US Army Field Manual on CD in Adobe Acrobat (.PDF) format.
**Click HERE for a preview sample of this PDF manual**
(Will open a new browser window)
THIS ITEM IS AVAILABLE FOR DOWNLOAD AND CD-ROM DELIVERY
What's inside:
Today’s Army has transitioned from a force that was forward deployed to one that is primarily
CONUS-based. This transition, however, has not changed the Army’s national defense strategy
role of providing land-based forces capable of operating across the entire military spectrum of
operations. What has changed is the need to more rapidly generate and deploy forces to an
operational area. As a consequence, some support forces will lag behind other, higher priority
forces, resulting in a logistical shortfall. To bridge the gap before scheduled resources and CSS
units arrive, or when other logistical support options do not provide the supplies and service
needed, the Army is turning more frequently to contracting support to provide goods and
services required. Contracting support is an integral part of the overall process of obtaining
support across the entire spectrum. Contingency contracting provides the commander a flexible
and responsive means to support deployed forces and their mission.
FM 100-10-2 addresses the contracting on the battlefield dimension of logistics, and is intended
for the non-contracting reader responsible for, or involved with, the planning and obtaining of
supplies or services through contracting support. Its purpose is to define battlefield contracting,
also referred to as contingency contracting, in terms of its structure, organization, and process
at the operational and tactical levels. References to the battlefield in the context of this manual
include the theater or area of operations of any operationally-deployed Army force, anywhere in
the world. The text recognizes that military operations include stability actions and/or support
actions such as nation building and disaster relief, which defy traditional definitions of a
battlefield. Principles discussed herein apply to Army missions spanning the operational
spectrum. This manual addresses the role of contracting in force projection, and where it fits
within the logistical support structure. It describes the operational concept of contracting
support on the battlefield, the legal and regulatory parameters that govern its conduct, and the
principles that guide its activities. This manual discusses the management of civilian
contractor personnel in general terms; FM 100-XX, Contractors on the Battlefield, prescribes
Army doctrine for this topic and discusses it in detail.
FM 100-10-2 describes the mission, organization, functions, and location of contracting elements
in a theater of operations down to division-level. It discusses how they and the contractors they
deal with are controlled and managed, who the main participants are in the planning,
managing, and providing of contracting support on the battlefield, and briefly describes the
relationship which influence contracting in a joint and multinational environment. This
manual concentrates on planning for contracting support, to include requirements
determination and funding, support to contractors, and the deployment of contracting
organizations and contractors. It describes how contracting support is obtained, with emphasis
on unit or requesting activity responsibilities, and the processing of contracting support
requests. This manual recognizes the vital importance of the relatively small numbers of
deployable contracting personnel found in our Active and Reserve Component military forces as
well as Department of the Army civilian personnel. It informs commanders and their staffs
throughout the Total Army how to use these scarce resources as force multipliers, and covers
management of support contractor personnel in generic terms. FM 100-XX, Contractors on the
Battlefield, addresses this topic in detail.
FM 100-10-2 is designed to assist Army service component commanders, Army force
commanders and senior logisticians, theater support command commanders, corps and division
commanders, and other Army logisticians and their staffs in identifying requirements and
planning to facilitate procurement of goods and services on the battlefield. This manual
implements relevant doctrine, incorporates lessons learned from recent operations, and
conforms to Army capstone doctrine. It links FMs 100-5, 100-7, 100-8, 100-10, 100-15, 100-16,
100-23, and other tactical and logistics doctrine manuals with other joint and Army capstone
manuals.
PAGES: 119
PUBLICATION DATE: AUGUST, 1999
THIS ITEM IS AVAILABLE FOR DOWNLOAD AND CD-ROM DELIVERY