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Ep Emcon Sop A Guide To Reduce Technical Signature Brendan Mcbreen Editor

  • SKU: BELL-42862108
Ep Emcon Sop A Guide To Reduce Technical Signature Brendan Mcbreen Editor
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Ep Emcon Sop A Guide To Reduce Technical Signature Brendan Mcbreen Editor instant download after payment.

Publisher: Marine Corps Intelligence Schools, Intelligence Training Enhancement Program
File Extension: PDF
File size: 12.75 MB
Pages: 134
Author: Brendan McBreen (editor)
Language: English
Year: 2020

Product desciption

Ep Emcon Sop A Guide To Reduce Technical Signature Brendan Mcbreen Editor by Brendan Mcbreen (editor) instant download after payment.

Your radio can kill you. Our communications equipment squawks continuously and our adversaries
can hear it. This is our challenge: Electromagnetic warfare (EW) is changing ground combat and we
now need to change how we fight.The threat has changed. Our adversaries can now find us with sophisticated electromagnetic
reconnaissance—EW satellites, aircraft, unmanned air systems (UAS), and ground collections capabilities—and then target uswith long-range precision fires.Operations have changed. Our new concepts envision Marines seizing advanced bases under the arc
of enemy missile fires. And even during traditional operations, Marines will face the threat of advancedEW collections cueing UAS and triggering long-range missile, rocket and artillery fires.After two decades without a direct EW collection and detection threat, we are complacent about
communications discipline, overly dependent on satellite communications (SATCOM), and addicted to excessive bandwidth andcontinuous talk. Every day, we acquire new equipment thatincreasesour signature andignorestheEW threat. Some of our systems are constantly emitting, which makes us much more vulnerable to
enemy direction finding. Our assumptions of technological superiority are dangerously outdated.Marine Corps communications equipment is especially bright and loud. To a sophisticated adversary,
our units—especially our command posts in the field—look like Las Vegas from space.The vast majority of our infantry battalion emissions—notionally represented in the above
illustration—are voice and data radio calls: very high frequency (VHF), ultra high frequency (UHF), high frequency (HF), and SATCOM. Each of thedifferent-coloured stacks is a different signal. The height of each stack represents the probability ofdetection, which is a function of the number of daily calls multiplied by signal strength, propagationpattern, and waveform.Our radio emissions, shown in red, are most likely to be detected by the enemy. But other
communic

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