Authorities and Permissions to Conduct Army Special Operations Activities Abroad
ResearchPublished Dec 12, 2022
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A wide variety of statutes, laws, and legal decisions — collectively called authorities — govern the use of Army Special Operations Forces overseas in environments below the threshold of armed conflict. This report outlines the basic types of such authorities, differentiating between "steady-state" and operational authorities. Further, it summarizes the role of policy permissions in enabling military activities overseas.
ResearchPublished Dec 12, 2022
The activities that U.S. special operations forces (SOF) conduct overseas in environments below the threshold of armed conflict are governed by a wide variety of statutes, laws, and legal decisions. Collectively called authorities, these parameters outline what military forces can, and cannot, do under specific circumstances. These authorities, and the non-statutory permissions that accompany them, are often the topic of policy discussions about how to leverage Army Special Operations Forces (ARSOF) to support broader strategic competition objectives, particularly because the sheer number of authorities that can be used often muddles understanding of what the legal basis is for a deployment in a particular region. This report outlines the basic types of authorities relevant to ARSOF's activities in environments short of war, differentiating between "steady-state" and operational authorities. Further, it summarizes the role of policy permissions in enabling military activities overseas.
The research described in this report was sponsored by the U.S. Army Special Operations Command and conducted by the Strategy, Doctrine, and Resources Program within the RAND Arroyo Center.
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