FM 5-19, ARMY FIELD MANUAL: COMPOSITE RISK MANAGEMENT (JUL-2006) [SUPERSEDING FM 100-14] [S/S BY ATP 5-19]
FM 5-19, ARMY FIELD MANUAL: COMPOSITE RISK MANAGEMENT (JUL-2006) [SUPERSEDING FM 100-14] [S/S BY ATP 5-19]., This publication supersedes FM 100-14 dated 23 April 1998 with change 1 dated 8 August 2005. Today’s Army is challenged by a wide range of threats and operating environments. These
challenges, plus new technologies, require our leaders to use creative measures to provide
positive protection to our Soldiers and equipment.
In April 1998, Field Manual (FM) 100-14 introduced to the Army the first doctrinal
publication on risk management. It detailed the application of a step-by-step process to
conserve combat power and resources. This milestone manual outlined a framework that
leaders could use to make force protection a routine part of planning, preparing, and
executing operational, training, and garrison missions.
Before the outset of the global war on terrorism it became apparent that FM 100-14 would
require updating to meet the needs of the future. Army assessments also indicated that the
existing manual needed to be expanded to provide clear standards and guidance on how the
risk management process was to be applied. This led to this current revision. During
development of this revision the Army broadened its understanding of the risk management
process to encompass all operations and activities, on and off duty. This holistic approach
focuses on the composite risks from all sources rather than the traditional practice of
separating accident from tactical hazards and associated risks. This revision has been
refocused to clearly reflect the Army’s new composite approach, and has been retitled
Composite Risk Management (CRM). CRM represents a culture change for the Army. It
departs from the past cookie cutter safety and risk management mentality through teaching
Soldiers “how to think” rather than telling them “what to think.”
This manual expands the context of the original FM by focusing on the application of
composite risk management to the military decisionmaking process (MDMP) and the Army
training management system. It further assigns the responsibilities for conducting risk
management training during initial entry training and professional military education. It is a
tool that works in conjunction with the Army’s on-going initiative to firmly attach CRM to
all Army processes. It is a milestone document for the standardization and institutionalization of the techniques,
tools, and procedures that lead to sound decisionmaking and valid risk acceptance by
leaders at all levels. This revision is a full rewrite of FM 100-14. It marks a break with the
past by integrating the CRM process into Army operations. CRM is not a stand-alone
process, a “paper work” drill, or an add-on feature. Rather, it is used as a fully-integrated
element of detailed planning. It must be so integrated as to allow it to be executed
intuitively in situations that require immediate action. CRM should be viewed as part of the
military art interwoven throughout the Army’s military decisionmaking and training
management cycles.