Search results for: JADC2
In its mark of the fiscal 2023 defense authorization bill, the House Armed Services Committee’s cyber, innovative technologies and information systems subcommittee says it wants to know what capabilities will be delivered to the warfighter, when they’ll be delivered and how much they’ll cost.
By Jaspreet Gill“The situation in Ukraine has made this more evident that we need to do the information sharing and we need to… mobilize our enterprise services,” Caroline Bean, acting director for DISA’s joint enterprise services directorate, told the AFCEA TechNet Cyber 2022 conference.
By Jaspreet Gill“The services today are working more what I call ‘service all domain command and control’ — and don’t blame me for the acronym, it sounds like SADC2,” said Scott Stapp, CTO of Northrop Grumman Corp.
By Theresa HitchensIt took US and coalition forces a decade to network themselves and share data. We can’t afford to take 10 years to figure out how to do that when faced with near-peer competitors.
By Breaking DefenseThe DoD has partnered with the aerospace and defense industry to help solve one of the most complex challenges for the warfighter – enabling Joint All Domain Operations (JADO) and implementing Joint All-Domain Command and Control (JADC2).
By Collins AerospaceThe JADC2 Implementation Plan, now signed by Deputy Secretary Kathleen Hicks, is aimed at ensuring that there is actual follow through in making JADC2 real, says Lt. Gen. Dennis Crall, who is managing the effort.
By Theresa HitchensThe eight-page summary document essentially defines Joint All Domain Command and Control (JADC2) and sets out the ambitious goals for the program, but provides little insight into how the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the military services actually are moving to make it work.
By Theresa HitchensSTRATCOM head Gen. Chas Richard said he’s “very concerned” about “opportunistic aggression” with regards to China and Russia. He also noted the government has whiffed on its plutonium pit production goal.
By Aaron MehtaData has been, arguably, the US military’s most valuable-but-untapped resource since the founding of the US Army in 1787 and the US Navy a decade later.
By Breaking DefenseC2 will be particularly important in scenarios where US forces are met with anti-access/area denial countermeasures potentially more suitable for autonomous aerial and ground systems.
By Barry RosenbergThe Afghanistan withdrawal and the consolidation of all in-country military networks to one base at Hamid Karzai International Airport illustrated unique challenges with direct applicability to Joint All Domain Command and Control and future Project Convergences.
By Barry Rosenberg“I’ve been saying, kind of tongue in cheek, we’ve been JADC2 before it was cool,” Space Force chief Gen. Jay Raymond told CSIS.
By Theresa HitchensThe goal of the demonstration was to show how integrated technologies and joint connectivity can support warfighters by providing actionable data and increased situational awareness, the company said.
By Jaspreet Gill
Pentagon leaders should down-scope JADC2 around a smaller set of force compositions, focused on problems facing combatant commanders and using the forces deploying to or already in theater, argue Bryan Clark and Dan Patt.
By Bryan Clark and Dan Patt