LESSON OBJECTIVES
511.1 Comprehend how national intelligence organizations support
Joint Force Commanders [I.4(d)].
511.11 Explain the critical importance of intelligence in the
decision-making process.
Military history shows that intelligence is a key player in
command and control. The commander privy to good intelligence
has had a distinct advantage over the one who was not. The thoughts
of a few military theorists and leaders illustrate this point.
.
Poor intelligence or failure to use intelligence blinds the
commander and adversely effects decision-making. It slows
or expands the commander's OODA loop. Poor intelligence
does not adhere to the tenets of intelligence.
What is intelligence?
511.12 Explain the different types of intelligence and how
they may best be used to support the commander.
There are seven primary source types:
counterintelligence. Information gathered and activities conducted to protect against espionage, other intelligence activities, sabotage, or assassinations conducted by or on behalf of foreign governments or elements thereof, foreign organizations, or foreign persons, or international terrorist activities. Also called CI. (Joint Pub 1-02)
human intelligence. A category of intelligence derived from information collected and provided by human sources. Also called HUMINT. (Joint Pub 1-02)
imagery intelligence. Intelligence derived from the exploitation of collection by visual photography, infrared sensors, lasers, electro-optics, and radar sensors such as synthetic aperture radar wherein images of objects are reproduced optically or electronically on film, electronic display devices, or other media. Also called IMINT. (Joint Pub 1-02)
measurement and signature intelligence. Scientific and technical intelligence obtained by quantitative and qualitative analysis of data (metric, angle, spatial, wavelength, time dependence, modulation, plasma, and hydromagnetic) derived from specific technical sensors for the purpose of identifying any distinctive features associated with the source, emitter, or sender and to facilitate subsequent identification and/or measurement of the same. Also called MASINT. (Joint Pub 1-02)
open source intelligence. Information of potential intelligence value that is available to the general public. Also called OSINT. (Joint Pub 1-02)
signals intelligence. 1. A category of intelligence comprising either individually or in combination all communications intelligence, electronics intelligence, and foreign instrumentation signals intelligence, however transmitted. 2. Intelligence derived from communications, electronics, and foreign instrumentation signals. Also called SIGINT. (Joint Pub 1-02)
technical intelligence. Intelligence
derived from exploitation of foreign material, produced for strategic,
operational, and tactical level commanders. Technical intelligence
begins when an individual service member finds something new on
the battlefield and takes the proper steps to report it. The item
is then exploited at succeedingly higher levels until a countermeasure
is produced to neutralize the adversary's technological advantage.
Also called TECHINT. (Joint Pub 1-02)
511.13 Summarize the major historical reasons for intelligence
failures.
The Shulsky reading provides historical reasons for intelligence failures.
One could also make a good argument that failures are usually the result of bad decision-making and not a failure of the intelligence organization it self.
The key intelligence failure is a misunderstanding of the situation, which leads a government or its military to take actions that are inappropriate and counterproductive to its own interests. Whether it is subjectively surprised by what happens is less important than the fact that the government or the military is doing or continues to do the wrong thing.(Shulsky)
By understanding the reasons for intelligence failure the commander and staff can take action to mitigate their impact on intelligence support.
1. Timeliness: for intelligence to be good it has to be on time. Intelligence must be available in time for commanders to assess what needs to be done and to take appropriate action. Just getting it there before the event happens doesn't cut it!!
2. Objectivity: intelligence must avoid bias. For intelligence to be objective, it must be truthful devoid of bias, distortion, and free from political constraints.
3. Usability: intelligence must be in a form suitable for application when it is received.
4. Readiness: intelligence must be prepared for contingencies and responsive to the operational commander.
5. Completeness: intelligence should provide as much of the total picture as possible.
6. Accuracy: intelligence should be verified truthful.
7. Relevance: it must be of a nature that is usable to
the receiver and contributes to decision-maker's understanding
of the enemy.
511.14 Explain how a commander and staff can lessen the impact
of factors detrimental to good intelligence.
Ask questions-- understand the basis for the intelligence. Don't blindly accept intelligence as fact. Don't be lulled by past performance.
Encourage countervailing analysis. Allowing competing positions
will often alleviate the reasons for past intelligence failures.
Jomini's four point summary on intelligence;
511.2 Comprehend the role of intelligence in information warfare
[SAE 2].
511.21 Explain what is meant by the term information warfare.
Because of the strategies of deception, maneuver and speed employed by coalition forces in Desert Storm, knowledge came to rival weapons and tactics in importance, giving credence to the notion that an enemy might be brought to its knees principally through destruction and disruption of the means for command and control.
Some military analysts have sifted the desert sands and concluded the time has come for the military to anoint command, control, communications, computers and intelligence (C4I) as a formal "warfare area," a change in course already adopted, in part, by the U.S. Navy.
Superior knowledge has always been an important-often decisive-factor in combat, but battles were seldom delayed and almost never halted because of severed communications. Indeed, an astute commander assumed that his communications would be disrupted, because they almost always were.
As airman and author James P. Coyne notes in his book on airpower in the Gulf: "Before the age of electronics and aerospace technology, command and control-in the modern sense of the term-was a comparatively minor element in warfare."7
Battles were fought, albeit inefficiently and often ineffectively, independent of the health of supporting communications. Commanders no longer can afford to be cavalier about the state of their information systems.
Desert Storm was different: knowledge-and its denial to an enemy-became an indispensable factor. Air Force official Martin Faga succinctly put it: "We could see, hear and talk all through the war. After a few hours, he could not." Using advanced technologies, coalition forces concentrated firepower to create what Joint Warfare Publication 1 calls an "information differential." Then, with devastating effectiveness, they exploited that differential, first to fix and then, in a matter of days, to flatten a formidable and battle-tested military power.
It was a war where an ounce of silicon in a computer may have had more effect than a ton of depleted uranium: a provoking notion that, if true, should factor heavily in debates about how to downsize U.S. military forces and the priority to be given the role of information systems.
The strategies and tactics used with such sensational effectiveness
in Desert Storm worked well because they were conducted in what
Robert Hermann once called a "free-signaling environment."
What the outcome might have been had the ether been less than
benign, should be a matter for serious inquiry; certainly before
new doctrine that rests upon the assumption of bountiful communications
is hammered into place
511.22 Describe how lessons learned from DESERT STORM have
driven changes in the intelligence community.
What other lessons learned were derived from Desert Storm?
BDA was one of the major areas of confusion. It led to some disagreements. As a matter of fact, it led to some distancing on the part of some agencies from the position of CENTCOM at the time, as to what the bomb damage assessment really was.47
Theater planners and intelligence staffs disagreed among themselves
and with the Washington intelligence agencies over the levels
of damage being achieved by the bombing in Iraq proper and within
the Kuwait theater. At the same time, reports from Air Force,
Navy, and Marine flight crew members and those of other Coalition
air forces agreed that they received little or no bomb damage
assessment on the targets they attacked during the entire war.
511.23 Give examples of how intelligence resources contribute
to the AF core competency of information superiority.
Air Force intelligence will head into the future with five concepts.
These strategies mean that Air Force intelligence must be flexible
and have the capability to provide more timely and effective support
to the operators as they organize and plan to execute the Air
Force's concept of "global reach, global power."
1. Comprehend the capabilities and limitations of US military forces across the range of military operations, to include command relationships, force development and organization, and the concepts of deployment, employment, sustainment, and redeployment (OPMEP Learning Area 1).
2. Comprehend the systems and understand the processes supporting
21st century battlespace and how they are integrated to achieve
operational-level joint force missions (OPMEP Learning Area 5).
READINGS
READING RATIONALE
The Intelligence toolbook provides the baseline, knowledge-level
data concerning intelligence. It provides an explanation of each
of the Intelligence disciplines, products, and systems. The Shulsky
reading provides an introduction of the conflicts and barriers
that lead to intelligence failures. Joint doctrine's view of intelligence
is presented in JP 2-0. The last three articles discuss the performance
of Intelligence during the Gulf War.
LESSON OUTLINE
Thesis: Intelligence is an integral part of the commander's decision-making process. For maximum and effective intelligence support, different types of intelligence-gathering capabilities must be understood and properly integrated.
Main Point I: Information and intelligence, while similar, are not the same. Intelligence comes in various forms, including human intelligence, imagery intelligence, signals intelligence, measurement and scientific intelligence, open source intelligence, and medical intelligence. The capabilities and limitations of each should be understood by military planners.
Main Point II: To use intelligence, the commander must understand intelligence problems and challenges. By understanding the reasons for intelligence failure, the commander and staff can take action to mitigate their impact on intelligence support.
Main Point III: Major changes have occurred in the Intelligence
community as a result of DESERT STORM.
LESSON INTEGRATION AND RATIONALE
This lesson links to the command and control lesson of Operational Structures and explains the purposes and pitfalls of intelligence at the operational level. Often, the structure and attributes of the intelligence system are taught without discussing the environment and values impacting that system.
LESSON OPR: War/Theater Level Studies Department