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Government Technology/News
FDIC Plans New Security Measures After Retroactive Data Breach Report
by Jay Clemens
Published on May 10, 2016
FDIC Plans New Security Measures After Retroactive Data Breach Report


SecurityLockThe Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. has suffered five data breach incidents of at least 10,000 records since October and plans to introduce new measures to step up network security at the agency, the Washington Post reported Monday.

Joe Davidson writes a retroactive report to lawmakers cited breaches into taxpayers’ personal information after employees with access to the data left FDIC.

An FDIC employee inadvertently downloaded the data of 44,000 customers prior to departure from the agency, according to an April report by the Post.

FDIC has submitted to Congress a document that outlines security practices the agency plans to adopt over the use of encryption in portable devices, end-to-end evaluation of internal information technology programs, mitigation efforts for future program gaps and the use of software to locate misplaced data, Davidson reports.

Federal News Radio reported Monday the agency also plans to revise its mobile device usage policies for employees, form a new incident tracking system, establish an incident response coordinator role, track printed materials in high-risk areas, create a chief information office and overhaul both reporting and incident escalation procedures.

DoD/News
Army Reserve ‘Warrior Exercise’ Aims to Train Military Police on Battlefield Support, Detainee Missions
by Jane Edwards
Published on May 10, 2016
Army Reserve ‘Warrior Exercise’ Aims to Train Military Police on Battlefield Support, Detainee Missions


military in trainingThe U.S. Army Reserve has started a two-week training in May at Fort Hunter-Liggett in California in an effort to train military police personnel on detainee and combat support operations, the Army reported Monday.

Master Sgt. Michel Sauret writes soldiers from the 160th MP battalion and the 56th MP company under the 200th Military Police Command participated in the Warrior Exercise administered by the 91st training division.

The training covers base security, traffic control points establishment, cordon and search operations, convoys with Armored Security Vehicles and High Mobility Multi-Purpose Wheel Vehicles, and weapons training with MK19 grenade launchers, M2 Bradley machine guns and M9 pistols.

The service branch’s training areas for the WAREX training event include virtual simulators, roadways for counter-improvised explosive devices, multiple operational bases, makeshift villages and outposts.

“Our end state, of course, is to bring support to the battlefield, by focusing on the three primary (principles of) shoot, move, communicate,” said Capt. Scott Breseman, 56th MP company commander.

Acquisition & Procurement/News
Lawmakers Introduce Bill to Limit LPTA Use in Defense Acquisitions
by Mary-Louise Hoffman
Published on May 10, 2016
Lawmakers Introduce Bill to Limit LPTA Use in Defense Acquisitions


acquisition policySens. Mark Warner (D-Virginia) and Mike Rounds (R-South Dakota) have proposed a bill that would direct the Defense Department to avoid the use of “lowest price, technically acceptable” procedures to buy knowledge-based professional services from industry.

The Promoting Value Based Defense Procurement Act seeks to discourage DoD from applying LPTA methods for acquisition contracts focused on information technology, systems engineering and technical support services, Warner’s office said April 21.

Reps. Don Beyer (D-Virginia) and Rob Wittman (R-Virginia) introduced a companion bill in the House.

Through an LPTA-based source selection process, procuring agencies consider offers that meet a defined set of minimum technical requirements and award a contract to the vendor with the lowest bid.

“Low costs cannot be the only consideration when safeguarding America’s most valuable information,” noted Beyer.

“LPTA is a valuable tool, but it can undermine DOD procurement flexibility and should not be used to purchase complex, innovative programs,” he added.

Government Technology/News
Navy, Tracen Technologies Unveil 2 Mobile Apps to Assist Mandatory Sailor Training
by Scott Nicholas
Published on May 10, 2016
Navy, Tracen Technologies Unveil 2 Mobile Apps to Assist Mandatory Sailor Training


U.S. NavyThe U.S. Navy has released two new mobile applications that work to deliver “anytime, anywhere” access to resources for mandatory sailor training on records management and privacy and personally identifiable information awareness.

Tracen Technologies helped build the apps with the Navy under the branch’s Sea Warrior program in an effort to aid users in completing required Navy general military training, the service branch said April 19.

“The mobile apps are an extension of our training to offer alternate methods to our workforce,” said Rear Adm. Mike White, commander of Naval Education and Training Command.

“We want the resources readily available and at your fingertips,” he added.

The Navy said the apps are available for free on Google Play and the App Store for active duty, reserve service members and civil service employees who require training.

They are required to complete PII training by Aug. 31 and RM training by Dec. 31.

A certificate of completion will also be sent to the user’s Electronic Training Jacket or to the Navy Training Management Systems, which the user can send to a supervisor, the service branch added.

DoD/News
Ashton Carter: Cooperative Threat Reduction Program Continues Through DTRA
by Jane Edwards
Published on May 10, 2016
Ashton Carter: Cooperative Threat Reduction Program Continues Through DTRA


Ashton Carter
Ashton Carter

Defense Secretary Ashton Carter has said the Cooperative Threat Reduction Program then-Sens. Sam Nunn (D-Georgia) and Richard Lugar (R-Indiana) created in 1991 continues through the Defense Threat Reduction Agency, DoD News reported Monday.

Cherly Pellerin writes Carter made the statement during an award ceremony in Washington to mark the 25th anniversary of the CTR initiative and recognize individuals who helped establish the program.

He said the initiative has evolved and its focus has extended to biological and chemical weapons, terrorism and other global threats.

“These threats also require new thinking of the kind that CTR represents and new ways of operating, like I’m challenging our department to show today,” Carter said.

The CTR program was created as an amendment to the legislation on the Conventional Armed Forces in Europe Treaty, Pellerin reports.

The amendment allocated $400 million in fiscal year 1992 funds in order for the Defense Department to help the Soviet Union destroy nuclear and other chemical weapons.

Carter also handed the first Nunn-Lugar Trailblazer Award to several individuals who helped created the CTR program during the event.

Click here to view the award recipients.

DoD/News
Hill AFB Commences Four-Ship Combat Training Missions With F-35s
by Scott Nicholas
Published on May 10, 2016
Hill AFB Commences Four-Ship Combat Training Missions With F-35s


F-35The U.S. Air Force‘s Hill Air Force Base have launched routine four-ship combat training missions using the F-35 Lightning II to practice evasion maneuvers against simulated threats.

The Air Force said Monday pilots from the 388th and 419th Fighter Wings teamed up and used the F-35’s computer network to identify and jam “enemy” radar and eliminate targets from an altitude of 40,000 feet.

Lt. Col. George Watkins, 34th Fighter squadron commander, said the four-ship configuration is standard for real-world combat and pilots will train to respond to surface-to-air threats in contested environments.

Hill AFB looks to house three operational F-35 squadrons with 78 aircraft by 2019 to be operated and maintained by the 388th and 419th FWs, the Air Force said.

According to the service branch, the FWs are targeting to reach initial operating capability to prepare the F-35s for combat missions.

DoD/News
Gen. John Hyten Outlines Air Force Space Command’s New Priorities
by Jay Clemens
Published on May 10, 2016
Gen. John Hyten Outlines Air Force Space Command’s New Priorities


Gen. John Hyten
Gen. John Hyten

Gen. John Hyten, head of the Air Force Space Command, has outlined the command’s primary priorities as indicated in its updated strategic intent document that serves as the command’s overall guide.

The document calls for AFSPC to outperform the enemies, boost military readiness for future hostile scenarios and look after the welfare of the airmen and their families, the Air Force said Monday.

“More than ever, AFSPC is called upon to deliver agile, integrated, and resilient effects in, from, and through space and cyberspace that are critical to fulfilling these strategic demands,” noted Hyten.

He stressed that all military operations depend on “integrated space and cyberspace effects to accomplish national objectives” and “achieve agile information superiority.”

The updated strategic intent also calls for the U.S. Air Force to adopt integrated multi-domain operations in order to coordinate space and cyberspace assets with assets from all domains to achieve combat mission goals.

Hyten also urged commanders to protect the airmen and their families and recognized the stress brought about by war, deployments and budget uncertainty to Air Force families.

DoD/News
Socom Chief Raymond Thomas: Transregional Network Key in Anti-Terrorist Campaign
by Ramona Adams
Published on May 10, 2016
Socom Chief Raymond Thomas: Transregional Network Key in Anti-Terrorist Campaign


Raymond Thomas
Raymond Thomas

Raymond Thomas, commander of the U.S. Special Operations Command, has said transregional cooperation between special operations forces worldwide is key in efforts to defeat militant groups such as the Islamic State organization, Defense News reported Monday.

Thomas told an audience at the Middle Eastern Special Operations Commanders Conference that USSOCOM looks to build on partnerships with Nigeria, Egypt, Tunisia, Morocco and Indonesia to support efforts against the IS group, Jen Judson wrote.

“The axiom that it takes a network to defeat a network logically drives the corollary that it takes a transregional network to defeat a similar foe,” said Thomas.

He added the formation of special operations force networks requires coordination between military, law enforcement groups and the international community, Judson quoted.

Government Technology/News
Senate Bill Aims to Define ‘Acts of War’ in Cyberspace
by Mary-Louise Hoffman
Published on May 10, 2016
Senate Bill Aims to Define ‘Acts of War’ in Cyberspace


cyberSen. Mike Rounds (R-South Dakota) has authored a bill that seeks to encourage the executive branch to identify what cyberspace operations constitute acts of war.

The Cyber Act of War Act of 2016 calls on the federal government to “consider the ways in which the effects of a cyberattack may be equivalent to the effects of an attack using conventional weapons, as well as the intangible effects of significant scope, intensity or duration,” Rounds wrote in an opinion piece for the Wall Street Journal published Sunday.

He noted the U.S. has policies that guide the Defense Department on how it should respond to a cyber attack against military assets but does not have a formal policy that can help DoD address a similar attack on critical civilian infrastructure.

Rounds added he believes having a clear definition of cyber acts of war will allow the government to determine the appropriate time to initiate offensive cyber missions against adversaries.

News
CBO: US Posts $109B Budget Surplus in April
by Mary-Louise Hoffman
Published on May 10, 2016
CBO: US Posts $109B Budget Surplus in April


budget analysis reviewA Congressional Budget Office report says the U.S. posted a budget surplus of $109 billion for the month of April 2016, about $47 billion less than the amount of surplus recorded in the same month last year.

CBO said Friday the government’s total receipts fell 7 percent to $440 billion during April while overall monthly spending hit $331 billion.

The agency also reported the federal budget deficit amounted to $352 billion over the first seven months of fiscal year 2016, up $69 billion compared with the prior-year period’s shortfall.

The government has earned $1.9 trillion in revenues from corporate and individual income taxes and other sources during the seven-month period, 2.5 percent lower than previously projected by CBO.

CBO noted the amount of government expenditures from October 2015 to April 2016 climbed 4 percent to approximately $2.3 trillion due to increases in spending for Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and Department of Veterans Affairs programs as well as growth in net interest on the public debt

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