American Forces Press Service (April 4, 2006): military, industry must work together to win Long War, general says.HAMPTON, Va. -- The U.S. military and private sector defense industry must work together to win the Long War against terrorism, the general who serves as commander of U.S. Joint Forces Command and as NATO's supreme allied commander Supreme Allied Commander is the title given to the most senior commander of some multinational military alliances. It originated as a term used by the Western Allies during World War II and is currently used by NATO. for transformation said here today. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] "The things we're doing with you in cooperative research and development agreements “CRADA” redirects here. For other uses, see CRADA (disambiguation). A Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) is an agreement between a government agency and a private company to work together. are indicative of the importance we place on this relationship, so that we can build the kinds of equipment our troops need to fight and win the war we're fighting," Air Force Gen. Lance L. Smith United States Air Force General Lance L. Smith serves as the commander, U.S. Joint Forces Command, Norfolk, Virginia, and Supreme Allied Commander, Transformation. He assumed command on November 10, 2005. told a defense industry audience at the 2006 JFCOM JFCOM Joint Forces Command (formerly ACOM change effective 1 Oct 99) Industry Symposium. The symposium is co-hosted by U.S. Joint Forces Command, which leads the Defense Department's effort to transform the military to meet challenges associated with the Information Age, and the National Defense Industrial Association. This is the sixth year JFCOM and ND/A have worked together on this type of event. This year's theme, Building Knowledge for the Warfighter, focused on enabling technologies to support joint, coalition, and interagency in·ter·a·gen·cy adj. Involving or representing two or more agencies, especially government agencies. operations; global perspective; knowledge fusion across multiple and critical domains; coalition battlespace awareness Knowledge and understanding of the operational area's environment, factors, and conditions, to include the status of friendly and adversary forces, neutrals and noncombatants, weather and terrain, that enables timely, relevant, comprehensive, and accurate assessments, in order to ; modeling and simulation; and training. The purpose of the symposium is to provide a legal and ethical forum for the interchange of ideas between the military and industry to resolve industrial problems of joint concern, military officials said. Smith said JFCOM is looking at ways to better deal with conflicts across a wide spectrum, "from humanitarian relief all the way through major combat operations," he said. He said fielding better joint and integrated communications systems In telecommunication, a communications system is a collection of individual communications networks, transmission systems, relay stations, tributary stations, and data terminal equipment (DTE) usually capable of interconnection and interoperation to form an integrated whole. is one of his priorities and that merging operational and intelligence capabilities is critical to defeating terrorism. "One of the clear lessons that has come out of Iraq and Afghanistan is the separation of operations and intelligence has not worked in the kind of war we're fighting," he said. "Merging operations and intel is one of the critical elements of being able to fight this Long War." Smith said the term "Long War" does not mean the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. intends to stay in Iraq and Afghanistan indefinitely. "That's not what we're trying to say. What we're trying to say is that this fight is against extremists who are not going to go away just because Iraq and Afghanistan go away," he said. "They will simply move. Our goal is to posture to fight this war as long as it takes." The defense industry can help win the Long War by helping the military build information and communications systems that talk to each other, Smith said. "We need a command-and-control system that is interoperable," he said. "And we need a command-and-control system that allows us to operate inside the enemy's decision loop." At one time there were more than 300 data systems in Iraq dealing with counter-improvised explosive device information, Smith said. "You cannot set up a search engine that can go and look into all those 300 databases in order to get a coherent picture to counter IEDs," he said. He stressed that data systems must be born and developed with joint capability and that military configuration controls must be less constrictive constrictive restricting movement or dilatation of an organ. . "We've had this discussion, and we will try to make sure that when the data standards come out that they will be broad enough and not be so restrictive that we can operate within them," he said. In addition, three-dimensional modeling and simulation of cities and rural areas will help special operations forces Those Active and Reserve Component forces of the Military Services designated by the Secretary of Defense and specifically organized, trained, and equipped to conduct and support special operations. Also called SOF. prepare for missions, he said, urging industry to tackle this area. "If we can do all those things, then we will certainly help our folks survive in this environment, and we will gradually over time take this fight away from the enemy, and we will win this battle," Smith concluded. |
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