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ALLIED JOINT DOCTRINE FOR FORCE PROTECTION

contributor authorNATO - North Atlantic Treaty Organization
date accessioned2017-09-04T18:13:29Z
date available2017-09-04T18:13:29Z
date copyright39387
date issued2007
identifier otherHFCJCCAAAAAAAAAA.pdf
identifier urihttp://yse.yabesh.ir/std;jsery=autho4703177D081D20686159DD6EC01B04CF/handle/yse/196449
description abstractIntroduction.
The Alliance and its forces remain vulnerable to a wide variety of hazards and threats. Hazards include occupational hazards such as road traffic accidents and fire and exposure to environmental hazards such as disease and Toxic Industrial Materials (TIMs). A threat may be described as a state's/coalition's perception that it is in some degree of danger based on the assessed capabilities, intentions, and actions of another state/coalition or group. Such threats may exist even in benign environments, such as a unit's home station or base. At best, an Improvised Explosive Device (IED) environment – or an environment that may involve Chemical, Biological, Radiological, or Nuclear (CBRN) agents – may deter or delay the timely deployment of some national forces and undermine Alliance resolve. At worst, it may result in significant casualties and severely hamper or thwart mission accomplishment.
languageEnglish
titleNATO AJP-3.14num
titleALLIED JOINT DOCTRINE FOR FORCE PROTECTIONen
typestandard
page49
statusActive
treeNATO - North Atlantic Treaty Organization:;2007
contenttypefulltext


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