Military Intelligence Program: Difference between revisions
imported>Howard C. Berkowitz (New page: {{subpages}} The United States' '''Military Intelligence Program (MIP)''' consists of programs, projects, or activities that support the U.S. Secretary of Defense’s intelligence, co...) |
imported>Howard C. Berkowitz No edit summary |
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| title = Department of Defense Directive No. 5205.12, Military Intelligence Program (MIP) | | title = Department of Defense Directive No. 5205.12, Military Intelligence Program (MIP) | ||
| date = 14 November 2008 | | date = 14 November 2008 | ||
| publisher = Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence}}</ref> | | publisher = Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence}}</ref> It is overseen by the [[Technical and Tactical Intelligence Subcommittee]] of the [[House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence]]. | ||
The term "MIP" replaces the earlier terms "Joint Military Intelligence Program (JMIP)" | The term "MIP" replaces the earlier terms "Joint Military Intelligence Program (JMIP)" |
Revision as of 09:02, 1 October 2009
The United States' Military Intelligence Program (MIP) consists of programs, projects, or activities that support the U.S. Secretary of Defense’s intelligence, counterintelligence, and related intelligence responsibilities. This includes those intelligence and counterintelligence programs, projects, or activities that provide capabilities to meet warfighters’ operational and tactical requirements more effectively. The term excludes capabilities associated with a weapons system whose primary mission is not intelligence. [1] It is overseen by the Technical and Tactical Intelligence Subcommittee of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence.
The term "MIP" replaces the earlier terms "Joint Military Intelligence Program (JMIP)" and "Tactical Intelligence and Related Activities (TIARA)". JMIP included Defense-wide programs not peculiar to the needs of a specific service, while TIARA covered service-specific needs. Under the MIP are the Office of the Secretary of Defense, service departments, the United States Special Operations Command, and, in their roles of supporting tactical operations, the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA); NGA; NRO and the National Security Agency/Central Security Service (NSA/CSS).
MIP activities are not strictly separated from national-level capabilities. Tactical Exploitation of National Intelligence Capabilities (TENCAP) gives warfighters access to data from national-level sensors. For example, national missile launch warning satellites routinely provided forces in the Gulf War with alerts of SS-1 SCUD launches. The Military Intelligence Company (Brigade Combat Team) has, as one of its mission, providing TENCAP information at the brigade level.
References
- ↑ Department of Defense Directive No. 5205.12, Military Intelligence Program (MIP), Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence, 14 November 2008