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ARMY AL&T


FIGURE 1


Intelligence search engine (M3, HOTR)


Evaluation of IIR through HOTR


INTELLIGENCE CYCLE


Intelligence collection requirement


Communication with customer and collection of feedback


THE MORE YOU KNOW


Contracting officers deploying to countries that lack a significant American presence can follow these steps to use intelligence tools to assess the threat environment and identify fraud, waste and abuse. (Graphic by U.S. Army Acquisition Support Center; SOURCE: the author)


Collection of relevant IIRs in support of contracting operations


Key


HOTR: Human Online Tasking Resource IIR: Intelligence information report M3: Multi Media Messenger platform


Before it was discontinued, dozens of countries had vendor lists produced for each combatant command that were vetted against existing intelligence reporting. Should the program be resumed, additional areas of growth would include analysis of risks in foreign military sales from foreign intelligence, exploitation of U.S. military hardware by foreign actors after sale to partner nations, and the use of contracted logistical support to gain access to U.S. facilities.


For more information, contact the author at russell.d.parman.civ@ mail.mil.


RUSSELL PARMAN is a foreign intelligence officer at the U.S. Army Aviation and Missile Command and a 17-year civilian member of the intelligence community (Marine Corps Intelligence Activity, Army Contracting Command G-2,


and Aviation


and Missile Command G-2). He is a National Guard captain, presently serving as an Officer Candidate School platoon trainer. He has authored academic articles, including “Te Social Roots of Terrorism” in the 2006 edition of the World of Transformations, and “Terrorism in a Unipolar World” in the 2005 McNair Research Journal. He has an M.A. in international relations and comparative politics from Vanderbilt University and a B.S. in political science from Middle Tennessee State University.


https://asc.ar my.mil 105


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