Cover, Department of the Army Historical Summary, Fiscal Year 1969


Department of the Army
Historical Summary

 

Fiscal Year 1969

Compiled and Edited

by

William Gardner Bell

 

 

CENTER OF MILITARY HISTORY
UNITED STATES ARMY
WASHINGTON, D.C., 1973

i


Foreword

Annual accounts of Army expenditures, work, and accomplishments have been published since 1822. Those prepared prior to that date, starting with Secretary of War Henry Knox's report of 1792, were published in 1832 in the military affairs volumes of American State Papers. In the World War II period, under the pressures of wartime conditions, the traditional report was suspended after publication of the fiscal year 1941 edition, and was resumed with a 17-month edition spanning the period July 1947-November 1948, nominally the fiscal year 1948 report. (The six-year gap between July 1941 and June 1947 was bridged in part by biennial reports of the Under Secretary of the Army and the Chief of Staff.) At that juncture, following creation in 1947 of the National Military Establishment, the Army Secretary's report became a part of the Semi-Annual Report of the Secretary of Defense, beginning with the July-December 1949 edition. The annual frequency was then resumed, and the reports of the Secretary of Defense and the three service secretaries appeared in a consolidated document for two decades.

In May 1972 the Annual Report of the Department of Defense was canceled. The last consolidated report to be published was that of fiscal year 1968. Because of the unique nature and long standing of the Army report, and especially because of its demonstrated value as a reference document—in effect, the Army's memory—the Army decided to continue publication separately under a title of departmental complexion. Publication is resumed with this, the fiscal year 1969 edition.

Washington, D.C.

JAMES L. COLLINS, JR.
Brigadier General, USA
Chief of Military History

 

iii


iv


Contents

Chapter

 

Page

I.

INTRODUCTION

3

II.

OPERATIONAL READINESS

8

 

The Pacific and the Far East

8

Europe, the Middle East, and Africa

11

Alaska and Latin America

12

Continental United States

13

Army Readiness

13

Civil Disturbances

15

Civil Affairs, Civic Action, Psychological Operations, and Special Forces

15

Strategic Mobility

18

Communications-Electronics

19

Civil Defense

20

III.

FORCE DEVELOPMENT

24

 

Plans and Programs

24

Training and Schooling

25

Doctrine and Systems

28

Sentinel-Safeguard

31

IV.

PERSONNEL

34

 

Military Personnel

34

Military Justice, Discipline, and Legal Services

43

Dissent

44

Health and Medical Care

45

Housing, Safety, and Awards

47

Civilian Personnel

47

V.

RESERVE FORCES

51

 

Partial Mobilization of the Reserve Components

51

Training and Readiness

52

Materiel and Supply

54

Facilities

55

Air Defense

56

Management

56

Support to Civil Authorities

57

Technicians

57

v

Chapter

 

Page

VI.

MANAGEMENT, BUDGET, AND FUNDS

59

 

Organizational Developments

59

Management Programs, Systems, and Techniques

60

Budget and Funds

65

Cost Reduction

67

Military Pay System

68

VII.

LOGISTICS

70

 

Procurement

70

Support of Operations in Southeast Asia

71

Support of Operations in Europe

74

Materiel Maintenance

75

Army Aircraft

75

Logistics Systems

76

Supply and Depot Management

78

Installations

79

Transportation

83

Support Services

84

VIII.

RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT

86

 

Funding

86

Mobility

86

Firepower

87

Advanced Ballistic Missile Defense Program

89

Surveillance, Target Acquisition, and Night Observation

90

Communications

91

Antimine Warfare

92

Space Activities

92

Medical Research and Development

94

Other Significant Research Activities

97

IX.

CIVIL WORKS AND MILITARY ENGINEERING

100

 

Civil Works

100

Planning

102

Legislation

104

Construction and Operations

105

Research and Development

107

Conservation

107

Pollution Abatement

109

Nuclear Energy Applications

109

Engineer Operations in Southeast Asia

111

Mapping and Geodesy

114

vi

Chapter

 

Page

X.

SPECIAL FUNCTIONS

116

 

Administration of the Ryukyu Islands

116

Administration of the Panama Canal

119

Interoceanic Canal Studies

119

Promotion of Rifle Practice

120

XI.

MILITARY ASSISTANCE AND FOREIGN LIAISON

121

 

Military Assistance

121

Foreign Military Training

121

International Logistics

122

Foreign Liaison

125

XII.

SUMMARY

126

vii


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