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The functional area analysis identifies operational tasks, conditions and standards needed to accomplish objectives. The Functional Needs Analysis assesses the ability of current and programmed capabilities to accomplish the tasks identified in the functional area analysis. The end product of these first two levels of analysis is a list of ...
The Army's Force management model [3]: diagram on p.559 begins with a projection of the Future operating environment, in terms of resources: political, military, economic, social, information, infrastructure, physical environment, and the time available to bring the Current army to bear on the situation.
The attendees identified the functional area's "skills, knowledge, and attributes" and designed the resulting BSAP course to support them. [ 1 ] On 16 January 2002, the Army G-3 directed the Commandant of the Army War College to develop a basic qualification course for Functional Area 59; the G-3 approved the BSAP concept on 22 July 2002.
The Aldridge study called for the establishment of a new joint lexicon that would allow leaders to clearly discuss mission areas and how to most responsibly manage resources. Further information on JCAs can be found at the Joint Experimentation, Transformation and Concepts Division (JETCD) [1] of the Joint Staff J-7, Operational Plans and Joint ...
The Air Force Manpower Analysis Agency (AFMAA) was originally established in 1975 as the Air Force Management Engineering Agency, a Separate Operating Agency of the USAF when USAF decided it needed an agency to provide technical guidance and central direction to its management engineering program. [2]
Effective 1 October 2016, Functional Areas 24 and 53 were merged into FA 26. Officer. 26A Network Systems Engineer (formerly Functional Area 24A, Telecommunications Systems Engineer) 26B Information Systems Engineer (formerly Functional Area 53A, Information Systems Manager) 26Z Senior Information Network Engineer (26A and 26B merge at O6 to 26Z)
Joint Assistant for Development and Execution (JADE) is a U.S. military system used for planning the deployment of military forces in crisis situations. [1]The U.S. military developed this automated planning software system in order to expedite the creation of the detailed planning needed to deploy military forces for a military operation.
The Center for Army Analysis (CAA), originally labeled the Concept Analysis Agency, was formed as a result of the 1973 STEADFAST Army reorganization which combined missions, functions and elements of the Combat Developments Command (CDC) and the Strategy and Tactics Analysis Group (STAG), organizations that had their origin in the early 1960s, into one analytical organization.