In particular, the team looks for information relating to the
enemy's size, their activities, their location, the type of enemy unit, the
time the enemy was seen, and the equipment they were using. MP use the key
word SALUTE as a memory device to remember this information.
S--What was the size of the enemy force?
A--What activity were they engaged in?
L--What is the location of the enemy?
U--What type of enemy unit was seen?
T--What time was the enemy seem?
E--What equipment were they carrying?
When in doubt about whether or not to report information, either
from observation by team members or from passing drivers, report it. Each
little piece of information adds to the picture puzzle that intelligence
personnel are constructing.
An incident that may not seem significant to
you may be the key to the puzzle when placed with information received from
other sources.
Since
military
police
rely
in
large
measures
on
radio
electronic warfare.
radio operator is subjected to electronic warfare.
Meaconing, intrusion,
jamming, and interfering (MIJI) is a set of phenomenon associated with
in FM 32-20. The person who experiences MIJI is responsible for reporting
the incident. The SOI usually has instructions on how the report must be
prepared. A sample format of a MIJI report is illustrated in Figure 1-9.
Figure 1-9.
1-23
MP1029