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The last mile first

The last mile first. Lieutenant Colonel Jim Dryburgh Royal New Zealand Corps of Signals Capability Branch New Zealand Defence Force. Thoughts. “ Give me three good sections, add a solid headquarters and we got the makings of a great Platoon...

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The last mile first

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  1. The last mile first Lieutenant Colonel Jim Dryburgh Royal New Zealand Corps of Signals Capability Branch New Zealand Defence Force

  2. Thoughts “Give me three good sections, add a solid headquarters and we got the makings of a great Platoon... Give me three good platoons add a solid headquarters and we’ve got the makings of a great Company... Provide the right level of organic support from Combat Support and Combat Service Support Arms and we have a Combined Arms Task Group……NZ’s LAND PLATFORM”

  3. Sequence • A2CBL Overview • NZ Army Operations • The Last Mile • NZ Operating Context • NZ C4 Enabling Concepts • The Way Ahead

  4. AC2BL – Role and Function The role for the AC2BL is to develop People,build relationships , exposeandevaluate technology andintegratechosen solutions - Enabling Army to: -Provide focussed experimentation in Land C4 to support the introduction of a LAND C4 capability as part of the NZDF LAND C4ISR Project. -Grow as an organisation -Meet the C4ISR Environment of the future (FLOC) -Assure the land component of NEC

  5. Battle Lab Industry Engagement • Currently an Informal Arrangement. • Product Selection. HP was engaged to help the Battle Lab select the most appropriate components for experimentation in NZ. • Knowledge Transfer. Essential for Battle Lab project delivery, and in the longer term to help bridge Army’s knowledge gap. • Integration Assistance. HP assisted Army to integrate components and systems in order to provide an end-to-end solution. • Capability Delivery. • Evolutionary Acquisition. • Architectures. Creation of a deployable architecture within an enterprise architecture. Use of other best practice, including project management, stakeholder engagement and governance. • A Partnership for System Integration. A formal role for an NZ based system integrator to work alongside Army. • A Programme Based Approach.Project teams formed for specific tasks.

  6. Industry Partnership

  7. Three Years of Experimentation Validated Concepts through Failures and Successes Oct 2005 Start of basic research and winning the internal information campaign thus allocation of resources Jun 2006 CWID Internal Experiment Jun 2007 2nd CWID Internal Experiment Oct 2007 LAV Coy Assessment Jun 2008 ISR Experimentation Jun 2009 Tactical Area Networked Environment Demonstration Oct 2009 Tactical Area Networked Environment Bn Level Exercise

  8. Operations Since 1994 Of company size or smaller. Battalion deployed to East Timor in 1999 was the largest commitment Mounted and Dismounted Patrols mainly operating from FOBs Conducted in partnership (Coalition). focused on maintaining security, law and order, and providing humanitarian relief. Troop Rotation four to six months. Characterised by the need to support significant operations simultaneously in different countries. Joint effects delivered by coalition partners RESTRICTED

  9. Today the NZ Army is involved in FOURTEENmissions and operations in TEN countries around the world RESTRICTED

  10. The Last Mile We have defined the last mile as the provision of the Command and Control Support System to the Soldier, Platform and Command Post at Combat team and below.

  11. The Last Mile (Why) It is the level at which we Train, Operate and Fight and lays a platform for growth and diversity NZ Army Developing Combat Team focus Operate Dispersed Platoons Greatest need Efficient and Effective of Resources (People and Finance) Tangible RESTRICTED

  12. The Last Mile • People • Training, education and change ( Learning Organisation) • War fighters in the Job now – OC, XO, Pl & Sect Comd + Soldiers • Technical Personnel • Information • Corporate + Tactical blending • Raw + Processed • Near and real-time sharing and collaboration. • Networks • Team, Area, Theatre and Strategic “Launch & Learn” RESTRICTED

  13. Future Land Operating Concept

  14. Future Land Operating Concept Is designed to meet future challenges Recognises need to engage in close combat Realises technology and improved situational awareness enables better combat decision making Reflects NZ Army’s enduring ethos and values Network Enabled Army provides opportunities to meet the future intent (FLOC)

  15. Deployment

  16. Multi Role - Multi Mission

  17. Operating Environment Outcomes Cardinal Points Degrees of Arrangement Degrees of Capacity Degrees of Connectivity Degrees of Interoperability

  18. Network Enabling - nz army last mile

  19. Design Drivers • Force projection and protection • Coalition support for Situational Awareness . • Operations are conducted in non-contiguous areas of operations with tailored, widely dispersed units that are mobile and lethal. • Access to a Global Information environment. • Need to reduce footprints through reach back. • Enable the Soldier, Team and Commander to mass effects rather than forces. RESTRICTED

  20. Common Services Voice Collaboration and Messaging Common Operating Picture Publish, Discover, Subscribe Productivity Tools RESTRICTED

  21. Information Flows and Categories • Collaborative Planning Information • Situational Awareness Information • Intelligence Information • Multinational Information • Support information RESTRICTED

  22. Emerging Concepts and Capabilities • C4 Support Group • Theatre Communications Access Node • Forward Information Systems Team • Network Operations Section (Including Computer Network Defence) • Patrol Signaller (C4 Operator???) • Network Enabled Elements • Soldier • Platform • Command Post • Key Concepts • Tactical Area Networked Environment • TATS ( Team, Area, Theatre Strategic) - Talk Zones • Common Universal Bearer System • EOIP • Interoperability Touch Points

  23. Tactical Area Network Environment Platform Integration (Command Post, Platform, Soldier)

  24. Tactical Area Networked Environment

  25. Theatre Communications Access Node

  26. Forward Information Systems Team

  27. Common Universal Bearer System (CUBS)

  28. Network enabled elements

  29. Network Enabled Soldier Network-enabled soldier. Secure voice/data communications (Harris’s SPR) integrated with a rugged BMS for the dismounted soldier from Cobham (enabling Battle Lab's Blue Force Tracking (BFT) system). Augmented with Multiband Radios (117G/148)

  30. Network Enabled Platforms • Network-enabled platforms. Light Armoured Vehicles (LAV) and Light Operational Vehicles (LOV) fitted with the Battle-Hawk Battle Management System (BMS) from Cobham Defence Communications, and high capacity data communications (HCDR & SPR) from Harris Corporation. LAV also Fitted with Harris 117G

  31. Command Post Pod • MILSAT COM • BGAN SAT MASTS DATA ACCESS BRICK CELL OPS CLK/SIG DUTY OFFICER • HCDR • VHF NETS • HF NETS CELL DUTY OFFR COALITION TERMINAL TANE TERMINAL(S) UNCLAS/RESTRICTED TERMINAL • UNIFIED VOICE SERVICES CP DUTY OFFR PRINTER PLOTTER DC2S TERMINAL • FLAT PANEL ARRAY • COP • ISR • CP LOG RESTRICTED

  32. What We Are Doing Adopt a common information model Adopt an Architectural Approach Minimal Application Environment 60% of Something... Keep complexity at the core - Simplicity at the edge Simple things superbly

  33. What we need to investigate Where are the interoperability touch points? What are the Information Exchange Requirement standards? How do we blend Business and Battle space? How do we protect?

  34. Way Ahead Building Blocks

  35. Battle lab– a glimpse of the future Questions

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