This article describes three distinct, but related terms: military operations, Operations as military events, and operational level of war.
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Military operations is the application of policy, planning, management, and administration principles in employment of military forces and resources (for example in a Military campaign) in daily formation and unit activities to achieve a specific goals or objectives. This is a concept, and should not be confused with military Operations as events. It involves the planning, mobilization of forces, the intelligence process of collecting, analyzing and disseminating of information, allocating resource and determining time requirements.
A military operation can involve the carrying out of a strategic or operational manoeuvre through management of logistic movement of forces. In general tactical are used to refer to ,military combat operations on military missions which are the subset of military operations.
In the process of carrying out the operation the forces may require provision of services, training, or administrative functions to allow them to commence, continue and end combat, including in the conduct of movement, supply, attack, defense, and maneuvres needed to achieve operation's objectives in a battle or a campaign.
Most military operations have distinct process features that must reach achieved milestones for the operation to progress. As a shortlist these features in a strategic operation are:
Military operations are the combat executions of military plans often referred to by a code name for the purpose of security. Military operations are often known for their more generally accepted common usage names then their actual operational objectives.
Parallel to and reflecting this framework for operations are organized elements within the armed forces which prepare for and conduct operations at various levels of war. While there is a general correlation between the size of units, the area within which they operate, and the scope of mission the perform, the correlation is not absolute. In fact, it is ultimately the mission that a unit performs that determines the level of war within which it operates.[1]
Military operations can be classified by the scale and scope of force employment, and their impact on the wider conflict. The scope of military operations can be:
The operational level of war occupies roughly the middle ground between the campaign's strategic focus and the tactics of an engagement. It describes "a distinct intermediate level of war between military strategy, governing war in general, and tactics, involving individual battles."[2] For example during World War II the concept applied to use of Soviet Tank Armies.[3]
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