1 / 14

Army Electronic Warfare Way Ahead

EW Planning & Management Tools. Army Electronic Warfare Way Ahead. Multi-Function Electronic Warfare. Defensive Electronic Attack. LTC James Ross Product Manager Prophet Jim.ross@us.army.mil 732-427-1479. PM EW Staff Tech Mgmt Readiness Mgmt Business Mgmt Operations.

lyndon
Download Presentation

Army Electronic Warfare Way Ahead

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. EW Planning & Management Tools Army Electronic WarfareWay Ahead Multi-Function Electronic Warfare Defensive Electronic Attack LTC James Ross Product Manager Prophet Jim.ross@us.army.mil732-427-1479

  2. PM EW Staff Tech Mgmt Readiness Mgmt Business Mgmt Operations Project Manager Electronic Warfare PM – COL Rod Mentzer DPM – Michael Ryan Product Director Tactical Data Terminals (Space) PD – LTC Craig Besaw DPD – Daryl Gorff Who We Are Tactical, forward deployed , mobile space control platform • Counter RCIED Force Protection • Platforms • Personnel • Facilities • Ground Based SIGINT • Mobile • Dismounted • Manpack Product Manager PROPHET PdM – LTC James Ross DPdM – Dan Tartaglia Product ManagerCREW PdM – LTC Bruce Ryba DPdM – Ken Evans Product Manager Information Warfare PdM – LTC Marty Hagenston DPdM – Matthew Maier Acknowledged Special Access Program • Prophet Spiral 1 • Prophet Enhanced • Prophet Control • TUAV SIGINT Payload (FY12) • Wolfhound* • Duke V2 / V3 • MMBJ 2.1 * • CVRJ 2.1 * • QRD * • Fixed Site * Acknowledged Special Access Program EAC Information Warfare Systems * Quick Reaction Capability (QRC)

  3. Evolution of Army CREW Systems Legacy CREW Systems De-Fielded Current Fielded Systems Warlock-Red/Green Combo Jun 2005 Warlock-ICE Initial Fielding to USMC Oct 2004 QRD Oct 2009 Universal Test Set (UTS) Oct 2011 MMBJ 2.1 Feb 2008 THOR III Jan 2010 Duke V2 Mar 2007 Warlock-MMBJ Mar 2005 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 First Warlock Fielding Warlock-Green Apr 2003 EWO Toolkits Jun 2010 Warlock-LX Apr 2005 Warlock-Duke Feb 2006 Warlock-Red Apr 2004 Warlock-SSVJ Assumed SSVJfrom the REF Nov 2004 Fielded Dec 2004 Duke V3 Mar 2009 CVRJ Feb 2008 105LX / 119L Antennas Dec 2010 Warlock-Blue Oct 2005 Fixed Site Oct 2010 • CREW TODAY • Operation New Dawn – defield assets in Iraq by FY13 • OEF – “Pure Fleet” with Duke V3s ~ 20,000 systems • Reset/Store/Maintain – TBD residual Qty of Dukes and CVRJs • Duke Tech Insertion (DTI) – Maintain relevancy and mitigate obsolescence

  4. Surveillance Radars mmW / UWB Fuses Wireless Networks RCIED Fire Directing Fire Finders Expanding EW Target Set EW is More than Just CREW! Potential BCT Targets of Interest RPG Fused Projectiles (Rocket, Artillery, mortars) Missiles Networked Comms Manpads /MANPAD C2 IADS/IADS C2 C2 Comms Media military and commercial C2 communications ( Military C2, Cellular, and wireless HPM ADA Electronic components of vehicle, equipment, and infrastructure ISR Sensors Infrastructure RCIED Ground & Air Data Links Deep and buried targets Personnel Mortars “Every enemy weapons system or article of equipment that transmits, receives or is susceptible to EM energy is a potential EW target.” USSTRATCOM Operational Concept for EW, 29 June 2006

  5. Integrated Electronic Warfare System Multi-Function EW (MFEW) Defensive EA (DEA) EW Planning & Management Tools (EWPMT) Attack and Exploit Personnel, Platforms and Systems Protect Personnel, Platforms and Systems Plan, Coordinate and Integrate EW Activities AFamily of Systemsdesigned to provide Electronic Warfare capabilities to the Army and Joint Force Commander. The IEWS is developed along three lines of effort: Multi-Function EW (MFEW), EW Planning & Management (EWPMT), and Defensive Electronic Attack (DEA). Building blocks of IEWS will be modular, scalable and interoperable to allow tailored responses to a variety of threats and scenarios.

  6. Program/System Characteristics Description • Provides integrated and coordinated Electronic Attack (EA), Electronic Protection (EP) and Electronic Warfare Support (ES) capabilities to select units (e.g., Brigade Combat Teams) • Gives commanders the ability to leverage and synergize both organic and external EW resources via networked and interoperable planning and battle management capabilities • Develops modular, scalable capabilities along three lines of effort: EWPMT, MFEW and DEA IEWS Concept Benefits to the Warfighter Characteristics • Increases a commander’s ability to shape and control the EMS to his advantage • Reduces the risk of “frequency fratricide” through enhanced situational awareness and system compatibility • Enhances Joint coordination through a networked planning and battle management capability • Reduces Army dependency on high demand low density Joint EW systems (e.g., Prowler, Growler, Compass Call) • Addresses a portion of 13 of 29 Army EW CBA Gaps and of 17 of 34 Joint EW CBA Gaps are addressed • Provides networked capabilities to plan, manage and execute EW operations within a highly complex operational environment • Gives organic air and ground EA capabilities to select units • Enhances the Army’s ability to protect personnel, equipment and facilities against EMS based threats

  7. Incremental Capability Strategy Acquisition Program Responsibility Assigned to PEO IEWS by AAE on 7 Jan 2011 • Key Assumptions, Constraints and Dependencies:  • Prioritized EW gaps; consider integrated capabilities • Fieldable capabilities within 3-5 years • Select threat priorities (tiered approach) • ARFORGEN 1 Corps/4 Division/15 BCTs/ 70,000 Enabling Units • Leverage Army’s CREW investment • Affordability rigor: • Requirements baseline informed by cost drivers • Established unit cost targets refined by subsequent AoAs

  8. Multi-Function EW (MFEW) Multi-Function EW (MFEW) Description • Offensive EA organic to the BCT • Family of Systems (FoS) that provides decisive non kinetic attack capability to deliver scalable non-lethal effects • Offensive EW operations in support of Full Spectrum Operations. Addresses 4 Army EW CBA gaps and 8 Joint EW CBA Gaps Attack and Exploit Personnel, Platforms and Systems Characteristics Initial Distribution Estimate • Attacks threat military/commercial comms • Detect/locate/identify/deny enemy use of spectrum • FoS with variants: • MFEW-GND Mounted, Dismounted, and Fixed Site • MFEW-AIR on unmanned platform • Networked for dynamic retasking /cooperative EA • Rapidly reprogrammable • MFEW-GND: Qty 74 per variant • 2 per IBCT; 2 per HBCT; 3 per SBCT; 3 per ACR; 4 per MI BN in BfSB; 6 per Special Forces Group; 2 per Ranger Battalion • MFEW-AIR: Qty 34 (x 3 payloads/system) on GreyWolf UAV or other designated platform • 2 per BCT • Training: Qty Estimate • 6 MFEW-GND / 4 MFEW-AIR for TRADOC • 2 each AIR/GND variant for USASOC

  9. EW Planning & Management Tools Description EW Planning & Management Tools (EWPMT) • EW Planning – tools to coordinate, manage, and deconflict unit EW activities; produces EW orders and estimates, local EME SA/visualization to employ EW assets • EW Battle Management – offensive EW targeting, dynamically task and reprogram EW assets; synchronize EW spectrum operations; support EOB development ; and conduct EW battle damage assessment • Effects cell within Mission Command Plan, Coordinate and Integrate EW Activities Addresses 11 Army EW CBA gaps and 12 Joint EW CBA Gaps Characteristics Initial Distribution Estimate • Software applications and tools; relies on existing hardware • Networks Army IEWS and Joint EW systems • Integrates with existing databases: fires, intelligence support, and spectrum management • Operates at the Secret (non-collateral) level through SIPRNET comms and network interfaces • One set of tools per each BN and higher HQs authorized a 29 Series Soldier

  10. Defensive Electronic Attack Description Defensive EA (DEA) • Force protection to ground forces operating in convoys, dismounted units, and fixed locations • Integrated with EWPMT for exploitation and analysis of Electromagnetic Environment (EME) • RCIED and potentially non-RCIED threats Protect Personnel, Platforms and Systems Addresses 2 Army EW CBA gaps and 5 Joint EW CBA Gaps Characteristics Initial Distribution Estimate • DEA-Mounted: IAW CREW distribution • 1 per vehicle • DEA-Fixed: combined with MFEW-Fixed for offensive/defensive EA capability • 2 per BN HQs; 4 per BDE HQs, 6 per DIV HQs • DEA-Dismounted: Qty 1380 • 1 per HQs CO, 1 per PLT • Training: Qty Estimate • 10 DEA-Mounted; 2 DEA-Fixed; and 10 DEA-Dismounted systems for TRADOC. • Protects against global RCIED threat • Three variants: Mounted/Dismounted/Fixed Site • Fixed site co-located w/MFEW-GND FIXED • Post-mission & limited real-time data analysis • Dynamic allocation of EA/ES resources within convoy • Networked within convoy and to EWPMT • Blue Force comms compatibility • Emitter mapping for convoy SA

  11. Electronic Support Prophet (SIGINT) Description • The BCT and BfSB dedicated, all weather, 24/7 tactical Signals Intelligence (SIGINT) and Electronic Warfare (EW) system; and is an integral part of expeditionary Army full spectrum operations • Enhanced ground-based capability to detect, identify, precision locate, and exploit enemy communications from Mobile At-the-Halt (ATH), Stationary Fixed Site, and Manpacked configurations • Prophet Control – technical steerage, SIGINT analysis, and actionable intelligence until DCGS-A migration strategy and MI Rebalance final decision implemented Without WB/BLOS With WB/BLOS QRC - Panther XM-1229 [AN/MLQ–44 (V)1] AN/MLQ-40 (v)4 AN/MLQ-40(v)5 Prophet Electronic Support 1/1+ Prophet Control T-LITE* Data Analysis, Central AN/MSW-24 Communication Central AN/TSQ-248 POR Prophet Control Prophet Enhanced *TROJAN-Lightweight Integrated Telecommunications Equipment Benefits/Capabilities Characteristics • Supports the Warfighter in New Dawn, Enduring Freedom, and other worldwide missions • Prophet currently exploiting signals internals for intelligence and immediate combat information in support of Counter Insurgency/Irregular Warfare operations • Precision geolocation supports High Value Target/High Value Individual (HVT/HVI) targeting • Supports the Integrated Sensor Coverage Area (ISCA): Persistent Area Assessment, Situational Development, and Mission Overwatch • Provides combat information and actionable intelligence in support of force protection and maneuver operations • Scalable, flexible, and open architecture; Technology Insertion (TI) to counter dynamic threat • High-speed Wideband Beyond Line-Of-Sight (BLOS) data communications provide NSAnet/Global SIGINT Enterprise access at point of collect that enables processing, collaboration, and dissemination of intelligence • Collaborative audio and data file-sharing via the Real Time Regional Gateway (RTRG) • Up-armored and environmental controls improve sustainability and survivability Linked to ARFORGEN reflecting the G8 Equipping Strategy

  12. Investment based on Lessons Learned, constant change of vehicle for mobile ops, and opportunity to provide additional capability with lifecycle cost savings Designed to better enable Technical Insertion/P3I Low coupling between modules; modular, scalable, open architecture allows insertion of new capability packages without impacting existing modules Reduced complexity/SWaP, improved usability, increased reliability/maintainability 80% less power, 40% less weight, 63% less volume, 43% less cabling Supports Multi-INT vehicle integration Hookup is simplified using visual cable and chassis markers; easier access to LRUs Use of common components reduces training costs Improved modularity/flexibility to support multiple simultaneous missions Mission -Tailorable – take only necessary equipment for specific mission Dismount & Man-pack; Dismount & Mobile; Mobile & Man-pack Functional capabilities fully contained in independent modules SATCOM, Sensor, and Network/Server functions are independent Transit cases/modules powered independently Enables mobile (without A-kit) operations on various military platforms Why POR (RCON)? Enables a non-vehicle specific solution and simultaneous ops with significant reductions in integration time, integration design cost and per system integration costs

  13. Goal: Migrate Prophet from TROJAN transport architecture into the Common Army Tactical Architecture (WIN-T) Requirements: Due to Prophet’s unique mission, Prophet sensor and control nodes require low latency connectivity directly to NSA via NSANet, as well as access to JWICS, plus help desk and NETOPS support WG has met three times (Aug and Oct 10, Jan 11) to refine requirements for Prophet, e.g., Number of Nodes, Bandwidth by Enclave, Latency Constraints ATH requirements are now threshold; OTM requirements moved to objective PM WIN-T and TCM N&S COA development has identified a proposed way-ahead that leverages WIN-T Incr 1 Modems at NSC-T and RHN’s as notional architecture. Notional Architecture addresses QoS for Prophet Sensors as part of a Mesh Sub-Net that assures at minimum 512Kbs threshold requirement Way Ahead for 2011: Conduct “Face to Face” meeting with major stakeholders Identify resources needed (funding, equipment, SATCOM bandwidth and NSANet/JWICS connectivity) and coordinate schedule and draft test plan Conduct Proof of Concept in CONUS using the NSC-T as a SATCOM PoP with direct connectivity to the TNCCs or GISA. Prophet Network Convergence WG

  14. QUESTIONS?

More Related