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Hello Community,

 

I was wondering if anybody could tell me some military codes for radio chat. In the singleplayer Campaigns they say some things like AO, ENDEX, COMEX, FOB and I don't know the definition of these words or what they mean.

 

As an arma fanatic I am currently developing a small singleplayer campaign and I would would be really grateful if anybody could post a link here where I can find       a good explanation on military codewords for radio, mission and so on

 

Thx for your help!

Best regards, Scott Miller, Royal Navy ^^ :)

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AO= Area of Operations; ENDEX= End Exercise; COMEX= Commence Exercise; FOB= Forward Operating Base

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3 hours ago, BadHabitz said:

AO= Area of Operations; ENDEX= End Exercise; COMEX= Commence Exercise; FOB= Forward Operating Base

Do you know some more military codes? ??

 

3 hours ago, BadHabitz said:

 

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TIC: Troops In Contact

CAS: Close Air Support

CASEVAC / MEDEVAC : Casualty Evacuation / Medical Evacuation

OP / COP : OutPost / Combat OutPost

Bogey : unidentified contact (air)

Judy : Objective in sight

Roger / Wilco :  Understand

Angel (air) : 1000 feet

JTAC : Joint Terminal Attack Controller (man on the ground who guides the air assets)

 

and some more, you can check on google I think.

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AAF- Army Airfield
ABNCP- Airborne Command Post
AFB- Air Force Base
AHP- Army Heliport
AMW- Air Movement Wing
ANG- Air National Guard
ANGB- Air National Guard Base
AS- Airlift Squadron
AW- Airlift Wing
Bn- Battalion
BW- Bomb Wing
CAP- Civil Air Patrol
CGAS- US Coast Guard Air Station
Co- Company
CP- Command Post
Det- Detachment
FW- Fighter Wing
FS- Fighter Squadron
FTS- Fighter Training Squadron
JIATF- Joint Interagency Task Force
JRB- Joint Reserve Base
NAOC- National Airborne Operations Center
NAS- Naval Air Station
NASA- National Aeronautics and Space Administration
SAM- Special Air Movement
SOF-Supervisor of Flying
SOS- Special Operations Squadron
TSC- Tactical Support Center 
USAV- US Army Vessel
USCG- United States Coast Guard

 

Taken from HERE

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The question is a bit vague, but as far as troop communications that you'll hear on a modern battlefield goes:
"FOB" - Forward Operating Base, a smaller camp connected to a larger camp via supply routes
"Contact [direction]!" - called when an unidentified individual is noticed by a member of the squad.

"Mount up" - board the given vehicle
"Victor/Vic" - term for any ground vehicle, based on NATO phonetic for V (i.e. "let's mount up on these vic's")
"Helo" - helicopter

"Klick" - one grid square on the map, approx. 1 kilometer


And then you have the NATO alphabet which is used to describe a variety of things (ie. 40MM rounds are known as "40 Mike Mike") so learning the NATO alphabet will also help a bit. But again, it really depends on what kind of dialogue you're going for and what the situation is. There are also set guidelines for the way that airstrikes and artillery are called in such as 9-lines and ADDRACs so there's a lot of military codes out there.
 

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On 24.12.2017 at 8:35 PM, Von Quest said:

Several sites have Field Manuals, for example globalsecurity.org

 

Take a peek at these:

FM-71-100-2

FM-24-19

 

Thx! That was definitely what I was looking for :D

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Hum, got 1 question:

 

Who chooses the call sign for:

 

- an operation

- the assets engaged

 

For example, Operation Red Wings: who decided the name?

Also, for planes in Afghanistan, I saw Viper and Rammit for F-16, Dude for F-15, Rage for Mirage 2000, Arrow for Apaches, etc... who decides?

 

Thx

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I don't know who decides the names of an Operation 

But I think that a high officer chooses the name. I have heard, that the american military has got their own name list for operations. Somtimes the Operation is just named like the task that has to be done.

In case of Red Wings I think the name just sounded cool :D

 

For example in the German Military my friend told me they use animal names to mark targets. For example a Target called Elephant is a bigger target with more guards or more security measures while I pig is a smaller target with less risks to engage. But that depends heavily on the organization and the country (he is in a small scout squad with around 20 men in total)

 

 

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The mission planners decide name. Sometimes your team gets a say, sometimes not. In the case of red wings, it was the seals planning that made it. They were hockey fans (red wings team) and they loved beer (checkpoints were named after beers) and my personal favorite they named their hvt rick james

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On 1/12/2017 at 10:35 AM, Mister GTX said:

they say some things like AO, ENDEX, COMEX, FOB and I don't know the definition of these words or what they mean.

 

Maybe  you should search for :

 

military abbreviations and  acronyms .

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_military_abbreviations

 

DOD Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms

http://www.jcs.mil/Portals/36/Documents/Doctrine/pubs/dictionary.pdf

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17 hours ago, warlord554 said:

The mission planners decide name. Sometimes your team gets a say, sometimes not. In the case of red wings, it was the seals planning that made it. They were hockey fans (red wings team) and they loved beer (checkpoints were named after beers) and my personal favorite they named their hvt rick james

 

Ok thx.

So it can vary whether it's regular army (command decides) and special forces (they can sometimes choose what they want).

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