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Annex A, section B of Operation Garden Plot defines tax
protesters, militia groups, religious cults, and general anti-government
dissenters as Disruptive Elements. This calls for the deadly force to be used
against any extremist or dissident perpetrating any and all forms of civil
disorder.
Under section D, a Presidential Executive Order will authorize and direct the
Secretary of Defense to use the Armed Forces of the United States to restore
order.
2 TAB A APPENDIX 1 TO ANNEX S USAF CIVIL DISTURBANCE PLAN 55-2
EXHIBIT POR:SGH, JCS Pub 6, Vol 5, AFR 160-5 hereby provides for America's
military and the National Guard State Partnership Program to join with United
Nations personal in said operations. This links selected U.S. National Guard
units with the Defense Ministries of "Partnership For Peace." This was
done in an effort to provide military support to civil authorities in response
to civil emergencies.
Under Presidential Decision Directive No. 25, this program serves to cement
people to relationships between the citizens of the United States, and the
global military of the UN establishments of the emerging democracies of Central
and Eastern European countries. This puts all of our National Guardsmen under
the direct jurisdiction of the United Nations.
Section 3: This plan could be implemented under any of the following
situation:
(1) SITUATION. Spontaneous civil disturbances which involve large numbers
of persons and/or which continue for a considerable period of time, may exceed
the capacity of local civil law enforcement agencies to suppress. Although this
type of activity can arise without warning as a result of sudden, unanticipated
popular unrest (past riots), it may also result from more prolonged dissidence.
This would most likely be an outgrowth of serious social, political or economic
issues which divide segments of the American population. Such factionalism could
manifest itself through repeated demonstrations, protest marches and other forms
of legitimate opposition but which would have the potential for erupting into
spontaneous violence with little or no warning.
(2) SITUATION. Planned acts of violence or civil disobedience which,
through arising from the same causes as (1) above, are seized upon by a
dedicated group of dissidents who plan and incite purposeful acts designed to
disrupt social order.
This may occur either because leaders of protest organizations intentionally
induce their followers to perpetrate violent acts, or because a group of
militants infiltrates an otherwise peaceful protest and seeks to divert it from
its peaceful course.
Subsection C: (2) Environmental satellite products will be continue to be
available.
(d) Responsibilities. Meteorological support to civil disturbance operations
will be arranged or provided by AWS wings.
The 7th. Weather Wing (7WW) is responsible for providing / arranging support for
Military Airlift Command (MAC) airlift operations. The 5th Weather Wing (5WW) is
responsible for supporting the United States Army Forces Command.
Civil disturbance may threaten or erupt at any time in the CONUS and grow to
such proportions as to require the use the Federal military forces to bring the
situation under control.
A flexible weather support system is required to support the many and varied
options of this Plan.
ANNEX H: XXOW, AWSR 55-2, AWSR 23-6, AFR 23-31, AR 115-10, AFR 105-3.
Subsection B:
Concept of Environmental Support. Environmental support will be provided by
elements of Air Weather Service (AWS) in accordance with refs a-f. The senior
staff meteorologist deployed int the Task Force Headquarters (TFH) will be the
staff weather officer (SWO) to the TFH.
Centralized environmental support products are requested in accordance with AWSR
105-18. Weather support is provided by weather units located at existing CONUS
bases or by deployed SWOs and / or weather teams to the objective areas.
Support MAC source will be provide in accordance with the procedures in MARC
103-15. MAC forces will be provided in accordance with the procedures in AFR
105-3.
Air Force Global Weather Central: Provides centralized products as requested.
JCS Pub 18 - Doctrine for Operations Security AFR 55-30
Operations Security
1. GENERALReleased under Freedom of Information Act on March 30th, 1990. All material presented here has been declassified and supersedes USAD Operations Plan355-10 of July 16, 1973. Information released by USAF under supervision of Alexander K. Davidson, BRIG. GEN, USAF, Dep. Director of Operations.
Opposition forces or groups may attempt to gain knowledge of this plan and 'use that knowledge to prevent or degrade the effectiveness of the actions outlined in this plan. In order to protect operations undertaken to accomplish the mission, it is necessary to control sources of information that can be exploited by those opposition forces or groups.
OPSEC is the effort to protect operations by identifying and controlling intelligence indicators susceptible to exploitation. The objective of OPSEC, in the execution of this plan, is to assure the security of operations, mission effectiveness, and increase the probability of mission success.
2. RESPONSIBILITY FOR OPERATIONS SECURITY (OPSEC):
The denial Of information to an enemy is inherently a command responsibility. However, since the operations Officer at any level of command is responsible to his commander for the Overall planning and execution of operations, he has the principal staff interest in assuring maximum protection of the operation and must assume primary responsibility instability for ensuring that the efforts of all other staff elements are coordinated toward this end. However., every other individual associated with, or aware of, the operation must assist in safeguarding the security of the operation.
3. OBJECTIVES FOR OPERATIONS SECURITY (OPSEC):
a. The basic objective of OPSEC is to preserve the security Of friendly forces and thereby to enhance the probability of Successful mission accomplishment. "Security" in this context relates to the protection of friendly forces. It also includes the protection of operational information to prevent degradation of mission effectiveness through the disclosure of prior knowledge of friendly operations to the opposition.
b. OPSEC pervades the entire planning process and must be a matter of continuing concern from the conception of an operation, throughout the preparatory and execution phases, and during critiques, reports, press releases, and the like conducted during the post operation phase.
4. OPERATION ORDERS AND SOP:
Specific operations orders and standard operating procedures "MUST be developed with the awareness that the opposition may be able to identify and exploit vulnerable activities.
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