İşçi Partisi Genel Başkanı Doğu Perinçek, 23 Mart 2011(Bugün) günü yaptığı açıklmasında Libya'ya yönelik saldırılara ilişkin “Uluslararası meşruiyet” diyenlere; "ABD ordusunun Türkiye’yi işgal tatbikatının resmi belgelerini" işaret etmişti. İşte o belgeleri dikkatinize sunuyoruz.
ABD'nin "Binyılın Meydan Okuması 2002" başlıklı işgal tatbikatı, üç yıllık hazırlıktan sonra California eyaletinin Nevada çöllerinde gerçekleştirildi. Tatbikatın başladığı gün, Lozan Anlaşması'nın yıldönümü olan 24 Temmuza rast getirilmiştir. Tatbikatın süresi ise, Sakarya Meydan Savaşı'na gönderme olsun diye 22 gün olarak belirlenmişti.
Anadolu Ajansı'nın "gizli" dediği tatbikat senaryosu, Associated Press (AP)'in 18 Temmuz 2002 günlü bülteninde açıklandı. Tatbikatla ilgili bilgiler, ABD'nin resmî internet sitelerinde de bulunuyordu. [19] Bu kaynaklara dayanarak, 24 Temmuz 2002 günü basın açıklamasıyla kamuoyunu bilgilendirdik. [20] 30 Temmuz 2002 günü Cumhurbaşkanı Sayın Ahmet Necdet Sezer'e bir dosya sunduk. Bu dosyanın birer örneğini, Başbakan Sayın Bülent Ecevit'e, Genelkurmay Başkanı Orgeneral Sayın Hüseyin Kıvrıkoğlu'ya ve Dışişleri Bakanı Sayın Şükrü Sina Gürel'e de ulaştırdık.
İşte Tatbikat Belgeleri;
Millennium Challenge 02
Millennium Challenge 2002 (MC02) brought together both live field exercises and computer simulation July 24-Aug. 15, 2002. Sponsored by U.S. Joint Forces Command (USJFCOM), MC02 focused on how a U.S. explores the military's ability to conduct Rapid Decisive Operations (RDO) against a determined adversary.
MC02 represented a critical building block of future military transformation.
MC02 will incorporate elements of all military services, most functional/regional commands and many DoD organizations and federal agencies. The Secretary of Defense has directed that participants involve elements representative of their future force concepts such as the Air Force's Expeditionary Aerospace Force, the Army's medium-weight brigades and the Navy's "Forward From the Sea" vision.
What are the objectives of MC02?
MC02 simulated a high-end, small-scale contingency that had the potential to escalate to a major theater war and:
• Determined the extent to which a joint force is able to implement the principles outlined in Joint Vision 2020 through:
o Establishing and maintaining information/knowledge superiority
o Setting the conditions for decisive operations
o Assuring access into and through the battle space
o Conducting effects-based operations
o Sustaining itself as it conducts synchronized non-contiguous operations
• Developed improved joint training capabilities through experimentation efforts
• Developed goals and objectives for future USJFCOM transformation events
• Produceed recommendations for current doctrine, organization, training, materiel, leadership, personnel, and facilities (DOTMLPF) in order to more effectively use our current major systems by developing and adapting a new set of principles.
What warfighter concerns were addressed by MC02?
Given the capabilities of the joint force and a major regional threat in the 2007 period, MC02 was designed to determine the extent to which we can:
• Establish a knowledge network through concepts such as Common Relevant Operational Picture (CROP) and Joint Interactive Planning (JIP)
• Establish joint command and control (C2) functions and Joint Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance (JISR) capabilities
• Establish access and then sustain a distributed, non-contiguous operation without relying on fixed bases adjacent to the objective area
• Establish full-dimensional and time definite superiority for selected forces and actions within the battle space of the RDO
• Conduct simultaneous, joint tactical actions throughout the battlespace that are based on a shared understanding of both the tactical and operational situation.
How do experiments like MC02 apply to current operations?
Military experimentation is an ongoing process that improves our joint interoperability and allows more effective use of our resources. MC02 was designed to maximize our joint warfighting capability in this decade and minimize materiel adjustments to our current military resources. Insights gained over the past several years are already making a difference in our national defense; recent operations have demonstrated our enhanced joint interoperability.
How will this help transform the military?
Joint experimentation fosters an operational, decision-making culture in the defense of our nation by exploring the threats of tomorrow today. The basic premise is that critical decisions on future military doctrine, organization and technology should be based on solid empirical results. We are exploring the future of national defense in order to provide better information for national security decision makers. National defense transformation begins with aggressively setting the joint context for concept development and robust joint experimentation.
Space team providing commanders view of MC02 battle
The view from above is helping commanders to understand the battlefield on the opposite coast at Millennium Challenge 2002.
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By Debra Valine
U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command Public Affairs
(FORT BRAGG, N.C., Aug. 9, 2002) - From an area barely larger than the back end of a long-bed pickup truck, members of Army Space Support Team 5 are providing space-based capabilities that enhance commanders' views of the Millennium Challenge 2002 battlefield at the National Training Center.
The group of 11 civilians and 14 soldiers from Army Space Command in Colorado Springs, Colo., are deployed to Fort Bragg for MC02. While only a small number of people compared to the 13,500 soldiers, sailors, airmen and Marines participating in the three-week-long joint training experiment, the team is making a contribution through the use of leading-edge technology.
The Space Support Element is supporting the Army Forces headquarters element - the XVIII Airborne Corps' 82nd Airborne Division - as part of the Army Transformation Experiment 02, the Army's contribution to Millennium Challenge. The capabilities of the SSE allow warfighters access to space planning tools and enhanced commercial satellite imagery.
"The SSE is a one-stop shopping source for space-based capabilities," said Brig. Gen. Richard V. Geraci, the Army Space deputy commanding general. "MC02 is the driver for getting our next seven years worth of work. Success will be determined by how well the SSE concept is received. The existence of the SSE mitigates risk."
While most of the U.S. Army Space and Missile Defense Command's involvement is at Fort Bragg, support is also being provided at Nellis Air Force Base in Las Vegas, Nev., where the Future Operations Capability/Tactical Operations Center is located. The Army Space Program Office is also providing simulation support at the joint level to all services from the Navy's Fleet Center Pacific in San Diego, Calif.
SMDC objectives for the exercise include highlighting the criticality of space and missile defense in Rapid Decisive Operations and Army Transformation, as well as continuing along the path to normalizing space, command officials said. They said a third objective is identifying space and missile defense Doctrine, Training, Leadership, Organization, Materiel and Soldiers solutions for the objective force.
"We're excited to have the opportunity to demonstrate the importance of Army Space support in a joint experiment," said Lt. Col. Brad Baehr, officer in charge of the Space Support Element. Baehr is the senior Functional Area 40 officer for Millennium Challenge 02. "Army Space, the Space and Missile Defense Battle Lab and Force Development Integration Center have formed a strong team of soldiers and civilians coupled with leading-edge technology and operational concepts to support the SMDC MC02 initiatives."
"These initiatives will lay the groundwork for space operations in the future," said Kurt Reitinger, the Space and Missile Defense Battle Lab experiment manager. "The experiments we are conducting here are key to the next several years of development. It's great that SMDC can play such an important role."
Overall, four of the 12 Army initiatives are being sponsored by SMDC. The Tactical Space Initiative, which includes the Broadcast Remote Imagery Technology Experiment, known as BRITE, and the Embedded National Tactical Receiver are two. TacSpace is an umbrella initiative that includes numerous concepts and initiatives. The centerpiece of TacSpace is the Space Support Element, which includes a six-soldier team of Space Operations soldiers. This team, which is designed to be an integral part of the future division staff, officials said, provides key input to the development of the supported unit's plan. The team uses the Space Support Element Toolset, which is a collection of hardware systems and software applications, to accomplish this mission.
Other initiatives include the Spectral Information Initiative which provides mobile, commercial, high-resolution satellite imagery; indirect field tasking of sensors; direct data downlink; and advanced processing of spectral data to create improved battlespace visualization for tactical users. This initiative will evaluate Eagle Vision II, Mobile Processing/Exploitation/Dissemination, or MoPED platforms, and the Spectral Operations Resource Center. The Army Space Program Office is sponsoring the National Imagery Client and Tactical Exploitation of National Capabilities, Multiple Unified Simulation Environment, or TENCAP MUSE initiatives.
What the SSE operators do is not "sexy" as far as Army operations go. It's not as glamorous as an airborne drop or a live-fire event, but it's just as important to the success of the mission, said Spc. Sabrina Bannister, the team's network administrator.
"We are integrating new and emerging technology into the tactical environment, such as wireless Internet connectivity," said Bannister, a member of the 1st Space Battalion. "I am responsible for ensuring voice, data and fax communications, as well as maintaining the computer hardware and software." Bannister also produces global positioning system accuracy charts and over-fly reports from satellite imagery.
Sgt. Brandi Harris, a topographic analyst for the Spectral Operations Resource Center makes maps of the battlefield from raw images she pulls down from satellites.
"We take a high-resolution image from the satellite and then draw in annotations that will help the decision-makers," Harris said. "For this exercise, we took an image of the drop zone at the NTC and drew in the flight path. We included elevation and other information that showed the warfighters in the field what they needed to know about the area." Harris is assigned to HHC, Army Space Command. The SORC supports the G-3.
Behind the scenes, 1st Lt. Angela Johnson, the team's communications officer and co-battle captain, verifies that the external networks are working.
"The first thing I do is check all the phones," Johnson said. "Then I check with G-6 to see if there are any problems with their system that might affect us. We check e-mail to see if we are getting operational updates.
"The team provides warfighters with space-based capabilities such as near real-time imagery, satellite constellation health and notional space control," Johnson said.
"We can add value to just about every staff element because they can use the information we provide to make better decisions," Johnson said.
"All the products of space - navigation, communication, warning and intelligence - will be key products for the U.S. Army objective force, which will be a much lighter and more lethal force," said SMDC Commanding General Lt. Gen. Joseph M. Cosumano Jr. "And for it to accomplish this mission, it must be able to see first, understand first, and then finish decisively. And Space will enable that force to do that."
Special operations troops testing concepts in MC02
Forces from across the Department of Defense will be evaluating not only service-specific concepts, but also joint service initiatives that will benefit parts of all the services like the special operations community.
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(MacDill Air Force Base, Fla. -- July 23, 2002) - U. S. Special Operations Command (USSOCOM) will test a wide range of futuristic war fighting concepts supporting Joint Forces Command's transformational experiment Millennium Challenge 02 at multiple locations across the United States from July 24 to Aug. 9. The experiment, the largest of its kind to date for USSOCOM, will involve more than 700 Special Operations Forces (SOF) personnel.
USSOCOM's primary experimental initiative will focus on facilitating Rapid Decisive Operations (RDO). The experiment is intended to test operational potential to accelerate RDO by shaping the beginning state of a conflict, setting the conditions for quick victory, and shaping the transition to peace. To achieve RDO, Special Operations Command Joint Forces Command (JFSOC) will act as executive agent for USSOCOM to test three command and control initiatives that will assist in the effort to integrate the SOF not only in execution, but also in planning:
• Information sharing through the use of a Common Relevant Operational Picture (CROP), Operational Net Assessment (ONA), user-friendly web pages, and other tools will provide unprecedented situational awareness of the joint battlefield.
• Collaboration efforts with Joint Task Force (JTF) headquarters and various components to ensure linkage for arriving at the best solution to challenge or task posed by the JTF commander.
• Force tracking tools to monitor forces on the ground, in the water and in the air. These tools give the JTF a good knowledge of where Special Operations Forces are at all times to protect troops, prevent fratricide and in assisting in targeting.
USSOCOM will integrate Special Operations Forces (SOF) into each Service portion of the experiment to ensure capabilities and concepts are synchronized with each of the Services' transformation concepts.
Simulations of the CV-22 Osprey and Advanced SEAL Delivery System (ASDS) will also be integrated into the experiment.
"Millennium Challenge 02 represents a significant opportunity for SOCOM to leverage Joint Forces Command's processes, validate future interoperability, and showcase future capabilities with the other Combatant Commands and the Services," said U.S. Army Colonel Michael Findlay, commander of Special Operations Command Joint Forces Command (JFSOC) and the MC02 Joint Special Operations Task Force (JSOTF).
"We're looking at integration versus deconfliction of SOF with the other elements of the joint force," said Findlay. "We're talking pure, full integration. Working side-by-side, working to ensure that we support the fight and the mission of the joint force commander. Integration is the key here."