Air Force uses network system for flight operations Donahue: Our vision for the Air Force is very clearits global reach, global power and global engagement. Weve recently taken some force structure initiatives to shape the forces that we present to a commander in chief into what we call our expeditionary Air Force because of the way we operate these days.
Information technology is front and center in the Air Force achieving its vision of global reach, power, engagement and expeditionary air forces. IT is a key enabler.
To be the expeditionary Air Force we seek to be, youve got to be
light, lean and lethal. You can only do that if youre smartly using IT across the wide range of activities.
We look carefully at how we command and control forces in these kinds of operations. Our vision is a distributive, collaborative process where we can plan our air campaigns.
We really want to send the smallest number of forces forward that we have to senda very lean forward presence that reaches back to the continental United States for the support and information they need.
We see a very tight sensor-to-shooter network. And we seek incredible awareness of the battlespace using all the sensors weve got to let us see whats happening. All these things depend on IT.
We plan to do experiments on a regular basis to test concepts and technologies so we can have a real learning experience. In Expeditionary Force Experiment 98, we expect to get some first-hand knowledge about command and control in a situation where weve got geographically dispersed operations with forward and rear air operations centers.
We will test concepts of how to do distributive, collaborative planning, where people are connected digitally but not physically.
It doesnt matter where you are; what matters is that youre on the network.
The concepts of global grid and global connectivity requirements will be a key part of our test. Were going to learn how to plan en route to an operations area and adjust as necessary the targets and mission orders as things change. Hopefully, well learn how to pull all that together to save time and resources but still execute the mission successfully.
The goal is not to just experiment and see the new technologies and concepts but to put them into practice.
The Air and Space Command and Control Agency at Langley Air Force Base, Va., is the planner of EFX 98. Its being substantially executed by the forces of Air Combat Command.
But anybody in the Air Forces IT business is involved in it. Theres also some participation from the joint community as well.
These things take a lot of energy to plan and execute. We plan a full-up EFX in 1999. But were also considering alternating between a heavy EFX one year and then a light EFX the next year.
The year 2000 may be a year to more fully exploit what we learned from 1999.
Well see how it goes this year. In 1999, there will be a very close association between EFX and the Joint Warrior Interoperability Demonstration. The same team putting on EFX 99 will be working with JWID 99 to broaden the scope, so there will be more space content.
Desktop VHughes Data Systems of Irvine, Calif., Dynamic Decisions Inc. of Edison, N.J., and International Data Products Corp. of Gaithersburg, Md., are the contractors for this three-year, $924 million indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity contract. The companies provide the Air Force with PCs, Unix workstations, peripherals, portable computers, services and support.
Global Combat Support SystemAir ForceLockheed Martin Corp. is providing integration, systems engineering and software development services to the Air Force in the services efforts to modernize its standard information systems. The five-year, $900 million IDIQ contract runs through 2001.
Management Information Systems Technical Support IIUnder this five-year, $674 million IDIQ contract, GTE Corp. and Litton PRC Inc. are providing communications, computer system development, implementation and operations at the Electronic Systems Center, Hanscom Air Force Base, Mass., and the Air Force Materiel Command.
Workstations UpgradeUnder this seven-year, $956 million IDIQ contract, Hughes Data Systems and Sun Microsystems Inc. provide high-performance workstations, peripherals, software, services and support as part of an Air Force systems upgrade. The contract runs through March 2003.
Unified LAN Architecture IIThe $574 million contract was awarded to Electronic Data Systems Corp. to provide all Defense Department and civilian agencies with local data communications, networking solutions, engineering services and user support. The IDIQ contract runs through December 1999.
Lt. Gen. Gregory Martin Chief Information Officer, Assistant Secretary for Acquisition
Lt. Gen. William Donahue Deputy CIO; Director, Communications and Information
Col. Anthony Bell Jr. Deputy Commander, Air Force Communications and Information Center
Col. Bernard Skoch Systems Director, Air Force Communications and Information Center
Col. Stephen Quick Plans and Programs Director, Air Force Communications and Information Center
Bernard Hoenle CIO Support Director, Air Force Communications and Information Center
Brig. Gen. David Nagy Mission Area Director for Information Dominance, Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Acquisition
John Gilligan Program Executive Officer for Battle Management
Robert Frye Standard Systems Group Executive Director, Maxwell Air Force Base, Ala.
Lt. Gen. Ronald Kadish Electronic Systems Center Commander, Air Force Materiel Command
Total $3,123.63
The Air Force will spend $40 million next month on a 12-day test of its air expeditionary force concept, using state-of-the-art command and control technologies that offer a glimpse of how the service will look and fight in the early 21st century.
The 1998 Expeditionary Force Experiment (EFX), sponsored by the Air and Space Command and Control Agency at Langley Air Force Base, Va., is the first in a series of experiments to evaluate new operational concepts and technologies for improving the services command and control capabilities.
EFX 98 will be held Sept. 14-26 at Eglin Air Force Base and Hurlburt Field, Fla. The experiment will combine live-fire weapons dropped by aircraft, as well as computer-generated modeling and simulation. C2 links will connect with air operations centers and the joint air component commander.
Gen. Michael Ryan, the Air Force Chief of Staff, said recently that the 10 expedition forces will include about 175 fighters and tankers that can deploy rapidly. The forces will be in place by 2000, he said.
The war game scenario simulates an attack by a rogue nation on a U.S. ally. The ally requests help and the United States responds.
EFX 98 participants hope to prove that command and control centers connected to a robust, global area network can move data quickly and efficiently while repelling an attack.
Among the command and control technologies being evaluated at EFX 98 is a Joint Targeting Workstation to improve the rapid dissemination of precision targeting data.
The system runs on a Sun Microsystems Sparcstation 10 with a ruggedized hard drive, but the system will be relocated to a standalone PC running Microsoft Windows NT and Java.
Another C2 initiative, the Common Object Framework/Special Operations Forces Planning and Rehearsal System, will be tested at EFX 98. The system uses Common Object Request Broker Architecture technology, which lets Special Operations Command squadron mission planners host different operating systems, such as Unix, MS-DOS and Windows, on a common ruggedized tactical data processor.
Mission planners also will use the Theater Battle Management Core System as the baseline C2 system for EFX. TBMCS is a single database drawn from several databases, including the Contingency Theater Automated Planning System. Planners use it to fill air tasking orders.
Lockheed Martin Corp. won the five-year, $150 million TBMCS integration and development contract from the Air Force in 1995.
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