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Army to Roll Out Air Defense That Integrates C2, Sensors, Missiles
by Jerry Petersen
Published on January 14, 2019
Army to Roll Out Air Defense That Integrates C2, Sensors, Missiles


Army to Roll Out Air Defense That Integrates C2, Sensors, Missiles

The U.S. Army’s assistant secretary for acquisition, logistics and technology has said that the service will soon deploy an air defense system that can address increasingly complex airborne threats, Military .com reported Friday.

Bruce Jette said during a Defense Writers Group meeting on Jan. 10 that, by “next December,” the service expects to roll out the Integrated Air and Missile Defense Battle Command System, which Northrop Grumman developed.

Jette explained that the system will make it possible to integrate command-and-control mechanisms, sensors and different types of missiles, allowing warfighters to respond to various types of airborne threats, such as drones, ballistic missiles, artillery and combat aircraft.

The Army official added that, down the road, the service intends to augment air defense with artificial intelligence.

Jette noted that AI would enable warfighters to respond to threats at greater speed.

Executive Moves/News
Trump Nominates Mark Greenblatt as DOI Inspector General
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on January 14, 2019
Trump Nominates Mark Greenblatt as DOI Inspector General


Trump Nominates Mark Greenblatt as DOI Inspector General

President Trump has nominated Mark Greenblatt, currently the Department of Commerce’s assistant inspector general, to serve as inspector general for the Department of the Interior, the White House said Friday.

Greenblatt has spent over 15 years serving across various legal oversight roles for the DOC, the Department of Justice’s Office of Inspector General and the Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations. 

Earlier in his career, Greenblatt worked as a litigator in New York and also as a clerk for U.S. District Judge Anita Brody. Previously, he served as vice chair of the Montgomery County Ethics Commission and was a senior manager in government fellow at the Harvard University Kennedy School of Government.

News
Democratic Senators Introduce Legislation to Compensate Employees During Shutdown
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on January 14, 2019
Democratic Senators Introduce Legislation to Compensate Employees During Shutdown


Democratic Senators Introduce Legislation to Compensate Employees During ShutdownThe House has passed the 2019 Government Employee Fair Treatment Act that will provide back pay for furloughed employees and enable workers to take previously scheduled leaves without consequence, Government Executive reported Friday.

The bill, introduced by Maryland’s Democratic Sens. Ben Cardin and Chris Van Hollen, was created to guarantee back pay for furloughed federal workers in future shutdowns.

Eleanor Holmes Norton, D-D.C., introduced a similar legislation called the 2019 Low-Wage Federal Contractor Employee Back Pay Act which will provide compensation to retail, custodial, food and security personnel working during the shutdown.

Thirty-three Democratic senators sent a letter to Russ Vought, acting director of the Office of Management and Budget, requesting him to mandate agencies to coordinate with contractors to ensure that the firms’ workers receive back pay when the partial government shutdown ends.

President Donald Trump has previously stated that federal workers will have to “make an adjustment” and take actions such as asking their landlords for payment relief.

News
USAF Completes First Phase of Cloud Migration; Plans Future Activities
by Nichols Martin
Published on January 14, 2019
USAF Completes First Phase of Cloud Migration; Plans Future Activities


USAF Completes First Phase of Cloud Migration; Plans Future Activities

The U.S. Air Force Network Integration Center aims to complete cloud migration of USAF enterprise services soon, following the first phase’s conclusion in November. AFNIC intends to move all USAF enterprise services within continental the U.S. to Microsoft Office 365, the U.S. Air Force said Friday.

The first phase, that concluded on Nov. 8, 2018, involved the transition of 555K accounts to the cloud. Military components including the 24th Air Force, Air Force Life Cycle Management Center and the Defense Information Sytems Agency worked with Dell and Microsoft to address newly discovered vulnerabilities.

“We didn’t create these issues, but it was our responsibility to work with experts across the Air Force to correct them before moving ahead,” said Dennis Polansky, lead program manager at AFNIC.

The integration center also expects to implement SharePoint Online and OneDrive in the foreseeable future, and is working to extend the same cloud services to USAF commands outside the country. AFNIC, AFLCMC and industry partners are developing a roadmap to guide future collaborative activities.

Government Technology/News
USAF Completes First Phase of Cloud Migration; Plans Future Activities
by Nichols Martin
Published on January 14, 2019
USAF Completes First Phase of Cloud Migration; Plans Future Activities


USAF Completes First Phase of Cloud Migration; Plans Future Activities

The U.S. Air Force Network Integration Center aims to complete cloud migration of USAF enterprise services soon, following the first phase’s conclusion in November. AFNIC intends to move all USAF enterprise services within continental the U.S. to Microsoft Office 365, the U.S. Air Force said Friday.

The first phase, that concluded on Nov. 8, 2018, involved the transition of 555K accounts to the cloud. Military components including the 24th Air Force, Air Force Life Cycle Management Center and the Defense Information Sytems Agency worked with Dell and Microsoft to address newly discovered vulnerabilities.

“We didn’t create these issues, but it was our responsibility to work with experts across the Air Force to correct them before moving ahead,” said Dennis Polansky, lead program manager at AFNIC.

The integration center also expects to implement SharePoint Online and OneDrive in the foreseeable future, and is working to extend the same cloud services to USAF commands outside the country. AFNIC, AFLCMC and industry partners are developing a roadmap to guide future collaborative activities.

News
USAF Launches New Formal Innovation Office
by Nichols Martin
Published on January 14, 2019
USAF Launches New  Formal Innovation Office


USAF Launches New Formal Innovation Office

The Air Force Installation and Mission Support Center opened a new office in November to facilitate and support the service branch’s innovation efforts. The AFIMSC innovation office consists of a new branch dedicated to innovation and analysis efforts, with Marc Vandeveer serving as chief innovation officer, the U.S. Air Force said Friday.

“This innovation office is dedicated to tying together the vast innovation ecosystem with our Airmen at our installations as a whole,” Vandeveer said. “We will strive to take an idea from conception, through collaborative innovation, and most importantly, through implementation.”

The office, now a full-time federal component, will work on efforts in partnership with other innovation groups including the Defense Innovation Unit, the Air Force Institute of Technology and the Air Force Innovation Hub Network. AFIMSC invested $150K in a partnership with AFWERX’s Austin, Texas-based hub to develop unmanned aerial vehicles.

Government Technology/News
DoD Inspector General Issues Summary of Unclassified, Classified Reports on Cybersecurity
by Jane Edwards
Published on January 14, 2019
DoD Inspector General Issues Summary of Unclassified, Classified Reports on Cybersecurity


DoD Inspector General Issues Summary of Unclassified, Classified Reports on CybersecurityThe Department of Defense’s office of inspector general has released a summary of 20 unclassified and four classified reports related to cybersecurity and found that the Pentagon continues to encounter challenges in managing cyber vulnerabilities to its network.

The Government Accountability Office and the Pentagon’s oversight community issued those reports from July 1, 2017 through June 30, 2018, according to OIG’s report published Wednesday.

According to the summary, the unclassified documents highlighted improvements in security continuous monitoring; identity management and access control; data protection procedures; and asset management.

Of the 159 recommendations in the unclassified reports, the inspector general found that the department has moved to address 19 of those suggestions by initiating measures to build up its cybersecurity posture.

The OIG noted in the summary that the highest number of identified cyber weaknesses were linked to governance, which enables organizations to manage security risks through implementation of policies and processes.

“Without proper governance, the DoD cannot ensure that it effectively identifies and manages cybersecurity risk as it continues to face a growing variety of cyber threats from adversaries, such as offensive cyberspace operations used to disrupt, degrade, or destroy targeted information systems,” according to the summary.

The summary also showed that there were 266 open recommendations related to cybersecurity as of Sept. 30, 2018.
 

News
Lt. Gen. Bruce Crawford on How Army CIO Office Supports AI Task Force Across Six Areas
by Jane Edwards
Published on January 14, 2019
Lt. Gen. Bruce Crawford on How Army CIO Office Supports AI Task Force Across Six Areas


Lt. Gen. Bruce Crawford on How Army CIO Office Supports AI Task Force Across Six AreasLt. Gen. Bruce Crawford, chief information officer of the U.S. Army, has said the service formed in September a new task force that aims to integrate artificial intelligence into the battlefield and business operations, Federal News Network reported Friday.

He said in an interview on Ask the CIO that Brig. Gen. Matt Easley, a signal officer, oversees the new AI task force and directly reports to Army Futures Command.

Crawford noted that his office supports the new task force across six areas and one of those is ensuring the security of data in the cloud.

He also mentioned his office’s other tasks in support of the new AI organization such as efforts to build up the certification process based on the risk management framework and improve the identity credentialing and access management through two-factor authentication.

The Army has begun to work with defense and intelligence community partners to develop a streamlined RMF process.

“It is one of the fundamental things that we have to do in order to achieve the vision of the Army 2028,” Crawford said.

“We’ve got to figure out how to streamline the RMF process so that we can get the speed that is required to be able to get things connected to the network and get weapons systems and technology to the soldier.”
 

Government Technology/News
Navy Commencing Information Warfare Improvement Plan in 2019
by Nichols Martin
Published on January 10, 2019
Navy Commencing Information Warfare Improvement Plan in 2019


Navy Commencing Information Warfare Improvement Plan in 2019

The U.S. Navy is pushing a plan to bolster information warfare capacities this year. The Information Warfare Readiness Improvement Plan would revamp the way Navy servicemen leverage command, control, communications, computers and intelligence assets, the service branch said Wednesday.

A group of commands agreed with the plan presented by the  Program Executive Office C4I last month.

“What we’re driving toward is an environment with better technology that lets Sailors employ, maneuver and manage their C4I capabilities with less onboard assistance from the SYSCOM [systems command],” said Rear Adm. Carl Chebi, program executive officer at PEO C4I.

The plan revolves around four main effort segments including design, materiel, documentation and personnel. The IWRIP team will adjust C4I systems to accommodate sailor needs, allocate required materiel, document activities and provide qualification training. The team’s efforts to simplify C4I systems would run throughout 2019, then baseline reduction activities would follow in 2020.

William Luebke, logistics and fleet support director at Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command, said the Navy invited stakeholders to take part in brainstorming sessions for the program.

News
David Norquist: DoD Developing Financial Database Under Pilot Program
by Brenda Marie Rivers
Published on January 10, 2019
David Norquist: DoD Developing Financial Database Under Pilot Program


David Norquist: DoD Developing Financial Database Under Pilot Program

David Norquist, acting deputy secretary of defense, said Wednesday during a Center for the National Interest event in Washington, D.C. the Department of Defense is developing a financial audit database, FCW.com reported Wednesday.

Norquist said the pilot program aims to resolve issues cited by the DoD inspector general’s first ever audit issued in November 2018. The program will utilize the DoD IG’s audit findings and enable budget analysts to view the department’s transaction history to foster accountability and take corrective actions.

Norquist noted that the department doesn’t have a projected cost for repairing its information technology systems throughout the multi-year effort. He added that the Pentagon has begun working through its second financial audit.

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