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News
DoD: ‘Systemic Challenges’ Impede Asset Modernization for Nat’l Guard, Reserve Components
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on July 9, 2019
DoD: ‘Systemic Challenges’ Impede Asset Modernization for Nat’l Guard, Reserve Components


Jeff Brody

The Department of Defense found that National Guard and Reserve Components mainly rely on “cascading” legacy technologies and equipment instead of modernizing such assets, Rotor and Wing International reported Monday. 

The “DoD National Guard and Reserve Equipment Report for Fiscal 2020”, published in March, found that such practices were implemented in lieu of modernization due to “significant systemic challenges with the current process for funding and procurement of new technology.”

“Because the pace of competition is increasing, DoD will achieve and maintain a technological edge only by quickly translating new technology into a fielded capability,” the report stated. The Air National Guard and Air Force Reserves have launched efforts to test and field situational awareness technologies for HH-60G Pave Hawk combat search and rescue helicopters.

Executive Moves/News
Thales Defense & Security Adds Gen. James L. Jones, Dr. Ray Johnson & Alan Kessler to Board of Directors; Mike Sheehan Quoted
by William McCormick
Published on July 9, 2019
Thales Defense & Security Adds Gen. James L. Jones, Dr. Ray Johnson & Alan Kessler to Board of Directors; Mike Sheehan Quoted


Jeff Brody

Thales Defense & Security, Inc. announced on Tuesday that General James L. Jones, formerly of the U.S. Marine Corps., Dr. Ray Johnson and Alan Kessler have been appointed new members of Thales’ board of directors. 

Thales’ newest board members will support the organizational direction of Thales and will work to enhance the organization’s industrial defense and security posture for Thales in the United States and abroad. They join a board roster composed of accomplished leaders with distinguished backgrounds as senior defense officials and industry executives.

“The addition of General Jones, Dr. Johnson and Mr. Kessler marks a new era for Thales’ defense activities in the U.S.,” said Mike Sheehan, CEO of Thales Defense & Security, Inc. “I am pleased to welcome them and glad they have recognized the potential of Thales.” 

Thales Defense & Security, Inc.’s current list of board members includes:

  • Mitchell Herbets, Chairman of the Board

  • Michael Sheehan, the company’s President & CEO

  • Brian Miller, the company’s CFO

  • Edward Miller, Chairman of the Government Security Committee

  • Lt. Gen. Albert Edmonds, U.S. Air Force (Retired) 

  • Gen. James L. Jones, U.S. Marine Corps (Retired) 

  • Lt. Gen. William Campbell, U.S. Army (Retired) 

  • Dr. Ray Johnson 

  • Alan Kessler

About Thales

Our customers come to us with big ambitions: to make life better, to keep us safer. Combining a unique diversity of expertise, talents and cultures, our architects design and deliver extraordinary high technology solutions. Solutions that make tomorrow possible, today. 

From the bottom of the oceans to the depth of space and cyberspace, we help our customers think smarter and act faster – mastering ever-greater complexity and every decisive moment along the way. With 80,000 employees in 68 countries, Thales reported sales of $22.4 billion in 2018, on a pro forma basis including Gemalto.

Government Technology/News
Navy Challenges U.S. Citizens to Develop AI-Based Cybersecurity Systems
by Nichols Martin
Published on July 9, 2019
Navy Challenges U.S. Citizens to Develop AI-Based Cybersecurity Systems


Jeff Brody

Naval Information Warfare Systems Command has launched a competition in search of cybersecurity technologies powered by machine learning and artificial intelligence, DVIDS reported Monday. 

NAWAR is working with the U.S. Navy’s Program Executive Office for Command, Control, Communications, Computers and Intelligence to sponsor the Artificial Intelligence Applications to Autonomous Cybersecurity Challenge or AI ATAC. The competition also calls for nontraditional businesses or other parties to participate and provide input.

“We need to get after faster solutions from sectors of industry outside our traditional partners and we want to lower any barrier to entry,” said John Armantrout, a deputy program manager within PEO C4I.

AI ATAC’s first place winner will receive $100,000 and the second placer will receive $50,000. The Department of Energy’s Oak Ridge National Laboratory will offer facilities for evaluation activities under the program. U.S. citizens may submit endpoint security technology proposals through Sept. 30. The Navy will announce winners in December.

News
Report: NSA Failed to Comply With Contracting, Data Security Regulations
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on July 9, 2019
Report: NSA Failed to Comply With Contracting, Data Security Regulations


Jeff Brody

The National Security Agency’s Office of the Inspector General released a report stating that the agency didn’t properly handle its contracting procedures and signals intelligence data repository. The report, which consolidates audits from October 2018 to March 2019, also found that there’s “room for improvement” in eight information technology security areas.

According to the IG, there were cases of significant problems or abuses in agency programs within the reporting period including deficiencies in SIGINT data verification procedures that “have the potential to impact civil liberties and individual privacy.” In addition, the IG found that NSA failed to properly implement award-fee contracting procedures and that the agency’s obligations for such contracts increased by 139 percent from fiscal 2010 to 2017.

The Department of Defense’s award fee obligations declined to $10B from fiscal 2010 to 2015 due to the implementation of incentive agreements. NSA also lacked transparency on its fiscal 2018 financial statements, the report stated.

Government Technology/News
Will Roper Offers Updates on Air Force’s Advanced Battle Management System, ‘Mad Hatter’ Program
by Jane Edwards
Published on July 9, 2019
Will Roper Offers Updates on Air Force’s Advanced Battle Management System, ‘Mad Hatter’ Program


Will Roper Offers Updates on Air Force’s Advanced Battle Management System, ‘Mad Hatter’ Program
Will Roper

Will Roper, assistant secretary of the Air Force for acquisition, technology and logistics and 2019 Wash100 Award recipient, addressed the recent developments in the service’s Mad Hatter program, which uses Agile software development to address issues with the F-35 aircraft’s Autonomic Logistics Information System, during an interview published Monday with Defense News.

“They already deployed several apps that are helping maintainers,” Roper said of the Mad Hatter team. “They fixed problems with the electronic equipment logs that were showing false positives, so those have been fixed, and the maintainers get to focus on things that are actually broken — not things that are reported as broken.”

He provided updates on ALIS version 3.6 and the B-52 re-engine program as well as progress with the Advanced Battle Management System since the service hired chief architect Preston Dunlap in March. Roper said Dunlap is recording the requirements for the data architecture and that the service has started the Unified Data Library initiative as part of the ABMS program.

“I think by the time we get to our 2021 budget, ABMS should be well definitized in terms of the lines of effort, the data architecture, you know we’ll have to have a line for artificial intelligence because we are not going to be able to pass all the data collected across the networks, a networking component, and then at the end, the platforms that provided,” he added.

News
John Sherman: Intelligence Community Needs to ‘Fully Unlock’ Data
by Jane Edwards
Published on July 9, 2019
John Sherman: Intelligence Community Needs to ‘Fully Unlock’ Data


John Sherman: Intelligence Community Needs to ‘Fully Unlock’ Data
John Sherman

The Office of the Director of National Intelligence is sending representatives to meetings and conferences to promote its information technology modernization effort to facilitate analysis and sharing of sensitive government data between agencies within the intelligence community, FCW reported Monday. IC has “world class computational capability” said John Sherman, chief information officer at ODNI. “Now we need to make sure that data is fully unlocked.”

Sherman said ODNI is advancing a concept that moves toward data capture, analysis and sharing across common platforms to achieve a mission. Intelligence agencies released a strategy in 2017 intended to implement the concept through the use of machine learning-backed analysis, automation and shared services.

He also noted that identifying and harmonizing government data in relation to IC’s cloud initiatives “sets the table” for the use of artificial intelligence and technologies.

Contract Awards/News
DoD Eyes JEDI Cloud Contract Award in August Amid Bidding Process Concerns
by Jane Edwards
Published on July 9, 2019
DoD Eyes JEDI Cloud Contract Award in August Amid Bidding Process Concerns


Jeff Brody

The Department of Defense plans to award the potential $10 billion Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure cloud procurement contract, which faces a court challenge and is under scrutiny by lawmakers over the bidding process, by the end of August, The Wall Street Journal reported Sunday. Microsoft and Amazon Web Services are the final two contenders for the JEDI contract, which has drawn complaints from IBM and Oracle. 

According to DoD emails obtained by the Journal, Amazon executives met with Pentagon officials prior to the announcement and release of the solicitation for the cloud contract. AWS has “received no preferential treatment in any procurement as a result of any meetings, one-on-one or otherwise, with DoD officials,” said a spokesman for parent company Amazon.

Elissa Smith, a spokeswoman for DoD, said the bidding process for the JEDI contract is “open, transparent and full” and that no one in the defense secretary’s office took part in drafting the request for proposals for the program.

News
Sens. Marco Rubio, Gary Peters Present Small Business Cybersecurity Bill
by Nichols Martin
Published on July 9, 2019
Sens. Marco Rubio, Gary Peters Present Small Business Cybersecurity Bill


Jeff Brody

Sens. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., and Gary Peters, D-Mich., introduced a bill to better inform small businesses on cybersecurity. The Cybersecurity Assistance Act of 2019 will task the Small Business Administration to provide these firms with cybersecurity counseling and access to informative materials, Rubio’s office said Monday. 

The legislation would also direct the Department of Homeland Security to create cybersecurity education materials and train personnel who would offer counseling at small business development centers. These counselors would receive training on higher-level cybersecurity information.

“This bipartisan bill will ensure that small businesses have greater access to critical resources and training to better protect their networks before a cyber-attack occurs,” said Rubio who chairs the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship.

News
USCYBERCOM Warns of Cyber Threats from Microsoft Outlook Bug
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on July 8, 2019
USCYBERCOM Warns of Cyber Threats from Microsoft Outlook Bug


Jeff Brody

The U.S. Cyber Command has found that a known Microsoft Outlook bug is being used to launch malicious attacks, Nextgov reported Friday. CYBERCOM said in a tweet dated July 3 that it recommends immediate patching for systems that may be impacted by malware.

According to Milpita, Calif.-based cybersecurity firm FireEye,  Iranian and other adversary hackers have been exploiting the CVE-2017-11774 bug to “cause confusion for many security professionals.”

“If Outlook launches something malicious, a common assumption is that the impacted user has been phished — which is not what is occurring here. The organization may waste valuable time without focus on the root cause,” the company said in a statement.

Previously, FireEye published a blog post that identifies a group called APT33 that works “at the behest of the Iranian government” as the source for such threats.

News
DoD Conducts ‘Cyber Lightning’ Exercise
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on July 8, 2019
DoD Conducts ‘Cyber Lightning’ Exercise


Jeff Brody

The Department of Defense facilitated an exercise that tests the capacity of cyber planning units within the combatant commands to help commanders better integrate cyber operations in the battlefield, Fifth Domain reported Saturday.

The Cyber Lightning 2019 event, which falls under the U.S. Cyber Command’s segment of the European Command’s Austere Challenge, took place in March and was aimed at training the combatant commands’ new cyber operations-integrated planning elements slated to be fully operational in 2022.

The CO-IPE cyber planning cells serve as satellite entities of larger military cyber units and may assist in cyberspace deconflicting operations.

Cyber Lightning 2019 ran for two weeks and saw over 4,500 participants from U.S. strategic and transportation commands as well as various NATO countries.

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