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Congressional Research Service
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                                                                                       Updated  December 20, 2018

Defense Primer: Intelligence Support to Military Operations


The bulk of the Intelligence Community (IC), eight of 17
total elements, resides within the Department of Defense
(DOD).  This includes the National Security Agency (NSA),
Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), National Geospatial-
Intelligence Agency (NGA), and the intelligence
components  of the military services. Along with non-DOD
IC elements with which they are integrated, these defense
elements provide strategic, operational, and tactical
intelligence products and services that support military
strategy, planning and operations.

The Director of National Intelligence (DNI) serves as
community  manager for the IC and the principal
intelligence advisor to the President. The core mission of
the DNI is to lead the IC in intelligence integration to
ensure the IC's 17 component organizations operate as one
team. The Under Secretary of Defense (Intelligence)
(USD(I)) manages  the DOD intelligence elements. His
position is dual-hatted. When acting as the USD(I), the
incumbent reports directly to the Secretary of Defense and
serves as the Secretary's principal staff assistant on
intelligence, counterintelligence, security, and other
intelligence-related matters. When acting as Director of
Defense Intelligence (DDI), the incumbent reports directly
to the DNI and serves as his principal advisor on defense
intelligence matters. Together, the DNI and USD(I)
coordinate a number of interagency activities designed to
facilitate the seamless integration of national and tactical-
level intelligence.

Types of Military Operations
The IC supports the entire spectrum of DOD missions, from
peacetime operations to war. Joint Publication 2-0, Joint
Intelligence, loosely groups DOD missions under three
headings:
*  Military Engagement,  Security Cooperation, and
   Deterrence. Examples  include military exchanges, arms
   control verification, sanctions enforcement, protection
   of shipping lanes, shows of force, and support to
   insurgency and counterinsurgency operations.
*  Crisis Response &  Limited Contingency  Operations.
   Examples  include noncombatant evacuation operations;
   peace operations; humanitarian assistance; personnel or
   equipment recovery operations; and chemical,
   biological, radiological, and nuclear response actions.
*  Major  Military Operations and Campaigns.   These
   types of operations include U.S. operations in Iraq and
   Afghanistan where military forces generally have a
   lengthy, multidimensional presence. The examples listed
   above (associated with more limited operations-such
   as humanitarian assistance) may also occur within this
   category as part of a larger military operation.


Intelligence Support
Table 1 summarizes the responsibilities of joint intelligence
to assist commanders in deciding which forces to deploy;
when, how, and where to deploy them; and how to employ
them in a manner that accomplishes a specific mission.

Table  I. Responsibilities of Joint Intelligence in
Military Operations


Source: Joint Publication 2-0, joint Intelligence, Figure 1-2, p. 1-3.

Intelligence to inform the commander may include
providing information about actual and potential threats,
terrain, climate and weather, infrastructure, cultural
characteristics, medical conditions, population, and
leadership.

Intelligence that describes the operational environment
may help in identifying and characterizing variables such as
the political context; governance; economy; social stability;
critical infrastructure; communications; physical setting;
and military capability, intentions, and tactics.

Intelligence to identify, define, and nominate objectives
may  include developing an understanding of the
commander's  priorities; creating an intelligence collection
plan based on those priorities; and creating possible
battlefield targets focused on achieving the commander's
objectives.

Intelligence to support planning and execution of
operations may include enhancing information sharing
across departments and agencies of the government, and
with international partners; allocating intelligence platforms
to provide optimized support, establishing mutual support
arrangements with host country nationals; and providing
indications and warning of attack.

Intelligence to counter adversary deception and
surprise may include providing information on an
adversary's capabilities and vulnerabilities; estimates of
when, where, and how military forces could exploit their
information superiority; and the threat an adversary poses to
friendly information and information systems.


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