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Civil Affairs’ (CA) Role In Stability PKSOI Lead (Liddick)

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Presentation on theme: "Civil Affairs’ (CA) Role In Stability PKSOI Lead (Liddick)"— Presentation transcript:

1 Civil Affairs’ (CA) Role In Stability PKSOI Lead (Liddick)
Topic: Defining CA’s role in stability Purpose: Planning and execution of stability activities requires understanding and engagement of populations and non-military partners. Neither stability nor civil affairs doctrine specifically addresses Civil Affairs’ responsibilities and tasks in support of U.S. Army and Joint Force stability efforts. During the PSOTEW, the CA working group will determine appropriate CA responsibilities and tasks in support of U.S. Army stability tasks in order to support CA capability enhancement efforts across the DOTMLPF-P domains. Objectives: Define CA’s overarching responsibility and tasks in support of U.S. Army stability tasks in order to improve effectiveness of US Army and Joint Force stability planning and activities. Deliverables: Develop initial CA’s responsibility in stability description statement and draft CA supporting task list for each of the Army’s stability tasks. Proposed timeline and milestones for finalizing tasks list and addressing DOTMLPF-P requirements to affect change. Summary of WG discussion. Participants: TBD

2 Key Points Stability tasks are part of every operation. (FM 3-07 p. 1-1) Operations focused on stability aim to stabilize the environment enough so the host nation can begin to resolve the root causes of conflict and state failure. (FM 3-07 p. 1-1) - Stability Tasks 3-15. Stability tasks are tasks conducted as part of operations outside the United States in coordination with other instruments of national power to maintain or reestablish a safe and secure environment and provide essential governmental services, emergency infrastructure reconstruction, and humanitarian relief (ADP 3-07). These tasks support governance, whether it is imposed by a host nation, an interim government, or military government. Stability tasks involve both coercive and constructive actions. They help to establish or maintain a safe and secure environment and facilitate reconciliation among local or regional adversaries. Stability tasks assist in building relationships among unified action partners, and promote specific U.S security interests. Stability tasks can also help establish political, legal, social, and economic institutions while supporting the transition to legitimate host-nation governance. Stability tasks cannot succeed if they only react to enemy initiatives. Stability tasks must maintain the initiative by pursuing objectives that resolve the causes of instability. Commanders are legally required to provide the minimum essential stability tasks when controlling an area of operations where populations exist. These essential services provide for minimal levels of security, food, water, shelter, and medical treatment. (See ADRP 3-07 for a detailed discussion of stability.) (ADRP 3-0, p. 3-4)

3 Key Points 3-28. Consolidate gains is the activities to make permanent any temporary operational success and set the conditions for a sustainable stable environment allowing for a transition of control to legitimate civil authorities. Army forces provide the joint force commander the ability to capitalize on operational success by consolidating gains. Consolidate gains is an integral part of winning armed conflict and achieving success across the range of military operations; it is essential to retaining the initiative over determined enemies and adversaries. To consolidate gains, Army forces reinforce and integrate the efforts of all unified action partners. (ADRP 3-0, p. 3-7)

4 Framework Establish Civil Security Conduct Security Cooperation
Establish Civil Control Restore Essential Services Support to Governance Support to Economic and Infrastructure Development


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