination and available floor space for ground forces ammunition de in selected countries. 3039 - MIP 244 - Ammunition Depot Study Vol. 11 And III- Air & Naval Air Ammunition Depots And Naval Forces Depots This NATO produced document provides detailed data on location, subordination, available floor space for air and naval air ammunition depots and naval forces depots in selected countries. 3040 - MIP 250 - Major Ground Forces Weapons And Combat Equipment This is final version of MIP 250 Major Ground Forces Weapons and Combat Equipment as agreed to by NATO nations. 3041 - MIP 250 Series Working Papers Reports that deal specifically with basic working papers, organizing dates and conferences. 3042 - MIP 253A - Missile Systems (Ship borne) This NATO produced report provides detailed technical intelligence on selected naval missiles, including ship to ship, submarine launched, ship launched air-defence. 3043 - MIP 253B - Missile Systems (Airborne) This NATO produced document provides detailed technical intelligence on selected nations missile systems, including air-to-air, air-to-surface, helicopter launched, guided munitions and air launched vehicles. 3044 - MIP 253C - Missile Systems (Land-Based) This NATO produced publication provides detailed technical intelligence on selected land-based missile systems, including anti-tank, surface-to-surface, coastal defence, anti-ballistic, surface to air, and reconnaissance drones. 3045 - MIP 254A - Electronic Equipment (Ship-borne) This NATO produced document provides detailed information concerning function, technical characteristics and operational performance of ship-borne electronic systems that belong to the inventory of the countries of Greater and Lesser Risk as described in MC 16 1. Details of western equipment deployed in these countries will be shown only if there of NATO manufacture and data that has been supplied by that NATO country.

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3046 - MIP 254B - Electronic Equipment (Airborne) This NATO produced document provides detailed information concerning function, technical characteristics and operational performance of airborne electronic systems that belong to Countries/Areas of Greater and Lesser Risk as directed in MC 16 1. Details of western equipment deployed in these countries will be shown only if these are of NATO manufacture and data that has been supplied by that NATO country. 3047 - MIP 254C - Electronic Equipment (Land-based) This NATO produced document provides where possible and appropriate, detailed information concerning, function, technical characteristics and operational performance of land-based electronic equipment that belong to the inventory of the Countries/Areas of Greater and Lesser Risk as directed by MC 16 1. 3048 - MIP 255 - Space Systems This NATO produced assessment provides reporting on selected nations space capabilities. 3049 - MIP 256 - Naval Armaments (Less Missiles) This NATO produced report provides detailed information concerning function, technical characteristics and operational performances of navy weapon systems that belong to the inventory of the Countries/Areas of Greater and Lesser Risk as directed by MC 161. 3050 - MIP 260A - Intelligence Warning Problems Intelligence Warning Problems. 3060 - NATO Standardization Reports that deal with the NATO Standardization programs including the conferences and reports associated with various Standardization Agreements (STANAGs). 3061 - MAS Air Standardization This NATO committee report provides information on air standardization agreements within NATO. 3062 - MAS Army Standardization This NATO committee report provides information on army standardization agreements within NATO. 3063 - Intelligence Doctrine - AINTP-1 This NATO produced publication provides guidelines for intelligence procedures and policies within the NATO environment.

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3064 - Security Doctrine - AINTP-2 This NATO produced publication provides guidelines for intelligence procedures and policies within the NATO environment. 3065 - Military Intelligence Data Management Exchange Concept - AINTP - 3 This NATO committee provides guidance as to the exchange of data in electronic format within NATO. 3066 - AIRCENT Reporting Directive 80-50 (AIREP) This NATO produced STANAG provides guidance on NATO air related reporting procedures. 3067 - NATO Armaments Committee (AC) Reports Reporting on a single or multiple subjects that originates within NATO Armaments Committee. 3068 - NATO Security Committee - AC/35 Security Committee 3069 - AIR GROUP I On Manned And Unmanned Aircraft And Aircraft/Weapons Interoperability - AC/224 (AG/1) This NATO produced report provides information on developments in NATO, aircraft standardization doctrine. 3070 - AIR GROUP 11 On Air Weapons - AC/224 (AG/II) This NATO produced report provides information on air weapons in use by NATO forces. 3071 - AIR GROUP III On Air Aspects Of Electronic Warfare - AC/224 (AG/III) This NATO produced publication provides information on NATO capabilities and doctrine for electronic warfare in the air environment. 3072 - AIR GROUP IV On Tactical Air Reconnaissance And Intelligence - AC/224 (AG.IV) Tactical Air Intelligence 3073 - NATO Army Armaments Group Working Papers (AC/225) This NATO produced report provides information on developments on the NATO Land Armaments Standardization Policy. 3074 - Long Term Scientific Studies - AC/243 (PANEL 1) This NATO produced report provides reporting on an on-going NATO scientific planning. 3075 - NATO Glossary Of Terms And Definitions For Military Use (FR/ENG) - AAP-6 (Q)

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This NATO staff manual provides a listing of approved military abbreviations for use within NATO. 3076 - Intelligence Briefing (IM) This NATO produced report provides reporting on a wide variety topics of current interest to NATO. 3077 - Current Intelligence, Group Summary This NATO produced report provides support to current intelligence operations in NATO. The reports cover a wide variety of topics, but coverage is normally limited to Europe, Eurasia and the Middle East. 3080 - SHAPE Reports Reports that originate within SHAPE Headquarters. 3081 - SHAPE Weekly INTSUM (IAI) This SHAPE produced report provides reporting on a wide variety of topics of current interest to NATO countries 3085 - SACLANT Reports Reports that originate within SACLANT posts. 3086 - SACLANT Weekly INTSUM (IM) This SACLANT periodic report provides reporting on a wide variety of subjects of current interest to NATO countries. 3090 - NATO IM/IT Reports Reports originating from NATO on IM/IT subjects affecting NATO including LOCE, BICES and DBIWG. 3091 - BICES Reports on BICES. 3092 - Data Base Working Group (DBIWG) Reports on DBIWG. 3093 - LOCE Reports on LOCE.

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3100 CANADIAN DEFENCE ATTACHÉ OFFICER (CDAO) REPORTS 3100 Canadian Defence Attaché Officer (CDAO) Reports Reports originating from various Canadian Defence attaches. 3101 - CDAO Argentina Intelligence Reports These periodic reports from CDAO of Argentina provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region. 3102 - CDAO Australia Intelligence Reports These CDAO Australia periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region. 3103 - CDAO Brazil Intelligence Reports These CDAO Brazil periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situation in the region. 3104 - CDAO China Intelligence Reports These CDAO China periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region. 3105 - CDAO Colombia Intelligence Reports These CDAO Colombian periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region. 3106 - CDAO Czech Republic Intelligence Reports These CDAO Czech Republic periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region. 3107 - CDAO Egypt Intelligence Reports These CDAO Egypt periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region. 3108 - CDAO France Intelligence Reports These CDAO France periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region. 3109 - CDAO Germany Intelligence Reports These CDAO Germany periodic reports provide reporting on military, political and economic situations in the region.

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3110 - CDAO Hungary Intelligence Reports These CDAO Hungary periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region. 3111 - CDAO India Intelligence Reports These CDAO India periodic reports provide reporting on the economic, political and military situations in the region. 3112 - CDAO Indonesia Intelligence Reports These CDAO Indonesia periodic reports provide reporting on military, political and economic situations in the region. 3113 - CDAO Israel Intelligence Reports These CDAO Israel periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region. 3114 - CDAO Italy Intelligence Reports These CDAO Italy periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region. 3115 - CDAO Japan Intelligence Reports These CDAO Japan periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region. 3116 - CDAO Kenya Intelligence Reports These CDAO Kenya periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region. 3117 - CDAO Korea Intelligence Reports These CDAO Korea periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region. 3118 - CDAO Mexico Intelligence Reports These CDAO Mexico periodic reports provide reporting on military, political and economic situations in the region. 3119 - CDAO Netherlands Intelligence Reports These CDAO Netherlands periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region. 3120 - CDAO Norway Intelligence Reports These CDAO Norway periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region.

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3121 CDAO Pakistan Intelligence Reports These CDAO Pakistan periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region. 3122 - CDAO Poland Intelligence Reports These CDAO Poland periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region. 3123 - CDAO Russia Intelligence Reports These CDAO Russia periodic reports provide reporting on military, political and economic situations in the region. 3124 - CDAO Saudi Arabia Intelligence Reports These CDAO Saudi Arabia periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region. 3125 - CDAO South Africa Intelligence Reports These CDAO South Africa periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situation in the region. 3126 - CDAO Syria Intelligence Reports These CDAO Syria periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region. 3127 - CDAO Turkey Intelligence Reports These CDAO Turkey periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region. 3128 - CDAO Ukraine Intelligence Reports These CDAO Ukraine periodic reports provide reporting on the military, political and economic situations in the region.

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9000 INDICATIONS AND WARNING Information that alerts or warns of threat situations, indications of preparations, or impending courses of action detrimental to Canada or allied nations, their overseas forces, citizens, facilities, systems, or interests. It includes enemy, criminal, insurgent, terrorist or other group capabilities, hostile action, or intentions; imminence of hostilities; insurgence; nuclear or non-nuclear attack, including chemical and biological agents; hostile reaction to Canadian military operations; terrorist attacks and other events, including internal political developments involving elements of instability or vulnerability in relationships among the ruling hierarchy, political party or parties, ethnic groups, classes, and the armed forces (with emphasis on actual or potential conflict situations); changes in the representation and roles of politically significant parties or factions; use of surrogates, international fronts, or key nongovernmental organized factions to secure political influence or allies; and vulnerability to civil disturbances on a scale serious enough to affect Canadian security and policy interests.

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CHAPTER 6 AUTHORIZED CONTINENTS, REGION, AND COUNTRY CODES SECTION 1 – REGION NAME/CODE BY CONTINENTS Worldwide WW Africa FF Eastern Africa F4 Northern Africa F1 Southern Africa F3 Western Coastal Africa F2 Asia AA Central Asia A4 China And Mongolia A5 Indian Sub Continent A3 Northern Middle East A2 Southeast Asia & Southwest Pacific A6 Southern Middle East A1 Australia & New Zealand Region UU Europe EE Aegean Nations E3 Baltic States E5 Central Europe E4 Eastern Europe E6 Scandinavian Region E2 Western Europe E1 North America NN Caribbean Islands N5 Central America N4 North America N1 South America SS

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SECTION 2 – COUNTRY NAME BY REGIONS/CONTINENTS Worldwide WW Africa FF Asia AA Australia & New Zealand Region UU Europe EE North America NN South America SS Africa FF Northern Africa F1 Western Coastal Africa F2 Southern Africa F3 Eastern Africa F4 Northern Africa F1 Algeria DZA Chad TCD Gabon GAB Libya LBY Maldives Islands MVD Mali MLI Mauritania MRT Morocco MAR Niger NER Tunisia TUN Western Sahara ESH Western Coastal Africa F2 Benin (formerly Dahomey) BEN Bissau PU Burkina Faso (Upper Volta) BFA Cameroon CMR Cape Verde Islands CPV Central Africa Republic CAF Equatorial Guinea GNQ Gambia GMB Ghana GHA Guinea GIN Guinea-Bissau GNB Ivory Coast CIV Liberia LBR Nigeria NGA Sao Tome and Principe STP Senegal SEN

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Sierra Leone SLE Togo TGO Southern Africa F3 Angola AGO Basses Da India BS Bophuthatswana (former) XA Botswana BWA Ciskei (former SF) XC Comoros COM Congo COG Glorioso Island GO Juan De Nova Island JU Lesotho LSO Madagascar (Malagasy Republic) MDG Malawi MWI Mauritius (including Chagos, Rodriguez Islands) MUS Mayotte MYT Mozambique MOZ Namibia NAM Reunion REU South Africa ZAF St Helena (including Ascension, Tristsn da Cunha Islands) SH Swaziland SWZ Transkei (former SF) XT Tromelin Islands TE Venda (former SF) XV Zaire ZAR Zambia ZMB Zimbabwe ZWE Eastern Africa F4 Burundi BDI Djibouti DJI Eritrea ERI Ethiopia ETH Kenya KEN Rwanda RWA Somalia SOM Sudan SDN Tanzania (including Zanzibar & Pemba Islands) TZA Uganda UGA

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Asia AA Southern Middle East A1 Northern Middle East A2 Indian Subcontinent A3 Central Asia A4 China and Mongolia A5 Southeast Asia and Southwest Pacific A6 Southern Middle East A1 Bahrain BHR Egypt EGY Gaza Strip GZ Israel (including Israel Jordan & Israel Syria DMZ) ISR Oman (including Kuria Muria Islands) OMN Qatar QAT Saudi Arabia SAU United Arab Emirates ARE Yemen YEM Northern Middle East A2 Iran IRN Iraq IRQ Iraq - Saudi Arabia Neutral Zone IY Jordan JOR Kuwait KWT Lebanon LEN Syria SYR Indian Subcontinent A3 Afghanistan AFG Bangladesh BGD Bhutan BTN India (including Silckim, Laccadive, Andaman, Nicobar Islands) IND Nepal NPL Pakistan (including Jammu & Kashmir) PAK Seychelles (Admiralty, Aldabra, Assumption Islands) SYC Sri Lanka LKA Central Asia A4 Armenia ARM Azerbaijan AZE Kazakhstan KAZ Kyrghzstan (Kirgyizstan) KGZ

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Tajikistan TJK Turkmenistan TKM Uzbekistan UZB CHINA and MONGOLIA A5 China (Former Peoples Republic of China) CHN Macau MAC Mongolia MNG South East Asia & South West Pacific - A6 Ashmore & Cartier Islands AT Baker Island KQ Brunei BRN Burma MMR Cambodia (formerly Kampuchea) KHM Christmas Island CXR Cocos Islands (Keeling Islands) CCK Coral Sea Islands CR Europa Islands EU Hong Kong HKG Howland Islands HQ Indonesia IDN Japan JPN Jarvis Island DQ Kingman Reef FQ Kiribati (Including Canton, Enderbury & Gilbert Islands) KIR Korea - North PRK Korea - South KOR Laos LAO Malaysia MYS Micronesia Federated States FSM Philippines PHL Republic of Palau PLW Samoa (US) AQ Singapore SGP Spratly Islands PG Taiwan (including Pescadores Islands) TWN Thailand THA Vietnam VNM Australia & New Zealand Region UU Australia AUS Cook Islands (including Society Islands) COK Fiji FJI

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French Polynesia (including Tahiti) PYF Guam GUM Johnston Atoll JQ Marshall Islands MHL Midway Islands MQ Nauru NRU New Caledonia NCL New Zealand NZL Niue NIU Norfolk Island NFK Northern Marianas Islands MNP Palmyra Atoll LQ Papua New Guinea PNG Parcel Islands PF Pitcairn Island PCN Samoa Western WSM Solomon Islands SLB Tokelau Islands TKL Tonga TON Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands (US) (including Caroline Islands) NQ Tuvalu TUV US Miscellaneous Pacific Islands IQ Vanuatu VUT Wake Island WQ Europe EE Western Europe E1 Scandinavian Region E2 Aegean Nations E3 Central Europe E4 Baltic States E5 Eastern Europe E6 Russia RS *Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (Former USSR) UR Western Europe E1 Andorra AND Austria AUT Belgium BEL France FRA Germany DEU Gibraltar GIB Greenland GRL Guernsey GU

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Iceland ISL Ireland IRL Isle of Man IM Italy ITA Jersey JE Liechtenstein LIE Luxembourg LUX Malta MLT Monaco MCO Netherlands NLD Portugal (Including Azores & Madeira Islands) PRT San Marino SMR Spain (including Balearic, Canary Islands & Spanish Territory in North Africa) ESP St Pierre and Miquelon SB Switzerland CHE United Kingdom GBR Vatican City VAT Scandinavian Region E2 Bjoernoeya (Bear Island) BJ Denmark DNK Faroe Islands FRO Finland FlN Norway NOR Svalbard & Jan Mayen SJM Sweden SWE Aegean Nations E3 Cyprus CYP Greece GRC Turkey TUR Central Europe E4 Albania ALB Belarus BLR Bosnia and Hercegovina BIH Bulgaria BGR Croatia HRV Czech Republic CZE Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia (FYROM) FY *German Democratic Republic (former GDR) GC

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Georgia GEO Hungary HUN Moldavia MDA Poland POL Romania ROM Serbia SR Serbia & Montenegro Federal Republic SCG Slovakia SVK Slovenia SVN *Yugoslavia (former Republic) YO Ukraine UKR Baltic States E5 Estonia EST Latvia LVA Lithuania LTU Eastern Europe E6 Belarus (Byelorussia) BLR Georgia GEO Ukraine UKR North America NN North America N1 Central America N4 Caribbean Islands N5 North America N1 Canada CAN United States USA

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Central America N4 Belize BLZ Clipperton Island IP Costa Rica CRI El Salvador SLV Guatemala GTM Honduras HND Mexico MEX Nicaragua NIC Panama (including Canal Zone) PAM Caribbean Islands N5 Anguilla AIA Antigua and Barbuda ATG Aruba ABW Bahamas BHS Barbados BRB Bermuda BMU Cayman Islands CYM Cuba CUB Dominica DMA Dominican Republic DOM Grenada GRD Guadeloupe GLP Haiti HTI Jamaica (Including Morant, Pedro Cayo Islands) JAM Martinique MTQ Montserrat MSH Navassa Island BQ Netherlands Antilles ANT Nevis SC Puerto Rico PRI St Christopher-Nevis KNA St Lucia LCA St Vincent VCT Trinidad and Tobago TTO Turks and Caicos Islands TCA Virgin Islands (UK) VGB Virgin Islands (US) VIR

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South America SS Antarctica ATA Argentina ARG Bolivia BOL Bouvet Island BVT Brazil BRA Chile CHL Colombia COL Ecuador ECU Falkland Islands FLK French Southern & Antarctic Lands (excluding Terre Adelie) FS French Guiana GUF Guyana GUY Heard & McDonald Islands HMD Paraguay PRY Peru PER Surinam SUR Uruguay URY Venezuela VEN Wallis & Fatuna WLF

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SECTION 3 – GEOGRAPHIC/GEOPHYSICAL REGIONS BY OCEANS North Atlantic Region 01 South Atlantic Ocean Region 02 North Pacific Ocean Region 03 South Pacific Ocean Region 04 Arctic Ocean Region 05 Indian Ocean Region 06 Baltic Sea Region 07 Mediterranean Sea Region 08 Great Lakes Region 09 North Atlantic Region 01 Caribbean Sea 1X Gulf of Mexico 1M North Atlantic Ocean 1A North Sea 1N Panama Canal 1J South Atlantic Ocean Region 02 South Atlantic Ocean 2A North Pacific Ocean Region 03 East China Sea 3E Formosa Strait 3F Gulf of Thailand 3T Gulf of Tonkin 3G North Pacific Ocean 3A Sea of Japan 3J Sea of Okhotsk 3Q South China Sea 3U Yellow Sea 3Y South Pacific Ocean Region 04 South Pacific Ocean 4A Arctic Ocean Region 05 Arctic Ocean 5A Barents Sea 5B Bering Sea 5D Bering Strait 5R Greenland Sea 5G

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Indian Ocean Region 06 Arabian Sea 6R British Indian Ocean Territory IO Gulf of Aden 6D Gulf of Aqaba 6Q Gulf of Oman 6M Indian Ocean 6A Persian Gulf 6P Red Sea 6E Strait of Malacca 6C Suez Canal 6U Baltic Sea Region 07 Baltic Sea 7B Mediterranean Sea Region 08 Adriatic Sea 8D Aegean Sea 8G Aral Sea 8R Caspian Sea 8C Dardanelles 8U Eastern Mediterranean Sea 8E Strait of Gibraltar 8S Western Mediterranean Sea 8W Great Lakes Region 09 Great Lakes 9A

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SECTION 4 – COUNTRY, 2 & 3 LETTER CODE, HIGHER REGION CODE AND GEOGRAPHIC/GEOPHYSICAL REGIONS BY OCEANS Country Name 2 LTRs 3 LTRs Higher Region Code

A.

Adriatic Sea 8D Mediterranean Sea Region 08

Aegean Sea 8G Mediterranean Sea Region 08

Afghanistan AF AFG Indian Subcontinent A3

Africa FF Worldwide WW

Aegean Nations E3 Europe EE

Albania AL ALB Central Europe E4

Algeria AG DZA Northern Africa F1

Andorra AN AND Western Europe E1

Angola AO AGO Southern Africa F3

Anguilla AV AIA Caribbean Islands N5

Antarctica AY ATA South America SS

Antigua & Barbuda AC ATG Caribbean Islands N5

Arabian Sea 6R Indian Ocean Region 06

Aral Sea 8R Mediterranean Sea Region 08

Arctic Ocean 5A Arctic Ocean Region 05

Arctic Ocean Region 05 Worldwide WW

Argentina AR ARG South America SS

Armenia AM ARM Central Asia A4

Aruba AW ABW Central America N4

Ashmore & Cartier Islands AT SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Asia AA Worldwide WW

Australia AS AUS Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Australia & NZ Region UU Worldwide WW

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Country Name 2 LTRs 3 LTRs Higher Region Code

Austria AU AUT Western Europe E1

Azerbaijan (Azerbaydzhan) AJ AZE Central Asia A4

B.

Bahamas BF BHS Caribbean Islands N5

Bahrain BA BHR Southern Middle East A1

Baker Island KQ SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Baltic Sea 7B Baltic Sea Region 07

Baltic Sea Region 07 Worldwide WW

Baltic States E5 Europe EE

Bangladesh BG BGD Indian Subcontinent A3

Barbados BB BRB Caribbean Islands N5

Barents Sea 5B Arctic Ocean Region 05

Basses Da India BS Southern Africa F3

Belarus (Byelorussia) BO BLR Eastern Europe E6

Belgium BE BEL Western Europe E1

Belize BH BLZ Central America SS

Benin BN BEN Western Coastal Africa F2

Bering Sea 5D Arctic Ocean Region 05

Bering Strait 5R Arctic Ocean Region 05

Bermuda BD BMU Caribbean Islands N5

Bhutan BT BTN Indian Subcontinent A3

Bjoernoeya. (Bear Islands) BJ Scandinavian Region E2

Black Sea 8B Mediterranean Sea Region 08

Bolivia BL BOL South America SS

Bophuthatswana (former SF) XA Southern Africa F3

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Country Name 2 LTRs 3 LTRs Higher Region Code

Bosnia-Herzegovina BK BIH Central Europe E4

Botswana BC BWA Southern Africa F3

Bouvet Island BV BVT South America SS

Brazil BR BRA South America SS

Br.Indian Ocean Territory IO Indian Ocean Region 06

Brunei BX BRN SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Bulgaria BU BGR Central Europe E4

Burkina Faso (former Upper Volta) UV BFA Western Coastal Africa F2

Burma BM MMR SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Burundi BY BDI Eastern Africa F4

C.

Cambodia CB KHM SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Cameroon CM CMR Western Coastal Africa F2

Canada CA CAN North America N1

Cape Verde Islands CV CPV Western Coastal Africa F2

Caribbean Islands N5 North America NN

Caribbean Sea 1X North Atlantic Ocean Region 01

Caspian Sea 8C Mediterranean Sea Region 08

Cayman Islands CJ CYM Caribbean Islands N5

Central Africa Republic CT CAF Western Coastal Africa F2

Central America N4 North America NN

Central Asia A4 Asia AA

Central Europe E4 Europe EE

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Country Name 2 LTRs 3 LTRs Higher Region Code

Chad CD TCD Northern Africa F1

Chile CI CHL South America SS

China (former People's Republic) CH CHN China and Mongolia A5

China & Mongolia A5 Asia AA

Christmas Island KT CXR SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Ciskei (former SF) XC Southern Africa F3

Clipperton Island IP Central America N4

Cocos Islands (Keeling Islands) CK CCK SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Colombia CO COL South America SS

Comoros CN COM Southern Africa F3

Congo CF COG Southern Africa F3

Cook Islands CW COK Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Coral Sea Islands CR SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Costa Rica CS CRI Central America N4

Croatia HR HRV Central Europe E4

Cuba CU CUB Caribbean Islands N5

Cyprus CY CYP Aegean Nations E3

Czech Republic CZ CZE Central Europe E4

D.

Dardanelles 8U Mediterranean Sea Region 08

Denmark DA DNK Scandinavian Region E2

Djibouti DJ DJI Eastern Africa F4

Dominica DO DMA Caribbean Islands N5

Dominican Republic DR DOM Caribbean Islands N5

E.

East China Sea 3E North Pacific Ocean Region 03

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Country Name 2 LTRs 3 LTRs Higher Region Code

Eastern Africa F4 Africa FF

Eastern Europe E6 Europe EE

Eastern Mediterranean 8E Mediterranean Sea Region 08

Ecuador EC ECU South America SS

Egypt EG EGY Southern Middle East A1

El Salvador ES SLV Central America N4

Equatorial Guinea EK GNQ Western Coastal Africa F2

Eritrea ER ERI Eastern Africa F4

Estonia EN EST Baltic States E5

Ethiopia ET ETH Eastern Africa F4

Europa Islands EU SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Europe EE Worldwide WW

F.

Falkland Islands FA FLK South America SS

Faroe (Faeroe) Islands FO FRO Scandinavian Region E2

Federal Republic Of Yugoslavia YU YUG Central Europe E4

Fiji FJ FJI Australian-New Zealand Region UU

Finland FI FIN Scandinavian Region E2

Formosa Strait 3F North Pacific Ocean Region 03

France FR FRA Western Europe E1

French Southern & Antarctic Lands FS South America SS

French Guiana GF GUF South America SS

French Polynesia FP PYF Australia-New Zealand Region UU

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Country Name 2 LTRs 3 LTRs Higher Region Code

Former Yugoslavian Republic of Macedonia FY Central Europe E4

G.

Gabon GB GAB Northern Africa F1

Gambia GA GMB Western Coastal Africa F2

Gaza Strip GZ Northern Middle East A2

German Democratic Republic (GDR) GC Central Europe E4

Georgia GG GEO Eastern Europe E6

Germany GE DEU Central Europe E4

Ghana GH GHA Western Coastal Africa F2

Gibraltar GI GIB Western Europe E1

Glorioso Island GO Southern Africa F3

Great Lakes 9A Great Lakes Region 09

Great Lakes Region 09 Worldwide WW

Greece GR GRC Aegean Nations E3

Greenland GL GRL Western Europe E1

Greenland Sea 5G Arctic Ocean Region 05

Grenada GJ GRD Caribbean Islands N5

Guadeloupe GP GLP Caribbean Islands N5

Guam GQ GUM Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Guatemala GT GTM Central America N4

Guernsey GU Western Europe E1

Guinea GV GIN Western Coastal Africa F2

Guinea-Bissau PU GNB Western Coastal Africa F2

Gulf of Aden 6D Indian Ocean Region 06

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Country Name 2 LTRs 3 LTRs Higher Region Code

Gulf of Aqaba 6Q Indian Ocean Region 06

Gulf of Mexico 1M North Atlantic Region 01

Gulf of Oman 6M Indian Ocean Region 06

Gulf of Thailand 3T North Pacific Ocean Region 03

Gulf of Tonkin 3G North Pacific Ocean Region 03

Guyana GY GUY South America SS

H.

Haiti HA HTI Caribbean Islands N5

Hawaii HW North America N1

Heard & McDonald Islands HM HMD South America SS

Honduras HO HND Central America N4

Hong Kong HK HKG SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Howland Island HQ SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Hungary HU HUN Central Europe E4

I.

Iceland IC ISL Western Europe E1

India IN IND Indian Subcontinent A3

Indian Ocean 6A Indian Ocean Region 06

Indian Ocean Region 06 Worldwide WW

Indian Sub-continent A3 Asia AA

Indonesia ID IDN SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Iran IR IRN Northern Middle East A2

Iraq IZ IRQ Northern Middle East A2

Iraq-Saudi Arabia Neutral Zone IY Northern Middle East A2

Ireland EI IRL Western Europe E1

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Country Name 2 LTRs 3 LTRs Higher Region Code

Israel (incl IS-JO & IS-SY DW) IS ISR Southern Middle East A1

Isle of Man IM Western Europe E1

Italy IT ITA Western Europe E1

Ivory Coast IV CIV Western Coastal Africa F2

J.

Jamaica JM JAM Caribbean Islands N5

Japan JA JPN SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Jarvis Islands DQ SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Jersey JE Western Europe E1

Johnston Atoll JQ Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Jordan JO JOR Northern Middle East A2

Juan De Nova Island JU Southern Africa F3

K.

Kazakhstan KZ KAZ Central Asia A4

Kenya KE KEN Central Africa F4

Kingman Reef FQ SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Kiribati KR KIR SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Korea - North KN PRK SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Korea - South KS KOR SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Kuwait KU KWT Northern Middle East A2

Kyrghzstan (Kirghizstan) KG KGZ Central Asia A4

L.

Laos LA LAO SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Latvia LG LVA Baltic States E5

Lebanon LE LBN Northern Middle East A2

Lesotho LT LSO Southern Africa F3

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Country Name 2 LTRs 3 LTRs Higher Region Code

Liberia LI LBR Western Coastal Africa F2

Libya LY LBY Northern Africa F1

Liechtenstein LS LIE Western Europe E1

Lithuania LH LTU Baltic States E5

Luxembourg LU LUX Western Europe E1

M.

Macau MO MAC China and Mongolia A5

Madagascar (Malagasy Republic) MA MDG Southern Africa F3

Malawi MI MWI Southern Africa F3

Malaysia MY MYS SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Maldives Islands MV MVD Northern Africa F1

Mali ML MLI Northern Africa F1

Malta MT MLT Western Europe E1

Marshall Islands MH MHL Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Martinique MQ MTQ Caribbean Islands N5

Mauritania MR MRT Northern Africa F1

Mauritius MP MUS Southern Africa F3

Mayotte ME MYT Southern Africa F3

Mediterranean Sea Region 08 Worldwide WW

Mexico MX MEX Central America N4

Micronesia Fed. States FM FSM SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Midway Islands MQ Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Moldavia MD MDA Central Europe E4

Monaco MN MCO Western Europe E1

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Country Name 2 LTRs 3 LTRs Higher Region Code

Mongolia MG MNG China and Mongolia A5

Montserrat MH MSR Caribbean Islands N5

Morocco MO MAR Northern Africa F1

Mozambique MZ MOZ Southern Africa F3

N.

Namibia WA NAM Southern Africa F3

NATO Countries N2 Worldwide WW

Nauru NR NRU Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Navassa Island BQ Caribbean Islands N5

Nepal NP NPL Indian Sub-continent A3

Netherlands Antilles NA ANT Caribbean Islands N5

Netherlands NL NLD Western Europe E1

New Caledonia NC NCL Australia-New Zealand Region UU

New Zealand NZ NZL Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Nicaragua NU NIC Central America N4

Niger NG NER Northern Africa F1

Nigeria NI NGA Western Coastal Africa F2

Niue NE NIU Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Norfolk Island NF NFK Australia-New Zealand Region UU

North America N1 North America NN

North America NN Worldwide WW

North Atlantic Ocean 1A North Atlantic Ocean Region 01

North Atlantic Ocean Region 01 Worldwide WW

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Country Name 2 LTRs 3 LTRs Higher Region Code

North Pacific Ocean 3A North Pacific Ocean Region 03

North Pacific Ocean Region 03 Worldwide WW

North Sea 1N North Atlantic Ocean Region 01

Northern Africa F1 Africa FF

Northern Mariana Islands CQ MNP

Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Northern Middle East A2 Asia AA

Norway NO NOR Scandinavian Region E2

O.

Oman MU OMN Southern Middle East A1

P.

Pakistan (incl Jammu & Kashmir) PK PAK Indian Sub-continent 06

Palmyra Atoll LQ Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Panama (incl Panama Canal) PM PAN Central America N4

Papua New Guinea PP PNG

Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Parcel Islands PF Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Paraguay PA PRY South America SS

Persian Gulf 6P Indian Ocean Region 06

Peru PE PER South America SS

Philippines RP PHL SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Pitcairn Islands PC PCN Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Poland PL POL Central Europe E4

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Country Name 2 LTRs 3 LTRs Higher Region Code

Portugal PO PRT Western Europe E1

Puerto Rico RQ PRI Caribbean Islands N5

Q.

Qatar QA QAT Southern Middle East A1

R.

Red Sea 6E Indian Ocean Region 06

Republic of Palau PS PLW SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Reunion RE REU Southern Africa F3

Romania RO ROM Central Europe E4

Russia RS RUS Europe EE

Rwanda RW RWA Eastern Africa F4

S.

Samoa (US) AQ SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Samoa Western WS WSM Australia-New Zealand Region UU

San Marino SM SMR Western Europe E1

Sao Tome & Principe TP STP Western Coastal Africa F2

Saudi Arabia SA SAU Southern Middle East A1

Scandinavian Region E2 Europe EE

Sea of Japan 3J North Pacific Region 03

Sea of Okhotsk 3Q North Pacific Region 03

Senegal SG SEN Western Coastal Africa F2

Serbia & Montenegro CS SCG Central Europe E4

Serbia SR Central Europe E4

Seychelles SE SYC Indian Subcontinent A3

Sierra Leone SL SLE Western Coastal Africa F2

Singapore SN SGP SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

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Country Name 2 LTRs 3 LTRs Higher Region Code

Slovakia LO SVK Central Europe E4

Slovenia SI SVN Central Europe E4

Solomon Islands BP SLB Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Soloman Islands (UK) SQ SLB

Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Somalia SO SOM Eastern Africa F4

South Africa SF ZAF Southern Africa F3

South America SS Worldwide WW

South Atlantic Ocean 2A South Atlantic Ocean Region 02

South Atlantic Ocean Region 02 Worldwide WW

South China Sea 3U North Pacific Ocean Region 03

SE Asia & SW Pacific A6 Asia AA

South Pacific Ocean 4A South Pacific Ocean Region 04

South Pacific Ocean Region 04 Worldwide WW

Southern Africa F3 Africa FF

Southern Middle East A1 Asia AA

Spain SP ESP Western Europe E1

Spratly Islands PG SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Sri Lanka CE LKA Indian Sub-Continent A3

St Christopher-Nevis SC KNA Caribbean Islands N5

St Helena SH Southern Africa F3

St Lucia ST LCA Caribbean Islands N5

St Pierre & Miquelon SB Western Europe E1

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Country Name 2 LTRs 3 LTRs Higher Region Code

St Vincent VC VCT Caribbean Islands N5

Strait of Gibraltar 8S Mediterranean Sea Region 08

Strait of Malacca 6C Indian Ocean Region 06

Sudan SU SDN Eastern Africa F4

Suez Canal 6U Indian Ocean Region 06

Surinam NS SUR South America SS

Svalbard & Jan Mayen SV SJM Scandinavian Region E2

Swaziland WZ SWZ Southern Africa F3

Sweden SW SWE Scandinavian Region E2

Switzerland SZ CHE Western Europe E1

Syria SY SYR Northern Middle East A2

T.

Taiwan TW TWN SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Tajikistan TI TJK Central Asia A4

Tanzania TZ TZA Eastern Africa F4

Thailand TH THA SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Togo TO TGO Western Coastal Africa F2

Tokelau TL TKL Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Tonga TN TON Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Transkei (former SF) XT Southern Africa F3

Trinidad & Tobago TD TTO Caribbean Islands N5

Tromelin Islands TE Southern Africa F3

Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands NQ

Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Tunisia TS TUN Northern Africa F1

Turkey TU TUR Aegean Nations E3

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Country Name 2 LTRs 3 LTRs Higher Region Code

Turkmenistan TX TKM Central Asia A4

Turks and Caicos Islands TK TCA Caribbean Islands N5

Tuvalu TV TUV Australia-New Zealand Region UU

U.

Uganda UG UGA Eastern Africa F4

Ukraine UP UKR Eastern Europe E6

*USSR UR Europe EE

United Arab Emirates TC ARE Southern Middle East A1

United Kingdom UK GBR Western Europe E1

United States US USA North America N1

US Misc. Pacific Islands IQ

Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Uruguay UY URY South America SS

Uzbekistan UZ UZB Central Asia A4

V.

Vanuatu (former New Hebrides) NH VUT

Australia & New Zealand Region UU

Vatican City VT VAT Western Europe E1

Venda (former SF) XV Southern Africa F3

Venezuela VE VEN South America SS

Vietnam VM VNM SE Asia & SW Pacific A6

Virgin Islands (UK) VI VGB Caribbean Islands N5

Virgin Islands (US) VQ VIR Caribbean Islands N5

W.

Wake Island WQ Australia-New Zealand Region UU

Wallis & Fatuna WF WLF South America SS

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Country Name 2 LTRs 3 LTRs Higher Region Code

Western Coastal Africa F2 Africa FF

Western Europe E1 Europe EE

Western Mediterranean 8W Mediterranean Sea Region 08

Western Sahara WI ESH Northern Africa F1

Worldwide WW Worldwide WW

Y.

Yellow Sea 3Y North Pacific Ocean Region 03

Yemen YE YEM Southern Middle East A1

*Yugoslavia (former republic) YO YUG Central Europe E4

Z.

Zaire CG ZAR Southern Africa F3

Zambia ZA ZMB Southern Africa F3

Zimbabwe ZI ZWE Southern Africa F3

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CHAPTER 7 – PRODUCER CODES INTRODUCTION 46. The first three letters appearing on the Intelligence Index barcode identifies the country or organization releasing or producing the intelligence product. Country Producer Code Agency AUS ADIO Australia Defence Intelligence Organization AUS ADSD Australian Defence Signals Directorate AUS ASIS AUS ATJI Australian Theatre Joint Intelligence Centre

Australia AUS AUST Australia BEL BELG Belgium CAN 1CAD 1 Canadian Air Division CAN 2 CMBG CAN 410 SQN CAN 8WNG 8 Wing/CFB Trenton CAN AIR COMMAND Air Command CAN AUDITOR GENERAL Auditor General CAN BIRT CAN CANADA Canada CAN CANI CAN National INT Cell Sarajevo CAN CASG Solicitor General of Canada CAN CBG CAN BTL GRP CAN CBSA Canadian Border Service Agency CAN CCCC Canadian Contingent Cyprus CAN CCRA Canada Customs and Revenue Agency CAN CCSE Communications Security Establishment

Canada CDDA CAN CDEA Department of External Affairs Canada CAN CDI CAN CDND Department of National Defence

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CAN CDOC Department of Commerce CAN CFEW Canadian Forces Electronic Warfare Centre CAN CFEWC Canadian Forces Electronic Warfare Centre CAN CFILO/L - LONDON CFILO/L – London, United Kingdom CAN CFIO CFIOG Units CAN CFIOG Information Operation Group CAN CFLL Canadian Forces Intelligence Liaison officer

(L) CAN CFLO Canadian Forces Liaison office CAN CFLW Canadian Forces Intelligence Liaison officer

(W) CAN CFMW Canadian Forces Mines Warfare Centre CAN CFNA CF Northern Area HQ CAN CFPU CF Photo Unit CAN CFSM CF School of Military Intelligence CAN CJNT CAN SOAC North Bay CAN CLFC Land Forces Command CAN CMAR Maritime Command CAN CMCE Mapping and Charting Establishment CAN CNRC National Research Council Canada CAN COSJ COS J3 CAN COTT Ottawa Canada CAN CPCO Privy Council office (Intelligence Advisory

Cmtte) Canada CAN CRAD Chief Research and Development CAN CREV Revenue Canada CAN CSIS Canadian Security Intelligence Service

Canada CAN CSOL Solicitor General Canada CAN CSSS NDHQ Shared Support Services DEU DBND German Armed Forces CAN DCDS Deputy Chief of the Defence Staff CAN DFAT Director foreign Affairs & International

Trades CAN CDI Director General Intelligence CAN DGIP Director General International and Industry

Programs

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CAN DGRD Director General Research and Development Programs

CAN DIAS DIS Pubs CAN DISO Director Intelligence Security and

Operations CAN DLSP Director Land Strategic Planning CAN DMPP Director Maritime Policy and Project

Development CAN DNAT D NATO CAN DNPL D NATO Pol CAN DNPM D NATO Pol/D MTAP DNRK Denmark CAN DPMS DPM SECUR CAN DPPK Peacekeeping Policy CAN DREA Defence Research Establishment Atlantic

Canada CAN DREO Defence Research Establishment Ottawa

Canada CAN DRES Defence Research Establishment Suffield

Canada CAN DREV Defence Research Establishment Valcartier

Canada CAN DSPC D Space D ESPN Spain EURO Europe EWOS Electronic Warfare Operations Centre FINL Finland FRAN France GBHC British High Commission GBRN United Kingdom GCHQ Government Communications HQ UK GJAR JARIC Joint Air Recce Intelligence Centre UK GRCE Greece ISLD Iceland ISRL Israel ITAL Italy CAN J2GE J2 Geomatics CAN J2IM J2 Imagery

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CAN J2OP J2 Ops CAN J2PL J2 Plans CAN J2SI Security Intelligence CAN J2SR J2 SRA CAN J2ST J2 STI CAN J3OP J3 Ops CAN J3PL J3 Plans CAN JIMC Information Management Centre JPAN Japan CAN JY2K J2/Y2k LATA Latin America CAN LFCA Land Forces Central Area LUXG Luxembourg CAN MARL Maritime Forces Atlantic Headquarters CAN MARP Maritime Forces Pacific Headquarters MODU Ministry of Defence (UK) MSIC Missile and Space Intelligence Centre USA NAIC National Air Intelligence Centre USA NATO NATO NBCD DNBCD CAN NDCC National Defence Command Centre CAN NDIC J2 Current NGIC National Ground Intelligence Centre USA NIMA National Imagery and Mapping Agency NLDS Netherlands CAN NMOU National Defence Memoranda of

Understanding Control NORW Norway NPIC National Photographic Intelligence

Interpretation Centre NPMP Naval Provost Marshall (Pacific) NZLD New Zealand OPEN Open Source PJHQ Permanent Joint HQ UK PRTL Portugal CAN RCMP Royal Canadian Mounted Police CAN SFOR CCSFOR PO 5003

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CAN SQFT SQFT/G2 CAN SRA2 SRA 2 Maritime CAN SRA3 SRA 3 Eurasia / FSU CAN SRA4 Eurasia CAN SRA5 Middle East/Africa CAN SRA6 Latin America / Caribbean CAN SRA7 South and Se Asia CAN STI2 Naval Weapons Systems CAN STI3 Scientific Intelligence CAN STI4 NBC / Missiles CAN STI5 Space Systems / C3 USA UCIA Central Intelligence Agency USA USA UDEA Drug Enforcement Agency USA USA UDIA Defence Intelligence Agency USA USA UFBI Federal Bureau of Investigation USA USA UJAC Joint Analysis Centre USA USA UNKN Unknown USA UNSA National Security Agency USA USA UONI Office of Naval Intelligence USA USA USAA United States Army USA USA USAF United States Air Force USA USA USAN United States Navy USA USA USMC United States Marine Corps USA USA UUSA United States of America USA

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CHAPTER 7 – USING IFCS FOR STANDARDISATION OF HARD AND SOFT COPY DATABASES AND WEBSITES

INTRODUCTION 47. Basic Intelligence. Basic intelligence is the background intelligence about a subject, which is maintained in electronic, paper, or website database and continually updated in the course of all operations. The principal use of basic intelligence is to set the scene at the outset of operations and to meet intelligence requirements dealing with unchanging facts such as battle space, oceanographic, terrain, and weather, which may be raised, in answer to new requirements in the course of an operation. The definition of Basic Intelligence is: “Intelligence, on any subject, which may be used as reference material for planning and as a basis for processing subsequent information or intelligence”

INTELLIGENCE DATABASES 48. Databases and Websites. A series of linked databases and websites are designed to meet the base requirements of the range of potential defence operations. The databases and websites will be “push” “pull” retrieval systems designed to assist the reference, estimative, warning and current intelligence applications at the strategic, operational and tactical levels of command as contingencies or situations occur. Examples of such databases and websites include Intelligence products such as:

a. Threat and risk products; b. Basic intelligence products; c. Military capabilities assessments and studies; d. Operations specific products; e. Reports and summaries.; and f. Orders of Battle.

49. Most Intelligence databases have become web centric in nature. IFC can provide structure and standardized means to collate intelligence and information for electronic databases or websites.

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50. Structured Database. Structured intelligence data is stored in a database in which each record has a defined structure consisting of a series of fields. Details of the field description, the field length, that is to say the number of characters for which there is space in the field, and the type of characters; alphabetical, numeric or a mixture of the two are set out in the Data Dictionary for the database. Intelligence is retrieved from the database through the use of a web browser designed specifically for use within the structure of a specified database. 51. Database Standards. In order to exchange data between two structured databases there has to be a common exchange format. In effect this means that the structure of the sending and receiving databases have to be the same. Fields within the structure have to have the same title and the data standards for the fields, the field length and character type also have to be the same. Finally, the value tables for both databases, the codes that are entered into the fields and which represent specific details also have to be common to both databases. When these conditions have been fulfilled and where a communications link between both structured databases exists, data can be passed or ‘exchanged’ from one database to the other.

DATA DICTIONARY 52. Folders. Folders are used during database/web page creation as means to organise data and imagery. All data used in electronic Intelligence databases or websites or can be placed in the appropriate file IFC labelled folder or have one created. This provides the unit with a standard means in which to input and organise data into all databases and websites. Ensure that when creating names for folders and other Web based products that an under score is used to separate forms, name, and numbers. This will allow your folder or Web product to have a clear URL displayed, i.e.: http://www1.marpac.c-esqt.dnd.ca/unit/home/ccirm/int_function_codes/ifc_main.htm. The following is an example and explanation of the different types of folders that will be used and seen within databases and webs:

a. General File folder: Example - 2400_terrorism:

(1) Explanation:

(a) Field 1 - Index code: Intelligence Index Code identifies topics in a hierarchical form. Terrorism is the topic in the sample field;

(b) Field 2 - Index Code title: Titles for index codes are in

some cases very long and cannot be fully used when constructing a database/Web folder. However, a short

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version can used in order to give the user a description of the folders contents. Terrorism is the title in the sample field; and

(c) General file folders, such as this example, contain documents pertaining to Worldwide, regional and topics containing more than one country.

b. Specific Continent, Region, and Country folder: Example - ww_regions\africa_ff\eastern_africa_f4\djibouti_djiI\2400_terrorism;

(1) Explanation:

(a) Field 1 - Index code. All country specific files are located in the worldwide regions folder;

(b) Field 2 - Index code: Indicates the content code;

(c) Field 3 - Index code: Indicates the region code;

(d) Field 4 - Index code: Country Code identifies the

geographic/geopolitical area for which the data or intelligence has been assembled. Djibouti is the area of operations in the sample field.

(e) Field 5 - Index Code Title: Terrorism is the title in the

sample field.

c. General data folder: Example - 0904_intelligence_reports:

(1) Explanation: In some cases a general file folder will be created to organise topics of a general nature. In this case this folder would be used for specific intelligence products or data that fall under this category.

(2) Folder name without IFC: Example - cib_Nov05:

(a) Explanation: Some locally produced intelligence

products or data will be given a simple product title for filing document pertaining to that subject. Current Intelligence Briefs for November 2005 is the used in this sample field;

53. File Names. The IFC is used to identify all data and Intelligence product files. The File Convention is modified from the DG INT Intelligence Bar Code

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System and separated into only four fields form the original nine. Each field gives specific information about the product. Most intelligence products produced by Intelligence Staff will be disseminated on a web site so it is very important that underscores be placed between each field because browsers do not recognize spaces in URLs, files or folder names.

a. Data or file name: Example: rus_1200_04_05.htm /Full document title: "An Overview of the Russian Navy for 2005": (1) Explanation:

(a) Field 1 - Three Letter Country Code: The Country

Code identifies the geographic/geopolitical area for which the data or intelligence has been assembled. Russia is the area of operations in the sample field.

(b) Field 2 - Index code: Intelligence Index Code identifies topics in a hierarchical form. Naval Forces is the topic in the sample field.

(c) Field 3 - Classification Code: The Classification Code is applicable to products and data. The number equate to: 01 - Unclassified; 02 – Protected/Restricted; 03 - Confidential; 04 - Secret; 05 - Top Secret; 06 - 09 Special Material. Secret is the classification code used in the sample field.

(d) Field 4 - Year Code: The Year Code represents the

year in which the intelligence product was assembled. The last two digits of the year are used. 2005 is the year code used in the sample field.

(e) Document Title: The full document title can be

inserted in properties by going to file, properties, and summary.

54. Imagery. Images can be separated into the same four fields as documents files with some modifications. When the classifications and year of the image is not known the last two fields are not required. However, in place of, or added to, a short name of the image (i.e.: A10) and an image number (i.e.: 001), in case there is more that one, must be added. The image should be labelled with the proper IFC, starting with country of origin, index code, image name and image number.

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a. Image name: Example: usa_1331_a10_001.gif

(1) Explanation:

(a) Field 1 - Country Code: The Operations Country Code identifies the geographic/geopolitical area for which the data or intelligence has been assembled. United States is the area of operations in the sample field;

(b) Field 2 - Index Code: IFC identifies topics in a

hierarchical form. Theatre Bomber Force Capabilities is the index code in the sample field. This index code was chosen because in the index code definition the key word "equipment" was used;

(c) Field 3 - Image Name: The image file name must be

short as possible. In this case A10 is use in the sample field. This name is short and easily identifiable to all users: and

(d) Field 4 - Image Number: The image number must

correspond to the number of images held of that type. 55. In the case when the image is classified and the year is known the image should have six fields as follows, i.e.: chn_1250_03_00_luhu_001.gif

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CHAPTER 8 – GUIDELINES TO BE FOLLOWED FOR VETTING AND DESTRUCTION OF INTELLIGENCE DATA 56. The Government Security Policy (GSP). The GSP states in part that information classified in the national interest and designated information for which the retention period approved by the Dominion Archivist has expired shall be promptly destroyed in a manner that will completely obliterate the classified and sensitive aspects of the information. 57. DND Policy. NDHQ/DG SAMP is the Departmental Office of Primary Interest (OPI) for security equipment. Security Policy is contained in National Defence Security Instructions (NDSI). As they come into effect, the NDSI will replace the current National Defence Security Policy (NDSP). This process has begun and will continue over the coming months, until all chapters of the NDSP will have been superseded by the NDSI. Should a subject not be covered by the following chapters of the NDSI, please refer to the NDSP. Questions or comments should be directed to DPM Secur 3 (945-7245 or [email protected]). 58. Regulations. Regulations governing the destruction of classified matter categorized as communications materiel or accountable publications are contained in CIS/01/1, Canadian Forces COMSEC Instructions, and CIS/01/02, Canadian Forces Instructions for COMSEC Materiel and Accountable Publications. 59. Responsibilities. Commanders, commanding officers and persons in charge of defence establishments shall ensure that classified/designated (C/D) matter destined for destruction is safeguarded and destroyed in accordance with departmental orders. 60. Authority for Destruction. Typical designated authorities for the destruction of C/D matter are:

a. The authorized holder, for correspondence (messages, letter

grams, memoranda, letters, minutes, briefs, etc); b. The authorized holder, for miscellaneous documents for which

destruction is not specifically prescribed; c. Authorities for departmental files, as prescribed in departmental

administrative orders; d. The originator of publications or documents; e. The issuer of equipment; and

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f. The authorized holder of surplus copies and waste.

61. The foregoing does not preclude the designation of an authority, when considered appropriate, for the specific purpose of authorizing the destruction or retention of classified or otherwise sensitive documents. 62. Protection of Waste Material. Information classified in the national interest and/or designated information shall, pending destruction, be kept separate from unclassified and non-designated waste material. 63. C/D waste materiel shall be destroyed as close as possible to the point of origin or storage to reduce handling and transportation requirements, and the consequent risk of unauthorized access. The residue from properly destroyed C/D matter may be disposed of as unclassified waste. 64. If legible information can be gleaned from the surplus copies and waste that were generated in the preparation of classified/designated (C/D) documentation, such matter must be promptly and completely destroyed, by approved methods, when it is no longer considered useful. 65. Destruction. C/D waste materiel shall be destroyed using equipment approved by DG SAMP/D Secur. Such equipment shall be marked, in accordance with Chapter 27, Annex J, indicating the level of classified and/or designated information and the physical form of the information (e.g., paper, microform, etc.), for which it has been approved. 66. When the use of shredders or incinerators is authorized for the destruction of non-standard matter, they shall be of the type specified in this chapter. 67. Witnesses. During the destruction of C/D materiel, an employee with an appropriate security clearance or enhanced reliability check, as applicable, shall be in attendance, and shall remain present until the materiel has been completely destroyed. 68. Protection of Waste Materiel. C/D matter awaiting destruction, or in transit to a destruction facility, is to be safeguarded in the manner prescribed for the highest level of classified or designated matter contained in the waste. Storage requirements for classified and designated materiel are outlined in Chapter 8, NDSP.

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69. Methods of Destruction. C/D waste is to be destroyed by burning, shredding, or disintegrating. Classified waste, including equipment, which cannot be adequately destroyed by these methods, is to be treated in any effective way that will ensure that classified information cannot be retrieved from the residue. 70. The RCMP Security Equipment Guide, SSB/SG-20, contains information on the equipment currently approved for the destruction of classified and designated equipment. This publication is updated periodically. Those requiring a listing of approved security equipment should contact local security advisors. 71. Incinerators. Existing incinerators, including locally manufactured equipment, may be used to burn C/D waste provided they are considered environmentally acceptable and are constructed in a manner which will preclude the escape of fragments during the burning process and, when used in the prescribed manner, are capable of:

a. Reducing paper to fine ash, and b. Reducing other materiel such as plastics to a form, which prevents

the recovery of any classified information from the residue. 72. Document Shredders. Shredding machines may be used to destroy standard weights of office paper. They are not suitable for shredding heavy weight paper, light cloth, plastic ribbons, sheets, tapes, duplicating masters and similar materials. Metal objects such as staples and paper clips should be removed prior to shredding. The following criteria are to be observed when destroying classified or designated waste by shredding:

a. Lines of print (typewriting, longhand, etc.) must be shredded at right

angles to the lines of print; b. Small amounts of one colour or type of paper must not be shredded

or mixed with other colours or types of paper, as this facilitates document reconstitution;

c. Small amounts of shredding must not be disposed of in isolation; d. Shreddings must be mixed by hand; e. Shredding machines should be thoroughly checked after each use

for document remnants; f. The maximum acceptable shred size is 1.0 mm in width and 14.3

mm in length;

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g. Shredded waste must be examined for over width or unshredded fragments prior to its disposal. Any such fragments are to be re-shredded; and

h. Upon completion of a proper shredding process, shredded waste

may be disposed of as unclassified waste. 73. Disintegrators. Disintegrators, by reducing materials to a fine powder, are capable of destroying all forms of designated and classified material, up to and including TOP SECRET. Disintegrators are not approved for the destruction of micro-sized information (microfilm, microfiche), as the particle size may allow the recovery of information. 74. Disposal of Information Technology (IT) Media. The disposal of sensitive Information Technology (IT) media should be carried out in accordance with DND/CF Operational Security Standards for IT media, for example:

a. Toner cartridges must be destroyed by burning; b. Cathode Ray Tubes may either be broken into small pieces and

then disintegrated, or smelted/incinerated/pulverized; c. Magnetic tape may be degaussed, or burnt after mechanical

shredding; d. Magnetic discs and disk packs may be destroyed/disposed of

through: (1) External overwrite or rewrite; (2) Degaussing, use of emery wheel, sandpaper or

chemicals/acids to remove surface material; and (3) Mutilation or melting in an approved metal destruction

facility. e. Optical disk/ROM may be destroyed by smelting/incineration or

pulverization (smaller than 0.5mm); and f. Packaged circuits may be effectively destroyed by melting or

immersion in chemicals.

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75. Certification. Form CF 779, Certificate of Destruction (NSN 7530-21-029- 0075) is to be completed for the destruction of:

a. All documents and files classified TOP SECRET or SECRET; and b. Other documents, files or correspondence for which a record of

destruction has been directed by a higher authority. 76. Letters, memoranda, messages, minutes, etc., contained in files need not be individually recorded on Form CF 779 unless subsequent accounting is required or directed by higher authority. Completed forms will be:

a. Held on unit files for a minimum period of three years; b. When applicable, attached to the report of a convened authority; c. Forwarded to a headquarters of higher authority if destruction was

carried out because of the disbanding of an establishment; and d. When necessary, forwarded to any authority required to maintain

records of destruction. 77. When Form CF 779, Certificate of Destruction for Classified Matter is required, the witness designated under paragraph 12 is to complete Block 10 and forward it to the Establishment Head who will complete Block 11. In the case of standard classified matter, there is no requirement to complete Block 9. 78. Emergency Destruction. No satisfactory method is recognized for the complete and rapid destruction of large quantities of C/D matter. Under emergency conditions, the destruction of all C/D matter is not likely to be accomplished. It follows, therefore, that prior identification and, where possible, segregation of the most sensitive C/D matter is essential to ensure its destruction in an emergency. Furthermore, to keep the volume of such matter to a minimum, highly sensitive/ classified matter must be destroyed as soon as it is no longer required for operational or other reasons. This is particularly important for deployed or operational units (including ships, aircraft and detachments of units) and formations. 79. To provide a degree of assurance that highly sensitive matter does not become compromised, commanders, commanding officers and persons in charge are to prepare a plan for the emergency destruction of C/D matter and its subsequent disposition.

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80. Vetting. There will be a requirement for Intelligence Staff to thoroughly examine and evaluate the information and intelligence in their inventory. There are seven occurrences when the vetting process must occur: The material has been superseded; The material is a recurring product which replaces its predecessors; The material is outdated; The material is outside current intelligence requirements; The mission has changed and the material no longer relates; Your supervisor directs you to vet; and SOPs direct you to vet.

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ANNEX A: GLOSSARY AAM Air-to-Air Missile ABM Anti-Ballistic Missile ACINT Acoustic Intelligence AIDS Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome APC Armoured Personnel Carrier ASAT Anti-Satellite missile ASM Air-to-Surface Missile ASW Anti-Submarine Warfare ATGM Anti-Tank Guided Missile CCIR Commander’s Critical Intelligence Requirement CIC Command, Control, and Communications CM Countermeasures combat service support Element Designation

based on the mission and function of the element. Transport and logistic units are examples of combat service support elements. Combat support Element designation based on the mission and functions of the element. Engineers and C' units are examples of combat support elements. Counterintelligence those activities that are concerned with identifying and counteracting the threat to security posed by hostile intelligence services or organizations or by individuals engaged in espionage, sabotage, subversion, or terrorism.

ECM Electronic Counter Measures EHF Extremely High Frequency ELF Extremely Low Frequency ELINT Electronic Intelligence ESM Electronic Support Measures EW Electronic Warfare FM Foreign Materiel exploitation HF High Frequency HIV Human Immune deficiency Virus HUMINT Human Intelligence ICBM Intercontinental Ballistic Missile ICECAP Integrated Coalition Environment Common Access Portal ICP Intelligence Collection Plan IMINT Imagery Intelligence IR Intelligence Requirement IRBM Intermediate Range Ballistic Missile LF Low Frequency MAD Magnetic Anomaly Detection MICV Mechanized Infantry Combat Vehicle MIRV Multiple Independent Re-entry Vehicle MOB Multiple Orbital Bombardment MRBM Medium Range Ballistic Missile MRV Multiple Re-entry Vehicle

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NATO North Atlantic Treaty Organization NBC Nuclear, Biological, Chemical OOB Order of Battle RDT&E Research, Development, Evaluation, and Testing RF Radio Frequency RPV Remotely Piloted Vehicle SAS Special Air Services SAM Surface-to-Air Missile SIGINT Signals Intelligence SIR Standing Intelligence Requirement SLBM Submarine-Launched Ballistic Missile SPETSNAZ Long range foot-borne Russian reconnaissance forces SRBM Short-Range Ballistic Missile strategic level of intelligence

production that incorporates country, region, and international factors into the analysis that results in finished intelligence judgements and assessments. Tactical level of intelligence production focused of fighting requirements to meet hostile forces within a given area.

UAV Unmanned Aerial Vehicle UHF Ultra High Frequency UN United Nations VLF Very Low Frequency WIG Wing in Ground Aircraft WMD Weapons of Mass Destruction

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ANNEX B: J2/DG INT FILE INDEX 04 Nov 03

File Number Subject Retention Period

1000 - General Administration And Management 5 YRS 1000-1 General 1000-2 Appreciations, Congratulations and Greetings 1001 - General Administration And Management - Canadian Defence Attaches (CDAs) 5 YRS

1001-1 General 1050 - General Administration And Management - Associations, Societies And Clubs 10 YRS

1050-1 General 1050-2 Ombudsman 1080 - General Administration And Management - Board Of Inquiry And Summary Investigations 10 YRS

1080-1 General 1110 - General Administration And Management - Ceremonies And Celebrations 10 YRS

1110-1 General 1150 - General Administration And Management - Committees And Boards 3 YRS

1150-1 General 1150-1100 LAND - General 1150-1100-FMOC (LAND) - FM Oversight Committee

1150-1100-TAG

(LAND) - Land Research & Development Thrust Advisory Group (TAG)

1150-1200 SEA - General 1150-1200-FMOC (SEA) - FM Oversight Committee

1150-1200-TAG

(SEA) - Maritime Research & Development Thrust Advisory Group (TAG)

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File Number Subject Retention Period

1150-1300 AIR - General 1150-1300-FMOC (AIR) - FM Oversight Committee

1150-1300-TAG

(AIR) - Air Research & Development Thrust Advisory Group (TAG)

1150-1700-TAG

C4ISR Research & Development Thrust Advisory Group (TAG)

1150-STISA Scientific & Technical Intelligence Support & Advise (STISA) Thrust Advisory Group (TAG)

1150-FMRB Foreign Materiel Review Board (FMRB) 1150-QWSSIC

Quadripartite Weapon and Space Systems Intelligence Committee (QWISSIC)

1150-SP Steering Panel 1150-WP1 Aerodynamic Missiles 1150-WP2 Aerospace Defence 1150-WP3 Ballistic Missiles 1150-WP4 Cancelled 1150-WP5 Biological & Chemical Warfare 1150-WP6 Cancelled 1150-WP7 Command, Control & Communications 1150-WP8 Directed-Energy Weapons & Electro-optics 1150-WP9 Electronics 1150-WP10 Space Systems 1150-WP11 Information Technology 1180 - General Administration And Management - Conferences And Meetings 5 YRS

1180-1 General 1180-1100 LAND - General 1180-1100-QIWP (LAND) - QUADRIPARTITE Infantry Working Panel

1180-1100-QAWP (LAND) - QUADRIPARTITE Artillery Working Party

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File Number Subject Retention Period

1180-1100-ArWP (LAND) - QUADRIPARTITE Armour Working Party

1180-1100-ALWTIC

(LAND) - Allied Land Warfare Technical Intelligence Conference

1180-1200 SEA - General 1180-1200-SUBCON (SEA) - Submarine Conference

1180-1200-MARINTCON

(SEA) - AUSCANUKUS MARINTCOM - Maritime Intelligence Committee

1180-1300 AIR - General

1180-1300-ATIE/SP

(AIR) American Australian British Canadian (AABC) - Aircraft Technical Intellignence Exchange (ATIE) Steering Panel

1180-1300-UAVP

(AIR) - QUADRIPARTITE Aircraft Technical Intelligence Exchange (ATIE) World Wide UAV Panel

1180-1300-WWHP

(AIR) - QUADRIPARTITE Aircraft Technical Intelligence Exchange (ATIE) World Wide Helicopter Panel and Avionics Sub-Panel

1180-1300-WWFP

(AIR) - QUADRIPARTITE Aircraft Technical Intelligence Exchange (ATIE) World Wide Fighter Panel and Avionics Sub-Panel

1180-1300-WWAP

(AIR) - QUADRIPARTITE Aircraft Technical Intelligence Exchange (ATIE) World Wide Armament Panel

1180-1700-QMEPED Q-MEPED

1180-1700-SPIRIT SPIRIT

1180-1700-MEA MEA Conference

1180-1700-QNIEC

QUADRIPARTITE Nuclear Intelligence Exchange Conference

1180-1700-MIDB MIDB PMB Conference

1190 - General Administration And Management - Contracting 7 YRS 1190-1 General

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File Number Subject Retention Period

1211 - General Administration And Management - Official Languages 5 YRS

1211-1 General 1243 - General Administration And Management - Directives 5 YRS 1243-1 General 1250 - General Administration And Management - Exhibitions And Displays 5 YRS

1250-1 General 1250-1100-IDEX

(LAND) International Defense Exhibition (IDEX), Abu Dhabi, UAE

1250-1100-URAL

(LAND) Ural Exhibition of Armament & Military Equipment (URAL EXPO ARMS) Nizhny Tagil, Russia

1250-1100-OMSK

(LAND) International Exhibition of Defense Equipment Technologies & Armaments, Omsk, Russia

1250-1200-IDEX

(SEA) International Defense Exhibition (IDEX), Abu Dhabi, UAE

1250-1200-IMDEX

(SEA) International Maritime Defense Exhibition (IMDEX), Singapore

1250-1200-LIMA

(SEA) Langkawi International Maritime & Aerospace (LIMA) Exhibition, Langkawi, Malaysia

1250-1300 (AIR) Paris Air Show, Le Bourget, France 1250-1300-MAKS

(AIR) MAKS International Aviation and Space Salon, Moscow, Russia

1250-1300-AITS

(AIR) Aero India Trade Show & Exhibition, Bangalore, India

1250-1300-LIMA

(AIR) Langkawi International Maritime & Aerospace (LIMA) Exhibition, Langkawi, Malaysia

1250-1300-AERO (AIR) International Aerospace Exposition (AERO) India

1260 - General Administration And Management - Exports And Imports 5 YRS

1260-1 General 1260-2 Applications 1326 - General Administration And Management - Historical Matters - Annual Historical Reports 10 YRS

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File Number Subject Retention Period

1326-1 General 1349 - General Administration And Management - Award Programs 10 YRS

1349-1 General 1455 - General Administration And Management - Legal Matters 10 YRS 1455-1 General 1460 - General Administration And Management- Legislation And Legislative Acts 10 YRS

1460-1 General 1460-2 Official Secrets Act 1463 - General Administration And Management- Legislative Acts - Access To Information Act 5 YRS

1463-1 General 1600 - General Administration And Management- Regulations And Orders 5 YRS

1600-1 General 1700 - General Administration And Management- Social Functions 2 YRS

1700-1 General 1775 - General Administration And Management- Visits 5 YRS 1775-1 General 1775-2 Incoming 1775-3 Outgoing 1875 - General Administration And Management- Records Management 5 YRS

1875-0 Policy 1875-1 General 1901 - General Administration And Management- Organization 5 YRS 1901-1 General 1901-2 Business Plan 1920 - General Administration And Management- Establishment 5 YRS 1920-1 General

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File Number Subject Retention Period

1960 - General Administration And Management- Automatic Data Processing 5 YRS

1960-1 General

1960-2 Battlefield Information Collection And Exploitation Systems (BICES)

2000 - Intelligence 10 YRS 2000-1 General

2000-0050 Intelligence - Memorandum Of Understanding (MOU)

2000-0100 Intelligence - Priorities 2000-0300-1 Intelligence - Collection 2000-0300-2 Intelligence - Human Intelligence (HUMINT)

2000-0300-3 Measurement And Signature Intelligence Technologies (MASINT)

2000-0350-1 Cooperation And Liaison - General 2000-0350-2 Cooperation And Liaison - Australia 2000-0350-3 Cooperation And Liaison - US 2000-0350-4 Cooperation And Liaison - Japan 2000-0350-5 Cooperation And Liaison - CSIS 2000-0350-6 Cooperation And Liaison - CSE 2000-0350-7 Cooperation And Liaison - DFAIT 2000-0350-8 Cooperation And Liaison - DIA 2000-0350-9 Cooperation And Liaison - France 2000-0350-10 Cooperation And Liaison - Germany 2000-0350-11 Cooperation And Liaison - IAC/PCO 2000-0350-12 Cooperation And Liaison - Israel 2000-0350-13 Cooperation And Liaison - New Zealand 2000-0350-14 Cooperation And Liaison - NIMA 2000-0350-15 Cooperation And Liaison - RCMP 2000-0350-16 Cooperation And Liaison - South Korea 2000-0350-17 Cooperation And Liaison - Russia 2000-0350-18 Cooperation And Liaison - Ukraine

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File Number Subject Retention Period

2000-0350-19 Cooperation And Liaison - CIA 2000-0350-20 Cooperation And Liaison - Hungary 2000-0350-21 Cooperation And Liaison - South Africa 2000-0350-22 Cooperation And Liaison - Romania 2000-0350-23 Cooperation And Liaison - UK 2000-0350-24 Cooperation And Liaison - OCIPEP 2000-0350-25 Cooperation And Liaison - Netherlands 2000-0350-26 Cooperation And Liaison - Belgium 2000-0370 Request For Information 2000-0390 Briefings / Debriefings 2000-0400-Isir Project Isir 2000-0400-Milo Project Milo 2000-0400-Polar Star Project Polar Star

2000-0400-Radarsat Project RADARSAT

2000-0400-Troodos Project Troodos

2000-0600 Intelligence Production 2000-0600-2 Intelligence Production - Annual Reports 2000-1100 Ground Forces 2000-1110 National Forces Issues(Ground) 2000-1120 Ground Service Issues

2000-1130 Theater Ground Force Order Of Battle, Capabilities, And Tactics

2000-1140 Ground Forces Combat Systems Characteristics And Performance

2000-1150 Theater Ground Combat Support And Combat Service Support Force Order Of Battle, Capabilities, And Tactics

2000-1160 Ground Force Combat Support And Combat Service Support Systems, Characteristics And Performance

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File Number Subject Retention Period

2000-1170 Ground Force Sensors And Electronics 2000-1200 Naval Forces 2000-1210 National Forces Issues(Naval) 2000-1220 Naval Service Issues 2000-1230 Naval Operations

2000-1240 Naval Order Of Battle, Bases, And Related Facilities

2000-1250 Naval Platforms Characteristics And Performance

2000-1260 Naval Sensors And Electronics Characteristics And Performance

2000-1270 Naval Weapons Characteristics And Performance 2000-1280 Naval Tactics 2000-1300 Air Forces 2000-1310 National Force Issues(Air) 2000-1320 Air Force Service Issues

2000-1330 Theatre Air Force Orders Of Battle, Capabilities, And Tactics

2000-1340 Air And Air Defense Forces Combat Systems Technologies Research, Development, Test And Evaluation Characteristics And Performance

2000-1350 Theatre Combat Support Force Order Of Battle, Capabilities, And Tactics

2000-1360 Air Force Combat Support Systems Characteristics And Performance

2000-1370 Theater Air Force Command, Control, Communications, Computer, And Intelligence And Logistics Capabilities

2000-1400 Space Forces 2000-1500 National Issues

2000-1510 National Security Policies, Programs Objectives, And Decision Making

2000-1520 National Command And Control Warfare 2000-1530 National Military Issues 2000-1540 Multiservice And Multinational

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File Number Subject Retention Period

2000-1550 Arms Control And Treaties 2000-1560 Proliferation Of Technology And Weapons Transfer 2000-1570 Regional And Global Military Issues 2000-1580 Hostilities 2000-1590 Foreign Relations 2000-1600 Nuclear Biological & Chemical Warfare 2000-1650 Asymmetric Threat 2000-1700 Electronics 2000-1710 Microelectronics 2000-1720 Lasers (Nonweapon) And Electro-Optics 2000-1730 Computers And Related Systems Technology 2000-1740 Sensor Technology 2000-1750 Electronic Combat/Electronic Warfare 2000-1800 Science And Technologies 2000-1860 Directed-Energy And Kinetic-Energy Weapons

2000-1870 Low-Observable, Stealth, And Counter-Stealth Technologies

2000-2200 Illicit Activities And Law Enforcement 2000-2400 Terrorism 2000-2435-1 Foreign Material Program (FMP) 2000-2435-2 Foreign Material Acquisition (FMA) 2000-2435-3 Foreign Materiel Exploitation (FME) 2000-2600 Sociological Factors, And Biographies 2000-2610 Biographies 2100 - Security 5 YRS 2100-1 General 2106 - Security - Counterintelligence 5 YRS 2106-1 General 2130 - Security Of Information 5 YRS 2130-1 General 2140 - Security Of Personnel - Clearances 3 YRS

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File Number Subject Retention Period

2140-1 General 2140-2 Special Access 2200 - NATO 3 YRS 2200-1 General 2700 - Communications - Electronics 7 YRS 2700-1 General 2900 - Publications 4 YRS 2900-1 General 3000 - Plans, Operations And Readiness 10 YRS 3000-1 General 3146 - Plans, Operations And Readiness - Arms Control Verification 10 YRS

3146-1 General 3350 - Plans, Operations And Readiness - Operations, Exercises And Manoeuvres 10 YRS

3350-1 General 3350-2 OP ECLIPSE 3350-3 OP APOLLO 3350-4 OP CENTRAL 3350-5 OP REPTILE 3350-6 OP PALLADIUM 3350-7 OP TOUCAN 3350-8 OP PRUDENCE 3350-9 OP KINETIC 3350-10 OP GRIZZLY 3350-11 OP PINOCLE 3350-12 OP MAGDALENE 3350-13 OP QUADRILLE 3350-14 Joint Warrior Interoperability Demonstration (JWID) 3350-15 OP ATHENA 4500 - Training 5 YRS

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File Number Subject Retention Period

4500-1 General 4500-2 HUMINT Candidate Assessment Program (HCAP) 4640 - Training - Courses - In Service 2 YRS 4640-1 General 4641 - Training - Courses - Out Service 3 YRS 4641-1 General 5000 - Service Personnel 5 YRS 5000-1 General 5400 - Service Personnel - Honours And Awards 5 YRS 5400-1 General 5600 - Service Personnel - Postings And Transfers 5 YRS 5600-1 General 6000 - Civilian Personnel 5 YRS 6000-1 General 6600 - Medical Plans And Services 5 YRS 6600-1 General 7000 - Finance And Accounting 7 YRS 7000-1 General 7500 - Transportation 5 YRS 7500-1 General 7600 - Construction Engineering 5 YRS 7600-1 General 10001 - Equipment And Supplies 5 YRS 10001-1 General Defence Subject Classification and Disposition System (DSCDS) http://diso-s041.ottawa-hull.mil.ca/dscds2/application/primary_details_e.asp?primary_id=1024

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ANNEX C: RFI FORM CLASSIFICATION CFSMI PO Box 17000 Stn Forces Kingston ON K7K 7B4 2075-0905 (IFC) 14 Feb 06 Distr List RFI FORMAT 012/ ddHHmmZMMMyyyy Ref: BI-SCD 80-3 Intelligence Reports Section 11B 1. (U) PRIORITY: 2. (U) TARGET COORDINATES: a. Country Code; b. Location Type; c. Location Category; d. Location Identification; e. Location Name; f. Coordinates; and g. Geographic Data. 3. (U) INFORMATION REQUIRED: A free text explanation of what information is requested. 4. (U) COLLECTION DATES: a. Frequency Of Reporting; b. Start Collecting At; c. End Collecting At;

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d. Last Time Information Of Value; and e. Last Report Date. 5. (U) LOCATION ACCURACY REQUIRED: 6. (U) JUSTIFICATION: Why the information is needed. 7. (U) BACKGROUND: Any relevant background information to support the request. 8. (U) COMMENT: 9. (U) MEDIA: The communication media desired for delivery of the information. 10. (U) PRODUCT TYPE AND CLASSIFICATION: The type of report desired, and the highest usable security classification. 11. (U) GUIDELINES: This paragraph is not part of the RFI format. It is included to provide information particular to the construction of RFIs.

a. An RFI is used to request information related to the Commander's stated Priority Intelligence Requirements.

b. All rules for military writing apply to RFIs. Font and size Arial 12

should be used. Caps lock shall not be used for text.

c. The file number for Intelligence Reports (2075) shall be used, plus the applicable Intelligence Function Code. In this example, the generic IFC for Intelligence Reports (0905) is used. If appropriate, a country or region code can be included (IFC).

d. The title RFI shall be followed by a reference number and the DTG

that the request is made.

e. All paragraphs must be included. If there is nothing to report for a particular topic, 'NTR' shall be used.

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R.C. Read MCpl CFSMI Chief Collator 4895 Distribution list Action CFSMI Students Info CFSMI Staff 2/2 CLASSIFICATION

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ANNEX D: CUSTOMER INFORMATION SHEET Name (Print) Rank Position Full Title Full Postal Address ADDN Message Address Short Title (Acronym) Division Branch Command Country Security Clearance held/date Level of highest secure storage facility available at customer site Commercial Telephone AUTOVON Telephone Secure Telephone Secure Fax Non-Secure Fax

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