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Government Technology/News
IDC: Cloud to Represent 8% of FY 2016 Federal IT Spend, Could Reach 50% Share by 2018
by Anna Forrester
Published on February 11, 2016
IDC: Cloud to Represent 8% of FY 2016 Federal IT Spend, Could Reach 50% Share by 2018


cloudA new report by IDC Government Insights predicts overall agency spend on cloud computing technologies for fiscal year 2016 will represent 8.5 percent of the federal government’s overall information technology budget.

That figure represents an increase from the 5-percent share reported for fiscal 2015 as the Federal CIO Council and Office of Management and Budget continue efforts to spur cloud adoption among agencies for their IT system with mobile devices and storage in mind, IDC Government Insights said Thursday.

Cloud spend will reach a total of $6.7 billion in FY 2016 and could represent a 50-percent share of the overall federal IT budget by 2018, IDC says.

Agencies are also changing how they label cloud categories due in part to what IDC calls the “fragmented nature” of the technologies that may not fit under definitions such as infrastructure-as-a-service, platform-as-a-service and software-as-a-service.

In FY 2015, the government added an “Other” category to account for cloud-based databases, application programming interfaces, shared services and other platforms and products some federal agencies believe do not fit under the other three categories.

IDC projects spend on “Other” cloud tools to hit $5 billion in FY 2016, followed by IaaS at $1.2 billion, then SaaS at $702.9 million and PaaS at $231.3 million.

Civilian/News
Unisys’ Casey Coleman: DevOps Key to Agile Federal IT Platform Deployment
by Jane Edwards
Published on February 11, 2016
Unisys’ Casey Coleman: DevOps Key to Agile Federal IT Platform Deployment


Casey Coleman
Casey Coleman

Casey Coleman, vice president of the federal civilian business group at Unisys, has said she believes the adoption of the development-operations concept can help federal information technology executives achieve efficiency and advance agile processes.

Coleman wrote in a blog entry posted Wednesday that DevOps requires federal agencies to undergo a “culture change” in order to rapidly deploy new IT platforms and services to customers.

Such a change calls for software developer teams and operations infrastructure staff to collaborate in order to identify and address any issues in the project at an early stage, Coleman wrote.

She also noted that NASA and the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services are among the agencies that have implemented the DevOps concept in an effort to achieve efficiency.

Coleman said agencies can also facilitate the migration of IT services to cloud environments through DevOps adoption.

“Regardless of where an agency’s culture sits, federal leaders need to bring their own ‘architects’ and ‘builders’ together in a culture of effective and seamless collaboration,” she added.

DoD/News
DIA’s Vincent Stewart: Cyber, Hostile Intell, Terrorism Key Global Security Challenges
by Mary-Louise Hoffman
Published on February 11, 2016
DIA’s Vincent Stewart: Cyber, Hostile Intell, Terrorism Key Global Security Challenges


Vincent Stewart
Vincent Stewart

Lt. Gen. Vincent Stewart, director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, has informed the Senate Armed Services Committee that regional security issues, malicious intrusion, transnational terrorism and hostile foreign intelligence activities remain as the biggest threats to the U.S. and its allies.

He said in his testimony Wednesday the security challenges in the Middle East have increased over the past five years and the region’s threat environment has become more unpredictable and dangerous due to the emergence of Islamic State militants.

Stewart also observed that Russia uses military power to dominate smaller regional states as well as prioritizes force modernization, space-based ISR and nuclear weapon programs.

China has launched a multi-year effort to secure sovereignty in the South China Sea, while North Korea continues to grow its stockpile of fissile materials for nuclear weapon development, he told SASC members.

He also reported various security threats in South Asia, Africa and Latin America to the committee.

According to Stewart, DIA is also worried about state actors who aim to access Defense Department systems and networks to gain asymmetric advantage.

“International progress toward agreement on accepted and enforceable norms of behavior in cyberspace may provide an opportunity to limit the scope and scale of nation-state cyber activities and establish parameters for deterrence of malicious cyber operations,” he added.

He believes the Islamic State organization can increase the lethality and pace of the group’s transnational attacks and noted that some U.S. adversaries collect intelligence in order to counter DoD’s strategic and operational missions.

DoD/News
‘Navy Information Dominance Forces’ Renamed ‘Naval Information Forces’
by Jay Clemens
Published on February 11, 2016
‘Navy Information Dominance Forces’ Renamed ‘Naval Information Forces’


NavyC5ISRThe former Navy Information Dominance Forces will now be known as the Naval Information Forces as part of an effort to align missions.

Rear Adm. Matthew Kohler, commander of the Naval Information Forces, announced the name change in January based on the adoption of the “information warfare” concept, the U.S. Navy said Tuesday.

“The name change is consistent with the naming conventions in place with the other type commanders and also reflects our efforts to further advance and ingrain information warfare readiness and capabilities across the fleet and Navy,” said Kohler.

The new name has been implemented in response to a document released by Chief of Naval Operations Adm. John Richardson that describes the Navy’s approach to coping with the security environment changes.

DoD/News
James Clapper Addresses Cyber Threats, Anti-Satellite Systems Before Senate Panel
by Jane Edwards
Published on February 11, 2016
James Clapper Addresses Cyber Threats, Anti-Satellite Systems Before Senate Panel


James Clapper
James Clapper

Director of National Intelligence James Clapper has said the U.S. continues to face cyber espionage-related threats from countries such as China, North Korea, Iran and Russia.

Clapper said in his testimony Tuesday before the Senate Armed Services Committee that the Islamic State organization also poses cyber threats to the U.S.

“ISIL has used cyber to its great advantage, not only for recruitment and propaganda, but also to hack and release sensitive information about U.S. military personnel,” he noted.

“The increased use by violent extremists of encrypted and secure Internet and mobile-based technologies enables terrorist actors to ‘go dark’ and serves to undercut intelligence and law enforcement efforts.”

He told the Senate panel that the increasing adoption of Internet of Things and artificial intelligence could bring new challenges to security.

Clapper also cited the involvement of approximately 80 countries in the space domain as well as the efforts of Russia and China to develop anti-satellite missile programs.

He also mentioned other global threats such as the rising number of Sunni violent extremist groups and foreign fighters who travel to Syria and Iraq and the efforts of North Korea, China and Russia to modernize their nuclear missile forces.

News
NASA Gets $260M Cut, $19B Total Budget in Obama’s FY 2017 Proposal
by Anna Forrester
Published on February 11, 2016
NASA Gets $260M Cut, $19B Total Budget in Obama’s FY 2017 Proposal


BudgetThe White House has cut $260 million in its allotted funds for NASA in fiscal year 2017 and submitted a $19 billion budget for the space agency as part of the administration’s overall proposal, Space News reported Tuesday.

Jeff Foust writes that the amount includes $3.3 billion for space exploration programs after it received a nearly $700 million cut for the Space Launch System and a $150 million reduction for Orion.

“This is the administration’s proposal as to how to provide a balanced NASA budget, both for exploration and across other areas,” NASA CFO David Radzanowski said in a statement to media.

The report said the current budget request covers the 2018 Exploration Mission-1 launch and 2023 EM-2 launch of SLS and Orion.

Ledyard King also reports on USA Today that the proposal also cuts $100 million from planetary science projects while adding at least $110 million to Earth science.

Overall, $5.6 billion will go to science programs, $5.1 billion to space operations, $827 million to space technology, $790 million to aeronautics research, $100 million to education and outreach efforts and the remaining $3.3 billion to safety, security and logistics.

Civilian/News
Senate Committee Endorses Beth Cobert as Full-Time OPM Head
by Mary-Louise Hoffman
Published on February 11, 2016
Senate Committee Endorses Beth Cobert as Full-Time OPM Head


Beth Cobert
Beth Cobert

Beth Cobert, acting director at the Office of Personnel Management, has received the full support of a Senate committee to lead the agency on a full-time basis, The Hill newspaper reported Wednesday.

Cory Bennett writes the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee voted Wednesday to advance Cobert’s nomination as permanent OPM director to a final hearing in the upper chamber.

“She has a strong record of strong management and she is the right person for this job,” Sen. Tom Carper (D-Del.) was quoted as saying by The Hill.

Cobert has led OPM in an interim basis since Katherine Archuleta resigned from the director role amid investigations of data breaches at the agency last summer, GovExec’s Kellie Lunney reports.

Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee Chairman Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) said Cobert has vowed to address lawmakers’ inquiry into OPM cybersecurity issues.

Before she joined OPM, Cobert was deputy management director at the Office of Management and Budget and previously worked at McKinsey & Co. for almost 30 years.

Profiles
Profile: Lt. Gen. James McLaughlin, Cybercom Deputy Commander
by Jane Edwards
Published on February 10, 2016
Profile: Lt. Gen. James McLaughlin, Cybercom Deputy Commander


James McLaughlin
James McLaughlin

Lt. Gen. James McLaughlin serves as deputy commander of the U.S. Cyber Command.

The 33-year Air Force veteran oversees and coordinates cyber defense programs and missions for computer network infrastructures across the Defense Department.

Prior to his current role, McLaughlin was commander of the Air Forces Cyber and 24th Air Force.

He also served as deputy director of global operations at the U.S. Strategic Command, director of planning and preparation at the office of defense undersecretary for intelligence and senior adviser on space, intelligence and C4ISR for defense undersecretary for policy.

McLaughlin has received numerous awards, including the Humanitarian Service Medal, Air Force Achievement Medal and the Defense Superior Service Medal with two oak leaf clusters.

He holds a bachelor’s degree in general studies from the U.S. Air Force Academy and master’s degree in space systems management from Webster University.

DoD/News
Robert Work: Joint Interagency Combined Space Ops Center to Support 3rd Offset Strategy
by Anna Forrester
Published on February 10, 2016
Robert Work: Joint Interagency Combined Space Ops Center to Support 3rd Offset Strategy

 

Robert Work
Robert Work

Deputy Defense Secretary Robert Work believes that the Joint Interagency Combined Space Operations Center will play a key role to identify needed capabilities that will drive the Pentagon’s Third Offset Strategy, Breaking Defense reported Tuesday.

“The JICSPOC in our view is the first operational and organizational construct of the Third Offset Strategy,” Work told the publication, according to Sydney Freedberg Jr.

JICSPOC, which the Defense Department established last year, works to connect the military and Intelligence Community to share information on space operations and develop measures that safeguard the U.S. space infrastructure.

Freedberg reports that Work also highlighted the human element in the Third Offset Strategy, which seeks to leverage technology such as artificial intelligence and autonomy to support human decision-making and actions as part of a human-machine collaborative combat network.

Work said the strategy is built on the U.S. military’s joint programs, industrial base and people or personnel rather than the technology.

 

DoD/News
White House Seeks $50B for FY 2017 Civilian Homeland Security Programs
by Jane Edwards
Published on February 10, 2016
White House Seeks $50B for FY 2017 Civilian Homeland Security Programs


WhiteHouseThe White House has requested $50.4 billion for fiscal year 2017 to fund civilian agencies involved in homeland security efforts, Federal Times reported Tuesday.

Aaron Boyd writes the budget plan for civilian agencies’ homeland security programs represents an increase of 11.5 percent over fiscal year 2016 and allocates more than $36.8 billion for the Department of Homeland Security.

DHS said in a fact sheet the budget request would allow the department to further support Unity of Effort programs and make investments in border security platforms and a cybersecurity initiative under the national protection and programs directorate.

The White House has requested $70.5 billion in total appropriations for homeland security initiatives run by civilian agencies and the Defense Department, according to budget documents obtained by Federal Times.

The Obama administration’s budget plan proposes $36.6 billion for the prevention of terrorist attacks, $27.7 billion for protection of critical infrastructures and $6.2 billion for natural disaster recovery efforts, according to the report.

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