Army Foreign Intelligence Assistance Program

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"The majority of government operations can be classified into one or more of the following general types: a) Meeting engagements; b) Attacks; c) Defense; d) Ambushes; e) Raids; f ) Pursuit actions; g) Interception actions; h) Terror Operations."[1]
"U.S. component provides advisory personnel and mobile training teams to advise, train and provide operational assistance for paramilitary forces."[2]
"1. You must select those objectives most likely to successfully counter the insurgency while leaving your government in power....
2. You may not employ mass counter-terror (as opposed to selective counter—terror) against the civilian population, i.e., genocide is not an alternative.
3. You must maintain, to the greatest extent possible, production on the area’s plantations, because continuation of this production is vital to Centralia’s economy."[3]

The US Army Foreign Intelligence Assistance Program, was a 1960s program. One part was "Project X", a military effort to create intelligence field manuals drawn from counterinsurgency experience in Vietnam, specifically from the CIA's Phoenix program in South Vietnam, an assassination program designed to identify and "neutralize" the infrastructure of the Viet Cong. The manuals influenced the "KUBARK Counterintelligence Interrogation-July 1963", "Human Resource Exploitation Training Manual-1983"[4] as well as intelligence manuals used at the School of the Americas.[5]

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