force readiness

[/fɔːrs ˈrɛdinəs/]
noun
prontidão operacional da força
1. The state of military preparedness in which armed forces are capable of executing their assigned missions with minimal delay
The military maintains high force readiness to respond to any national security threats.
As forças armadas mantêm alta prontidão operacional para responder a qualquer ameaça à segurança nacional.
2. The degree to which personnel, equipment, and resources are prepared for immediate deployment and combat operations
Force readiness levels are assessed quarterly to ensure operational effectiveness.
Os níveis de prontidão da força são avaliados trimestralmente para garantir a eficácia operacional.
Force readiness is a critical concept in both Brazilian and American military doctrine. In Brazil, it relates to the operational capacity of the armed forces (Exército, Marinha, and Aeronáutica) to respond to domestic and international security challenges. In the United States, it is a fundamental measure of military effectiveness and is regularly assessed and reported to Congress. The term is primarily used in military, defense policy, and strategic planning contexts.
Synonyms / Sinônimos
operational readinesscombat readinessmilitary preparednessdeployment readiness
Antonyms / Antônimos
unpreparednessoperational weaknesscombat unreadiness

Regional Variations

General Brazilian
prontidão operacional da força; prontidão de combate
standard military terminology used in Brazilian Armed Forces
Portugal
prontidão operacional das forças; capacidade de pronto emprego
used in Portuguese military and defense contexts
USA Military
force readiness
standard term in U.S. Department of Defense doctrine and planning

Related Words

deploymentmilitary capabilitytactical readinessstrategic preparednessrapid response

Related Idioms & Phrases

maintain force readiness
achieve full force readiness
force readiness level
force readiness posture
Look up more words on Fala2Me
The free English-Portuguese dictionary with real Brazilian accents, NYC slang, conjugator and more
Open Fala2Me →