US Army Field Manual on CD in Adobe Acrobat (.PDF) format.
THIS ITEM IS AVAILABLE FOR DOWNLOAD AND CD-ROM DELIVERY
What's inside:
Field manual (FM) 4-20.07 provides insight, general data and operational information for the commanders,
supervisors, and personnel assigned or attached to a Quartermaster (QM) Force Provider Company. This
manual also serves as a guide for commanders, supervisors, and other personnel concerned with Force Provider
operations in general. It addresses the key aspects of performing the company’s critical wartime mission to
“Provide Force Provider Support” and accomplishing the unit’s mission essential task list (METL). The METL
consists of tasks categorized into the following missions:
- Deploy unit
- Establish unit area
- Defend assigned area
- Conduct Force Provider operations
- Relocate unit
- Redeploy unit
Detailed information concerning the METL, as well as collective and individual training, required to
accomplish the unit’s METL is available in Army Training and Evaluation Program (ARTEP) 42-424-30-MTP.
This publication applies to the Active Army, Reserve Component QM Force Provider company commanders,
supervisors and Soldiers, the Army National Guard (ARNG)/Army National Guard of the United States
(ARNGUS), and the United States Army Reserve (USAR) unless otherwise stated. The focus is on the
organization of the Force Provider Company, Force Provider modules, responsibilities, deployment,
redeployment, and operations.
Introduction
Commanders must bear in mind the stressful effects of combat as they plan and conduct
operations. The pressures that battlefield chaos and destruction place on Soldiers have always
been great. Unit discipline, realistic field training, deliberately fostered unit cohesion, and
solid bonding between leaders and subordinates can reduce the effects of this stress in part,
but nothing can eliminate it. The commander who understands this and protects his Soldiers
through strong, positive, and caring leadership, proper mental, physical and training
preparation, and simple decisive plans will win (FM 3-0). The purpose of the Force Provider
program is to improve the quality of life for deployed Soldiers by reducing the stressors of
combat. Under force health protection (FHP), combat and operational stress control (COSC)
training is provided to assist Soldiers in preventing combat and operational stress reactions
(COSRs) and other stress related illnesses. The Force Provider system also enables the
reduction of stress.
During Operation Desert Shield/Desert Storm, the Army realized that it could do more to
improve the quality of life for the deployed Soldier. Many Soldiers used makeshift and field
expedient latrines and showers. The Army recognized the importance of combating stress and
sleep deprivation, while offsetting COSR and conserving fighting strength. Its answer was to
set up the Force Provider program. The concept of Force Provider was initially tested in the
Bosnia area of operations. Doctrine, training, and system requirements were then developed
as a result of lessons learned to improve the quality of life for the deployed Soldier. In
addition to this FM, ARTEP 42-424-30-MTP has been developed and is available through
normal distribution. Training and evaluation outlines (T&EOs) for unit training (Chapter 5,
ARTEP 42-424-30-MTP) are also available in the Army Systems Approach to Training
(ASAT) program. The Force Provider Product Manager office at Soldier System Command
(SSCOM), maintains a homepage for related issues.
Force Provider units are expected to be an essential component of joint, multinational, and
expeditionary operations - fully capable of responding to requirements along its entire
operational mission continuum: Soldier sustainment, humanitarian and civic assistance,
disaster relief, and non-combatant evacuation operations. Future Force Provider operations
must provide scalable and modular base camps to support operations such as combat (forward
operating bases/FOBs), reception, staging, onward movement, and integration (RSOI), rest
and refit, intermediate staging bases (ISB), redeployment, humanitarian assistance, disaster
relief, homeland defense, and peacekeeping/enforcement.
PAGES: 78
PUBLICATION DATE: AUGUST, 2008
THIS ITEM IS AVAILABLE FOR DOWNLOAD AND CD-ROM DELIVERY