SOT-A

A SOT-A (Special Operations Team-Alpha) is a signals intelligenceelectronic warfare (SIGINT-EW) element of the United States Army Special Forces.[1] They are low-level SIGINT collection teams that intercept and report operational and technical information derived from tactical threat communications through prescribed communications paths. The mission of a SOT-A is to conduct SIGINT/EW in support of information operations (unilaterally or in conjunction with other SOF elements) to support existing and emerging SOF missions worldwide.

SOT-A's are the direct descendants of the Army Security Agency's Special Operations Detachments (USASASODs).

Capabilities

SOT-As can detect, monitor, and exploit threat communications through communications transmission intercept and direction finding. SOT-As also can deploy with Special Forces Operational Detachments-A (SFODAs or A-teams) to provide SIGINT support for contingency, direct action, force protection, or MTT support. These functions may require SOT-As to:[1]

  • Deploy with a SFODA.
  • Deploy independently and then join a deployed SFODA.
  • Operate independently or with other SOT-As.
  • Operate and train on advanced collection equipment provided by national intelligence agencies.

Insertion/Extraction Techniques

SOT-A team members can operate in remote and denied areas. In addition to their linguistic and SIGINT skills, SOT-As are trained in tactical and fieldcraft techniques.

SIGINT (Signals Intelligence)

  • Foreign languages
    • Arabic
    • Russian
    • Korean
    • French
    • Spanish
    • Farsi
    • Chinese
    • Indonesian
    • Thai
  • Morse Code intercept (>20 GPM)
  • Analysis and reporting
    • Tagalog

Advanced training

Advanced training may include:

Organization

Currently, there is one SOT-A section per battalion at every Special Forces Group. A SOT-A team generally consists of four members.[1]

gollark: Also "The five boxing wizards jump quickly".
gollark: "Jived fox nymph grabs quick waltz" and "Sphinx of black quartz, judge my vow" are two good not-quite-perfect pangrams.
gollark: There are many.
gollark: It's exotically spelled, so yes.
gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pangram

References

  1. "FM 3-05.102 Army Special Operation Forces Intelligence" (PDF). Headquarters, Department of the Army. 31 August 2001: Glossary-23. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
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