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Process Captured Material

Process Captured Material. Terminal Learning Objective. References. Administrative Notes. SAFETY CONSIDERATIONS NONE RISK ASSESSMENT LOW ENVIRON. CONSIDERATIONS NONE EVALUATION YES. Did you know……….

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Process Captured Material

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  1. Process Captured Material

  2. Terminal Learning Objective

  3. References

  4. Administrative Notes • SAFETY CONSIDERATIONS NONE • RISK ASSESSMENT LOW • ENVIRON. CONSIDERATIONS NONE • EVALUATION YES

  5. Did you know……… A Union soldier found a copy of General Lee’s march order for the Army of Northern Virginia. Information from that document led to the Confederate defeat at the Battle of Antietam, stopped the South’s first major invasion of the North, and provided President Lincoln the needed victory to permit his announcement of the Emancipation Proclamation.

  6. Enabling Learning Objective 1

  7. Captured Enemy Material (CEM) • Captured Enemy Documents (CED) • Captured Enemy Equipment (CEE)

  8. Captured Enemy Documents (CED) • Consists of any piece of recorded information, regardless of form, obtained from the enemy, which subsequently comes into the hands of a friendly force. • Found on captured or dead personnel • Found on battlefield • Three types: Official documents, Identity, Personal documents

  9. Captured Enemy Equipment (CEE) Purpose: Military Application & Technical Intelligence (TECHINT) • Includes all types of foreign materiel found on a enemy prisoner of war (EPW) or on the battlefield. • Items of CEE value: • New weapons • Radios • Track vehicles • Associated manuals • Anything else of TECHINT value

  10. Protection of CEM • Capturing unit is responsible for reporting, protecting and initiating accountability of captured enemy materiel. • Enemy materiel captured becomes the property of the United States. Safe guard against: • Looting • Pilferage • Cannibalization • Souvenir hunters • Destruction

  11. Check on Learning: ELO #1 Question: Why can’t US service members take home souvenirs from their combat time; (i.e., pieces of weapons systems, personal effects of enemy soldiers, manuals, etc.)? Answer: CEE becomes the property of the US and needs to be exploited for tactical and intelligence value.

  12. Check on Learning: ELO #1 Question: If you found a tank, or a missile, you would assign a guard to the item until you received further instructions. What are some reasons why you wouldn‘t leave it in place? Answer: It could be recaptured, destroyed or damaged before it was able to be exploited.

  13. Check on Learning: ELO #1 Question: Would the following items have military or technical value: Answer: • Military • Military • Military • Technical • Military • Military • Technical • Technical • Technical Enemy land mine? Enemy equipment decontamination kit? Enemy machine gun? Enemy new weapons with associated manual? Enemy Grenades? Enemy Medical or Ration Wastes? Enemy track vehicle with associated manual? Enemy logbooks? Enemy firing tables?

  14. Enabling Learning Objective 2

  15. Time Sensitive Information • Significant Intelligence Information • Information critical to successfully accomplishing friendly courses of action • Includes: • Enemy Order of Battle • Enemy Maps, Overlays • Enemy Operation Orders • Enemy Signals, Codes • New Weapons or Equipment • Information indicating a significant change in the enemy’s capabilities or intentions

  16. SPOT Report Format • Use to notify higher commands of the capture or identification of enemy materiel believed to answer intelligence requirements. • S - Size • A - Activity • L - Location • U - Unit • T - Time • E - Equipment

  17. Check on Learning: ELO #2 Question:How would you report the capture of an 8 “x 11” Bosnian map, as you were on a 0430 (0930Z) hours patrol in the vicinity of DN34346767? Answer: S- 8” x 11”; A-Bosnian wartime activities; L-DN34346767; U-Unknown; T-0930Z; E-map

  18. Enabling Learning Objective 3

  19. What do I tag? Tag all CEM found on the battlefield with no known association to an EPW.

  20. Sample Tag CAPTURED DOCUMENT TAG ________________________________ NATIONALITY OF CAPTURING FORCE (STANAG 1059) 1. DATE/TIME CAPTURED: 091756ZAPR99 2. PLACE CAPTURED: TA 123456 3. CAPTURING UNIT: ICO/2/3/4 REGT 4. IDENTITY OF SOURCE (IF APPLICABLE):_____________________ __________________________________________________________ 5. CIRCUMSTANCES OF CAPTURE:FOUND IN ABANDONED ENEMY CP.

  21. CED Tag Information to include is: • Provide date and time of capture and record as a DTG. • Identify the location where the document was captured, including the six- or eight digit grid coordinate. • Identify the capturing unit. • Provide the identity of the source from whom the document was taken, if applicable. • Provide a summary of the circumstance under which the document was found.

  22. CEE Tag • Information to include is: • Provide the nomenclature of the equipment. • Provide the serial number of the equipment. • Include the date/place captured. • Provide the capturing unit. • Provide the quantity.

  23. Documents associated with equipment Attach a Coversheet, marked “TECHDOC” to the CED associated with a particular piece of CEM. • Coversheet should include: • Precise location • time • circumstances of capture • detailed description of the materiel • Treat all documents marked “TECHDOC” with the highest priority

  24. TECHDOC Form NOMENCLATURE: MT-140-A SERIAL NO: 1234567 DATE/PLACE CAPTURED: 02 FEB 99 CA 123456 CAPTURING UNIT: 2 INF CO/2/3 REGT QUANTITY: ONE EACH ____________________________________________ BELOW FOR USE BY TECH INTEL UNITS ONLY ____________________________________________ NOTICE THIS EQUIPMENT IS BEING HELD FOR: ANALYSIS UTILIZATION DESTRUCTION BY AUTHORITY OF THE JOINT U.S. FORCES COMMANDER. ______________________________________________ SIGNATURE PRINTED NAME ______________________________________________ UNIT DATE

  25. Field Expedient Disposition Methods • All CEM must be tagged. • When no standard tag forms are available, you should use: • meals, ready-to-eat cardboard • or other type of paper for expediency.

  26. Tag but DO NOT deface the Item • All markings already on the materiel should be preserved • Never write on the document or equipment itself

  27. Check on Learning: ELO #3 Question:What is the definition of a TECHDOC? Answer: A TECHDOC is documentation associated with a piece of equipment, such as an operator’s manual. It is the highest priority.

  28. Enabling Learning Objective 4

  29. Disposition of CEM • Evacuate time sensitive CEM through chain of command to S-2 • Screen for intelligence or technical value • Evacuate to the rear

  30. All other CEM • Logistical assets (petroleum, supplies) are handled as similar US items • Some items require special handling: • Medical supplies can ONLY be used for EPWs, refugees, indigenous population-otherwise, leave in place unharmed • For other items (NBC materials, ordnance, special documents, such as maps, charts, air imagery) check unit SOP or operation order.

  31. Captured Document Log • CED accountability is maintained during document evacuation. • Accountability is performed at each echelon, starting with the capturing unit UNIT 16 INF DIV (L) _____________________________________________________________________________ FILE RECEIVED DOCUMENT INCOMING TRANS- FORWARDING RECEIVED TIME & PLACE OF NO. DTG SERIAL NO. MISSION NO. UNIT BY CAPTURE (DTG) 0001 111910Z US-AR-1910 NA 4TH BDE ROYCE 110719ZNC123456 0002

  32. Check on Learning: ELO #4 Question:If you capture a surface-to-Air missile system and are directed not to move it for evacuation, what should you do? Answer: Assign personnel to guard the item to avoid the item being recaptured, destroyed or damaged before it is exploited and await further instructions.

  33. Check on Learning: ELO #4 Question:What information should be listed on CEE tags? Answer: Provide the nomenclature and serial number of the equipment, date and place captured, capturing unit and the quantity of item captured.

  34. Check on Learning: ELO #4 Question:What information should be listed on CED tags? Answer: Provide the date and time of capture, six or eight didit grid coordinate of the location of capture, the capturing unit, identity of source from whom document was taken, if known, and the circumstances of capture.

  35. Check on Learning: ELO #4 Question:You found a document which you believe to be signal operation instructions. What must you do with this document? Answer: Handle the document in close coordination with communication personnel, treat it as a secret document, tag it and evacuate it through secure channels without delay

  36. Check on Learning: ELO #4 Question:Should your soldiers collect harmless souvenirs on the battlefield to take home? Answer: No. Items found on the battlefield become United States property that needs to exploited for tactical and technical intelligence value.

  37. Summary • Process captured enemy materiel. • Prepare a spot report on all time sensitive information • Tag each item of CEM. • Select the disposition procedure for each item of CEM.

  38. Conclusion Huah! The proper and timely processing and evacuation of CEM is an important segment of the intelligence gathering process. Information developed from captured materiel will aid the intelligence officer in keeping the commander informed of the enemy situation..……… If you find it, REPORT IT!

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