The following examples may help you in defining parameters for your communications. It is important to remember that there are many more examples than those listed below:
- Detailed information about the mission of assigned units.
- Details concerning locations and times of unit deployments.
- Personnel transactions that occur in large number (e.g., pay information, power of attorney, wills or deployment information.
- References to trends in unit morale or personnel problems.
- Details concerning security or operational procedures.
By being a military family member, you will often know some bits of critical information. These bits of information may seem insignificant. However, to a trained adversary they are small pieces of a puzzle that highlight what U.S. forces are doing and planning. Remember, the elements of security and surprise is vital to the accomplishment of U.S. goals and collective DOD personnel protection.
Where and how you discuss this information is just as important as with whom you discuss it. An adversary's agents tasked with collecting information frequently visit some of the same stores, clubs, recreational areas or places of worship as you do.
Determined individuals can easily collect data from cordless and cellular phones and even baby monitors using inexpensive receivers available from local electronics stores.
If anyone, especially a foreign national, persistently seeks information, notify your military sponsor immediately.