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DoD/News
James Thurman: US Army’s Size, Budget Need Reconsideration
by Jane Edwards
Published on February 16, 2016
James Thurman: US Army’s Size, Budget Need Reconsideration


military in trainingRetired U.S. Army Gen. James Thurman has said the U.S. government should reconsider the budget and the number of soldiers the service branch needs, the Army reported Thursday.

Thurman said at a Thursday Senate Armed Services Committee hearing that Russia’s resurgence and other national security challenges the country currently faces also require reconsideration.

C. Todd Lopez writes Thurman, one of the commissioners of the National Commission on the Future of the Army, made the remarks in response to questions about a report that NCFA released last month about the military branch’s structure and policies with regard to the size of the force.

The commission recommended in the report that the Army’s force should not be lower than 980,000 uniformed personnel, Lopez writes.

Thurman noted that the assumptions used to arrive at a decision to reduce the service branch’s budget and draw down the military force are no longer applicable due to dramatic changes in the state of global security.

“We are not out of Afghanistan. We’re probably putting more in,” he added.

Government Technology/News
DHS Project Aims to Facilitate Data Exchanges With Public Safety Personnel Via Public TV Signals
by Jane Edwards
Published on February 16, 2016
DHS Project Aims to Facilitate Data Exchanges With Public Safety Personnel Via Public TV Signals


DHS - ExecutiveMosaicThe first responders group inside the Department of Homeland Security’s science and technology directorate has launched a project that works to share encrypted data and live videos with public safety personnel through public television signals.

DHS said in a release posted Feb. 9 FRG conducted two pilot exercises for the Video Datacasting Project in Chicago and Houston in 2015.

FRG teamed up with SpectraRep, Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab and Public Broadcasting Service-related TV stations to carry out the two pilots with the goal to help facilitate data exchanges with first responders and law enforcement officials.

“Datacasting is a broadcasting mechanism capable of one-to-many content delivery which reduces congestion on public safety agencies’ networks,” said Cuong Luu, FRG program manager.

Users of the datacast-based system worked to send and receive images, live videos, files, alerts and other transmissions during the two pilot exercises.

DHS’ S&T directorate has started its search for new pilot locations and partners to conduct further tests on the datacast platform this year.

DoD/News
Mike McCord: DoD Makes Portfolio Adjustments to Cover $22B Funding Shortfall
by Mary-Louise Hoffman
Published on February 16, 2016
Mike McCord: DoD Makes Portfolio Adjustments to Cover $22B Funding Shortfall


Mike McCord
Mike McCord

The Defense Department had to adjust its portfolio of space, ISR and ground and tactical air capabilities to trim nearly $22 billion from its proposed fiscal 2017 budget, DoD Comptroller Mike McCord told Defense News in an interview published Monday.

“It’s kind of looking at the margin of where we think we have a little too much or that we really think progress could be made,” he said to the publication’s editor Vago Muradian.

DoD is seeking a $582.7 billion budget to fund military operations over the next fiscal year.

McCord noted that his office turns to acquisition programs in order to address short-term funding requirements of the department rather than reducing the compensation rate for military personnel.

He added that Defense Secretary Ashton Carter wants the department to think long term across the air, sea, land, space and cyber domains.

Carter is “challenging the military to be, as we know that they are, versatile and agile across every imaginable dimension,” McCord told Defense News.

News
Lt. Gen. Chris Bogdan: Air Force Works on Updates to F-35
by Anna Forrester
Published on February 12, 2016
Lt. Gen. Chris Bogdan: Air Force Works on Updates to F-35


F-35U.S. Air Force Lt. Gen. Chris Bogdan has said the F-35 Lightning II joint strike fighter program continues to move forward to address current flight restrictions and other challenges, DoD News reported Wednesday.

Lisa Ferdinando writes Bogdan indicated the F-35 development program is scheduled for completion by the latter half of 2017.

“What we’re trying to do right now is work toward that very large $50-plus-billion contract and turn that into a modernization program,” Bogdan told reporters at a roundtable event.

The report said ongoing updates to the Lockheed Martin-built fighter jet include a heavy/light weight switch and a head-restraining device to support pilot safety in case of ejection from the aircraft.

The changes are currently in the test phase and could be in production by the end of 2016, Ferdinando reports.

Government Technology/News
Michael Daniel: ‘Einstein’ a ‘Credible’ Cyber Defense Tool for Federal Agencies
by Jane Edwards
Published on February 12, 2016
Michael Daniel: ‘Einstein’ a ‘Credible’ Cyber Defense Tool for Federal Agencies


Michael Daniel
Michael Daniel

White House Cybersecurity Coordinator Michael Daniel has said he believes the Einstein tool that works to detect and monitor network vulnerabilities is still a “very credible and solid piece” of the federal agencies’ defenses against cyber threats, FCW reported Thursday.

Sean Lyngaas writes Daniel made the remarks at a New America think tank event held Thursday in Washington.

The federal government runs an “incredible array of legacy systems that if we were in the private sector we would probably just write off,” Daniel said.

“But the government can’t just do that.”

His statements surfaced after the Government Accountability Office released last month an audit report, which found that the Einstein program did not consistently identify and prevent vulnerabilities and malicious content in federal networks’ web traffic.

Acquisition & Procurement/News
Darlene Costello Named Principal Deputy Asst Sec for Acquisition, Logistics at USAF
by Mary-Louise Hoffman
Published on February 12, 2016
Darlene Costello Named Principal Deputy Asst Sec for Acquisition, Logistics at USAF

 

Darlene Costello
Darlene Costello

Air Force Secretary Deborah Lee James has appointed Defense Department veteran Darlene Costello to serve as principal deputy assistant secretary for acquisition and logistics at the military branch.

Costello succeeds Richard Lombardi, who has been reassigned to a non-acquisition role within the Air Force, the service announced Thursday.

She has served as principal deputy assistant secretary for acquisition at the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology and Logistics since September 2014.

In that capacity, she advised DoD leadership on military and business system acquisition, strategic, space, intelligence, tactical warfare and command and control matters.

Costello previously held the role of deputy assistant defense secretary for strategic and tactical systems on an acting basis as well as principal director of S&TS and director of acquisition and program management at DoD.

She also worked at the U.S. Navy, where she oversaw 15 shipbuilding programs and associated weapon systems as its deputy director for naval warfare.

 

News
Mark Welsh Pushes for Maintenance Shift to F-35
by Jay Clemens
Published on February 12, 2016
Mark Welsh Pushes for Maintenance Shift to F-35


Gen. Mark Welsh
Gen. Mark Welsh

Gen. Mark Welsh, chief of staff for the U.S. Air Force, has called on lawmakers to either authorize a shift of maintainers to the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter or grant funds to train additional aircrews, Air Force Times reported Friday.

Phillip Swarts writes Welsh testified before the Senate Appropriations defense subcommittee to discuss the 2017 budget proposal for the Air Force.

Welsh said the service needs new planes and must end its reliance on legacy aircraft, according to the report.

“The platforms and systems that made us great over the last 50 years will not make us great over the next 50 years,” Welsh told lawmakers.

Previously, the Air Force attempted to transition its resources and maintenance crew to the F-35 fighter from the A-10 Thunderbolt II, Swarts reports.

Air Force Times reports the service decided to sustain the A-10 through 2022 under the fiscal 2017 budget plan.

Civilian/News
David Bowdich Named FBI Associate Deputy Director
by Jane Edwards
Published on February 12, 2016
David Bowdich Named FBI Associate Deputy Director


David Bowdich
David Bowdich

David Bowdich, formerly assistant director in charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles field office, has been named associate deputy director of the bureau, its third-ranked executive position.

The FBI said Thursday Bowdich will be responsible for the agency’s non-operational divisions and branches and be succeeded at the LA office by Deirdre Fike, special agent in charge of the FBI’s division in Anchorage, Alaska.

Bowdich joined the FBI in 1995 as a special agent and served as a SWAT member, sniper and gangs and violent crimes investigator during his assignment at the bureau’s San Diego field office.

The former New Mexico detective and police officer helped the FBI launch the U.S.’ first hybrid squad against kidnapping groups with operations across the U.S. and Mexican border.

His previous roles at the FBI include special agent in charge of the LA office’s counterterrorism division and special assistant to the associate deputy director at the bureau’s headquarters in Washington, D.C.

DoD/News
Jeh Johnson: DHS Continues Efforts to Centralize Agency Processes, Bolster National Security
by Mary-Louise Hoffman
Published on February 12, 2016
Jeh Johnson: DHS Continues Efforts to Centralize Agency Processes, Bolster National Security


Jeh Johnson
Jeh Johnson

Jeh Johnson, secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, highlighted the agency’s management reform activities and public safety operations in his remarks Thursday at the Woodrow Wilson Center in Washington.

He said Thursday that DHS works to transform budgeting, acquisition and programming functions under its Unity of Effort initiative to shift away from a stove-pipe organizational system.

During his speech, Johnson also described how DHS and its component agencies such as the Customs and Border Protection, Secret Service, Transportation Security Administration, Federal Emergency Management Agency and the U.S. Coast Guard have helped protect infrastructure and people across the country.

He added that cybersecurity and counterterrorism will remain the cornerstones of the DHS mission.

“My overarching goal as Secretary this last year is to continue to protect the homeland and leave the Department of Homeland Security a better place than I found it,” Johnson told his audience.

News
DARPA Develops Neural-Recording Device; Doug Weber Comments
by Jay Clemens
Published on February 11, 2016
DARPA Develops Neural-Recording Device; Doug Weber Comments


DARPAThe Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has developed a new neural-recording device built to repurpose stent technology to gather neural data in a less invasive manner.

DARPA’s stentrode is designed for delivery via catheter angiography to pass through a blood vessel in the neck and guided with real-time imagery to reach a certain area in the brain, the agency said Monday.

“DARPA has previously demonstrated direct brain control of a prosthetic limb by paralyzed patients fitted with penetrating electrode arrays implanted in the motor cortex during traditional open-brain surgery,” said Doug Weber, program manager for DARPA’s Reliable Neural-Interface Technology program.

“By reducing the need for invasive surgery, the stentrode may pave the way for more practical implementations of those kinds of life-changing applications of brain-machine interfaces,” Weber added.

The Vascular Bionics Laboratory research team at the University of Melbourne led by neurologist Thomas Oxley confirmed in a Nature Biotechnology article the high-fidelity brain signal measurement from a study performed on a sheep.

Researchers will conduct the first in-human trial of the device in 2017 at the Royal Melbourne Hospital in Melbourne, Australia.

DARPA Develops Neural-Recording Device; Doug Weber Comments

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