Processing....

Executive Gov

Digital News Coverage of Government Contracting and Federal Policy Landscape
Sticky Logo
  • Home
  • Acquisition & Procurement
  • Agencies
    • DoD
    • Intelligence
    • DHS
    • Civilian
    • Space
  • Cybersecurity
  • Technology
  • Executives
    • Profiles
    • Announcements
    • Awards
  • News
  • Articles
  • About
  • Wash100
  • Contact Us
    • Advertising
    • Submit your news
    • Jobs
Logo
Acquisition & Procurement/DHS/Government Technology/News
DHS Seeks Industry Input on Deployable 5G Systems for Operational Missions
by Miles Jamison
Published on January 28, 2026
DHS S&T logo. The Department of Homeland Security has issued a request for information forn deployable 5G systems.

The Department of Homeland Security’s Science and Technology Directorate has issued a request for information to gather industry input on deployable 5G systems capable of supporting operational missions.

5G will be a central topic at tomorrow’s 2026 Defense R&D Summit. Hear from Pentagon 5G Leader Dr. Thomas Rondeau in a keynote speech! It’s not too late to register.

Table of Contents

  • What Is DHS Seeking From Industry?
  • What Technical Details Are Requested?
  • What Operational Performance Does DHS Expect?
  • What Security, Interoperability & Cost Factors Is DHS Evaluating?

What Is DHS Seeking From Industry?

According to the sources sought notice posted Tuesday on SAM.gov, DHS S&T seeks technical, operational and cost data to help shape potential future acquisition strategies. Industry responses are due by March 2.

What Technical Details Are Requested?

DHS is asking vendors to provide information on system design and integration, including size, weight, power requirements, portability, platform integration and supported radio access technologies. The agency is also seeking details on frequency bands, antenna configurations, technology readiness levels and manufacturing origin.

What Operational Performance Does DHS Expect?

Beyond technical design, DHS is seeking insight into how the systems perform in real-world operational environments. The notice calls for information on system capacity, scalability, coverage, data performance and application server support. It also highlights ease of deployment, automated provisioning, interference detection and secure access controls, along with sustainment factors such as training, software updates and remote diagnostics.

What Security, Interoperability & Cost Factors Is DHS Evaluating?

Other key focus areas include security, interoperability and standards compliance. These areas encompass data encryption and cybersecurity features, network resilience and failover capabilities, interoperability with other networks, multi-vendor support and environmental tolerance.

Finally, DHS is requesting cost and support information to assess total lifecycle value and inform future acquisition decisions. This includes lifecycle cost estimates, licensing details, documentation and available support options.

DoD/Executive Moves/News
Miranda Coleman Named Acting Program Executive Officer at US Army PEO Enterprise
by Miles Jamison
Published on January 27, 2026
Miranda Coleman. Coleman was named acting PEO at the U.S. Army PEO Enterprise.

Miranda Coleman announced on LinkedIn Monday that she has been appointed acting program executive officer for the U.S. Army Program Executive Office Enterprise.

Miranda Coleman Named Acting Program Executive Officer at US Army PEO Enterprise

Join Army and industry leaders at the Potomac Officers Club’s 2026 Army Summit on June 18 to examine post-transformation priorities, contracting changes and progress toward the Army’s 2030 goals. Save your seat now!

Table of Contents

  • Who Is Miranda Coleman?
  • What Experience Does Miranda Coleman Bring to the Role?

Who Is Miranda Coleman?

Miranda Coleman is an experienced acquisition and technology leader who has held senior roles at Army PEO Enterprise. Prior to her promotion, she held the acting deputy program executive officer role, spearheading four O-6–led project management offices aligned with the Army’s business mission domains. Her other leadership roles include acting assistant PEO for quality and transformation, deputy chief information officer and deputy director of the Artificial Intelligence Factory at the AI Integration Center under Army Futures Command.

What Experience Does Miranda Coleman Bring to the Role?

Coleman has led major Army data and analytics initiatives, including serving as product lead for the Army Vantage program, where she managed the platform’s lifecycle and performance. Her background spans acquisition and IT leadership roles across PEO Enterprise Information Systems, Assistant Secretary of the Army for Acquisition, Logistics and Technology, or ASA(ALT), PEO Soldier and the Rapid Equipping Force. Prior to government service, she spent nearly five years in industry as a SharePoint consultant at Booz Allen Hamilton.

Acquisition & Procurement/DoD/News
Army Replaces Standard Procurement System With ACWS
by Jane Edwards
Published on January 27, 2026
U.S. Army logo. The Army has replaced its Standard Procurement System with the Army Contract Writing System.

The U.S. Army retired the Standard Procurement System for the Army, or SPS-A, in mid-December to further advance the implementation of a single, enterprisewide platform designed to streamline contract development, management and execution in support of the service branch’s mission.

Army Replaces Standard Procurement System With ACWS

As the Army continues to modernize enterprise systems and processes, efforts such as the transition to ACWS highlight the scale and complexity of the change underway. Broader discussions on Army priorities and initiatives will take place at the Potomac Officers Club’s 2026 Army Summit. Save your spot at this must-attend event!

Table of Contents

  • What Does ACWS Stand For?
  • What’s Next for ACWS?

What Does ACWS Stand For?

ACWS stands for the Army Contract Writing System, a platform designed to automate and streamline the procurement process to speed up the delivery of materiel and services to warfighters, the service said Monday.

In fiscal year 2022, leaders at the Army Program Executive Office, or PEO, Enterprise expedited ACWS delivery by leveraging the Air Force Contracting – Information Technology platform.

The system launched in August 2023 with an initial user group of 104 contracting personnel at 29 sites.

According to the Army, ACWS reached initial capability in FY 2023. It has migrated over 49,000 contract files from SPS-A in less than 10 months and now supports more than 7,600 active users. Financial throughput also increased from $39 million in FY23 to $17 billion in FY25.

“ACWS directly supports activities that sustain multi-domain operations, contingency responses, homeland missions and domestic disaster responses. No weapon fires, no unit moves and no force sustains without contract support,” said Lt. Col. Camille Morgan, product manager for ACWS at PEO Enterprise.

What’s Next for ACWS?

Full deployment of ACWS is expected by FY27. Upcoming efforts include continued system modernization, enhanced cybersecurity, expanded analytics capabilities and onboarding additional users. 

The Army expects ACWS to replace the legacy Procurement Automated Data and Document System and serve as the main landing zone for the service’s other contract systems.

“Modernization is not a rip-and-replace effort — it is a disciplined transition that protects mission-critical contracting functionality while positioning ACWS to operate at the scale, speed and security the Army requires,” said Gregory Youmans, ACWS functional sponsor from the Office of the Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Army for Procurement.

Civilian/Government Technology/News
OMB Memo Calls for Risk-Based Approach to Software Security
by Jane Edwards
Published on January 27, 2026
Office of Management and Budget logo. OMB’s new memo calls for agencies to adopt a risk-based approach to software security.

The Office of Management and Budget has issued a memorandum directing federal agencies to adopt a risk-based approach to software and hardware security by implementing secure development principles and comprehensive risk assessments.

OMB Memo Calls for Risk-Based Approach to Software Security

As federal guidance on software and hardware security continues to evolve, stakeholders across government and industry are closely watching how these changes may shape future priorities. To connect with peers and stay engaged in broader cybersecurity discussions, register now for the Potomac Officers Club’s 2026 Cyber Summit on May 21.

Table of Contents

  • Why Did OMB Rescind the Previous Software Security Policies?
  • What Software & Hardware Security Actions Does the OMB Memo Require?

Why Did OMB Rescind the Previous Software Security Policies?

In a memo published Friday, OMB Director Russell Vought ordered the rescission of two prior OMB policies, stating that they prioritized compliance over security and imposed burdensome software accounting requirements.

OMB Memorandum M-22-18, introduced by the previous administration in September 2022, sought to strengthen the software supply chain through secure software development practices. However, Vought said the policy “diverted agencies from developing tailored assurance requirements for software and neglected to account for threats posed by insecure hardware.”

OMB also rescinded a companion policy, Memorandum M-23-16, issued in June 2023. That memo reaffirmed secure software development practices and extended deadlines for agencies to collect security attestations from software providers.

What Software & Hardware Security Actions Does the OMB Memo Require?

According to the latest OMB guidance, agencies should continue to maintain complete inventories of their software and hardware and develop assurance policies and processes that align with their risk determinations and mission needs.

Agencies may choose to use the Secure Software Development Attestation Form and other governmentwide resources established under M-22-18.

The memo also allows agencies to incorporate contractual terms requiring software producers to provide a current software bill of materials upon request.

Civilian/News
NIST Seeks Public Comments on OT Cybersecurity Guide Update
by Miles Jamison
Published on January 27, 2026
NIST logo. NIST is seeking public comment on proposed updates to its Guide to Operational Technology Security.

The National Institute of Standards and Technology has released an initial preliminary draft of Special Publication 800-82 Revision 4, launching a public comment period as part of its effort to update federal guidance on operational technology, or OT, cybersecurity.

NIST Seeks Public Comments on OT Cybersecurity Guide Update

Get your tickets to the Potomac Officers Club’s 2026 Cyber Summit on May 21 to hear government and industry leaders address evolving cyber threats.

Table of Contents

  • Why Is NIST Revising Special Publication 800-82?
  • What Changes Is NIST Proposing?

Why Is NIST Revising Special Publication 800-82?

The agency intends to update Special Publication 800-82, or the Guide to Operational Technology (OT) Security, to reflect lessons learned, ensure consistency with related NIST guidance and account for the evolving OT cybersecurity threat environment, NIST said Thursday. Comments on the planned revision are due Feb. 23.

What Changes Is NIST Proposing?

NIST is considering expanded guidance for different OT systems, including building automation, transit and maritime systems. The proposed revision would also introduce updated guidance on the use of emerging technologies in OT environments, such as artificial intelligence, machine learning, behavioral anomaly detection, digital twins, Internet of Things, zero trust architectures, cloud services, edge computing, 5G and advanced wireless technologies.

The agency also plans to update the OT threat landscape to reflect current vulnerabilities, incidents, standards and recommended cybersecurity practices, including recent activities in OT cybersecurity and updates to capabilities, tools and mitigations.

In addition, the proposed update would reorganize several appendices by moving Appendix F, the OT Overlay, into a standalone document and relocating Appendices C, D and E, which address threats, vulnerabilities, incidents, organizations, research, activities and security tools, to web-based resources. NIST is also considering removing outdated or no longer relevant content.

DoD/News/Space
Space Force Wants to Establish Pool of Vendors for RG-XX GEO Satellites
by Elodie Collins
Published on January 27, 2026
Col. Byron McClain, program executive offer at Space Systems Command. McClain shared RG-XX acquisition plans

The U.S. Space Force is seeking companies interested in joining a pool of qualified vendors capable of designing and building its fleet of neighborhood watch satellites in geosynchronous orbit called the Geosynchronous Reconnaissance & Surveillance Constellation, or RG-XX, Breaking Defense reported.

Table of Contents

  • How Will the Space Force Acquire the RG-XX Satellites?
  • What Is the Space Force’s Plan for the RG-XX Satellite Constellation?

How Will the Space Force Acquire the RG-XX Satellites?

Col. Byron McClain, program executive officer for Space Combat Power at Space Systems Command, told reporters that the Space Force will set up an indefinite-delivery/indefinite-quantity contract that will enable the service to procure capabilities every year based on available funding.

Space Force Wants to Establish Pool of Vendors for RG-XX GEO Satellites

Explore the new technologies and initiatives that ensure U.S. superiority in the space domain at the Potomac Officers Club’s 2026 Air and Space Summit on July 30. Space Force leaders will be present at the event to meet industry partners and to participate in insightful discussions about the capabilities guardians need to stay ahead of adversaries. Get your tickets here. 

He added that a flexible acquisition approach is necessary because the Space Force has not determined how many satellites will be needed to create RG-XX.

“The quantity will be based off of a couple of factors,” revealed McClain, “the cost of the individual systems that we get, [but also] available funds and the mission need.”

SSC posted in early January a request for competitive proposals for the IDIQ, nicknamed Andromeda. According to the solicitation notice, the command wants companies that provide technologies and space-based systems that enable space domain awareness.

Proposals are due on Feb. 12. Defense Daily reported that SSC may begin awarding contracts by March.

What Is the Space Force’s Plan for the RG-XX Satellite Constellation?

RG-XX is the planned successor of the Geosynchronous Space Situational Awareness Program, or GSSAP, a satellite constellation that collects for tracking and characterizing man-made objects in orbit. The GSSAP satellites lifted off from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida in July 2014 and became fully operational in September 2027.

Compared to GSSAP, RG-XX satellites will be more maneuverable and will be capable of refueling in orbit, McClain shared.

Federal Civilian/Government Technology/News
NASA, GE Aerospace Validate Hybrid Aircraft Engine Under HyTEC Program
by Elodie Collins
Published on January 27, 2026
A GE Aerospace Passport engine. GE Aerospace and NASA teamed up to develop a hybrid engine

Researchers from NASA and GE Aerospace have conducted a power extraction test of a hybrid aircraft engine being developed under the space agency’s Hybrid Thermally Efficient Core, or HyTEC, program.

During the test, the team fired up a modified Passport engine at a level that can power an airliner at GE Aerospace’s Peebles Test Operation site in Cincinnati, Ohio, NASA said Monday.

Table of Contents

  • What Happened During NASA’s Hybrid Engine Demonstration?
  • What Is HyTEC’s Goal?

What Happened During NASA’s Hybrid Engine Demonstration?

The test was the first time that the NASA-GE Aerospace team demonstrated an integrated system. Previous tests assessed the performance of engine components, including electric motors and power system controls.

“They had to integrate equipment they’ve never needed for previous tests like this,” shared Laura Evans, acting HyTEC project manager at NASA’s Glenn Research Center in Cleveland.

GE Aerospace’s Passport is equipped with an electric motor and generators in a gas turbine engine. It is capable of extracting energy during different phases of operation.

The company said the engine exceeded NASA’s technical performance benchmarks. The space agency added that the researchers now have real data to determine how to integrate the technology into aircraft.

“Our latest milestone successfully demonstrated a narrowbody hybrid electric engine architecture that doesn’t require energy storage to operate,” Arjan Hegeman, vice president of future of flight for GE Aerospace, shared. “It’s a critical step to making hybrid electric flight a reality for commercial aviation with technologies that meet customer needs for greater efficiency, durability, and range.”

What Is HyTEC’s Goal?

NASA’s HyTEC program aims to develop a hybrid engine that burns 10 percent less fuel compared to 2020 best-in-class turbofan engines and meet the aviation industry’s sustainability goals.

GE Aerospace is working on the program under a cost-sharing contract.

DoD/News/Policy Updates
DOW Task Force Issues Updated Counter-UAS Guidance for Homeland Installations
by Kristen Smith
Published on January 27, 2026
Drone swarm. JIATF-401 has issued updated counter-UAS guidance.

The Joint Inter-Agency Task Force 401, a specialized Department of War organization, has released updated guidance governing how military installation commanders detect, assess and respond to unmanned aerial system threats within the homeland, expanding authorities and clarifying procedures under existing law.

Table of Contents

  • What Does the New JIATF 401 Guidance Change?
  • What New Authorities Are Granted to Commanders and Services?
  • How Does the Guidance Address Interagency Coordination?

What Does the New JIATF 401 Guidance Change?

The guidance, signed Dec. 8, 2025, by Secretary of War and Wash100 awardee Pete Hegseth, consolidates and updates counter-UAS policy under Title 10 authorities, replacing earlier directives, the DOW said Monday. It removes previous limitations that tied defensive action strictly to installation boundaries, allowing commanders to act across a broader protective area when addressing unmanned aircraft threats.

“With this new guidance installation commanders are empowered to address threats as they develop, and the guidance makes clear that unauthorized drone flights are a surveillance threat even before they breach an installation perimeter,” said Brig. Gen. Matt Ross, JIATF-401 director.

What New Authorities Are Granted to Commanders and Services?

The guidance authorizes service secretaries to designate covered facilities or assets based on risk assessments and permits them to delegate that authority to service chiefs. It also directs installation commanders to issue local operating procedures within 60 days to align with the updated policy.

How Does the Guidance Address Interagency Coordination?

The policy incorporates provisions from the fiscal year 2026 National Defense Authorization Act that allow for expanded information-sharing among federal partners, including the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Justice, regarding unmanned aircraft activity. It also permits the use of trained and certified contractor personnel to support counter-UAS operations.

JIATF-401 will support implementation of the guidance by providing training resources through the Joint Counter-Small UAS University and facilitating access to validated counter-UAS technologies.

The task force, led by the U.S. Army, was created in 2025 to consolidate counter-UAS authorities and accelerate development, acquisition and fielding of capabilities across the department.

Articles/DoD
Congress’ FY26 DOW R&D Budget Boost: Essential GovCon News
by Pat Host
Published on January 27, 2026
Congress. Legislation in Congress would boost the DOW's RDT&E budget for FY 2026.
  • Critical spending legislation moving through Congress would increase the Pentagon’s RDT&E budget by $6.5 billion
  • It would also increase the Pentagon’s overall budget by $8.4 billion
  • Join the conversation on what the extra money would mean for the DOW at the 2026 Defense R&D Summit this Thursday—Jan. 29!

Critical must-pass spending legislation moving through Congress would boost the Pentagon’s fiscal year 2026 research, development, test and evaluation budget by $6.5 billion to a total of $148 billion, according to the compromise bill produced by the House and Senate appropriations committees.

The money, combined with the $37 billion in RDT&E money provided in FY 2026 from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act signed into law in 2025, would total a whopping $185 billion for the DOW in RDT&E funds this fiscal year. In comparison, the DOW received $141 billion for RDT&E in FY 2025.

Are you a GovCon technology executive? Then you cannot afford to miss the 2026 Defense R&D Summit this Thursday, Jan. 29—it’s designed specifically for you! Get the latest partnership opportunities directly from top DOW officials like Dr. Thomas Rondeau, principal director for FutureG. Spark collaborations with other GovCon titans and score that big contract. Tickets are running out—get yours now!

The bill would boost the Pentagon’s overall budget by $8.4 billion from the $830 billion it requested, according to Breaking Defense. The House passed the full year, defense, labor, Health and Human Services, education and Housing and Urban Development bill on Jan. 22. The legislation must be signed into law by President Trump by Jan. 30 before FY25 funding expires.

Table of Contents

  • What Programs Will Benefit From the FY2026 RDT&E Boost?
  • How Is the DOW Investing in C-UAS?

What Programs Will Benefit From the FY2026 RDT&E Boost?

Many key defense RDT&E programs will benefit from the extra money included in the conferenced spending bill. The Navy’s new fighter jet, F/A-XX, received $897 million more than the service requested in its FY26 budget.

The bill also provides roughly $26 billion overall for the Space Force. Combined with the $14 billion provided in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act from mid 2025, the service is set to receive about $40 billion in FY 2026, which is nearly twice as much as it received five years ago, according to Space News.

The legislation adds an additional $642 million to the Space Force acquisition budget, raising the service’s acquisition funds to more than $4 billion. Industry operators of intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance spacecraft will benefit from $169 million for the Space Force to acquire services and products from commercial companies. This is an additional $132 million from the service’s roughly $37 million budget submission.

How Is the DOW Investing in C-UAS?

The appropriations committees, in their joint explanatory statement, directed Secretary of War and Wash100 Award winner Pete Hegseth to submit a report on counter unmanned aerial system RDT&E activities taking place throughout the department. The committees are concerned about the growing threat posed by drones, including loitering munitions and other advanced capabilities, to jeopardize national security. The DOW recently started a campaign to procure counter small UAS, or C-sUAS, capabilities.

Explore the details of Pentagon RDT&E spending at the Potomac Officers Club’s 2026 Defense R&D Summit this Thursday—Jan. 29. Attend our multiple panels on how the DOW wants to use this increase in RDT&E funding to help critical emerging capabilities get through the perilous “valley of death” and into operators’ hands. Get your ticket today!

The committees commended the Navy on its big investment in the defense industrial base, especially in shipbuilding. It congratulated program managers who are leveraging commercial tools like off-the-shelf supply chain management software for their willingness to innovate.

The committees urged Navy Secretary John Phelan to evaluate enterprise-wide opportunities to use and scale firm-fixed-price COTS defense acquisition software-as-a-service. The goal is to fix consistent cost and schedule challenges that impact weapon systems through their lifetimes.  

The appropriations news comes on the heels of President Trump announcing he wants a $1.5 trillion defense budget for FY 27. The president, in a Truth Social post, said this increase in military spending would be offset by the income created through tariffs.

Congress’ FY26 DOW R&D Budget Boost: Essential GovCon News
Articles/GovCon Expert
Deltek’s Kevin Plexico Offers Thought Leadership on Measuring Contractor Success Ahead of Summit Appearance
by Pat Host
Published on January 27, 2026
Kevin Plexico. The Deltek SVP will moderate a panel at the 2026 GovCon Executive Leadership Summit on Feb. 26.
  • Kevin Plexico’s latest column on how President Trump is redefining defense contractor success in his second term is a must-read for GovCons
  • The six-time Wash100 Award winner and Executive Mosaic GovCon Expert gives sensible advice for contractors to succeed under these new contracting rules
  • Witness Plexico’s thought leadership live when he moderates a panel at the 2026 GovCon Executive Leadership Summit on Feb. 26!

Kevin Plexico’s latest column on how defense contractor performance will be measured in President Trump’s second term hits home for many GovCons. The Deltek senior vice president for information solutions, a six-time Wash100 Award winner and one of Executive Mosaic’s GovCon Experts, discusses how publicly traded defense contractors perform a difficult balancing act in prioritizing solid financial results as much as performance.

This balancing act is getting even greater attention from President Trump following his Jan. 7 executive order, Prioritizing the Warfighter in Defense Contracting. Trump, in this executive order, declares that performance must be prioritized and that contractors who don’t meet this new expectation can expect to suffer consequences.

Plexico provides sensible guidance for GovCon Wire readers so they can stay in the president’s good graces.

  • Boost visibility into business processes
  • Invest in your business
  • Create new compensation milestones, like risk reduction
  • Get ready for recovery before it’s needed

Who Is Kevin Plexico?

GovCon Wire readers trust Plexico for his exclusive insight and expertise into today’s turbulent contracting ecosystem. As SVP for information solutions, he directs overarching research, analysis and specification development for customers in the GovCon and architecture, engineering and construction industries.

He also supervises the production of GovWin, Deltek’s government market information and research service. On Feb. 26, readers can hear directly from Plexico at the Potomac Officers Club’s 2026 GovCon Executive Leadership Summit!

Witness Plexico’s thought leadership in person when he moderates the Leading the Shift: CEOs at the Crossroads of Innovation and Integration panel. He’ll be joined by other titans of GovCon, including QinetiQ US’ Tom Vecchiolla, Capgemini Government Solutions’ Dan Ford and CGI Federal’s Stephanie Mango. Get your pressing questions answered by the best and brightest minds in GovCon and get the scoop on strategies that will define the future of government services, technologies and federal mission success. Secure your seat today!

Deltek’s Kevin Plexico Offers Thought Leadership on Measuring Contractor Success Ahead of Summit Appearance
Previous 1 … 30 31 32 33 34 … 2,703 Next
News Briefing
I'm Interested In:
Wash100 Vote Now
Recent Posts
  • Farhan Khan Named FCC CIO
  • Marine Corps Advances AI-Driven Battle Management in Dynamis Serial 005 Exercise
  • Former DHS Executive Craig Basham Appointed US Secret Service Deputy CIO
  • DOE Invests $320M in Quantum, Nuclear, Material Science Research
About

ExecutiveGov, published by Executive Mosaic, is a site dedicated to the news and headlines in the federal government. ExecutiveGov serves as a news source for the hot topics and issues facing federal government departments and agencies such as Gov 2.0, cybersecurity policy, health IT, green IT and national security. We also aim to spotlight various federal government employees and interview key government executives whose impact resonates beyond their agency.

Read More >>

RSS ExecutiveBiz
  • FedTec, AiStrike Introduce FedRAMP-Ready Platform for AI-Driven Security Operations
  • Booz Allen to Support Air Force’s AEDC Hypersonic Test Improvement Project Under $82M Contract
  • Hanwha Defense USA, Hanwha Philly Shipyard Partner With VARD on Navy NGLS Contract
  • Evolver Secures CMMC Level 2 Certification to Strengthen Federal Cyber Posture
  • Amentum Relocates Hawaii Office to Boost USINDOPACOM Mission Support
  • Radiance Technologies Appoints Paul Lithgow as Chief Growth Officer
RSS GovConWire
  • Navy Selects Nine Contractors for $1.2B Training System Contract Modifications
  • RTX BBN Books $125M USTRANSCOM Modeling, Simulation Support IDIQ
  • Leidos Closes $2.4B ENTRUST Acquisition, Doubles Energy Infrastructure Market Footprint
  • Former Lockheed Martin Exec Jeff Schrader Joins Sierra Space as Chief Strategy Officer
  • NIH Issues RFP for Potential $3B Contract for Scientific, Technical Support Services
  • CyberArk’s Rahul Dubey on Treating AI Agents as Privileged Identities
Executive Gov

Copyright © 2025
Executive Mosaic
All Rights Reserved

  • Executive Mosaic
  • GovCon Wire
  • ExecutiveBiz
  • GovCon Exec Magazine
  • POC
  • Home
  • Acquisition & Procurement
  • Agencies
    • DoD
    • Intelligence
    • DHS
    • Civilian
    • Space
  • Cybersecurity
  • Technology
  • Executives
    • Profiles
    • Announcements
    • Awards
  • News
  • Articles
  • About
  • Wash100
  • Contact Us
    • Advertising
    • Submit your news
    • Jobs
Go toTop