Information Warfare Pioneers Take Top Pentagon Positions.Military planners and policy-makers, for many years, have advocated the need to increase the interoperability The capability of two or more hardware devices or two or more software routines to work harmoniously together. For example, in an Ethernet network, display adapters, hubs, switches and routers from different vendors must conform to the Ethernet standard and interoperate with each other. of computer networks for battlefield use. Although some progress has been achieved, the reality today is that network-centric warfare Network-centric warfare (NCW), now commonly called network-centric operations (NCO), is a new military doctrine or theory of war pioneered by the United States Department of Defense. is more of an academic concept than an operational reality. Things could change in the future, however, as the pioneers of network-centric warfare settle into high-level Pentagon posts. These officials will be expected to help bring network-centric warfare to the mainstream of military doctrine Military doctrine is the concise expression of how military forces contribute to campaigns, major operations, battles, and engagements. It is a guide to action, not hard and fast rules. Doctrine provides a common frame of reference across the military. and program development. In 1999, David Alberts David Albert, Ph.D., is Professor of Philosophy and Director of M.A. Program in The Philosophical Foundations of Physics at Columbia University. He received his B.S. in Physics from Columbia College (1976) and his Doctorate in Theoretical Physics from The Rockefeller University , John J. Garstka John J. Garstka is the Assistant Director, Concepts and Operations at the Office of Force Transformation, Office of the Secretary of Defense, at the United States Department of Defense, and is a recognized thought leader in the area of Network Centric Warfare. and Frederick P. Stein published a book tided, "Network-centric Warfare, Developing and Leveraging Information Superiority That degree of dominance in the information domain which permits the conduct of operations without effective opposition. See also information operations. ." A contributor to the book was then-Navy Vice Adm. Arthur Cebrowski. Now, Cebrowski, Garstka and Alberts are all working at the Pentagon in positions that allow them to influence the application of network-centric warfare. Cebrowski, recently retired from the Navy, is the Pentagon's director of force transformation. Garstka is the chief technology officer for the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Alberts is the director of research and strategic planning Strategic planning is an organization's process of defining its strategy, or direction, and making decisions on allocating its resources to pursue this strategy, including its capital and people. for the assistant secretary of defense for command, control, communications and intelligence (C31). The assistant secretary for C31 is the Pentagon's chief information officer. Network-centric warfare can be defined as the use of computers, high-speed data links and networking software Please [ improve this article] by rewriting this article in an . in combat operations, said Ronald O'Rourke, a national defense specialist at the Congressional Research Service The Congressional Research Service (CRS) is a branch of the Library of Congress that provides objective, nonpartisan research, analysis, and information to assist Congress in its legislative, oversight, and representative functions. U.S. . The application of network-centric warfare means that data gleaned from listening devices, unmanned vehicles, geospatial information and human intelligence is collected and distributed in real time to the military services. "Network-centric warfare is no longer just someone's idea, but it's being put into practical use and is accruing benefits," said Alberts in a recent interview. "We're developing a state of shared awareness, so that everyone understands what it is, and program managers develop capabilities with an eye toward interoperability, even when that specifically may not be mentioned in program requirement documents. "We know we have to deploy a robust infrastructure for sharing information," Alberts said. "Not only do we need all the information collected by the Defense Department available in the same place, we need information collected by other people, outside the Defense Department." Current legacy systems are not interoperable without work-arounds and special fixes, which may create security problems, Alberts said. "Most people know that security is also a huge issue in this day and age," he said. "Doing something both interoperable and secure is a real challenge. "We have people now monitoring networks and looking at systems, and we're melting big strides, but in the final analysis, it takes a lot of people at the Defense Department to get something done," he said. Experimentation will be key to the implementation of network-centric warfare, said Alberts. "Experimentation is a great start, and we need to be doing a hell of a lot more of it," he said. Alberts mentioned that Garstka often gives speeches, talks and attends conferences outside of the Defense Department, in order to exchange ideas about network-centric warfare. "We used to think that industry and academia were way ahead of us on this concept, but it turns out now that we do a lot of stuff here just as well," he said. Cebrowski fine-tuned the concept of network-centric warfare while he was president of the Naval War College. As the force transformation "point man," answering directly to Secretary of Defense Donald H. Rumsfeld and Deputy Secretary Paul Wolfowitz Paul Dundes Wolfowitz (born December 22, 1943) is a visiting scholar at the American Enterprise Institute, working on issues of international economic development, Africa and public-private partnerships. , he is tasked with making sure that the military services are working in line with the Department's vision. It is expected that his first priority will be to make all the services "network-centric." "If you're not interoperable, if you're not on the 'net,' you're not benefiting from the Information Age, and you're nor on the team," said Cebrowski during a roundrable with reporters. "People do not strive to be non-interoperable, but there are forces that tend to lead people to program decisions, which might result in a lack of interoperability, and those need to be addressed," he said. "Rumsfeld wants transformation linked to key strategic functions, and network-centric warfare should be the cornerstone of the Defense Department's plan for transformation," Cebrowski said. The four strategic functions are "assurance of allies, dissuading of competition, deterrence deterrence Military strategy whereby one power uses the threat of reprisal to preclude an attack from an adversary. The term largely refers to the basic strategy of the nuclear powers and the major alliance systems. of hostilities, and if need be, the decisive defeat of enemies." Transformation plays a role in all of those functions, Cebrowski said. The concept of network-centric warfare provides a "solid intellectual foundation from which to build," said Army Lt. Col. Kevin Woods, director of experimentation at the U.S. Joint Forces Command (JFCOM JFCOM Joint Forces Command (formerly ACOM change effective 1 Oct 99) ). "It has already spawned new supporting joint concepts," he said. "It is important to remember, however, that some of the ideas associated with network-centric warfare still remains well-founded hypothesis and conjecture CONJECTURE. Conjectures are ideas or notions founded on probabilities without any demonstration of their truth. Mascardus has defined conjecture: "rationable vestigium latentis veritatis, unde nascitur opinio sapientis;" or a slight degree of credence arising from evidence too weak or too ." To move beyond conjecture, Woods said, joint experimentation is required. "Network-centric warfare must include all service capabilities," said Woods. "Its strength is in the idea that when diverse war-fighting elements possess a shared understanding of the battle space, and their capabilities are in mutual support, then new synergies will emerge that today remain essentially undiscovered. "The joint force--as an organized whole--is the beneficiary of network-centric warfare," he said. "The alternative to joint warfare Joint warfare is a military doctrine which places priority on the integration of the various service branches of a state's armed forces into one unified command. Joint warfare is in essence a form of combined arms warfare on a larger, national scale, in which complementary forces is probably sub-effective warfare: greater risk, more casualties, greater costs and indecisive in·de·ci·sive adj. 1. Prone to or characterized by indecision; irresolute: an indecisive manager. 2. Inconclusive: an indecisive contest; an indecisive battle. outcomes. John Stenbit, assistant secretary of defense for C31, said that network-centric warfare "allows us to go anywhere we want, in very small groups, talk to each other, and get everything together at exactly the same instant and turn it all around." "The traditional systems rely on the fact that the bureaucracy that finds the target is the same bureaucracy that shoots it," Stenbit said during a Pentagon news conference. "But, if we achieve a network-centric operation--and to me that means anybody can get any information at any time--anybody in the world who's got a gun at any moment can be solving the problem of what are his ten best targets, and it's not somebody waiting for somebody else to tell him. "That doesn't mean he's supposed to shoot. But I do believe that it's very important that we decentralize de·cen·tral·ize v. de·cen·tral·ized, de·cen·tral·iz·ing, de·cen·tral·iz·es v.tr. 1. To distribute the administrative functions or powers of (a central authority) among several local authorities. the decision-making." Arthur L. Money, who served as assistant secretary of defense for C3I C3I Command, Control, Communications & Intelligence (US DoD) C3I Computer Controlled Coil Ignition C3I Command, Control, and Communications Interoperability C3I Command Control Communications and Intelligence in the Clinton administration Noun 1. Clinton administration - the executive under President Clinton executive - persons who administer the law , said that information superiority encompasses the ability to collect, process, protect and distribute relevant and accurate information in a timely manner. It is equally important to deny adversaries access to that information, he told an industry conference. Woods agreed that the enemy's information systems play a key role in war planning. At JFCOM, "the concept of an operational net assessment is to understand the enemy as a system-of-systems. As an initial model, these systems are often listed as political, military, economic, social, information and infrastructure. "The challenge for the commander is to discern those nodes within the enemy's systems that are both essential to the enemy and vulnerable to attack. Paralyzing effects that deny all options to the enemy comes from a full court, sustained attack against all of the enemy's systems," Woods said. "Information is important, but it is still only one system." According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Money, "Network-centric warfare is going to tie together every aspect of our operations, from tactical to theatre to national commanders, from our 'satellite' sensors to our 'shooters' on the ground, all in what we call 'a system of systems.' "Technology intersects at almost every level of defense, and the advances made in high-performance computing High-speed computing, which typically refers to supercomputers used in scientific research. and complex data management solutions have never been more relevant in digital warfare than they are today," Money said. Knowledge Needs "The Department of Defense and the intelligence community must invest in new technology capabilities and people to meet the information and knowledge needs of the armed forces and national decision makers," said retired Army Lt. Gen. James King James King is the name of:
"What we need is a fused, real-time, true representation of the battle space-an ability to order, respond and coordinate horizontally and vertically to the degree necessary to prosecute the assigned mission," he said during a conference sponsored by Silicon Graphics Inc. John Burwell, senior director of government industry for SGI (SGI, Sunnyvale, CA, www.sgi.com) A manufacturer of workstations and servers, founded in 1982 by Jim Clark. The company was founded as Silicon Graphics, Inc., but changed to its acronym in 1999. Federal, explained that the sensors that are out there-imaging, listening devices--generate immense amounts of data that needs to be stored, processed and turned into meaningful information to support decision making. As an example of how network-centric warfare works, Burwell cited the Defense Department's Topscene system. Topscene is a software application that provides a mission rehearsal digital environment for military pilots. The idea is to provide an interactive, three-dimensional training environment that is geo-specific, meaning it reflects the real world. The scenery that pilots see in the rehearsal looks exactly like the teal teal: see duck. teal Any of about 15 species (genus Anas, family Anatidae) of small dabbling ducks found on the major continents and many islands. Many are popular game birds. mission, because it's based on real world imagery. "The same technology of three-dimensional visualization can also support command and control applications," said Burwell. "That sort of data fusion Data fusion, is generally defined as the use of techniques that combine data from multiple sources and gather that information in order to achieve inferences, which will be more efficient than if they were achieved by means of a single source. has never been done before. By putting different pieces of data together from different systems, you get much more powerful results." The U.S. government, he added, has done "a lot of collection and processing of data, but now we're doing more visualization of data, and that's exciting." Woods noted, "The powerful idea here is to establish those conditions that can evolve the service strengths into a single, highly functional single system." The question of how to shift the focus away from systems and onto joint mission capabilities packages is critical, Cebrowski said. JFCOM says that's where they come in. At the Joint Forces Command, "We are looking to use all that we have in a collective fashion, a goal that is unique in the Defense Department. ... We are changing how the U.S. goes to war," said Air Force Er. Col. Janet Tucker, a spokesperson for JFCOM. "We are trying to realize the vision of a 'plug and play' force, where ad hoc For this purpose. Meaning "to this" in Latin, it refers to dealing with special situations as they occur rather than functions that are repeated on a regular basis. See ad hoc query and ad hoc mode. computer networks could be established over a battle space, anywhere, anytime," said Annette Ratzenberger, chief of JFCOM's experimentation engineering. Within such a computer network, Ratzenberger said, the goal would be for any soldier, sailor, altman or Marine to plug-and-play with other agencies and command authorities. "Someday some·day adv. At an indefinite time in the future. Usage Note: The adverbs someday and sometime express future time indefinitely: We'll succeed someday. Come sometime. we want to have the pilot in the aircraft being able to talk to a nuclear expert on plant design, and be able to do that in real time," she said. JFCOM is pursuing modeling, simulation and experimentation in this arena. "We try and work this networked-battlefield, through scheduled experiments such as Network Challenger II and Millennium Challenge '02, which will occur in July of 2002, with all services involved." During the experimentation process, Ratzenberger said, "we are looking at three legs of a stool that make up the operational concept: the services' doctrine, organization, and technology. "There is some prototype software that we will be experimenting on," to connect the networks, Ratzenberger noted. "Most importantly Adv. 1. most importantly - above and beyond all other consideration; "above all, you must be independent" above all, most especially , however, are the doctrinal doc·tri·nal adj. Characterized by, belonging to, or concerning doctrine. doc tri·nal·ly adv.Adj. 1. and organizational aspects." These experiments, she said, "are beginning to look at what we would call 'coherent jointness' in the battle space, as opposed to separate service stovepipes. We're trying to take stovepipes and make them interoperate together." |
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