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1. Defensive Operations definition - ANSWER Commanders choose to
defend to create conditions for a counter-offensive that allows Army forces
to regain the initiative. Other reasons include to retain decisive terrain or
deny a vital area to the enemy, to attrit or fix the enemy as a prelude to the
offense, in response to surprise action by the enemy, or to increase the
enemy's vulnerability by forcing the enemy to concentrate forces.
2. Characteristics of the Defense - ANSWER Disruption
Flexibility
Maneuver
Massing Effects
Operations in Depth
Preparation
Security
3. Forms of Defense - ANSWER Defense of a Linear Obstacle
Defense of a Perimeter
,Reverse Slope Defense
4. Types of Defensive Operations - ANSWER Mobile Defense
Area Defense
Retrograde
5. Forms of a Retrograde - ANSWER Delay
Withdrawal
Retirement
6. AHS Support to Mobile Defense - ANSWER •Fluid lines of
communication and medical evacuation.
•Casualties concentrated at decisive points in time and space.
•High likelihood of wounded enemy prisoners of war or other detainees.
•Use of air ambulance to overcome obstacles and movement of URGENT AND
URGENTSURG patients to the appropriate MTF.
7. AHS Support to Retrograde - ANSWER •Requirement for maximum
security and secrecy in movement
•Influence of dislocated person's on MEDEVAC mission
•Integration of evacuation routes and obstacle plans
•Difficulties in controlling movements of the force
•Movements at night or during periods of limited visibility
•Time and means available to remove patients from the battlefield
,•Casualties may fall forward of the Forward Line of Troops (FLOT) and therefore
become harder to recover
8. AHS Support to Area Defense - ANSWER •MASCAL situation is
increased when
•Enemy possesses the capacity and capability to employ large quantities of
munitions
•Enemy has the ability to attack in strength at any point or points of the defensive
perimeter
•The dynamics of the defensive tasks and enemy offensive operations requires
agility of the medical evacuation system in both planning and execution.
•Medical treatment teams may receive high volumes of casualties when contact
with the opposing forces is made and sustained.
9. EVAC Support to Defense Considerations - ANSWER •Depth and
dispersion of the defense
•Effective integration of air evacuation assets
•Projected patient workload
•Enemy artillery capability
•Enemy CBRN capability
•During Retrograde
•Time and means available to remove patients from battlefield
•MEDEVAC routes competing with troop movement and materiel movement
•Disruption of mission command and communication systems
•Include ambulances on priority list for movement
, •Maximize CASEVAC for slightly wounded
•When patient load exceeds means to move them
•Air ambulance support to withdrawing force as well as forces left in contact
•Air ambulances typically bypass BSMC to avoid impeding the withdrawal of Role
2s within BCTs
10. How do you determine if your patient load has exceeded your MEDEVAC
capability? - ANSWER Casualty Estimates
Single Lift Capacity
11. Where do you find a template to produce your MEDEVAC/CASEVAC Plan? -
ANSWER ATP 4-02.2 Medical Evacuation
12. Stability Operations - ANSWER Ultimately aims to create a condition so
the local populace regards the situation as legitimate, acceptable, and
predictable. These conditions consist of the level of violence; the
functioning of governmental, economic, and societal institutions; and the
general adherence to local laws, rules, and norms of behavior.
13. Types of Stability Operations - ANSWER Establish civil security
Establish civil control
Restore essential services
Support to governance
Support to Economic and Infrastructure Development