Small Wars Journal

“Why COIST Matters”

Wed, 03/25/2015 - 1:09am

“Why COIST Matters”

Victor R. Morris

Introduction

“Do you even COIST, bro?” was the question a young command post non-commissioned officer (NCO) asked one of his Soldiers. The question arose during situational exercise lane training (STX) involving platoon level patrols in the company sector. The young soldier asked his leader how he knew about the enemy’s employment of IEDs and the “hot spot” locations, which are essential to countering asymmetric threats, maintaining situational awareness and contributing to bottom-up refinement. There have been numerous debates regarding the applicability of Company Intelligence Support Teams or COISTs and the “way ahead” in future conflicts. Opinions such as “COIST is for COIN”, “COIST is not doctrine”, and “Intel is for analysts” have been widespread. In contrast, there have been positive reviews from Specialist through Brigadier General about the efficacy of COISTs in training and combat.

One of the current challenges involving COISTs stems from an overall military shift. This shift involves the reduction of counterinsurgency operations world-wide, increase of Decisive Action Training Environment rotations (DATE) and global employment utilizing Regionally Aligned Forces (RAF).  The DATE rotations support conducting Unified Land Operations in a Hybrid Threat Environment. There is a perception that COISTs are only relevant in an irregular warfare model during counterinsurgency and stability operations. Other challenges to COIST future applicability involve a lack of doctrine and ineffective task organization. The current company COIST model is not conducive to effectively engaging diverse combinations of regular and irregular forces simultaneously. Future security challenges will include multi-faceted, uncertain, complex and chaotic environments, and will require more support to information and intelligence requirements at all echelons. The initial, sustainment and pre-deployment training must be a command priority and must for formalized for future management during Army Force Generation (ARFORGEN) cycles. Finally, teams must become better integrated into company command posts during training and be better supported through more emphasis on overall mission command. COISTs must not only be maintained for future conflicts, but adapted to be better integrated and transitional within company mission command systems during Unified Land Operations involving a hybrid threat.

Background

The complexity of irregular warfare necessitated the need to have more enhanced intelligence capability at the small unit level. In conventional operations, intelligence is disseminated from higher to lower headquarters based on the presence of intelligence gathering resources. In counterinsurgency or other decentralized operations, information flows in the opposite direction, where small units gather raw information based on their operational environment. Recent counterinsurgency operations assessed that company formations needed the ability to produce intelligence to drive their operations and support higher echelon common operational picture (COP) development. This assessment was refined and given the designation “COIST” with the following mission: serve as the primary source of information and intelligence that the company commander needs to make timely accurate decisions (CALL COIST Handbook). Post-deployment after action reviews (AARs) and training assessments dictated the employment of COISTs and greatly enhanced the company’s ability to analyze, produce and disseminate accurate information and intelligence in a counterinsurgency environment. They also facilitated better situational awareness and more effective lethal and non-lethal targeting in support of the commander’s intent and overall mission.

The Shift: Unified Land Operations

In response to the current and future changes, the combat training centers and TRADOC collaborated on the development of a training model called the Decisive Action Training Environment (DATE). The current model is designated as DATE 2.1 and differs from past training rotations and pre-deployment Mission Readiness Exercises (MREs) utilized to prepare units for Iraq and Afghanistan. The model was designed to prepare tactical organizations to execute a wide range of operations as part of Unified Land Operations. The DATE model presents a complex training environment that is designed to train operationally adaptable units. The ground operations provide the ability for the unit to build competency with mission essential tasks, while re-fining standard operating procedures from the last fourteen years of combat. Next, the model drew on aspects of the contemporary operational environment, while incorporating aspects of emerging threats and security challenges. The threat to the brigade’s mission involves an emerging category of threats and activities that do not fit into the traditional understanding of conventional and unconventional war. Lastly, the DATE includes Joint, Interagency, Intergovernmental, and Multinational (JIIM) partners and a multifaceted host nation security force that presents the brigade with integration challenges and opportunities. This paradigm shift to encompass Decisive Action, Army Core Competencies and Mission Command has created debate about the applicability of COISTs during Unified Land Operations.

The Doctrine Dilemma

There have been improvements during the last eight years involving the development and implementation of COIST doctrine, but the concept is still not formalized in many company formations. It is imperative that doctrinal references be used as the basis for COIST training, AARs and standard operating procedure (SOP) development. A current doctrine review and its support to COIST operations are below:

  • 25 November 2008: Field manual 2-19.4, 1-24, Brigade Combat Team (BCT) Intelligence Operations. This section briefly mentions the need to form COISTs based on capability requirements and access to perishable information. It also highlights the fact that these teams are ad hoc and optional.
  • 23 March 2010: Field Manual 2-0 Intelligence fails to address COIST operations in detail.
  • 9 November 2010: Training Circular 2-19.63 Company Intelligence Support Team. Aside from various CALL handbooks published May 2013, this is a very detailed doctrinal publication involving COISTs. Although it was published in 2010, it acts as the doctrinal foundation for our COIST, Attack the Network, Counterinsurgency and staff training courses.
  • 15 April 2014: The revision to FM 2-0 Intelligence highlights COISTs in BCT intelligence operations (Chapter 2). Paragraphs 2-7 through 2-10 provide an overview of COIST and their contribution to intelligence sharing, enemy assessment, troop leading procedures, and mission execution. The manual also states that the MI Company may augment selected maneuver companies with MI Soldiers to form the nucleus of the COIST.
  • 10 February 2015: ATP 2-19.4, 1-24, Brigade Combat Team (BCT) Intelligence Operations. This document has been updated from the previous 2008 version and clearly frames the CoIST’s role & responsibilities.

Evaluating the Threat

Hybrid threats are not new and there are myriad examples throughout history of how adversaries organize into conventional and irregular forces. A hybrid threat (HT) is defined as the diverse and dynamic combination of regular forces, irregular forces, and/or crimi­nal elements all unified to achieve mutually benefitting effects (TC 7-100). The term “hybrid” has recently been used to illustrate the increased complexity of war, the multiplici­ty of actors involved, and the blurring between traditional categories of conflict. Contemporary hybrid warfare involves a multiplicity of actors employing a combination of hybrid instruments facilitated by 21st century technologies and combinations of conventional and irregular forces. Hybrid threats are characterized by the combination of forces, which can further be defined as conventional military, insurgent (cellular networks) or criminal organizations. To be a hybrid, these forces cooperate in the context of pursuing their own internal objectives, which further complicate the unit’s mission and need for increased situational awareness and understanding. A recent example of this threat can be seen in Buenos Aires, Argentina. On August 10, 2014, Troops of Apolo Task Force, Third Army Division, discovered a complex illegal structure which operated in La Esperanza village, Buenos Aires municipality, Cauca. On site, troops fought against a group of guerrillas and when they retreated, troops searched the area and located a 200 m2 structure which had been adapted to manufacture explosives and process coca paste. This facility was reported to be the property of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC). This event is evidence of the close relation between drug trafficking and FARC, and the way this criminal structure intends to strengthen its capabilities by using explosive devices. Below are some of the goals associated with hybrid threats:

  • Removal of forces from their area of operations.
  • Degrade and exhaust forces rather than cause a direct military defeat.
  • Use of a dynamic variety of conventional and unconventional methods to create multiple dilemmas.
  • Prevent opponents from segregating the conflict into easily assailable parts. In many cases military action is the least important of the hybrid threat’s activities.
  • Rapidly form, transform, adapt and abolish cells based on requirements, environment and opponents.
  • Simultaneously inject themselves into all of the operational variables in the OE (PMESII-PT).
  • Adhere to ensuring security, accomplishing the task, maintaining adaptability, and remaining connected to the people.
  • Preserve bases to train, self-sustain, prepare for future missions and evolve organizational capability.
  • Initiate strategic consequences of denying an enemy a secure area, or making it politically untenable to remain.
  • Create a dilemma where an army is vulnerable to conventional attack when it disperses to combat irregular forces within the population, and cede control of the operational environment and population if they remain concentrated.

Training to Counter the Threat

COISTs must possess core competencies associated with engaging actors in a hybrid environment. The below tasks are associated with offensive, defensive and stability operations in a static or mobile command post during operations. The core competencies can also be aligned with a COIST framework consisting of the following spheres: Mission, Purpose and Function, Task Organization, Core Tasks, Situational Development and Understanding, Support to Targeting and Assessment. The framework is nested in the Mission Command and Intelligence Warfighting Functions for complimentary effects. The below list is not all inclusive and is subject to change based on the mission and commander’s discretion.

Traditional or Conventional Threat: Regular Military Forces as a threat the regulated armed forces of a state or alliance of states with the speci­fied function of military offensive and defensive capabilities. These forces may have matching capabilities across all war-fighting functions.

COIST Core Competencies: Intelligence Preparation of the Battlefield (IPB) involving detailed terrain analysis, various intelligence disciplines to included TECHINT, OSINT, SIGINT, GEOINT and HUMINT, template and company graphic management (analog and BFT), PIR, SIR, CCIR management, ISR program management, proper enabler utilization (task/purpose), information assurance management (cyber defense), airspace/ground integration, planning on the move contribution and direct support to the orders process, which is condensed during high-tempo operations.

Irregular or Unconventional Threat: Irregular forces as armed individuals or groups who are not members of the regular armed forces, police, or other internal security forces (JP 3-24). These forces include: paramilitary, insurgent, guerilla, terrorist and criminal elements. At the tactical level, they can apply tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTPs) common to regular forces but do so with asymmetric applications. The definition of irregular warfare highlights population centric engagement and intention to damage an opponent’s influence over that population.

COIST Core Competencies: IPB with an emphasis on understanding trends, patterns, human networks (to include criminal), culture and perceptions of the community within the environments, various intelligence disciplines, Weapons Technical Intelligence (WTI), OSINT with a social media emphasis, SIGINT, GEOINT and HUMINT. All of the above competencies support situational awareness and support to targeting.

Lessons Learned

James K. Greer’s article from the Small Wars Journal entitled “The Network vs. the BCT: Organizational Overmatch in Hybrid Strategies” analyzes the concept of more modular approaches at the tactical level specifically involving “cellular companies.” In summary, he suggests that we must become a cellular network in order to respond to future threats. This is accomplished through a deviation from the current relatively fixed company identity to a “cellular company” that operates off of rule sets enabled by a robust information and intelligence cell. This cell is an augmentation of the information mission command system. He also states that the company should be able to gain or lose modules many times in a day without losing the coherence of operations, as tasks and engagements are conducted simultaneously and sequentially.

As an Infantry Company Commander during OIF 09-10, we conducted operations in a similar model. For example, we had one platoon conducting route security patrols (C-IED), one platoon conducting host nation security force EOD training, one platoon conducting indirect fire disruption patrols in a targeted area of interest, and one platoon designated as a company or battalion quick reaction force. Based on the situation and operations tempo, these patrols could be happening sequentially or simultaneously. Additionally, each module has its own set of enablers, which had to be planned and managed properly. The “dynamic re-tasking” occurred when host nation security forces required tactical support from U.S. forces. Typically, Commanders were given six to eight hours to dynamically re-task the company to support host nation battalion level operations. This re-tasking meant consolidating and re-organizing the platoons or “cells” back at the operating base and finalizing the troop leading procedures. The majority of the time the mission was to conduct a company level clearance of an urban area. In other offensive terms, we conducted company movements to contact whilst partnered with host nation forces. The threat was asymmetrical at the time, but this can easily be applied to a more conventional or hybrid threat. The OPORD was completed and briefed within three to four hours of the company WARNO. The company essentially went from conducting de-centralized stability operations to centralized offensive operations in six hours with direct support from the headquarters section. COIST employment begins with the company command team and the commander’s mission command philosophy and system management.

Mission Command Systems: COIST 2020 Initiatives

The solution to effective and adaptable companies lies within mission command. ADP 6-0 defines Mission Command as the exercise of authority and direction by the commander using mission orders to enable disciplined initiative within the commander’s intent to empower agile and adaptive leaders in the conduct of unified land operations. Additionally, mission command system consists of five components: personnel, networks, information systems, processes and procedures, facilities and equipment. All of these components are contained in the company command post module. That module is contained in the headquarters section with the commander as the backbone of mission command.

Due to the nature of the future operational environment, the current state of company command posts and COIST cells are not effective due to a lack of effective integration. They should not only be combined, but augmented through experience and capability—not personnel. The efficacy of this technique comes from a synchronization of the five components of mission command in one module with intelligence as a centralized function. The module or node is the command post, the cells are the headquarters section/platoons, and the network is the company. One of the primary arguments with COIST training and employment involves creating cells “out of hide” and taking soldier from line platoons. All the mission-command capabilities are already present in the headquarters section of a maneuver company/troop/battery, which includes the 35 series MOS intelligence soldier, Armored, Infantry, and Stryker formations. Mission command capabilities can also be modified or augmented in non-maneuver companies as seen in Chapter 9 of the CALL COIST Handbook No. 13-09, May 2013. This is not to say that a soldier from the line cannot be transferred to or from the section, but the capabilities are already there and are adaptable. If you are conducting combined arms maneuver through high-tempo operations, the commander is fighting mounted through a multi-vehicle TAC or in a dismounted configuration. There is no “COIST vehicle” and those skill sets are executed via the personnel and systems present on the various TAC vehicles. If you transition to wide area security, the entire module along with the systems transitions to a tent or hard stand building. Company intelligence must be synchronized with current operations and reporting, based on all of the preparation and assessments conducted prior to the mission. The emphasis comes from a previous planning knowledge involving friendly maneuver, enemy courses of action, information requirements and enabler integration. Accurate reporting is decisive in high-tempo operations and must be concise for proper common operational picture development. Doesn’t it make sense for the soldiers collecting and analyzing the information before the mission, to report it during and after the mission?

All modular configurations of the command post must be able to receive, distribute and analyze information. They must also be able to recommend courses of action and integrate resources. All of this is accomplished through one mission command module that includes the company intelligence aspect. Intelligence is innate at the company level based on recent combat operations. There is no longer a need to differentiate Command Posts from COISTs because their missions are synonymous. We need to train with increased capability in mind, in lieu of increased personnel or equipment. Strong companies with strong leaders have the ability to “do more with less”.

Conclusion

In conclusion, companies have evolved from recent combat operations and must continue to evolve and adapt based on the future threats involving security. Time-honored concepts of conventional and unconventional war involving traditional methods have no meaning to a hybrid threat beyond their ability to be used against its opponents. The skill sets required to combat this threat must be standardized and maintained at the company level. Operations at the tactical level directly correlate to the success or failure of a campaign, where success is gained through enhancing the situational awareness in tactical units at the company/troop/battery level. All of the principles contained in this article are applicable to maneuver and non-maneuver companies alike. Whether you are utilizing Company Intelligence Support Team (COIST), Company-Level Intelligence Cell (CLIC), Company Intelligence Cell (CIC), or Intelligence Support Team (IST), you must be cellular and adaptive in order to support higher echelon requirements and the mission in a highly dynamic operational environment.

References

  1. Center for Army Lessons Learned (CALL) Handbook No. 13-09: Company Intelligence Support Team Update May 2013.
  1. Field manual 2-19.4, 1-24, Brigade Combat Team (BCT) Intelligence Operations 25 November 2008.
  1. Field Manual 2-0 Intelligence 23 March 2010 and 15 April 2014.
  1. Training Circular 2-19.63 Company Intelligence Support Team 9 November 2010.
  1. ATP 3-90.37 Combined Arms Counter-Improvised Explosive Device Operations.
  1. ATP 3-21.11, SBCT Rifle Company 3rd QTR FY 15 (pending).
  1. Training Circular 7-10 Hybrid Threat November 2010.
  1. Super-cities threaten to swallow humanity The Independent August 2014.
  1. The Network vs. the BCT: Organizational Overmatch in Hybrid Strategies, James K. Greer Small Wars Journal November 2013.

About the Author(s)

Victor R. Morris is an irregular warfare and threat mitigation instructor at the Joint Multinational Readiness Center in Germany. He has conducted partnered training in sixteen European nations, with four NATO centers of excellence, and at the NATO Joint Warfare Center. A civilian contractor and former U.S. Army officer, he has experience in both capacities in Iraq and Afghanistan. Twitter: @vicrasta3030

Comments

Vicrasta

Sat, 04/15/2017 - 1:02pm

A Small Wars Journal and Military Writers Guild Writing Contest Finalist Article

Are Small Wars Just Big Wars That Are Smaller?: Why Our Conventional Wisdom About Small Wars Leaves Us Learning Little

“Organizing for intelligence” and “smart and innovative companies have developed in-house intelligence sections” makes sense to me, because I assert that small wars should be company-centric. Having said that, however, I suspect Kilcullen’s purpose for this is for targeting. I would assert that in small wars shared learning is a key requirement and that means that a company’s in-house intel section’s main purpose during small wars is to assist its higher headquarters in learning. “Taking stock regularly” is just another big wars tool that is improperly and disastrously applied to small wars. Metrics in paradoxical and contradictory environments can be very illusory and many times these efforts result in obstacles to learning as they become corrupted by legacy systems and processes that serve other political interests."

Vicrasta

Tue, 05/26/2015 - 4:30pm

In reply to by SGM97B

SGM thank you for your response and for your innovation which has become a significant combat multiplier and catalyst for the evolution of company level operations in the 21st century. I started with COIST as a PL in 2007 during the surge (4/2ID JBLM, WA) and continue to teach it now as an enduring capability for our NATO and PfP partners. I have also been very impressed with the USMC's ability to evolve and adapt rapidly with regard to doctrine development and implementation.

First, I agree with your points about COIST being an organic asset from the unit. I re-iterated that point in my previous comment with regard to the analysts not being the single point of success or failure for the unit. COISTs "aren't going away" due to MICO task organization shifts and lack of command influence. I also agree that Infantrymen (and other MOSs) can be taught basic analytical skill sets and would argue they are ready for more advanced training based on combat experience, enduring CTC training and threat evolution. They HAVE to be.

Secondly, my argument with regard to the "detachment" discussion is contained in the main article which fuses intelligence support to operations into the company mission command system. They cannot be detached if they are an organic component of the CP module (HQ soldiers who are closest to the CDR and 1SG anyway). During ULO, COIST is in the fight and carries the same BTL Rhythm as the rest of the platoons, albeit with different priorities of work.

Additionally, I'm glad to see that we share the same thoughts with regard to COIST being a Commander's and PL's asset. They are crutial in providing SA/SU and CDRs intent for disciplined initiative during extremely decentralized operations. Conversely, they are the central mission command node that supports the commander's fire and maneuver planning and execution during centralized operations. They are the hinge for effective ULO transition.

Finally, my charge to you involves providing accurate and realistic intelligence support to company operations for our Eastern European partners conducting real world operations. As much as I would like to say that flutter kicks and low crawls make a difference, what they desperately need is a method to better share information and intelligence from the front line to support their superior leader's decisionmaking. They also need to share that information adjacently to their sister elements in adjacent sectors. How do we apply an effective COIST model to the nonlinear battlefield where overmatching conventional military means are resulting in loss of life, and are coupled with nonmilitary means achieving other detrimental effects above the tactical level? An additional obstacle involves top down, compartmentalized Soviet era intelligence models not conducive to bottom-up intelligence refinement. I'd like some help with this and here or offline is fine.

Thank you again for your continued contributions to effective company level operations.

I am the guy that started CoIST (it was originally called Company Level Intel Cell or CLIC for short) in the Army as the S2 SGM of the Asymmetric Warfare Group. Others were dabbling with the idea at the same time. I also worked closely with the USMC who went one step further and created Ops/Intel fusion cells at the company level.

Where did the idea come from? I was embedded with a separate MP company that had no effective Intel support. They were going outside the wire completely blind to the threat. I trained two promotable Staff Sergeants to conduct basic collection, analysis, and production during a couple long nights when things were fairly quiet. I published a White Paper called, "Roll your Own", which explained the capability gap and the potential solution. A team from AWG expanded on my ideas and then we pitched it to a brigade at Fort Lewis. The commander liked the concept so we quickly put together a five-day and a seven-day training program. The extra two days was if the unit wanted additional training on software solutions (CIDNE, WebTas, Falconview, and Crystal Reports). Of course it is bigger and more complex now then it was in the beginning.

The original concept, and I stand by the wisdom of it, was for the CoIST to be organic assets from the unit. Nobody knows what Intel an Infantryman needs except another Infantryman. It is far easier to teach (not train) an Infantry, MP, engineer, or whatever, Soldier to do basic analysis than it is to teach an Intel Soldier every other MOS that exists. These CoIST Soldiers would continue to go outside the wire with their platoon on a routine basis to stay fresh and in the fight. Another poster is completely right when he says that a CoIST can become detached from the line platoon. That is why I fought to prevent the MI Corps from making CoIST positions CMF 35 Soldiers across the board. The reason the original CoIST elements were so effective is that they were looking at the threat from a completely different perspective from the professional MI Soldier that is trained to do things one way. The original concept called for the organic CoIST element to be the link between the company and the battalion S2, not to be a part of it.

I completely oppose pulling the CoIST up under a MICO. CoIST is the company commander and platoon leaders' asset and they MUST be organic troops from the line unit; not just in support of it. There is a huge difference.

I trained five brigades and then we embedded with those five and many more after I passed off that mission. Our observations were that Soldiers organic to the unit had far more credibility with the commander, had the trust of the Soldiers in the line platoons, and had a better "feel" for what was going on in the AO that they patrolled then non-organic MI Soldiers pushed down from the brigade or battalion did.

Vicrasta

Tue, 05/26/2015 - 4:31pm

In reply to by Gruse

Gruse,

A very detailed response to the COIST assessment which I believe addresses a myriad of accurate concerns. The "prisoners to products" mentality is certainly a pitfall and can consume the COIST in what we would consider Staff type work. It's the CDRs prerogative most likely as a former Staff Officer to say "this is what I want and how I want it". There is no time for slides during a condensed offensive BTL Rhythm where the CDR can rely on the COIST to provide an enemy COA sketch on the skirt of a tank or stryker in chalk before enabler status checks and SP. This is the intra-company sharing that you mention and is crutial. F2F brief before the company crosses the LD in support of the Commander's OPORD review, CONOP or FRAGO.

I disagree with the point saying a HQ COIST is so far away from a rifle squad or vehicle crew. Maybe in the days of superfobs, but not the case in an AA, defensive position or early stage outpost. I also disagree that PLs see it as a box check. In our modern Army, the Lieutenants are the hungriest (not excluding company level NCOs) and see COIST as a way to feed their knowledge and planning efficacy. They also have a peer in the COIST through the FSO or XO..who acts as a sounding board in addition to their PSG. It is there, they can clarify guidance about the CDRs intent, higher echelon reporting requirements and their favorite topics "ISR, CAS and Fires".

Lastly, your final point makes a great deal of sense and is echoed in the article points about evolution and company intelligence being innate. The every soldier as a sensor still applies and all individual nodes are plugged into the modules, which are plug into the company network. HQ soldiers do have a combat job which involves various jobs within the company TAC which hopefully don't involve .ppts

Mr. Morris,

A very well thought out technical proposal, though I feel there is one danger in COISTs that deserves highlighting: the more capable they become, the more platoon and company level leadership tend to lean on the COIST as a intelligence staff function, and begin to abdicate their own responsibilities to intelligence because "COIST does that."

It is, of course, very human. After a hundred plus patrols in the first quarter of a deployment, even the best junior leaders are looking for a way to lighten their load. The time pressures of a dynamic action/high intensity environment will always see leaders looking for ways to save time without compromising what they see as their duty. Unfortunately, the COIST in these situations can rapidly become a crutch, with hotspots and network diagrams replacing the bone-deep human knowledge you want in your squad and platoon leaders in COIN, or the truly critical thought on just how the enemy is going to go about killing you in high intensity, and the intra-company sharing of intelligence and trends gets boiled down to a lifeless staff product.

In short, the COIST quite accidentally becomes a beast to be fed more than a supporting function, and this only increases as it grows larger and its personnel grow further detached from the line. A "permanent" COIST of HQ platoon and the FSO, plus a 35 if the BN provides, is already so far away from the average rifle squad or vehicle crew that they demonstrably do not use it and tend to think of it's members as rear area soldiers with more reporting requirements. The platoon leaders tend to see it as a box-check, not the commander's direct tool for intelligence.

As a counter-proposal, I would say draw the COIST entirely from line personnel - and leave them with their patrolling and fighting elements to continue to witness the AO. COISTing becomes a duty, not a position. At most, one analyst and a UAV operator from the HQ platoon, but everyone else needs a combat job - though I imagine a lot of FSOs will end up being COIST-Os. It keeps the COIST honest, interested, and aware and keeps the line in the mindset that the COIST is, in fact, a way to process information and share ideas on the AO, not just a staff function interfering at the company level and forwarding the S2's power-points.

Scott Kinner

Thu, 04/02/2015 - 1:23pm

Well, if it is any help, the Marine Corps has already written CLICs into doctrine and have changed the infantry company manning documents to place permanent intelligence analysts within the company HQ (reference MCWP 3-11.1 Inf Co Ops).

The current debate in the infantry and intelligence communities within the Marine Corps is how best to double down on this - probably by adding more intelligence trained personnel of greater experience and rank while increasing reachback capabilities as the Marine Corps moves further towards making the infantry company the basic unit of employment (reference Expeditionary Force 21).

There is debate on how best to train and maintain proficiency for intelligence personnel permanently assigned to infantry companies - but not whether they should be there.

Vicrasta

Wed, 03/25/2015 - 3:17pm

Scott,

Thank you for the feedback and I agree that the core competencies need to be clarified in their current context. The awareness (where to access them on-line) and "fusion" of the various "INT" reports into analysis is what I was trying to capture, which you did concisely. I should also differentiate TECHINT from site exploitation and DOMEX which is a critical skill and SOP for company and below operations. COIST and key leaders should be closely integrated with HCTs, LEPs, WITs, EOD and analysts so they need to be aware of the basic intelligence capabilities and disciplines to complement those assets. I agree that the cyber aspect and AGI is well above the scope, so an awareness of cyber-enabled intelligence and reporting requirements is probably sufficient for COISTs. If COISTs/CPs are the same module, then they may be required to coordinate aviation assets (AWT/SWT) before or during an operation, which is what I think you clarify in your last statement.

In my experience the relationship between the COIST and 35 series representative was not an issue. We did not have a permanent analyst at the company level, but had a dedicated rep/liaison at the BN level. The COIST and analyst had a deliberate relationship that included face to face BTL Rhythm working groups (Company and BN CPs), but was often times limited to email, phone, internet relay chat or O&I net based on OPTEMPO, competing echelon requirements and transitioning between CAM and WAS. As long as that nexus is created, standardized and maintained the company can operate without robust intelligence analyst presence in the company.The analysts are an invlauable asset, but not a single point of success or failure for tactical intelligence support to operations.

Greywolf

Wed, 03/25/2015 - 12:55pm

Mr. Morris,

Good rundown on the importance of maintaining COIST elements in all types of conflicts.

One change that the Army has proposed is to move all COIST personnel to the MICO, where they would establish a COIST platoon (21 pax) comprised entirely of 35F intel analysts. This should work well to ensure the COIST members receive the training and professional development they need, but means they will have less synergy with the company that they will ultimately support in combat. Additionally, 21 personnel will not be enough to staff all 3 infantry BNs, Cav Sqdn, and other units that may be employed as a maneuver company; meaning other augmentation from non-intel MOS personnel will likely be needed.

Regrading the Core Competencies that you list above, I think you are being a little too ambitious. COIST are not qualified to collect or conduct single source analysis of TECHINT, SIGINT, GEOINT and HUMINT. What they can do is receive those reports from higher and fuse them into their analysis. They also are not qualified nor authorized to conduct cyber defense or airspace/ground integration. These things are not even done by a battalion S2 section; they are far beyond the scope of COIST.

COIST that are proficient in IPB, ISR planning, and Intelligence current operations to include tracking the battle and managing the current ISR fight would go a long way in assisting the company commander with mission accomplishment. Mastering the basics would be a major improvement over the current state of competency.

Sincerely,

Scott