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U.S. NAVY MANUALS COMBINED: OPERATIONS SECURITY (OPSEC) NTTP 3-54M; NAVY INFORMATION OPERATIONS NWP 3-13; AND THE COMMANDER’S HANDBOOK ON THE LAW OF NAVAL OPERATIONS NWP 1-14M (2007 & 2017 EDITIONS)
註釋

 

NTTP 3-54M/MCWP 3-40.9 provides the commander with an operations security (OPSEC)

overview, OPSEC evolution, and guidance for the most crucial aspect of OPSEC, that of identifying critical information (CI). It explains the OPSEC process, also known as the OPSEC five-step process.

 

This publication addresses the areas of OPSEC and force protection, public affairs officer (PAO)

interaction, the role of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) in coordination with OPSEC, the OPSEC/OMBUDSMAN/KEY VOLUNTEER relationship and the conduct of OPSEC assessments.

 

This publication includes separate chapters on Web page registration, Web risk assessment, and Red team activity. Appendices provide guidance to implement effective plans/programs at the individual unit, strike group, and shore establishment levels.

 

NWP 3-13 (FEB 2014), NAVY INFORMATION OPERATIONS, provides

information operations guidance to Navy commanders, planners, and operators

to exploit and shape the information environment and apply information-related

capabilities to achieve military objectives. This publication reinforces the

integrating functionality of information operations to incorporate informationrelated

capabilities and engage in the information environment to provide a

military advantage to the friendly Navy force. It is effective upon receipt.

 

1. NWP 1-14M/MCTP 11-10B/COMDTPUB P5800.7A (AUG 2017), THE

COMMANDER’S HANDBOOK ON THE LAW OF NAVAL OPERATIONS, is

available in the Navy Warfare Library. It is effective upon receipt and supersedes

NWP 1-14M/MCWP 5-12.1/COMDTPUB 5800.7A (JUL 2007), The Commander’s

Handbook on the Law of Naval Operations.

 

2. Summary. This revision updates and expands upon various topics regarding the law of the

sea and law of war. In particular, it updates the history of U.S. Senate consideration of the

UN Convention on the Law of the Sea, to include its 2012 hearings; emphasizes that

islands, rocks, and low-tide elevations are naturally formed and that engineering,

construction, and land reclamation cannot convert their legal status; provides more detail

on U.S. sovereign immunity policy for Military Sealift Command chartered vessels and

for responding to foreign requests for health inspections and medical information;

removes language indicating that all USN/USCG vessels under command of a

noncommissioned officer are auxiliary vessels; emphasizes that only warships may

exercise belligerent rights during international armed conflicts; adds a description of

U.S.-Chinese bilateral and multilateral agreements promoting air and maritime safety;

updates the international law applicable to vessels seeking a place of refuge; updates the

description of vessels assimilated to vessels without nationality; provides detailed

descriptions of the five types of international straits; states the U.S. position on the legal

status of the Northwest Passage and Northern Sea Route; updates the list of international

duties in outer space; updates the law regarding the right of safe harbor; adds “honor” as a

law of war principle; adds information about weapons reviews in the Department of the

Navy; updates the law regarding unprivileged enemy belligerents; includes information

about the U.S. position on the use of landmines; expands on the discussion of the

International Criminal Court (ICC); and updates the law of targeting.