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[Cold War] [U.S. Military Intelligence] U.S. Army and Defense Intelligence Agency manuals documenting the evolution of American military intelligence doctrine from the early Cold War through the late détente period, with sustained focus on Soviet military organization, combat intelligence, subversion theory, and battlefield operations under the shadow of nuclear warfare. Produced between 1956 and 1984, the manuals span the formative decades of nuclear strategy, from the post-Korean War consolidation of atomic doctrine, through the Berlin and Cuban Missile Crisis era, and into the late Cold War reassessment of Soviet conventional and nuclear capabilities. Collectively, they illustrate how U.S. intelligence institutions conceptualized the Soviet threat across tactical, operational, psychological, and strategic levels during the nuclear age. Archive of 6 includes: [1] Department of the Army. Combat Intelligence. Washington, D.C.: Headquarters, Department of the Army, December 1956. Field Manual FM 30-5. This manual codifies early Cold War U.S. Army doctrine on combat intelligence at a moment when nuclear weapons had become central to battlefield planning. Chapters on reconnaissance, counter-reconnaissance, and intelligence processing reflect lessons drawn from World War II and Korea, while the integration of air reconnaissance and terrain analysis anticipates nuclear-era requirements for target identification and survivability in atomic battlefields. [2] Department of the Army. Combat Intelligence: Battle Group, Combat Command, and Smaller Units. Washington, D.C.: Headquarters, Department of the Army, September 1958. Field Manual FM 30-7. Issued during the height of early nuclear brinkmanship following Sputnik (1957), this manual adapts intelligence doctrine to smaller, more mobile units expected to operate in dispersed formations under nuclear threat. Emphasis on rapid intelligence dissemination, decentralized command, and survivability reflects the Army's response to tactical nuclear warfare scenarios envisioned in the late 1950s. [3] United States Army School, Europe, Intelligence Department. Mechanics of Communist Subversion. July 1963. Mimeographed instructional manual. Produced months after the Cuban Missile Crisis (October 1962), this instructional text situates intelligence work within a "total global conflict" framework, explicitly linking ideological, psychological, political, and military fronts. The manual frames Communist subversion as inseparable from nuclear confrontation, asserting that Soviet strategy integrates military buildup, ideological warfare, and geopolitical pressure to achieve dominance in the nuclear age. [4] Defense Intelligence Agency. Glossary of Soviet Military and Related Abbreviations. Washington, D.C.: Defense Intelligence Agency, 1 September 1965. AP-1-650-3-1-65-INT. Compiled at the height of Cold War escalation during the Vietnam War, this glossary standardizes terminology used in U.S. intelligence assessments of Soviet forces, including missile units, nuclear delivery systems, command structures, and strategic forces. Its production reflects the increasing technical complexity of nuclear and missile intelligence during the mid-1960s arms race. [5] Department of the Army. Combat Intelligence. Washington, D.C.: Headquarters, Department of the Army, October 1973. Field Manual FM 30-5. This revised edition supersedes the 1971 version and incorporates NATO standardization agreements (STANAGs), reflecting Cold War alliance integration following the Cuban Missile Crisis, Vietnam, and the onset of détente. The table of contents explicitly includes reporting enemy nuclear, biological, and chemical warfare; order of battle analysis; counterintelligence; and operational planning within environments shaped by nuclear, chemical, and electronic warfare considerations; issued the same year as the Yom Kippur War and amid renewed nuclear alert concerns. [6] Department of the Army. The Soviet Army: Operations.
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