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Information Dominance Information Dominance Reliability, Availability, & Communication Supremacy Reliability, Availability, & Communication Supremacy Section 110 Operations

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Page 1: Eidws 110 operations

Information DominanceInformation Dominance Reliability, Availability, & Communication SupremacyReliability, Availability, & Communication Supremacy

Section 110 Operations

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Information DominanceInformation Dominance Reliability, Availability, & Communication SupremacyReliability, Availability, & Communication Supremacy

110.1 Describe the mission of the following primary warfare areas:

a. ASW(Anti-Submarine Warfare): Operations conducted with the intention of denying the enemy the effective use of submarines.

b. SUW(Surface Warfare): That portion of maritime warfare in which operations are conducted to destroy or neutralize enemy naval surface forces and merchant vessels.

c. IW(Information Warfare): Information operations conducted during time of crisis or conflict to achieve or promote specific objectives over a specific adversary or adversaries.

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110.1 Describe the mission of the following primary warfare areas (cont.):

d. AW(Air Warfare): NWP 3-56 identifies this as AD(Air Defense). There is no mention of AW or Air Warfare in NWP 3-56. AD is defined as all defensive measures designed to destroy attacking enemy aircraft or missiles in the Earth’s envelope of atmosphere, or to nullify or reduce the effectiveness of such attack.

e. STW(Strike Warfare): Naval operations to destroy or neutralize enemy targets ashore, including attacks against strategic or tactical targets such as manufacturing facilities and operating bases from which the enemy is capable of conducting or supporting air, surface, or subsurface operations against friendly forces.

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110.1 Describe the mission of the following primary warfare areas (cont.):

f. NSW(Naval Special Warfare): A designated naval warfare specialty that conducts operations in the coastal, riverine, and maritime environments. Naval special warfare emphasizes small, flexible, mobile units operating under, on and from the sea. These operations are characterized by stealth, speed, and precise violent application of force.

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110.2 Explain how the Reserve Component integrates with the Active Component:

– Naval Strategy outlined in SECNAVINST 1001.37A and OPNAVINST S3061.1D IAW OPNAVINST 1001.21 call for the integration of the Active and Reserve components into a seamless and cohesive “Total Force” capable of meeting all requirements in peacetime and in war.

– The Navy employs Reserve forces and personnel to relieve the stress on Active Operating Tempo (OPTEMPO) and Personnel Tempo (PERSTEMPO) by deploying, when practicable, and by fulfilling close-to-home Commander in Chief (CINC) requirements that enable the deployment of Active forces and personnel.

– Within this governing concept, the mission of the Reserve component is, as defined in Section 10102 of Title 10 U.S.C., to “provide trained units and qualified persons available for active duty in the armed forces, in time of war or national emergency and at such other times as the national security may require. ..“

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110.3 Explain the purpose of a mobile detachment

– Provide direct or indirect support to an operational entity to further enhance or support that entity’s operational or administrative capability.

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110.4 Discuss the purpose of Direct Support Assets

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110.5 Discuss the primary services provided by the following deployable METOC teams:

a. Mine Warfare UUV Platoon: This specialized platoon removes divers and Marine Mammals from the dangers and extreme hazards of Mine Countermeasure Warfare and replaces them with Unmanned Underwater Vehicles (UUVs) that can perform this function.

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110.5 Discuss the primary services provided by the following deployable METOC teams

(cont.):

b. Naval Oceanography ASW Team (NOAT): Provides integral support to ASW by taking model output and turning it into tactically relevant information that helps warfighters decide where and how to best use their sensors. NOAT uses a variety of tools to discern acoustic performance: ocean data from several sources, numerical ocean models and acoustic models to enhance ASW operations.

c. Strike Group Oceanography Team(SGOT): Strike Group Oceanography Team supports aircraft carriers and amphibious ships, as well as special warfare operations, by providing them with meteorological and oceanographic support.

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110.5 Discuss the primary services provided by the following deployable METOC teams

(cont.):

d. Mobile Environment Team (MET): The Navy's deployable METOC units are the Mobile Environmental Teams (MET). They are the primary users of the Navy's mobile equipment assets. They have their own portable sensing and display equipment which contain modules for tactical meteorological and oceanographic forecasting, polar-orbiting satellite ingest and processing, alphanumeric and facsimile data receipt and display, and in situ data collection via expendable bathythermograph probes. MET's have the capability to install remote Navy Automated Meteorological Observing Systems (AMOS), which sense temperature, humidity, pressure, and winds and provide direct readout and/or telemetry of data via satellite.

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110.5 Discuss the primary services provided by the following deployable METOC teams

(cont.):

e. Fleet Survey Team (FST): FST members (both civilian and military) can quickly deploy to areas around the world outfitted with equipment to perform surveys from various boats of opportunity. Because of these unique capabilities, civilian and military members of FST have deployed to areas of combat like the Middle East to perform near-shore surveys to collect data which aids in the safe navigation of U.S. forces and supplies traversing the area.

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110.6 Discuss the IO (Information Operations) Core Capabilities:

– Provide broad strategic concepts of operations and sustainment for achieving multinational, national, and theater strategic objectives.

– Provide an orderly schedule of decisions.– Achieve unity of effort with air, land, sea, space, and

special operations forces, in conjunction with interagency, nongovernmental, or private voluntary organizations or United Nations or other multinational forces, as required.

– Incorporate the combatant commander's strategic intent and operational focus.

– Identify any special forces or capabilities the enemy has in the area.

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110.6 Discuss the IO Core Capabilities (cont.):

– Identify enemy strategic and operational centers of gravity and provide guidance for defeating them.

– Identify friendly strategic and operational centers of gravity and provide guidance to subordinates for protecting them.

– Sequence a series of related major joint operations conducted simultaneously in depth.

– Establish the organization of subordinate forces and designate command relationships.

– Serve as the basis for subordinate planning and clearly define what constitutes success, including conflict termination objectives and potential post hostilities activities.

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110.6 Discuss the IO Core Capabilities (cont.):

– Provide strategic direction, operational focus, and major tasks, objectives, and concepts to subordinates.

– Provide direction for the employment of nuclear weapons as required and authorized by the National Command Authorities.

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110.7 Define the roles of the U.S. Navy Blue and Red Teams.

– Blue Team: • The group responsible for defending an enterprise’s use

of information systems by maintaining its security posture against a group of mock attackers (i.e., the Red Team). Typically the Blue Team and its supporters must defend against real or simulated attacks.• The term Blue Team is also used for defining a group of

individuals that conduct operational network vulnerability evaluations and provide mitigation techniques to customers who have a need for an independent technical review of their network security posture.

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110.7 Define the roles of the U.S. Navy Blue and Red Teams.

– Red Team: • A group of people authorized and organized to emulate

a potential adversary’s attack or exploitation capabilities against an enterprise’s security posture. The Red Team’s objective is to improve enterprise Information Assurance by demonstrating the impacts of successful attacks and by demonstrating what works for the defenders (i.e., the Blue Team) in an operational environment.

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110.8 Explain the purpose of FES (Fleet Electronic Support).

– Utilized NSGA Pearl Harbor’s web-page for the information.

– Responsible for the installation, removal, maintenance and repair of Cryptologic Direct Support Element (CDSE) electronic equipment on surface and subsurface combatants.

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110.9 Explain the difference between the following documents.

– USC Title 10 and USC Title 50a. USC Title 10 outlines the role of armed forces in the

Unites Sates code. It provides the legal basis for the roles, missions and organization of each of the services as well as the United States Department of Defense. Each of the five subtitles deals with a separate aspect or component of the armed services.

b. USC Title 50 outlines the role of war and National Defense.

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110.10 Define CRITIC.

– Critical Intelligence Communication

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110.11 State the purpose of the following:

a. CCOP: The Cryptologic Carry-On Program (CCOP) provides carry-on cryptoplogic exploitation capability by augmenting existing Ships Signal Exploitation Space (SSES) capabilities and providing capabilities where no SSES exists. CCOP supports FLTCINC cryptologic Electronic Support (ES) requirements for Naval and Joint Operation Including Counter-Drug operations. Its manning is provided by fleet DIRSUP Augmentees and it is staged at Fleet Electronic Support (FES) activities worldwide.

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110.11 State the purpose of the following(cont.):

b. NITES: Navy Integrated Tactical Environmental Subsystem (NITES) is the portable tactical environmental support system used by the U.S. Navy Mobile Environmental Teams operating aboard unit-level ships and at undeveloped shore sites. The main purpose of NITES IV is to enhance the automated capabilities of these teams/units to provide meteorology and oceanography (METOC) support at remote locations, which are often in harsh environments.

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110.11 State the purpose of the following (cont.):

c. JDISS: The Joint Deployable Intelligence Support System (JDISS) program provides a family of hardware and software capabilities that allow connectivity and interoperability with intelligence systems supporting forces, in garrison, and deployed during peace, crisis, and war. It provides the Joint Intelligence Center (JIC), Joint Task Forces (JTF) and operational commanders with on-site automation support and the connectivity necessary to execute the intelligence mission.

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110.12 Discuss Maritime Domain Awareness (MDA).

– MDA is part of an U.S. Government interagency and international maritime security effort.

– Maritime Domain Awareness is defined as the effective understanding of anything associated with the maritime domain that could impact the security, safety, economy, or environment

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110.13 State the purpose of a MOC.

– Maritime Headquarters with Maritime Operations Centers, or more specifically the MOC, (MOC) represents the nexus of Joint and Navy transformation initiatives, lessons learned in the Global War on Terrorism, and progress toward the Sea Power 21 vision. Developing effective globally networked MOCs will require continued development, refinement and acquisition to deliver nearterm enhancement to Navy warfighting capabilities, while transforming the future maritime force to fulfill its role in The Cooperative Strategy for 21st Century Seapower.

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110.5 Discuss the function of the CDSE (Cryptologic Direct Support Element):

– Ref: COMFLTCYBERCOMINST S3230.1– Details/functions are paragraph marked as

Confidential on the instruction located on the SIPRNet.