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Army News Service (March 29, 2007): Aerial Common sensor gets green light from army leadership.


WASHINGTON -- The Army's next-generation airborne intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance An activity that synchronizes and integrates the planning and operation of sensors, assets, and processing, exploitation, and dissemination systems in direct support of current and future operations. This is an integrated intelligence and operations function. Also called ISR.  platform has a new runway to get off the ground.

"The Army remains committed to ACS (Asynchronous Communications Server) See network access server.  (Aerial Common Sensor The Lockheed Martin Aerial Common Sensor (ACS) platform was a reconnaissance aircraft airframe, for the United States Army and Navy. The aircraft would have been able to detect troop movements, intercept enemy communications and radar transmissions, and communicate with other ) to meet current and emerging reconnaissance, surveillance, and target acquisition For the RSTA/ISTAR/STA doctrine, see .

For the RSTA in the U.S. Army, see .

This is a disambiguation page: a list of articles associated with the same title.
 requirements," said Col. John Burke For other persons named John Burke, see John Burke (disambiguation).

John Burke (February 25 1859–May 14 1937) was an American lawyer, jurist, and political leader from North Dakota.

Burke was born in Keokuk County, Iowa and moved to the Dakota Territory.
, deputy director, Army Aviation, Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations and Plans at the Pentagon.

The ACS is intended to detect troop movements, intercept enemy communications and radar transmissions, and communicate with other aircraft.

After terminating an $879 million contract with Lockheed Martin For the former company, see .

Lockheed Martin (NYSE: LMT) is a leading multinational aerospace manufacturer and advanced technology company formed in 1995 by the merger of Lockheed Corporation with Martin Marietta.
 for the development of the system in early 2006, the Army is returning to the drawing board to focus on system requirements.

"The prudent course of action at this time was to terminate the contract and bring the various players--industry, the acquisition and user communities, the Navy and Air Force--back to the drawing board to make sure we all have a firm understanding of what the requirements are and the various challenges we need to overcome to make this program succeed," said Claude M. Bolton, assistant secretary of the Army for Acquisition Logistics and Technology in 2006. "We are not terminating the program."

Vice Chief of Staff of the Army Gen. Richard A. Cody General Richard A. Cody became the 31st Vice Chief of Staff, United States Army, on June 24, 2004.

General Cody was born in Montpelier, Vermont, on 2 August 1950. He was commissioned a second lieutenant upon graduation in 1972 from the United States Military Academy.
 approved the development of an ACS blocked requirements and acquisition strategy March 16. By blocking the acquisition, the ACS capability can achieve the full system's performance by taking advantage of mature payloads early and then integrating those in development when prudent, he said.

"We didn't want to wait 10 years or more for the big bang big bang

Model of the origin of the universe, which holds that it emerged from a state of extremely high temperature and density in an explosive expansion 10 billion–15 billion years ago.
 of trying to wait for everything at once," Cody said.

An Armywide team is now assessing requirements, acquisition, and funding, and will report findings in all areas in a decision briefing next quarter.

In the next 60 days, the Army will:

* Refine the specific ACS requirements in a blocked strategy and develop an acquisition strategy to meet these requirements against the desired capability delivery timeline

* Establish an interoperability plan with the Navy's similar capability for their maritime applications

* Develop the manned-unmanned teaming concept to operations

* Conduct a mini-joint functional needs analysis

* Use all the expertise in our intelligence, aviation, and communications domains to bear against the ACS requirements.

ACS is a responsive, worldwide, self-deployable, airborne Reconnaissance, Surveillance, Targeting and Acquisition/Intelligence, Surveillance, Reconnaissance system capable of providing real-time sensor-to-shooter information.

The ACS initiative will merge and improve the capabilities of the Army's Guardrail Common Sensor and Airborne Reconnaissance Low systems into a single multifunction platform, and eventually replace those legacy airborne ISR (Interrupt Service Routine) Software routine that is executed in response to an interrupt.  systems.

Lt. Col. Carl Ey, USA
COPYRIGHT 2007 Defense Acquisition University Press
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Title Annotation:In the News
Author:Ey, Carl
Publication:Defense AT & L
Date:Jul 1, 2007
Words:424
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