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NATO Joint Military Symbology

NATO Joint Military Symbology is the NATO standard for military map symbols. Originally published in 1986 as Allied Procedural Publication 6 (APP-6), NATO Military Symbols for Land Based Systems, the standard has evolved over the years and is currently in its fifth version (APP-6D). The symbols are designed to enhance NATO's joint interoperability by providing a standard set of common symbols. APP-6 constituted a single system of joint military symbology for land, air, space and sea-based formations and units, which can be displayed for either automated map display systems or for manual map marking. It covers all of the joint services and can be used by them.

History edit

The first basic military map symbols began to be used by western armies in the decades following the end of the Napoleonic Wars. During World War I, there was a degree of harmonisation between the British and French systems, including the adoption of the colour red for enemy forces and blue for allies; the British had previously used red for friendly troops because of the traditional red coats of British soldiers. However, the system now in use is broadly based on that devised by the US Army Corps of Engineers in 1917. The infantry symbol of a saltire in a rectangle was said to symbolise the crossed belts of an infantryman, while the single diagonal line for cavalry was said to represent the sabre belt. With the formation of NATO in 1949, the US Army system was standardized and adapted, with different shapes for friendly (blue rectangle), hostile (red diamond) and unknown (yellow quatrefoil) forces.[1]

APP-6A was promulgated in December 1999. The NATO standardization agreement that covers APP-6A is STANAG 2019 (edition 4), promulgated in December 2000. APP-6A replaced APP-6 (last version, July 1986), which had been promulgated in November 1984 (edition 3 of STANAG 2019 covered APP-6), and was replaced in turn by Joint Symbology APP-6(B) (APP-6B) in 2008 (STANAG 2019 edition 5, June 2008) and NATO Joint Military Symbology APP-6(C) (APP-6C) in 2011 (STANAG 2019 edition 6, May 2011).

The U.S. is the current custodian of APP-6A, which is equivalent to MIL-STD-2525A.

Symbol sets edit

The APP-6A standard provides common operational symbology along with details on their display and plotting to ensure the compatibility, and to the greatest extent possible, the interoperability of NATO land component command, control, communications, computer, and intelligence (C4I) systems, development, operations, and training. APP-6A addresses the efficient transmission of symbology information through the use of a standard methodology for symbol hierarchy, information taxonomy, and symbol identifiers.

APP-6A recognises five broad sets of symbols, each set using its own SIDC (Symbol identification coding) scheme:

  • Units, equipment, and installations
  • Military operations (tactical graphics)
  • METOC (meteorological and oceanographic)
  • Signals intelligence
  • MOOTW (military operations other than war)

Units, equipment, and installations consist of icons, generally framed, associated with a single point on the map. All sorts of graphical and textual modifiers may surround them, specifying categories, quantities, dates, direction of movement, etc.

Tactical graphics represent operational information that cannot be presented via icon-based symbols alone: unit boundaries, special area designations, and other unique markings related to battlespace geometry and necessary for battlefield planning and management. There are point, line and area symbols in this category.

Meteorological and oceanographic symbology is the only set not under the standard's control: rather, they are imported from the symbology established by the World Meteorological Organization.

The signals intelligence and military operations other than war symbology sets stand apart from Units, Equipment, and Installations although they obey the same conventions (i.e., they consist of framed symbols associated to points on the map). They do not appear in APP-6A proper, having been introduced by MIL-STD-2525B.

Symbol composition edit

Most of the symbols designate specific points, and consist of a frame (a geometric border), a fill, a constituent icon, and optional symbol modifiers. The latter are optional text fields or graphic indicators that provide additional information.

The frame provides a visual indication of the affiliation, battle dimension, and status of an operational object. The use of shape and colour is redundant, allowing the symbology to be used under less-than-ideal conditions such as a monochrome red display to preserve the operator's night vision. Nearly all symbols are highly stylised and can be drawn by persons almost entirely lacking in artistic skill; this allows one to draw a symbolic representation (a GRAPHREP, Graphical report) using tools as rudimentary as plain paper and pencil.

The frame serves as the base to which other symbol components and modifiers are added. In most cases a frame surrounds an icon. One major exception is equipment, which may be represented by icons alone (in which case the icons are coloured as the frame would be).

The fill is the area within a symbol. If the fill is assigned a colour, it provides an enhanced (redundant) presentation of information about the affiliation of the object. If colour is not used, the fill is transparent. A very few icons have fills of their own, which are not affected by affiliation.

The icons themselves, finally, can be understood as combinations of elementary glyphs that use simple composition rules, in a manner reminiscent of some ideographic writing systems such as Chinese. The standard, however, still attempts to provide an "exhaustive" listing of possible icons instead of laying out a dictionary of component glyphs. This causes operational problems when the need for an unforeseen symbol arises (particularly in MOOTW), a problem exacerbated by the administratively centralised maintenance of the symbology sets.

When rendering symbols with the fill on, APP-6A calls for the frame and icon to be black or white (as appropriate for the display). When rendering symbols with the fill off, APP-6A calls for a monochrome frame and icon (usually black or in accordance with the affiliation colour). NATO symbols can also be rendered with fill off using a frame coloured according to affiliation and a black icon,[2] though this is not defined in any APP-6 standard.

Allegiance and affiliation edit

APP-6 colour representation edit

The concept of affiliation does not appear in the original APP-6 as these were not introduced until APP-6A. Instead, the original APP-6 described a series of "colour representations" with the purpose of distinguishing friendly and enemy elements.

  • Multi-colour representation:
    • Blue or black for friendly icons
    • Red for enemy icons
    • Green for man-made obstacles (friendly or enemy)
    • Yellow for chemical, biological, radiological or nuclear events
    • Other colours to be established in a map legend
  • Tri-colour representation:
    • Blue or black for friendly icons
    • Red for enemy icons
    • Green or yellow for man-made obstacles (friendly or enemy) and for chemical, biological, radiological or nuclear events
  • Two colour representation:
    • Blue, green, or black for friendly icons
    • Red for enemy icons
  • One colour representation:
    • Single line border for friendly icons
    • Double line border for enemy icons, and unbordered icons were labeled with "EN" to the lower right corner

APP-6A affiliation edit

Affiliation refers to the relationship of the tracker to the operational object being represented. The basic affiliation categories are unknown, friend, neutral, and hostile. In the ground unit domain, a yellow quatrefoil frame is used to denote unknown affiliation, a blue rectangle frame to denote friendly affiliation, a green square frame to denote neutral affiliation, and a red diamond frame to denote hostile affiliation.[3]: 11  In the other domains (air and space, sea surface and subsurface, etc.), the same color scheme is used.

Style Friendly Hostile Neutral Unknown
Fill on        
Monochrome (for digital media)        
Monochrome (for print media)        

The full set of affiliations is:

  • Pending (P)
  • Unknown (U)
  • Assumed friend (A)
  • Friend (F)
  • Neutral (N)
  • Suspect (S) (assumed hostile)
  • Hostile (H)
  • Exercise pending (G)
  • Exercise unknown (W)
  • Exercise assumed friend (M)
  • Exercise friend (D)
  • Exercise neutral (L)
  • Exercise suspect (J)
  • Exercise hostile (K) There are no "assumed neutral" and "exercise assumed neutral" affiliations.

These colors are used in phrases such as "blue on blue" for friendly fire, blue force tracking, red teaming, and Red Cells.

Battle dimension edit

Battle dimension defines the primary mission area for the operational object within the battlespace. An object can have a mission area above the Earth's surface (i.e., in the air or outer space), on it, or below it. If the mission area of an object is on the surface, it can be either on land or sea. The subsurface dimension concerns those objects whose mission area is below the sea surface (e.g., submarines and sea mines). Some cases require adjudication; for example, an Army or Marine helicopter unit is a maneuvering unit (i.e., a unit whose ground support assets are included) and is thus represented in the land dimension. Likewise, a landing craft whose primary mission is ferrying personnel or equipment to and from shore is a maritime unit and is represented in the sea surface dimension. A landing craft whose primary mission is to fight on land, on the other hand, is a ground asset and is represented in the land dimension.

Closed frames are used to denote the land and sea surface dimensions, frames open at the bottom denote the air/space dimension, and frames open at the top denote the subsurface dimension.

Dimension Friendly Hostile Neutral Unknown
Air and space        
Ground        
Sea surface        
Subsurface        

An unknown battle dimension is possible; for example, some electronic warfare signatures (e.g., radar systems) are common to several battle dimensions and would therefore be assigned an "Unknown" battle dimension until further discrimination becomes possible. Special forces may operate in any dimension.

The full set of battle dimensions is, in ascending order of distance from Earth center:

  • SOF (F)
  • Sea subsurface (U)
  • Sea surface (S)
  • Ground (G)
  • Air (A)
  • Space (P)
  • Other (X)
  • Unknown (Z)

The mnemonic for this ordering is "Fuss-Gap".

The letter in parentheses is used by the symbol identification coding (SIDC) scheme – strings of 15 characters used to transmit symbols.

The space and air battle dimensions share a single frame shape. In the ground battle dimension, two different frames are used for the friendly (and assumed friendly) affiliations in order to distinguish between units and equipment. The SOF (special operations forces) are assigned their own battle dimension because they typically can operate across several domains (air, ground, sea surface and subsurface) in the course of a single mission; the frames are the same as for the ground (unit) battle dimension.[4]: 47–48  The other battle dimension, finally, seems to be reserved for future use (there are no instances of its use as of 2525B Change 1).

Status edit

The status of a symbol refers to whether a warfighting object exists at the location identified (i.e., status is "present") or will in the future reside at that location (i.e., status is "planned, anticipated, suspected," or "on order"). Regardless of affiliation, present status is indicated by a solid line and planned status by a dashed line. The frame is solid or dashed, unless the symbol icon is unframed, in which case the icon itself is drawn dashed. Planned status cannot be shown if the symbol is an unframed filled icon.

Icon placement edit

The icon is the innermost part of a symbol which, when displayed, provides an abstract pictorial or alphanumeric representation of an operational object. The icon portrays the role or mission performed by the object. APP-6A distinguishes between icons that must be framed or unframed and icons where framing is optional.[3]: 39–43  APP-6A defined a standard octagon boundary within each map symbol frame. This octagon is not actually shown when symbols are drawn or rendered but, with a few defined exceptions, all icons inside the frame would also fit inside these octagons. APP-6C modified some symbol frames from previous editions of the standard. From top to bottom, here is the symbol boundary shown inside the APP-6C frames of space elements, air elements, land units, land equipment and surface sea elements, and sub-surface sea elements.

 

Unit symbols edit

Unit icon modifiers edit

Unit symbols can be used independently as well as in combinations. There are also some symbols that cannot appear by themselves, but can only be used to modify other unit symbols:

Modifier meaning Friendly Hostile Neutral Unknown Notes
Airborne         In APP-6 was including air assault and paratrooper forces; since APP-6A is specifically parachute forces
Parachute         Symbol used in APP-6, not used in APP-6A and later editions
Airmobile        
Airmobile with organic lift        
Amphibious        
Motorized        
Mountain        
Cannon or gun system equipped        
Wheeled and cross-country capable        

Unit basic icons edit

Land unit icons require a frame.

Unit type[5] Friendly Hostile Neutral Unknown Notes
Air defence         Evocative of a protective dome
Ammunition         Stylised breech-loaded, rimmed cartridge or shell
Anti-tank         Representing a concentrated, piercing action
Armour         Stylized tank treads
Artillery         A cannonball
Rotary-wing aviation         Blurred, spinning helicopter blades
Fixed wing aviation         Air screw
Bridging         Topographical map symbol for a bridge
Combat service support        
Combined manoeuvre arms         Introduced in APP-6C for an organization of infantry and armour; it is a hybrid of the two symbols
Engineer         Letter E on its side. Possibly: Stylised bridge
Electronic ranging         Simplified parabolic antenna
Electronic warfare        
Explosive ordnance disposal        
Fuel, or petroleum, oil, and lubricants (POL)         Simplified funnel
Hospital         Derivative of the medical symbol below superimposed with "H"
HQ unit         This is the HQ unit, not the HQ itself. An HQ's physical position is represented by an empty rectangle with a line extending down from bottom left.
Infantry         Evocative of the crossed bandoliers of Napoleonic infantry
Maintenance         Stylised wrench
Medical         Evocative of the Red Cross symbol
Meteorological        
Missile         Simplified missile
Mortar         Projectile with a vertical arrow symbolizing mortar's high arc trajectory
Military police        
Navy         Anchor
CBRN defence         Simplified crossed retorts, the principal elements in the insignia of the U.S. Army Chemical Corps
Ordnance         Derived from crossed cannon behind a disc
Radar         Stylised lightning flash and parabolic dish
Psychological operations         Electronic schematic symbol for loudspeaker, evocative of propaganda
Reconnaissance or cavalry         Inspired by the cavalry's sabre strap
Signals         Simplified lightning flash, evocative of radio signals (likewise used in the radar symbol above)
Special forces        
Special operations forces        
Supply        
Topographical         Stylised sextant
Transportation         Simplified wheel
Unmanned air vehicle         Flying wing silhouette

Modified unit icons edit

Some of the most common combinations are:

Modified symbol Meaning
  Mountain infantry; examples: Italy's Alpini, Germany's Gebirgsjäger, France's Chasseurs Alpins, Poland's Podhale Rifles, US 86th Infantry Brigade Combat Team, Ukraine's 128th Transcarpathian Brigade
  Parachute infantry; examples: 82nd Airborne Division (United States), Fallschirmjäger_(Bundeswehr) (Germany), example: Fallschirmjägerregiment 26 (https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fallschirmj%C3%A4gerregiment_26), VDV (Russia), PLAAF Airborne Corps (China), Parachute regiment (UK), Brigada de Infantería Ligera Paracaidista BRIPAC (Spain)
  Airmobile infantry; examples: 101st Airborne Division (Air Assault), Jägerregiment 1, 25th Airborne Brigade (Ukraine)
  Mechanized infantry; examples: US 3rd Infantry Division (equipment example: M2 Bradley infantry fighting vehicle), Ukraine's 93rd Kholodnyi Yar Brigade
  Mechanized infantry equipped with infantry fighting vehicles; equipment examples: M2 Bradley, BMP-3, ZBD-04, Kurganets-25, Dardo IFV
  Amphibious mechanized infantry; example: 1st Marine Regiment (United States) when amphibious assault vehicle units are attached.
  Mechanized infantry (wheeled-"medium"); equipment examples: 3rd Brigade (US 2nd Infantry Division), Stryker, GTK Boxer, ZSL-08, Patria AMV, Mowag Piranha, BTR-80 (with machine gun turrets)
  Mechanized infantry (wheeled-"medium") equipped with wheeled infantry fighting vehicles; equipment examples: BTR-90, Bumerang, ZBL-08, Freccia, VBTP-MR Guarani (with autocannon turrets)
  Tank destroyer; equipment examples: B1 Centauro, AMX 10 RC, ZTL-11, M1128 mobile gun system
  Wheeled armoured reconnaissance; equipment examples: Fennek, VBL, BRDM-2, ASLAV
  Armoured engineers; equipment examples: M60A1 AVLB, Bergepanzer BPz3.
  Combat engineers in mechanized engineer section carriers. Also engineers mounted in IFVs such as Bradley or Warrior.
  Armoured artillery; equipment examples: M109 howitzer, PzH 2000, PLZ-05, 2S19 Msta, 2S35 Koalitsiya-SV, AS90
  Mountain artillery; equipment example: OTO Melara Mod 56
  Multiple rocket launcher; equipment example: M270 MLRS
  Wheeled multiple rocket launcher; equipment examples: HIMARS, Pinaka, BM-27 Uragan, BM-30 Smerch, PHL-03, PHL-16, Astros II MLRS
  Self-propelled anti-aircraft artillery; equipment examples: FlaKPz Gepard, 9K22 Tunguska, Type 95 SPAAA, PGZ-09
  Missile air defence; equipment examples: S-300, S-400, 9K37 Buk, MIM-104 Patriot, Roland
  Attack helicopter; equipment examples: AH-64 Apache, AH-1 Cobra, Eurocopter Tiger, Mil Mi-28, Kamov Ka-50, CAIC Z-10, Agusta A129 Mangusta
  Medium transport helicopter; equipment examples: CH-46 Sea Knight, UH-60 Blackhawk, Mi-17 Hip
  Theatre level fuel supply unit
  Supply and transportation unit

Unit size indicators edit

Above the unit symbol, a symbol representing the size of the unit can be displayed:[4]: 57 

Symbol Name Typical No. of personnel No. of subordinate units Typical rank of leader (Commonwealth and US)
 
 
250,000–1,000,000+ Several army groups
 
 
120,000–500,000 Several armies or air forces
  • Commonwealth: Field marshal
  • US: General of the Army or general
 
 
Army[b]
Air force
100,000 2–4 fighting corps (5–10 fighting divisions) and support troops (often organized in divisions or brigades) General
 
 
Corps 30,000–90,000 2–4 fighting divisions and support troops (often organized in brigades or groups) Lieutenant general
 
 
Division 10,000–20,000 Nominally several brigades and/or regiments Major general
 
 
2,000–10,000 Several battalions or Commonwealth regiments.
 
 
500–3,000 3–7 battalions (usually of the same arm)
 
 
300–1,000 2–6 companies, batteries, U.S. troops, or Commonwealth squadrons, etc.
 
 
60–250 2–5 platoons/troops
 
 
Staffel[8] or echelon[9]
(level of hierarchy unique to Germany)
50–90 2 platoons/troops or 6–10 sections Captain or staff captain
 
 
25–40 3–5 squads, sections, or fighting vehicles
 
 
Section 7–13 2–3 fireteams
 
 
Squad 5–10 1–2 fireteams
  • Commonwealth: Corporal or sergeant
  • US: Sergeant or staff sergeant
 
 
Fireteam 3–5 n/a

The typical commander ranks shown in the table are for illustration. Neither the actual rank designated for a particular unit's commander, nor the rank held by the incumbent commander alters the appropriate symbol. For example, units are periodically commanded by an officer junior to the authorised commander grade, yet a company under the command of a lieutenant (U.S.) or captain (Commonwealth) is still indicated with two vertical ticks. Likewise, some peculiar types of companies and detachments are authorised a major, lieutenant colonel (personnel services companies) or colonel (some types of judge advocate detachments); the company or detachment is nevertheless indicated with, respectively, one vertical tick or three dots.

While in Commonwealth armies, the regiment as a tactical formation does not normally exist, in some cases a regimental sized (i.e. larger than battalion and smaller than brigade) task force may exist where the operational requirement exists. These formations may be commanded by colonels.

Note that, for brigades and higher, the number of Xs corresponds to the number of stars in the United States military's insignia for the typical general officer grade commanding that size unit. For example, a division is capped with XX and is usually commanded by a major general the American insignia for which is two stars.

Equipment icons edit

Equipment icons are "frame optional".

Equipment symbol (framed) (unframed) Equipment type
    Bridge (e.g. AVLB)

Installation icons edit

Installation symbol Installation type
  Bridge production

Symbol modifiers edit

APP-6A stops with field AB. MIL-STD-2525B and 2525B Change 1 add a number of other modifiers.

 
Positions of the various graphic modifiers around the symbol (itself field A). MIL-STD-2525B Change 1 fails to specify where to place fields AD, AE, and AF.

Graphic modifiers edit

  • Echelon (field B) Identifies command level (see Unit sizes, above).
  • Task force (field D) Identifies a unit as a task force. It may be used alone or in combination with echelon, like so:
  • Frame shape modifier (field E) A short textual modifier that completes the affiliation, battle dimension, or exercise description of an object ("U", "?", "X", "XU", "X?", "J" or "K"). It is treated as a graphic modifier, however.
  • Direction of movement (field Q) A fixed-length arrow that identifies the direction of movement or intended movement of an object. It emanates from the symbol's centre except in the ground domain, where it is hooked to a short offset, straight down from the symbol's base centre (see diagram).
  • Mobility indicator (field R) Depicts the mobility of an object. It is used only with equipment.
  • Headquarters staff or offset location (field S) Identifies a unit as a headquarters, or indicates the object's actual location on the map when it has been shifted away in order to declutter the display. It goes straight down from the symbol's centre left, then angles towards the actual location (see diagram).
  • Feint/dummy (field AB) Identifies a unit intended to draw the enemy's attention away from the area of the main attack, or a decoy designed to fool enemy intelligence. It consists of a dashed chevron, placed above the frame, like the echelon graphic modifier (the standard is unclear as to how the two combine graphically).
  • Installation (field AC) Identifies a particular symbol as an installation. It sits atop the frame.
  • Auxiliary equipment (field AG) Indicates the presence of a towed sonar array (used exclusively in the sea surface or subsurface battle dimensions). It sits below the frame, like field R.
  • Area of uncertainty (field AH) Indicates the area where an object is most likely to be, based on the object's last report and the reporting accuracy of the sensor that detected it. This can take various forms, such as an ellipse, a bounding box, or lines indicating probable bearing and distance.
  • Dead reckoning trailer (field AI) Identifies where an object should be located at present, given its last reported course and speed. This can take the form of a dotted line (extending from the symbol to the dead-reckoned position) or a dotted circle (bounding the zone the object may have reached since, when the direction of movement is unknown or uncertain).
  • Speed leader (field AJ) Depicts the speed and direction of movement of an object. It is identical to the direction of movement indicator except that its length is variable (and there is no arrow head).
  • Pairing line (field AK) Connects two objects.

Feints/dummies and installations edit

Source:[4]: 288 

Feint/dummy Installations
 
 
       

Mobility and auxiliary equipment edit

Source:[4]: 163–164 

Wheeled
(limited
cross-country)
Wheeled
cross-country
Tracked Half-tracked Towed Railway
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Snowmobile Sled Pack animals Barge Amphibious  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  Short towed array (typ. sonar) Long towed array (typ. sonar)
   
 
 
 

Text modifiers edit

  • Quantity (field C) Identifies the number of equipment items present.
  • Reinforced or reduced (field F) Displays (+) for reinforced, (-) for reduced, (±) for reinforced and reduced.
  • Staff comments (field G)
  • Additional information (field H)
  • Evaluation rating (field J) A letter-and-number reliability and credibility rating, assigned by intelligence.
  • Combat effectiveness (field K)
  • Signature equipment (field L) Used for hostile equipment; "!" indicates a detectable electronic signature.
  • Higher formation (field M) Number or title of higher echelon command.
    • field M of this company symbol shows that it belongs to the 42nd Armored Infantry Battalion:  
  • Hostile (enemy) (field N) "ENY" denotes hostile equipment.
  • IFF/SIF (field P) IFF/SIF Identification modes and codes.
  • SIGINT mobility indicator (field R2) "M" for Mobile, "S" for Static, "U" for Uncertain.
  • Unique designation (field T)
    • field T shows this is Alpha Company:  
  • Type (field V)
  • Date/time group (DTG) (field W) Indicates the symbol's date and time stamp.
  • Altitude/height/depth (field X)
  • Location (field Y) Location in degrees, minutes, and seconds (or in UTM or other applicable display format).
  • Speed (field Z) Velocity as set forth in MIL-STD-6040.
  • Special C2 headquarters (field AA)
  • Platform type (field AD) "ELNOT" (electronic intelligence notation) or "CENOT" (communications intelligence notation)
  • Equipment teardown time (field AE) In minutes.
  • Common identifier (field AF) Example: "Hawk" for a Hawk SAM system.

Other information edit

APP-6 organization chart of the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force (MEF):

 
Structure of the 1st MEF (click to enlarge)

A quick reference chart for friendly icons:

 
Quick guide to military symbology

MIL-STD-2525A edit

APP-6A, Military Symbols for Land Based Systems was developed directly from MIL-STD-2525A, Common Warfighting Symbology. MIL-STD 2525A was the American standard for military symbols. The custodian of APP-6 is the United States. APP-6(A) remained unchanged as work on harmonizing it with ADatP-3, NATO Message Text Formatting System was carried out. In 1999, APP-6 was moved from the Army Service Board to the Joint Service Board. With this move, APP-6 was placed under the Information Exchange Requirements Harmonization/Message Text Format Working Group. The IERH/MTFWG then formed the Joint Symbology Panel to provide configuration management of APP-6 with the US custodian as the chairman. With the ratification and promulgation of APP-6(B) in 2008, the named was changed to NATO Military Symbology to better reflect the nature of the publication. In 2011, with the introduction of APP-6(C), the named was changed to NATO Joint Military Symbology. The US military required new symbols to support ongoing operations in Iraq and Afghanistan, so the pace of change between APP-6 and MIL-STD-2525 remained uneven until 2009. In 2009, a new chairman for DOD Symbology Standardization Management Committee was appointed, and the two configuration management organizations began to work together. The two organizations held joint meetings with full participation on both sides. The goal of both groups is to develop comprehensive joint military symbology that is common to both organizations to the greatest extent possible. APP-6(C) began the process of changing the format of the publications and introduced new symbol identification codes. MIL-STD-2525D[10] has carried that one step further with more symbols and more symbol sets derived from recent NATO and US operations. MIL-STD-2525D will serve as the base document for APP-6(D) as the two documents move closer together.

Notes edit

  1. ^ in the US this unit is termed an army region
  2. ^ in the US this unit is termed a field army

References edit

  1. ^ Hershey, Andrew (2012). (PDF). Strategy & Tactics. 274: 22–27. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 7, 2014.
  2. ^ "NATO Map Symbol Programmed Instruction Package" (PDF). Canadian Forces School of Military Intelligence. Jan 2000. p. 6. Retrieved Nov 14, 2018.
  3. ^ a b Korkolis, M. (July 1986). "APP-6 Military Symbols For Land Based Symbols" (PDF). alternatewars.com. Retrieved Nov 14, 2018.
  4. ^ a b c d Thibault, D. U. (September 2005). "Commented APP-6A - Military symbols for land based systems" (PDF). DRDC Valcartier. Retrieved November 14, 2018.
  5. ^ "US Army FM 21-30 Military Symbols" (PDF). US Army Engineers. June 1965. p. 2–5. Retrieved 7 May 2020.
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This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations November 2009 Learn how and when to remove this message NATO Joint Military Symbology is the NATO standard for military map symbols Originally published in 1986 as Allied Procedural Publication 6 APP 6 NATO Military Symbols for Land Based Systems the standard has evolved over the years and is currently in its fifth version APP 6D The symbols are designed to enhance NATO s joint interoperability by providing a standard set of common symbols APP 6 constituted a single system of joint military symbology for land air space and sea based formations and units which can be displayed for either automated map display systems or for manual map marking It covers all of the joint services and can be used by them Example Symbols An unidentified hostile motorized anti tank division 1 DPLeg Wyszkow Polish 1st Legions Infantry Divisionof Operational Group Wyszkow 3 PPCLI 1 CMBG 3rd Battalion Princess Patricia s Canadian Light Infantryof 1 Canadian Mechanized Brigade Group 4 Pz XXIV 4th Panzer Division of XXIV Army Corps 82 Abn 82nd Airborne Division Artillery Brigade Contents 1 History 2 Symbol sets 3 Symbol composition 4 Allegiance and affiliation 4 1 APP 6 colour representation 4 2 APP 6A affiliation 5 Battle dimension 6 Status 7 Icon placement 8 Unit symbols 8 1 Unit icon modifiers 8 2 Unit basic icons 8 3 Modified unit icons 8 4 Unit size indicators 9 Equipment icons 10 Installation icons 11 Symbol modifiers 11 1 Graphic modifiers 11 1 1 Feints dummies and installations 11 1 2 Mobility and auxiliary equipment 11 2 Text modifiers 12 Other information 13 MIL STD 2525A 14 Notes 15 References 16 External linksHistory editThe first basic military map symbols began to be used by western armies in the decades following the end of the Napoleonic Wars During World War I there was a degree of harmonisation between the British and French systems including the adoption of the colour red for enemy forces and blue for allies the British had previously used red for friendly troops because of the traditional red coats of British soldiers However the system now in use is broadly based on that devised by the US Army Corps of Engineers in 1917 The infantry symbol of a saltire in a rectangle was said to symbolise the crossed belts of an infantryman while the single diagonal line for cavalry was said to represent the sabre belt With the formation of NATO in 1949 the US Army system was standardized and adapted with different shapes for friendly blue rectangle hostile red diamond and unknown yellow quatrefoil forces 1 APP 6A was promulgated in December 1999 The NATO standardization agreement that covers APP 6A is STANAG 2019 edition 4 promulgated in December 2000 APP 6A replaced APP 6 last version July 1986 which had been promulgated in November 1984 edition 3 of STANAG 2019 covered APP 6 and was replaced in turn by Joint Symbology APP 6 B APP 6B in 2008 STANAG 2019 edition 5 June 2008 and NATO Joint Military Symbology APP 6 C APP 6C in 2011 STANAG 2019 edition 6 May 2011 The U S is the current custodian of APP 6A which is equivalent to MIL STD 2525A Symbol sets editThe APP 6A standard provides common operational symbology along with details on their display and plotting to ensure the compatibility and to the greatest extent possible the interoperability of NATO land component command control communications computer and intelligence C4I systems development operations and training APP 6A addresses the efficient transmission of symbology information through the use of a standard methodology for symbol hierarchy information taxonomy and symbol identifiers APP 6A recognises five broad sets of symbols each set using its own SIDC Symbol identification coding scheme Units equipment and installations Military operations tactical graphics METOC meteorological and oceanographic Signals intelligence MOOTW military operations other than war Units equipment and installations consist of icons generally framed associated with a single point on the map All sorts of graphical and textual modifiers may surround them specifying categories quantities dates direction of movement etc Tactical graphics represent operational information that cannot be presented via icon based symbols alone unit boundaries special area designations and other unique markings related to battlespace geometry and necessary for battlefield planning and management There are point line and area symbols in this category Meteorological and oceanographic symbology is the only set not under the standard s control rather they are imported from the symbology established by the World Meteorological Organization The signals intelligence and military operations other than war symbology sets stand apart from Units Equipment and Installations although they obey the same conventions i e they consist of framed symbols associated to points on the map They do not appear in APP 6A proper having been introduced by MIL STD 2525B Symbol composition editMost of the symbols designate specific points and consist of a frame a geometric border a fill a constituent icon and optional symbol modifiers The latter are optional text fields or graphic indicators that provide additional information The frame provides a visual indication of the affiliation battle dimension and status of an operational object The use of shape and colour is redundant allowing the symbology to be used under less than ideal conditions such as a monochrome red display to preserve the operator s night vision Nearly all symbols are highly stylised and can be drawn by persons almost entirely lacking in artistic skill this allows one to draw a symbolic representation a GRAPHREP Graphical report using tools as rudimentary as plain paper and pencil The frame serves as the base to which other symbol components and modifiers are added In most cases a frame surrounds an icon One major exception is equipment which may be represented by icons alone in which case the icons are coloured as the frame would be The fill is the area within a symbol If the fill is assigned a colour it provides an enhanced redundant presentation of information about the affiliation of the object If colour is not used the fill is transparent A very few icons have fills of their own which are not affected by affiliation The icons themselves finally can be understood as combinations of elementary glyphs that use simple composition rules in a manner reminiscent of some ideographic writing systems such as Chinese The standard however still attempts to provide an exhaustive listing of possible icons instead of laying out a dictionary of component glyphs This causes operational problems when the need for an unforeseen symbol arises particularly in MOOTW a problem exacerbated by the administratively centralised maintenance of the symbology sets When rendering symbols with the fill on APP 6A calls for the frame and icon to be black or white as appropriate for the display When rendering symbols with the fill off APP 6A calls for a monochrome frame and icon usually black or in accordance with the affiliation colour NATO symbols can also be rendered with fill off using a frame coloured according to affiliation and a black icon 2 though this is not defined in any APP 6 standard nbsp Friendly mechanized infantry with fill on nbsp Friendly mechanized infantry with fill off and monochrome colour frame and icon nbsp Friendly mechanized infantry with fill off and monochrome frame and icon nbsp Friendly mechanized infantry with fill off and bichrome frame and iconAllegiance and affiliation editAPP 6 colour representation edit The concept of affiliation does not appear in the original APP 6 as these were not introduced until APP 6A Instead the original APP 6 described a series of colour representations with the purpose of distinguishing friendly and enemy elements Multi colour representation Blue or black for friendly icons Red for enemy icons Green for man made obstacles friendly or enemy Yellow for chemical biological radiological or nuclear events Other colours to be established in a map legend Tri colour representation Blue or black for friendly icons Red for enemy icons Green or yellow for man made obstacles friendly or enemy and for chemical biological radiological or nuclear events Two colour representation Blue green or black for friendly icons Red for enemy icons One colour representation Single line border for friendly icons Double line border for enemy icons and unbordered icons were labeled with EN to the lower right corner nbsp APP 6 friendly unit colour nbsp APP 6 enemy unit colour nbsp APP 6 friendly unit B amp W nbsp APP 6 enemy unit B amp W APP 6A affiliation edit Affiliation refers to the relationship of the tracker to the operational object being represented The basic affiliation categories are unknown friend neutral and hostile In the ground unit domain a yellow quatrefoil frame is used to denote unknown affiliation a blue rectangle frame to denote friendly affiliation a green square frame to denote neutral affiliation and a red diamond frame to denote hostile affiliation 3 11 In the other domains air and space sea surface and subsurface etc the same color scheme is used Style Friendly Hostile Neutral Unknown Fill on nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Monochrome for digital media nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Monochrome for print media nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp The full set of affiliations is Pending P Unknown U Assumed friend A Friend F Neutral N Suspect S assumed hostile Hostile H Exercise pending G Exercise unknown W Exercise assumed friend M Exercise friend D Exercise neutral L Exercise suspect J Exercise hostile K There are no assumed neutral and exercise assumed neutral affiliations These colors are used in phrases such as blue on blue for friendly fire blue force tracking red teaming and Red Cells Battle dimension editBattle dimension defines the primary mission area for the operational object within the battlespace An object can have a mission area above the Earth s surface i e in the air or outer space on it or below it If the mission area of an object is on the surface it can be either on land or sea The subsurface dimension concerns those objects whose mission area is below the sea surface e g submarines and sea mines Some cases require adjudication for example an Army or Marine helicopter unit is a maneuvering unit i e a unit whose ground support assets are included and is thus represented in the land dimension Likewise a landing craft whose primary mission is ferrying personnel or equipment to and from shore is a maritime unit and is represented in the sea surface dimension A landing craft whose primary mission is to fight on land on the other hand is a ground asset and is represented in the land dimension Closed frames are used to denote the land and sea surface dimensions frames open at the bottom denote the air space dimension and frames open at the top denote the subsurface dimension Dimension Friendly Hostile Neutral Unknown Air and space nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Ground nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Sea surface nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Subsurface nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp An unknown battle dimension is possible for example some electronic warfare signatures e g radar systems are common to several battle dimensions and would therefore be assigned an Unknown battle dimension until further discrimination becomes possible Special forces may operate in any dimension The full set of battle dimensions is in ascending order of distance from Earth center SOF F Sea subsurface U Sea surface S Ground G Air A Space P Other X Unknown Z The mnemonic for this ordering is Fuss Gap The letter in parentheses is used by the symbol identification coding SIDC scheme strings of 15 characters used to transmit symbols The space and air battle dimensions share a single frame shape In the ground battle dimension two different frames are used for the friendly and assumed friendly affiliations in order to distinguish between units and equipment The SOF special operations forces are assigned their own battle dimension because they typically can operate across several domains air ground sea surface and subsurface in the course of a single mission the frames are the same as for the ground unit battle dimension 4 47 48 The other battle dimension finally seems to be reserved for future use there are no instances of its use as of 2525B Change 1 Status editThe status of a symbol refers to whether a warfighting object exists at the location identified i e status is present or will in the future reside at that location i e status is planned anticipated suspected or on order Regardless of affiliation present status is indicated by a solid line and planned status by a dashed line The frame is solid or dashed unless the symbol icon is unframed in which case the icon itself is drawn dashed Planned status cannot be shown if the symbol is an unframed filled icon Icon placement editThe icon is the innermost part of a symbol which when displayed provides an abstract pictorial or alphanumeric representation of an operational object The icon portrays the role or mission performed by the object APP 6A distinguishes between icons that must be framed or unframed and icons where framing is optional 3 39 43 APP 6A defined a standard octagon boundary within each map symbol frame This octagon is not actually shown when symbols are drawn or rendered but with a few defined exceptions all icons inside the frame would also fit inside these octagons APP 6C modified some symbol frames from previous editions of the standard From top to bottom here is the symbol boundary shown inside the APP 6C frames of space elements air elements land units land equipment and surface sea elements and sub surface sea elements nbsp Unit symbols editUnit icon modifiers edit Unit symbols can be used independently as well as in combinations There are also some symbols that cannot appear by themselves but can only be used to modify other unit symbols Modifier meaning Friendly Hostile Neutral Unknown Notes Airborne nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp In APP 6 was including air assault and paratrooper forces since APP 6A is specifically parachute forces Parachute nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Symbol used in APP 6 not used in APP 6A and later editions Airmobile nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Airmobile with organic lift nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Amphibious nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Motorized nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Mountain nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Cannon or gun system equipped nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Wheeled and cross country capable nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Unit basic icons edit Land unit icons require a frame Unit type 5 Friendly Hostile Neutral Unknown Notes Air defence nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Evocative of a protective dome Ammunition nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Stylised breech loaded rimmed cartridge or shell Anti tank nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Representing a concentrated piercing action Armour nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Stylized tank treads Artillery nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp A cannonball Rotary wing aviation nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Blurred spinning helicopter blades Fixed wing aviation nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Air screw Bridging nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Topographical map symbol for a bridge Combat service support nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Combined manoeuvre arms nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Introduced in APP 6C for an organization of infantry and armour it is a hybrid of the two symbols Engineer nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Letter E on its side Possibly Stylised bridge Electronic ranging nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Simplified parabolic antenna Electronic warfare nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Explosive ordnance disposal nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Fuel or petroleum oil and lubricants POL nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Simplified funnel Hospital nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Derivative of the medical symbol below superimposed with H HQ unit nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp This is the HQ unit not the HQ itself An HQ s physical position is represented by an empty rectangle with a line extending down from bottom left Infantry nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Evocative of the crossed bandoliers of Napoleonic infantry Maintenance nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Stylised wrench Medical nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Evocative of the Red Cross symbol Meteorological nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Missile nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Simplified missile Mortar nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Projectile with a vertical arrow symbolizing mortar s high arc trajectory Military police nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Navy nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Anchor CBRN defence nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Simplified crossed retorts the principal elements in the insignia of the U S Army Chemical Corps Ordnance nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Derived from crossed cannon behind a disc Radar nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Stylised lightning flash and parabolic dish Psychological operations nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Electronic schematic symbol for loudspeaker evocative of propaganda Reconnaissance or cavalry nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Inspired by the cavalry s sabre strap Signals nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Simplified lightning flash evocative of radio signals likewise used in the radar symbol above Special forces nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Special operations forces nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Supply nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Topographical nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Stylised sextant Transportation nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Simplified wheel Unmanned air vehicle nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Flying wing silhouette Modified unit icons edit Some of the most common combinations are Modified symbol Meaning nbsp Mountain infantry examples Italy s Alpini Germany s Gebirgsjager France s Chasseurs Alpins Poland s Podhale Rifles US 86th Infantry Brigade Combat Team Ukraine s 128th Transcarpathian Brigade nbsp Parachute infantry examples 82nd Airborne Division United States Fallschirmjager Bundeswehr Germany example Fallschirmjagerregiment 26 https de wikipedia org wiki Fallschirmj C3 A4gerregiment 26 VDV Russia PLAAF Airborne Corps China Parachute regiment UK Brigada de Infanteria Ligera Paracaidista BRIPAC Spain nbsp Airmobile infantry examples 101st Airborne Division Air Assault Jagerregiment 1 25th Airborne Brigade Ukraine nbsp Mechanized infantry examples US 3rd Infantry Division equipment example M2 Bradley infantry fighting vehicle Ukraine s 93rd Kholodnyi Yar Brigade nbsp Mechanized infantry equipped with infantry fighting vehicles equipment examples M2 Bradley BMP 3 ZBD 04 Kurganets 25 Dardo IFV nbsp Amphibious mechanized infantry example 1st Marine Regiment United States when amphibious assault vehicle units are attached nbsp Mechanized infantry wheeled medium equipment examples 3rd Brigade US 2nd Infantry Division Stryker GTK Boxer ZSL 08 Patria AMV Mowag Piranha BTR 80 with machine gun turrets nbsp Mechanized infantry wheeled medium equipped with wheeled infantry fighting vehicles equipment examples BTR 90 Bumerang ZBL 08 Freccia VBTP MR Guarani with autocannon turrets nbsp Tank destroyer equipment examples B1 Centauro AMX 10 RC ZTL 11 M1128 mobile gun system nbsp Wheeled armoured reconnaissance equipment examples Fennek VBL BRDM 2 ASLAV nbsp Armoured engineers equipment examples M60A1 AVLB Bergepanzer BPz3 nbsp Combat engineers in mechanized engineer section carriers Also engineers mounted in IFVs such as Bradley or Warrior nbsp Armoured artillery equipment examples M109 howitzer PzH 2000 PLZ 05 2S19 Msta 2S35 Koalitsiya SV AS90 nbsp Mountain artillery equipment example OTO Melara Mod 56 nbsp Multiple rocket launcher equipment example M270 MLRS nbsp Wheeled multiple rocket launcher equipment examples HIMARS Pinaka BM 27 Uragan BM 30 Smerch PHL 03 PHL 16 Astros II MLRS nbsp Self propelled anti aircraft artillery equipment examples FlaKPz Gepard 9K22 Tunguska Type 95 SPAAA PGZ 09 nbsp Missile air defence equipment examples S 300 S 400 9K37 Buk MIM 104 Patriot Roland nbsp Attack helicopter equipment examples AH 64 Apache AH 1 Cobra Eurocopter Tiger Mil Mi 28 Kamov Ka 50 CAIC Z 10 Agusta A129 Mangusta nbsp Medium transport helicopter equipment examples CH 46 Sea Knight UH 60 Blackhawk Mi 17 Hip nbsp Theatre level fuel supply unit nbsp Supply and transportation unit Unit size indicators edit Above the unit symbol a symbol representing the size of the unit can be displayed 4 57 Symbol Name Typical No of personnel No of subordinate units Typical rank of leader Commonwealth and US nbsp nbsp Combatant command 6 Region a 7 very rare in peacetime Theatre very rare in peacetime 250 000 1 000 000 Several army groups Commonwealth Field marshalUS General of the Army nbsp nbsp FrontArmy group rare in peacetime Air forces command or major command 120 000 500 000 Several armies or air forces Commonwealth Field marshalUS General of the Army or general nbsp nbsp Army b Air force 100 000 2 4 fighting corps 5 10 fighting divisions and support troops often organized in divisions or brigades General nbsp nbsp Corps 30 000 90 000 2 4 fighting divisions and support troops often organized in brigades or groups Lieutenant general nbsp nbsp Division 10 000 20 000 Nominally several brigades and or regiments Major general nbsp nbsp Brigadewing air or aviation 2 000 10 000 Several battalions or Commonwealth regiments Brigadier generalCommonwealth BrigadierCommonwealth air Air commodoreUS Army Colonel nbsp nbsp RegimentGroup some CS and CSS arms Group air or aviation 500 3 000 3 7 battalions usually of the same arm ColonelCommonwealth air Group captain nbsp nbsp Battalion or equivalentRegiment certain countries arms only Squadron US Cavalry Squadron air or aviation 300 1 000 2 6 companies batteries U S troops or Commonwealth squadrons etc Lieutenant colonelCommonwealth air Wing commander nbsp nbsp Company or equivalentArtillery batterySquadron some Commonwealth arms U S Cavalry troop 60 250 2 5 platoons troops Commonwealth army MajorCommonwealth air Squadron leaderU S Captain nbsp nbsp Staffel 8 or echelon 9 level of hierarchy unique to Germany 50 90 2 platoons troops or 6 10 sections Captain or staff captain nbsp nbsp Platoon or equivalentTroop certain countries arms only Flight air and aviation French Army section 25 40 3 5 squads sections or fighting vehicles Commonwealth Lieutenant or second lieutenantUS Second lieutenant nbsp nbsp Section 7 13 2 3 fireteams Commonwealth Corporal or sergeantUS Sergeant or staff sergeant nbsp nbsp Squad 5 10 1 2 fireteams Commonwealth Corporal or sergeantUS Sergeant or staff sergeant nbsp nbsp Fireteam 3 5 n a Commonwealth Lance corporalUS Corporal or sergeant The typical commander ranks shown in the table are for illustration Neither the actual rank designated for a particular unit s commander nor the rank held by the incumbent commander alters the appropriate symbol For example units are periodically commanded by an officer junior to the authorised commander grade yet a company under the command of a lieutenant U S or captain Commonwealth is still indicated with two vertical ticks Likewise some peculiar types of companies and detachments are authorised a major lieutenant colonel personnel services companies or colonel some types of judge advocate detachments the company or detachment is nevertheless indicated with respectively one vertical tick or three dots While in Commonwealth armies the regiment as a tactical formation does not normally exist in some cases a regimental sized i e larger than battalion and smaller than brigade task force may exist where the operational requirement exists These formations may be commanded by colonels Note that for brigades and higher the number of Xs corresponds to the number of stars in the United States military s insignia for the typical general officer grade commanding that size unit For example a division is capped with XX and is usually commanded by a major general the American insignia for which is two stars Equipment icons editEquipment icons are frame optional Equipment symbol framed unframed Equipment type nbsp nbsp Bridge e g AVLB Installation icons editInstallation symbol Installation type nbsp Bridge productionSymbol modifiers editAPP 6A stops with field AB MIL STD 2525B and 2525B Change 1 add a number of other modifiers nbsp Positions of the various graphic modifiers around the symbol itself field A MIL STD 2525B Change 1 fails to specify where to place fields AD AE and AF Graphic modifiers edit Echelon field B Identifies command level see Unit sizes above Task force field D Identifies a unit as a task force It may be used alone or in combination with echelon like so Type Icon Combat team orCompany group nbsp nbsp Battlegroup nbsp nbsp Regimental combat team orMarine expeditionary unit MEU nbsp nbsp Brigade group orBrigade combat team orMarine expeditionary brigade MEB nbsp nbsp Marine Expeditionary Force MEF nbsp nbsp Frame shape modifier field E A short textual modifier that completes the affiliation battle dimension or exercise description of an object U X XU X J or K It is treated as a graphic modifier however Direction of movement field Q A fixed length arrow that identifies the direction of movement or intended movement of an object It emanates from the symbol s centre except in the ground domain where it is hooked to a short offset straight down from the symbol s base centre see diagram Mobility indicator field R Depicts the mobility of an object It is used only with equipment Headquarters staff or offset location field S Identifies a unit as a headquarters or indicates the object s actual location on the map when it has been shifted away in order to declutter the display It goes straight down from the symbol s centre left then angles towards the actual location see diagram Feint dummy field AB Identifies a unit intended to draw the enemy s attention away from the area of the main attack or a decoy designed to fool enemy intelligence It consists of a dashed chevron placed above the frame like the echelon graphic modifier the standard is unclear as to how the two combine graphically Installation field AC Identifies a particular symbol as an installation It sits atop the frame Auxiliary equipment field AG Indicates the presence of a towed sonar array used exclusively in the sea surface or subsurface battle dimensions It sits below the frame like field R Area of uncertainty field AH Indicates the area where an object is most likely to be based on the object s last report and the reporting accuracy of the sensor that detected it This can take various forms such as an ellipse a bounding box or lines indicating probable bearing and distance Dead reckoning trailer field AI Identifies where an object should be located at present given its last reported course and speed This can take the form of a dotted line extending from the symbol to the dead reckoned position or a dotted circle bounding the zone the object may have reached since when the direction of movement is unknown or uncertain Speed leader field AJ Depicts the speed and direction of movement of an object It is identical to the direction of movement indicator except that its length is variable and there is no arrow head Pairing line field AK Connects two objects Feints dummies and installations edit Source 4 288 Feint dummy Installations nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Mobility and auxiliary equipment edit Source 4 163 164 Wheeled limitedcross country Wheeledcross country Tracked Half tracked Towed Railway nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Snowmobile Sled Pack animals Barge Amphibious nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Short towed array typ sonar Long towed array typ sonar nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Text modifiers edit Quantity field C Identifies the number of equipment items present Reinforced or reduced field F Displays for reinforced for reduced for reinforced and reduced Staff comments field G Additional information field H Evaluation rating field J A letter and number reliability and credibility rating assigned by intelligence Combat effectiveness field K Signature equipment field L Used for hostile equipment indicates a detectable electronic signature Higher formation field M Number or title of higher echelon command field M of this company symbol shows that it belongs to the 42nd Armored Infantry Battalion nbsp Hostile enemy field N ENY denotes hostile equipment IFF SIF field P IFF SIF Identification modes and codes SIGINT mobility indicator field R2 M for Mobile S for Static U for Uncertain Unique designation field T field T shows this is Alpha Company nbsp Type field V Date time group DTG field W Indicates the symbol s date and time stamp Altitude height depth field X Location field Y Location in degrees minutes and seconds or in UTM or other applicable display format Speed field Z Velocity as set forth in MIL STD 6040 Special C2 headquarters field AA Platform type field AD ELNOT electronic intelligence notation or CENOT communications intelligence notation Equipment teardown time field AE In minutes Common identifier field AF Example Hawk for a Hawk SAM system Other information editAPP 6 organization chart of the 1st Marine Expeditionary Force MEF nbsp Structure of the 1st MEF click to enlarge A quick reference chart for friendly icons nbsp Quick guide to military symbologyMIL STD 2525A editAPP 6A Military Symbols for Land Based Systems was developed directly from MIL STD 2525A Common Warfighting Symbology MIL STD 2525A was the American standard for military symbols The custodian of APP 6 is the United States APP 6 A remained unchanged as work on harmonizing it with ADatP 3 NATO Message Text Formatting System was carried out In 1999 APP 6 was moved from the Army Service Board to the Joint Service Board With this move APP 6 was placed under the Information Exchange Requirements Harmonization Message Text Format Working Group The IERH MTFWG then formed the Joint Symbology Panel to provide configuration management of APP 6 with the US custodian as the chairman With the ratification and promulgation of APP 6 B in 2008 the named was changed to NATO Military Symbology to better reflect the nature of the publication In 2011 with the introduction of APP 6 C the named was changed to NATO Joint Military Symbology The US military required new symbols to support ongoing operations in Iraq and Afghanistan so the pace of change between APP 6 and MIL STD 2525 remained uneven until 2009 In 2009 a new chairman for DOD Symbology Standardization Management Committee was appointed and the two configuration management organizations began to work together The two organizations held joint meetings with full participation on both sides The goal of both groups is to develop comprehensive joint military symbology that is common to both organizations to the greatest extent possible APP 6 C began the process of changing the format of the publications and introduced new symbol identification codes MIL STD 2525D 10 has carried that one step further with more symbols and more symbol sets derived from recent NATO and US operations MIL STD 2525D will serve as the base document for APP 6 D as the two documents move closer together Notes edit in the US this unit is termed an army region in the US this unit is termed a field armyReferences edit Hershey Andrew 2012 Not Just Lines on a Map A History of Military Mapping PDF Strategy amp Tactics 274 22 27 Archived from the original PDF on January 7 2014 NATO Map Symbol Programmed Instruction Package PDF Canadian Forces School of Military Intelligence Jan 2000 p 6 Retrieved Nov 14 2018 a b Korkolis M July 1986 APP 6 Military Symbols For Land Based Symbols PDF alternatewars com Retrieved Nov 14 2018 a b c d Thibault D U September 2005 Commented APP 6A Military symbols for land based systems PDF DRDC Valcartier Retrieved November 14 2018 US Army FM 21 30 Military Symbols PDF US Army Engineers June 1965 p 2 5 Retrieved 7 May 2020, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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