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Purpose. To discuss how to improve NetOps in Southwest Asia inspired by Thomas Friedman's book ?The World is Flat." . Agenda. The Premise of the World Is FlatNetworks are JointThe Primary NetOps organizations in SWAUSCENTCOM Five NetOps Functional AreasFlattening NetOps Functional Areas

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335th TSC

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    2. Purpose To discuss how to improve NetOps in Southwest Asia inspired by Thomas Friedman’s book “The World is Flat.”

    3. Agenda The Premise of the World Is Flat Networks are Joint The Primary NetOps organizations in SWA USCENTCOM Five NetOps Functional Areas Flattening NetOps Functional Areas in SWA NetOps Reporting Information Systems Operations Network Engineering IA & CND Knowledge Management Example of Flattening - Active Directory Consolidation in Iraq Summary and Suggestions Questions and Comments

    4. The Premise of the World is Flat In a flat world information is readily available at any location. Assuming adequate connectivity to a network an organization can improve its capability and/or efficiency by several means. However, the inference is the following must be true for SWA: Our networks and information systems have to be “flat enough” NetOps organizations have to trust each other – networks and systems don’t have clear borders which will create conflicts in ownership If the above are true an organization can gain efficiencies by: Outsourcing – is there a place where some work can be performed at the same level, and more efficiently? In-forming – ensuring that all people with requirements have access to all information that is pertinent to them, because dissemination usually requires centralization Identifying and eliminating redundancy – gets rid of unnecessary layers, creates efficiency and speed of response The good news - NetOps in SWA works, people have the best communications ever available to a warfighter, but can it be better?

    5. Networks are Joint (but Joint doesn’t make them Flat) All networks are joint, because DISA owns the Tier 0 - the problem is how do we establish a proper and flat relationship between joint NetOps organizations and service or component NetOps organizations to prevent redundancy and promote good relationships between communication organizations Services provide portions of the network, especially for all regions not associated with a JTF, e.g. Qatar, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Kyrgyzstan Service NOSCs are permanent (or more enduring) They have an established network relationship with units deploying from their service They are supported by a global NOSC (NTOs) They are more likely to have a common toolset JNCCs are stood up to provide adequate NetOps support for a JTF and therefore: Are “one-off” based upon the mission – they don’t exist before or after the JTF Specialists in understanding client-server relationships Have portions of their network and services provided by the more permanent service organizations Gap fill for needs Create new seams in ownership in the network when they are stood-up -because they are new

    6. Primary NetOps Organizations in SWA (Joint and Service) TNC CENT – the combined TNCC and TNC for SWA, TACON to USCENTCOM JNCC-Iraq Handles all TLA stacks in Iraq (minus Air Force and Marine) Manages the Iraq and Iraq-s Forest Manages and/or monitor IA/CND for Iraq 24x7 Operations Center JNCC-Afghanistan Handles intra-Afghanistan routing DAA Authority over systems (e.g. firewalls, patching) Splits management on the Afghan Domain Receives multiple services from the SWA TNOSC SWA TNOSC Provides NetOps support for Army components in SWA Handles all TLA stacks for the Army outside of Iraq Runs the SWA Forest for Kuwait, Afghanistan, Qatar and Bahrain 831st Provides IDS for SIPR, NIPR to include Iraq ACCC/NOSC Handles all Air Force TLA stacks Provides CSIDs for all stacks in theater Handles all Air Force IA/CND Provides the CENTAF Forest

    8. CENTCOM NetOps Functional Areas

    10. Flattening NetOps Reporting All NetOps organizations need to see all NetOps information that applies to them, this requires seams to be removed in reporting (compatible information) Network Monitoring Tools can be different, but must be compatible Both tactical and fixed/commercial organizations must provide SA SA must be available to all NetOps organizations that need them - flat In a joint and flat world there is always more than one person to report to, Requires a standard reporting schema Two NetOps organizations may track the same issue, but might have different requirements for SA The goal should be to have the unit make one report available to many recipients The information must be correct and detailed – it must be flat (available) Multiple entities must have the permissions to contact the reporting agency There must be a RFI process – the ability to get answers to questions rapidly, without having to go through multiple layers of command, one question – one answer All organizations must understand the requirement to make information available and respond to questions, and follow centrally well defined CCIR

    12. Flattening Network Engineering The network requires fewer players in the TLA stacks – its not a specialty skill, and it should be done by the services There will be TLA stacks in Oman, Kuwait, Qatar, Bahrain, HOA, Sinai, Kyrgyzstan TLA stack administration should be centralized – lots of redundancy The military needs to centralize experts The services are in cheaper areas, contractors cost 50 to 66% in Kuwait and Qatar when compared with Iraq and Afghanistan TLA stacks and enterprise management can be outsourced, but The JNCCs will need local support The support must be in the same time zone, to be responsive In a flat network, Qatar and Kuwait should be the primary sites because the sites are more enduring, cheaper to man, have better connectivity - and in a flat world could COOP each other

    14. Flattening Computer Network Defense Minimizing domain and forests in an AOR is critical to having uniform and controllable security policies in that AOR There is only one RCERT in the theater – it responds to Tier 1.2 IDS tickets from the Army – this should be leveraged for the entire theater Data storage, CAC/PKI implementation and Switch Security need to be standardized lack of standards is hurting security, especially below the Tier 2 only the chain of command has the enforcement function this requires JNCCs to control their information resources within their AOR In a flat SWA world, standards and policies for the minimum standard must come through one source – that should be the Combatant Command, service policies can be stricter, but not less than the CC policy – should be coordinated, the CC is the only organization that everyone recognizes must reduce waivers, because of the weakest link problem

    16. Flattening Content Staging and Information Management Defined here as “ensuring the warfighter has the right information at right time” - the most important of the pillars – all others enable this This is the “specialist skill” of a JNCC, and therefore they need NetOps SA and control of local NetOps systems Only a JNCC can provide an understanding of all the component networks and systems, this is important for: determining operational impact providing NetOps information for communications integration coordinating ASIs that affect multiple services ensure redundant paths obtain provisioning and trend analysis information – to allow better data flow Neither the SWA TNOSC or ACCC/NOSC are manned to provide true knowledge management, which requires a direct interface to operations centers. All implementations require the services as supporting organizations to be responsive to the prioritization of the JNCCs (only they can gain a true understanding of the priorities)

    19. Flattening Information Systems Operations Lack of unity in an Active Directory (AD) structure creates problems. For example, there are problems with multiple domains in Iraq. Creates security inconsistencies (SMS/WSUS) Violates Netcentricity by creating seams in Single Sign On and information access Hinders the use of two factor authentication (CAC/PKI) Requires additional servers and system administrators Leads to baselining In contrast a unified AD structure leads to Netcentricity, Allows for confirmable and consistent security policies with accountability Eases system administration – you can see the seams between systems Allows single sign-on and access to information Saves money (system administrators and servers) – and simplifies identifying redundancy Increases mobility - users can have an account throughout an AOR

    26. Summary of The World is Flat In SWA NetOps the functional areas are tightly integrated, but all are done differently by country, and by organization – this requires great coordination and flattening of information Often the biggest problem is the lack of trust between organizations. In extension all organizations feel they have to control something for it to be responsive. There are many reasons to flatten SWA NetOps: Makes a more user friendly and available network Leads to a better and more capable network Allow for the establishment of a true NetCop It provides better, more responsive, uniform and controllable CND It would save millions of dollars It allows for concentration of expertise It makes it easier for units and personnel to move in the theater It makes it easy to identify redundancy

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