Search results for: JADC2
Its unclear how much the Pentagon is spending on JADC2 and it needs to provide examples of progress next year.
By Andrew EversdenResponsible Artificial Intelligence principles will build justified confidence in AI systems that the DoD will depend upon for all-domain operations.
By Breaking Defense“I think there’s not going to be an appetite for large scale M&A in in the defense industry,” the BAE Systems Inc. CEO said, while noting smaller add-ons will continue.
By Aaron MehtaHow can warfighters know when the AI is telling the truth? The answer to that and the roles of AI/ML in all-domain operations are inextricably linked.
By Breaking DefenseBrig. Gen. John Olson said that for JADC2 to work, “artificial intelligence and machine learning are absolutely essential enablers to make us able to react, and respond, and again, make sense of the information, then act upon it.”
By Theresa HitchensAmid questions of authority, top general overseeing JADC2 defended the Pentagon’s current approach to the governance of the concept.
By Andrew EversdenThe similarities of the failed DoD push in the early 2000s to implement “network-centric warfare” to the evolution of today’s JADC2 effort are striking and ominous, the CSIS study shows.
By Theresa HitchensThe OSCAR effort is designed do develop AI/ML software that can detect spectrum interference and re-route users to open comms channels in near real time.
By Theresa HitchensThe Marine Corps’ Ground/Air Task-Oriented Radar (G/ATOR) and the Navy’s Surface Electronic Warfare Improvement Program (SEWIP) Block 3 program enable DMO.
By Breaking Defense“Penetrating and disintegrating A2/AD is the fundamental problem of all-domain operations. It’s the hardest problem we’ve got,” said Brig. Gen. John Rafferty.
By Andrew EversdenGovini’s Billy Fabian said that for some JADC2 problems, the DoD has a “closing window… before the next generation of capabilities are too far along in development. Otherwise, it risks making its interoperability challenges even worse.”
By Brad D. WilliamsAgile, open networks will let the DoD make command decisions faster, distribute its forces, and operate at a standoff distance to counter new weaponry like hypersonic missiles.
By Barry Rosenberg
“We are past the tipping point where information and decision-centric capabilities are more important instruments of war than kinetic weapons,” write former deputy secretary Bob Work and Govini’s Bill Fabian.
By Robert O. Work and Billy Fabian