Progressing toward a net-centric force.Part of the much talked-about transformation of our military is the ability of the services to seamlessly integrate and fight as a joint force. As we saw in Operation Iraqi Freedom, the services have come a long way in this arena. The senior commanders of the war unanimously agreed that, in this conflict, operations were much more integrated than in any previous campaign. Despite this recent success, much work remains ahead, particularly in the joint command and control area, where gaps and seams still exist, largely due to the lack of 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. between each service's command and control systems. This is a significant task, not only for the services, bur also for the industry, which must be prepared to change the traditional approaches to meeting service-unique customer requirements. As far as joint command and control is concerned, the challenge is enormous. Not only are there lots of different stove-piped architectures to sort through, but there are also multiple players who have a role in setting requirements. The job that lies ahead is difficult, but not impossible. As we have seen in recent weeks, changes already are under way in how requirements and standards are being developed in joint battle management, command and control. During the past several months, specifically, the office of the undersecretary of defense for acquisition, technology and logistics, and the U.S. Joint Forces Command, have been working on the development of a Joint Battle Management Command & Control (BMC (BMC Software, Inc., Houston, TX, www.bmc.com) A leading supplier of software that supports and improves the availability, performance, and recovery of applications in complex computing environments. 2) Roadmap. The Roadmap will provide the services, the Defense Department and the Joint Staff an update on those systems that require interoperability and will address whether those systems can effectively interact in our new environment of a capability-based military and net-centric operations. The kickoff of the Roadmap occurred in late July, when officials from the Pentagon Pentagon Huge five-sided building (1941–43) in Arlington, Va., that is the headquarters of the U.S. Department of Defense. Designed by George Edwin Bergstrom, it was, on its completion, the world's largest office building, covering 34 acres (14 hectares) and offering , Joint Forces Command and the services addressed a contingent of senior military, government and industry attendees at the Joint Battle Management Command and Control (JBMC2) Summit. Interoperability is at the heart of JMBC2. Both the acting undersecretary of defense for acquisition, technology and logistics, Mike Wynne, and John Stenbit, the assistant secretary of defense for networks and information integration, stated at the Summit that OSD (1) (On-Screen Display) An on-screen control panel for adjusting monitors and TVs. The OSD is used for contrast, brightness, horizontal and vertical positioning and other monitor adjustments. will focus on the critical interactions that will facilitate truly joint operations A general term to describe military actions conducted by joint forces or by Service forces in relationships (e.g., support, coordinating authority) which, of themselves, do not create joint forces. , via a new Joint Battlespace management architecture. It was noted that the "system-of-systems" concept is still a stovepipe approach and has been ineffective in achieving true integration and interoperability. Wynne said that the Roadmap should allow a seamless delivery of land, air and sea pictures to all forces--including collusive col·lu·sive adj. Acting in secret to achieve a fraudulent, illegal, or deceitful goal. col·lu sive·ly adv. and collaborative solutions to the common
command function.
The information must be routinely available, useful and transferable among the squad leaders Squad leader may mean
Squad Leader is a tactical level board wargame originally published by Avalon Hill in 1977. , pilots and special operations Operations conducted in hostile, denied, or politically sensitive environments to achieve military, diplomatic, informational, and/or economic objectives employing military capabilities for which there is no broad conventional force requirement. team members, as it is no longer sufficient that only flag officers and staffs have access to the information. And the information must be accurate, comprehensive, integrated, networked, common to all, unambiguous, consistent and reliable. "JBMC2 is the challenge of the hour," Wynne said. "And meeting the challenge is nothing less than the most urgent military necessity of our transformation." Those of you in industry surely must be wondering what specifically companies will be asked to do and how far the Defense Department and Joint Forces Command will go in setting common standards and architectures for the services and contractors to follow. It is yet too early to expect precise answers to these questions. Even though the technology is rapidly maturing, there are many issues to work out, such as the role of legacy systems and the development of new joint operational concepts. Proving out these concepts also will require lots of experimentation, trial and error. Making our forces fully interoperable The ability for one system to communicate or work with another. See interoperability. and giving them effective tools to command and control a joint force is a tall order, and one that will truly require a dramatic change in how we procure To cause something to happen; to find and obtain something or someone. Procure refers to commencing a proceeding; bringing about a result; persuading, inducing, or causing a person to do a particular act; obtaining possession or control over an item; or making a person and deploy systems. The exact path is still being defined but the trend is clear: U.S. military forces are moving rapidly toward total integrated military operations This is a list of missions, operations, and projects. Missions in support of other missions are not listed independently. World War I ''See also List of military engagements of World War I
I should point out that two of our NDIA NDIA National Defense Industrial Association NDIA New Doha International Airport (Qatar) divisions--the Systems Engineering Division and the C4ISR C4ISR Command, Control, Communications, Computers, Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance C4ISR Command, Control, Communications, Computer, Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance C4ISR Command Control Communications Computers Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance Division--are spearheading efforts to keep industry involved in the process of developing joint command and control standards and consolidating architectures, in partnership with their government counterparts. I urge you to join their efforts. Check our NDIA Website for points of contact. The defense industry is up to the challenge. Now we need to perform. Please e-mail me your comments to lfarrell@ndia.org |
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