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This February 2011 edition is the most current, fully revised and
is currently in use. In this handbook you will find tactics and
techniques used by Army Rangers. This handbook offers the
techniques and tactics that make U.S. Army Rangers the best
soldiers in the world. These highly trained, easily deployable, and
widely skilled infantrymen specialize in airborne assault, raids,
recovery of personnel and equipment, and airfield seizure, among
other difficult and dangerous missions. Now, in this recently
revised edition of the U.S. Army Ranger Handbook, you can get the
latest info on everything from understanding the basics of Army
operations and tactics to discovering what makes a soldier with
good leadership qualities and character. Although primarily written
for Rangers and other light infantry units, it serves as a handy
reference for all military units, covering how infantry squad- and
platoon-sized elements conduct combat operations in varied
terrains. this guide provides modern soldiers with best training
possible and effectively combines the lessons of the past with
important insights for the future to help make army leaders the
absolute best they can be. This handbook provides squad and platoon
leaders with the roles, tactics, knowledge, and operational
requirements to employ combat multipliers in a combat environment.
SH 21-76.
Soldier physical readiness is acquired through the challenge of a
precise, progressive, and integrated physical training program. A
well-conceived plan of military physical readiness training must be
an integral part of every unit training program. This field manual
prescribes doctrine for the execution of the Army Physical
Readiness Training System. Profusely illustrated.
This Army Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures (ATTP) is intended to
help company-level leaders understand the principles and techniques
of camouflage, concealment, and decoys (CCD). To remain viable, all
units must apply CCD to personnel and equipment. Ignoring a
threat's ability to detect friendly operations on the battlefield
is shortsighted and dangerous. Friendly units enhance their
survivability capabilities if they are well versed in CCD
principles and techniques. CCD is equal in importance to
marksmanship, maneuver, and mission. It is an integral part of a
soldier's duty. CCD encompasses individual and unit efforts such as
movement, light, and noise discipline; letter control; dispersal;
and deception operations. Each soldier's actions must contribute to
the unit's overall CCD posture to maximize effectiveness.
ATTP 3-21.50 provides perspective on Infantry company missions in
an operational environment characterized by high-altitudes, rapidly
changing climatic conditions, and rugged terrain. It also provides
the small-unit leader with guidance on how company-sized units and
below can conduct these operations. The mountain environment
challenges all warfighting functions. Infantry units are full
spectrum organizations, not specifically designed for mountain
terrain but are well-suited for mountain operations. Successful
units combine the basic doctrine described in FM 3-21.10 and
augment with specialized equipment and predeployment training. The
tactics and techniques specific to conducting operations in
mountain terrain provide added operational capability. Table 6-3 in
this manual depicts where Soldiers may obtain specialized
mountaineering and cold weather operational skills. This manual
focuses on company and below operations in mountain operational
terrain levels II and III as described in FM 3-97.6, specifically,
where the influence of increasingly steep and rugged terrain
dictates the use of dismounted operations. For mountain operations
in level I (lower, less rugged valleys and flatter terrain) refer
to FM 3-21.10. The concepts discussed in this publication are
useful in most mountain environments.
Army Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures (ATTP) 3-39.32 provides
doctrinal guidance for personnel who are responsible for planning
and executing physical security programs. It is the basic reference
for training security personnel and is intended to be used in
conjunction with the Army Regulation (AR) 190 series (Military
Police), Security Engineering Unified Facilities Criteria (UFC)
publications, Department of Defense (DOD) directives, and other
Department of the Army (DA) publications. This publication applies
to the Active Army, the Army National Guard (ARNG)/Army National
Guard of the United States (ARNGUS), and the United States Army
Reserves (USAR) unless otherwise stated. Prevention and protection
are the two primary concerns of physical security; both serve the
security interests of people, equipment, and property. This ATTP
establishes physical security as a supporting component of the
protection warfighting function and describes defensive measures
that enable protection tasks, such asoperations security,
antiterrorism, operational area security, survivability, and
information protection.
This field manual (FM) serves as a reference document for tactical
radio systems. (It does not replace FMs governing combat net
radios, unit tactical deployment, or technical manuals [TMs] on
equipment use.) It also provides doctrinal procedures and guidance
for using tactical radios on the modern battlefield. This FM
targets operators, supervisors, and planners, providing a common
reference for tactical radios. It provides a basic guidance and
gives the system planner the necessary steps for network planning,
interoperability considerations, and equipment capabilities.
Illustrated throughout.
This training circular (TC) provides information on the principles
of operation and maintenance of marine diesel engines, auxiliary
equipment, and related systems. General instructions and
precautions requiring special attention are included for guidance
for those responsible for training personnel. No attempt has been
made to cover all unit models. Specific technical manuals,
lubrication orders, or manufacturer's instructions issued with
equipment will fully cover required operational and maintenance
procedures. This TC is designed for all Soldiers in the marine
engineering field. It also provides information for military
occupational specialties (MOSs) 88L and 881A. This TC reinforces
good marine engineman practices. A good knowledge of marine
electricity helps maintain the health and welfare of the crew by
promoting the safe operation of the many electrical systems onboard
a vessel.
The United States (U.S.) Army watercraft fleet is made up of all
types of vessels, including oceangoing vessels, tugs, landing
craft, and barges. Although all of these vessels operate on water,
their missions are different. The watercraft operator must have the
skills and knowledge to perform the tasks required on any of these
vessels. This training circular (TC) is for the 88K watercraft
operator, skill levels 1 through 4. It will provide the subject
matter that relates directly to the common technical tasks listed
in STP 55-88K14-SM-TG. The U.S. Army's environmental strategy into
the 21st century defines the Army's leadership commitment and
philosophy for meeting present and future environmental challenges.
It provides a framework to ensure that environmental stewardship
ethic governs all Army activities. The Army's environmental vision
is to be a national leader in environmental and natural resource
stewardship for present and future generations, as an integral part
of all Army missions. The Army's environmental vision statement
communicates the Army's commitment to the environment. This TC
applies to the Active Army, the Army National Guard/Army National
Guard of the United States, and the United States Army Reserve.
This aircrew training manual (ATM) standardizes aircrew training
programs (ATPs) and flight evaluation procedures. This manual
provides specific guidelines for executing Mi-17 aircrew training.
It is based on the training principles outlined at the Army
Training Network located on the web at https:
//atn.army.mil/index.aspx under the Training Management tab. The
Mi-17 ATM establishes requirements for crewmember qualification:
refresher, mission, and continuation training; and evaluations
The training circular (TC) is a tool that a commander can use as an
aid during training strategy development. The products in this TC
are developed to support the company's mission-essential task list
(METL) training strategy. This TC provides guidance for commanders,
staff, leaders, and Soldiers who plan, prepare, execute, and assess
training of the weapons and antiarmor company.
Training Circular (TC) 3-22.23 provides technical information about
training and employment of M18A1 claymore munitions. Intended users
include leaders and Soldiers who use this information to
successfully integrate M18A1 claymore munitions into their combat
operations. The electrical system used to fire the M18A1 claymore
munition has been replaced by a nonelectrical system, a shock tube
assembly with pull initiator; however, M18A1 claymore munitions
equipped with electrical firing systems will remain in the Army
inventory until the current stock is exhausted. This TC applies to
the Active Army, the Army National Guard (ARNG)/Army National Guard
of the United States (ARNGUS), and the United States Army Reserve
(USAR) unless otherwise stated.
This training circular details techniques Soldiers and leaders must
know to cope with mountainous terrain. These techniques are the
foundation upon which the mountaineer must build. They must be
applied to the various situations encountered to include river
crossings, glaciers, snow-covered mountains, ice climbing, rock
climbing, and urban vertical environments. The degree to which this
training is applied must be varied to conform to known enemy
doctrine, tactics, and actions. This TC also discusses basic and
advanced techniques to include acclimatization, illness and injury,
equipment, anchors, evacuation, movement on glaciers, and training.
Field Manual (FM) 3-37 provides doctrinal guidance for commanders
and staffs who are responsible for planning and executing
protection in support of full spectrum operations. It describes
protection as both an element of combat power and as a warfighting
function. FM 3-37 corresponds with Army operations doctrine
introduced in the FM 3-0 capstone manual. As the Army keystone
manual for protection, FM 3-37 will help commanders understand and
visualize protection concepts and ideas and enable them to describe
protection tasks and systems for integration into the operations
process. FM 3-37 expands on the protection and combined arms
terminology outlined in FM 3-0. It explains how protection can be
achieved and applied through the combination and integration of
reinforcement and complementary capabilities to preserve combat
power or to protect personnel, physical assets, or information.
This manual recognizes that protection has no direct antecedent
from the former battlefield operating systems, so protection is
realized in many ways. Therefore, the text introduces the five
forms and five principles of protection to provide a context for
battle command and a framework for task assignment: Forms of
protection: Deterrence; Prevention; Active security; Passive
defense; Mitigation. Principles of protection: Full-dimension;
Integrated; Layered; Redundant; Enduring.
Doctrine provides a military organization with unity of effort and
a common philosophy, language, and purpose. This field manual (FM)
provides doctrine for the tactical employment and operations of the
maneuver enhancement brigade (MEB). FM 3-90.31 is intended to
facilitate the operations and training requirements of the MEB as
they organize, prepare for, and conduct operations. This initial FM
will evolve after lessons learned from training and operational
experiences are incorporated into future Army doctrine. This FM
provides doctrinal guidance for commanders, staffs, and subordinate
leaders to plan, prepare, execute, and assess MEB operations.
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