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Government Technology/News
DARPA’s XS-1 Spaceplane Program Aims to Help Address National Security Risk
by Jane Edwards
Published on October 26, 2017
DARPA’s XS-1 Spaceplane Program Aims to Help Address National Security Risk


DARPA’s XS-1 Spaceplane Program Aims to Help Address National Security RiskThe Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency’s move to launch the XS-1 spaceplane program stemmed from the need to address a national security risk posed by long lead times on space launches and challenges to launching satellites into space in a cost-effective manner, Space.com reported Wednesday.

“If it takes me 20 years to build a constellation of geosatellites to do, [for example], ballistic missile early warning, and it costs 20 billion dollars, that’s a problem,” Fred Kennedy, director of DARPA’s tactical technology office, said Oct. 12 at the International Symposium for Personal and Commercial Spaceflight in New Mexico.

“Because someone else might figure out how to put up similar capabilities or develop countermeasures in that period,” he said of the country’s potential adversaries.

DARPA teamed up with Boeing in May to build an unmanned reusable spaceplane – Phantom Express – that will work to deploy an expendable upper stage to launch a 3,000-pound satellite into orbit.

The agency expects XS-1 to have its initial flight tests by 2020 and to have a demonstration vehicle ready as early as 2019 with a goal to reduce launch costs to less than $5 million per take-off.

The spaceplane will run on an Aerojet Rocketdyne-built AR-22 engine and will work to perform up to 10 space missions in 10 days, the report added.

Government Technology/News
Transcom Begins Commercial Cloud IT System Migration
by Nichols Martin
Published on October 26, 2017
Transcom Begins Commercial Cloud IT System Migration


Transcom Begins Commercial Cloud IT System MigrationThe U.S. Transportation Command has migrated the first batch of five information technology systems to a commercial cloud infrastructure, making Transcom the first Defense Department organization to do so.

Gen. Darren McDew, commander of Transcom, directed the cloud migration effort in a move to help the command deliver information to transportation service providers on time, update its aging electronic infrastructure and address cyber domain threats, the U.S. Air Force said Wednesday.

“This transformational move to the cloud also allows us to keep pace with industry,” said Lt. Col. John Riester, deputy chief of enterprise infrastructure portfolio and support division at Transcom’s command, control, communications and cyber systems directorate.

The project stems from a cloud-migration contract executed by Transcom’s Cloud Center of Excellence with the Defense Innovation Unit Experimental and the Army Contracting Command in May.

Herndon, Virginia-based REAN Cloud was awarded the contract to prototype a cloud-migration platform and helped the command establish an IT enclave within a government-approved cloud environment.

Transcom expects to move its remaining IT systems to the cloud by July 2018.

Government Technology/News
Transportation Dept to Launch Pilot Program for UAS Integration in the Natl Airspace
by Scott Nicholas
Published on October 26, 2017
Transportation Dept to Launch Pilot Program for UAS Integration in the Natl Airspace


Transportation Dept to Launch Pilot Program for UAS Integration in the Natl AirspacePresident Donald Trump has directed Transportation Secretary Elaine Chao to launch a program that will assess and validate operations for unmanned aircraft systems alongside state and local governments in select areas.

The Transportation Department‘s UAS Integration Pilot Program will look to streamline and address challenges related to integrating drones into the national aerospace, the Federal Aviation Administration said Wednesday.

FAA noted the program also aims to foster the use of unmanned technology in the economy and mitigate potential public safety and security risks.

The program can potentially open up to 100,000 jobs in the span of a decade as well as help USDOT and FAA establish a regulatory framework for low-altitude operations, determine strategies that will cater to local and national interests as well as boost communications among local, state and tribal jurisdictions, added FAA.

“This program supports the President’s commitment to foster technological innovation that will be a catalyst for ideas that have the potential to change our day-to-day lives,” said Chao.

“The program recognizes the importance of community participation in meaningful discussions about balancing local and national interests related to integrating unmanned aircraft,” noted FAA Administrator Michael Huerta.

FAA said the pilot program will assess various operational concepts such as night operations, flights over people and beyond pilots’ line of sight, package delivery, detect-and-avoid-technologies, data links between aircraft and pilots as well as counter-UAS security missions.

Government Technology/News
NASA Teams With Other Agencies to Develop In-Space Assembly Tech
by Ramona Adams
Published on October 26, 2017
NASA Teams With Other Agencies to Develop In-Space Assembly Tech


NASA Teams With Other Agencies to Develop In-Space Assembly TechNASA is working with other government agencies on the development of technologies that can help build and inspect large structures in space.

The space agency said Thursday it has participated in a series of technical interchange meetings on in-space assembly as a member of the Science and Technology Partnership Forum.

The forum also includes the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, U.S. Air Force, National Reconnaissance Office and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.

The team has completed the first phase of the in-space assembly effort and moved to the program’s second phase, which involved a technical interchange meeting in September at NRL’s Washington facility.

Each agency discussed their plans to create in-space assembly platforms during the meeting, NASA noted.

Forum members identified the potential government and commercial applications of in-space assembly technologies, including the construction and servicing of large and modular spacecraft.

The team plans to explore interagency collaboration opportunities and work with industry and academia to gain additional knowledge, expertise and research capacity.

DoD/News
DLA, Army Partner to Equip 1st of Six Security Force Assistance Brigades
by Scott Nicholas
Published on October 26, 2017
DLA, Army Partner to Equip 1st of Six Security Force Assistance Brigades


DLA, Army Partner to Equip 1st of Six Security Force Assistance BrigadesThe Defense Logistics Agency has teamed up with the U.S. Army to equip the first of six security force assistance brigades tasked to perform advise-and-assist operations around the world.

The equipment list for the 1st SFAB unit covers approximately 6,300 items including the latest version of the Mine-Resistant Ambush Protected vehicle, updated communications systems and other materials currently deployed with other units, DLA said Wednesday.

DLA currently helps the Army repair approximately 1,500 line items at Fort Stewart, Georgia as part of efforts to help the 1st SFAB achieve mission readiness.

Phil Greene, customer support representative of the Army Forces Command, said part of the 1st SFAB equipment will come from surplus stock which will be turned over to the DLA Disposition Services as part of the All Army Excess program.

Greene noted DLA’s troop support unit has created and procured 1,000 berets for members of the 1st SFAB along with an additional 600 units for members of the next established SFAB.

Lisa Smitherman, customer support representative for DLA Land and Maritime, added agency representatives have reached out to Army Materiel Command, Red River Army Depot and Army Tank Automotive and Armaments Command representatives to acquire various parts such as optical lenses and wire rope assemblies.

DoD/News
Thomas Dee: Navy Needs More Time, Funds to Reach 355-Ship Goal
by Jane Edwards
Published on October 26, 2017
Thomas Dee: Navy Needs More Time, Funds to Reach 355-Ship Goal


Thomas Dee: Navy Needs More Time, Funds to Reach 355-Ship GoalThomas Dee, acting U.S. Navy undersecretary, has said the service will take until 2050s to execute its plan to increase its combat fleet to 355 ships, Breaking Defense reported Thursday.

“We may want it very, very soon, and perhaps we’ll be able to get there, but we’re going to have to work with our partners over on the Hill,” Dee said of the 355-ship goal.

“We can get on mark by mid-century to be approaching 350 ships, with significant additional dollars in our shipbuilding accounts,” he said Wednesday at the Expeditionary Warfare conference in Annapolis, Maryland.

Dee said the Navy might have to complement its large combat ships with small fleets of unmanned vessels and leverage multi-domain concepts of operation and cyber space to facilitate services coordination in order to help achieve the 355-ship capability by 2050s, the report added.

News
GSA Releases Emerging Citizen Tech Guide for Federal Agencies
by Nichols Martin
Published on October 26, 2017
GSA Releases Emerging Citizen Tech Guide for Federal Agencies


GSA Releases Emerging Citizen Tech Guide for Federal AgenciesThe General Services Administration has created an open source guide on emerging service-applicable technologies, such as blockchain and artificial intelligence, to support government agencies in their efforts to implement these tools.

The U.S. Emerging Citizen Technology Atlas contains cases, reports, program references and resources that resulted from collaborations between the U.S. government and the private sector, GSA said Wednesday.

GSA encourages other agencies to evaluate and contribute to the atlas.

The guide is part of GSA’s Emerging Citizen Technology program that works to bring agencies, companies, civic organizations and public/private partnerships together to support citizen service modernization efforts across the government.

DoD/News
Navy Rear Adm. Cathal O’Connor Named Joint Staff J5 Chief of Staff
by Scott Nicholas
Published on October 26, 2017
Navy Rear Adm. Cathal O’Connor Named Joint Staff J5 Chief of Staff


Navy Rear Adm. Cathal O'Connor Named Joint Staff J5 Chief of Staff
Rear Adm. Cathal O’Connor

U.S. Navy Rear Adm. Cathal O’Connor, commander of the Expeditionary Strike Group Three in San Diego, has been assigned as chief of staff at the Joint Staff’s strategic plans and policy directorate/J5 in Washington, D.C.

Navy Secretary Richard Spencer and John Richardson, chief of naval operations, announced O’Connor’s new assignment in a Defense Department release published Tuesday.

O’Connor will oversee the J5 organization that recommends strategies, plans and policy intended to help the Joint Staff chairman provide military advice to the U.S. president and other national leaders on national security matters.

He previously commanded Amphibious Squadron 11/Task Group 76.4 in Sasebo, Japan as well as the USS Rushmore Whidbey Island-class dock landing ship in San Diego, California.

His at-sea assignments have included officer roles onboard USS Farragut, USS Kitty Hawk, USS Pharris, USS Tortuga and USS Truett as well as the Carrier Strike Group 5/Commander Task Force and the Expeditionary Strike Group 7/CTF 76.

O’Connor also held positions within the Fleet Anti-Submarine Warfare Training Center, Surface Warfare Officers School, Joint Task Force Southwest Asia, Joint Staff J-8, Navy Staff, Office of the Secretary of Defense for Policy and U.S. Naval Forces Europe-Africa.

Government Technology/News
Foreign Hacking Group Targets Cybersecurity Conference Attendees With Phishing Campaign
by Joanna Crews
Published on October 25, 2017
Foreign Hacking Group Targets Cybersecurity Conference Attendees With Phishing Campaign


Foreign Hacking Group Targets Cybersecurity Conference Attendees With Phishing CampaignCisco‘s Talos threat intelligence team has discovered a malicious campaign by a suspected Russian hacking group that targeted prospective attendees of a cyber conflict and security conference to be held in the U.S. from Nov. 7 to 8.

Researchers from Cisco Talos said in a blog post published Sunday that the hacking group known as Group 74 has sent emails containing a decoy of a Cyber Conflict U.S. conference document loaded with a malicious Visual Basic for Applications macro script.

The report noted that the VBA implements a variant of the Seduploader reconnaissance malware that the hackers have been utilizing for years but instead executed as a standalone with persistence mechanisms and no exploits in what the researchers say could be an effort to ensure viability for future attacks and avoid patch fixes.

Modifications on the malware’s public information to hinder detection based on public indicators of compromise include changes to the obfuscation key and MUTEX name since the security report’s publication, the researchers added.

Capabilities of the Seduploader variant include screenshot capture using graphics device interface application programming interface, data/configuration exfiltration, code execution and file downloading.

The NATO Cooperative Cyber Defense Center of Excellence, which organizes CyCon U.S. with the U.S. Military Academy’s Army Cyber Institute and NATO Cooperative Cyber Military Academy has since released a statement regarding the incident.

DoD/News
Navy Conducts 1st F-35C Flight Operations Aboard USS Carl Vinson Carrier
by Joanna Crews
Published on October 25, 2017
Navy Conducts 1st F-35C Flight Operations Aboard USS Carl Vinson Carrier


Navy Conducts 1st F-35C Flight Operations Aboard USS Carl Vinson CarrierThe U.S. Navy‘s first F-35 Joint Striker Fighter variant underwent a flight exercise Oct. 18 aboard an aircraft carrier off the Southern California coast as the aircraft prepares to reach initial operating capability.

F-35C Lightning II from the Strike Fighter Squadron 125 performed launch and recovery operations on the USS Carl Vinson as part of day and night carrier qualifications, the service branch said Friday.

“We’re supporting efforts to flight test the current helmet-mounted display system,” added VFA-125 Operations Officer Lt. Cmdr. Josh Reynolds.

Reynolds added that the F-35C works to add airborne stealth and deep-strike capacities to the carrier fleet in efforts to penetrate enemy air defenses.

The aircraft is set to reach IOC status for the Navy toward the end of 2018.

F-35C is a fifth-generation strike fighter for long-range stealth operations in support of aircraft carriers and is meant to enhance awareness, lethality and survivability in the battlespace.

The Navy said the Nimitz-class USS Carl Vinson is anticipated to be the first carrier in the West Coast to go on deployment with an F-35C squadron after the ship undergoes a scheduled maintenance in 2019.

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