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Financial Reports/News
CBO Estimates Defense Costs to Reach $922B by 2038
by Jane Edwards
Published on October 26, 2023
CBO Estimates Defense Costs to Reach $922B by 2038

The Congressional Budget Office examined the Department of Defense’s plans between 2024 and 2028 as outlined in the 2024 Future Years Defense Program and projected that defense costs under such plans would hit $922 billion in 2038, reflecting a 10 percent increase.

Nearly 70 percent of the cost increase would be for military personnel or for operations and maintenance, according to a CBO report published Wednesday.

When adjusted for inflation, the defense budget after calendar year 2024 would remain nearly unchanged through 2028.

According to the report, the total costs of DOD’s plans between 2024 and 2028 would be approximately 3 percent or $113 billion higher than the department indicated in the 2024 FYDP. From 2024 through 2038, the total costs would be about 4 percent or $587 billion higher than DOD stated in the FYDP.

“To accommodate higher costs, DoD would need to scale back its plans or request larger budgets than are anticipated in the 2024 FYDP,” the report reads.

M&A Activity/News
RTX Sells Cybersecurity, Intelligence & Services Business for $1.3B
by Ireland Degges
Published on October 26, 2023
RTX Sells Cybersecurity, Intelligence & Services Business for $1.3B

RTX has sold its cybersecurity, intelligence and services arm to an undisclosed buyer for $1.3 billion, Potomac Tech Wire reported on Thursday.

In an email sent to Washington Technology, an RTX spokesperson said the decision to divest the business unit resulted from a routine review of the company’s portfolio, which determined that selling was the best option for company clients, stakeholders and employees.

“We believe this gives the business greater autonomy to deliver on customer missions and allows it to serve as a platform for innovation well into the future,” they stated.

RTX Sells Cybersecurity, Intelligence & Services Business for $1.3B

The defense industry is constantly evolving to meet the changing needs of its customers. Learn about key shifts in the landscape at the Potomac Officers Club’s 10th Annual Defense R&D Summit in January 2024, where experts from both the public and private sectors will come together to consider notable developments in defense technology. Heidi Shyu, under secretary of defense for research and engineering, will keynote the event. Click here to learn more, and click here to register.

Contract Awards/DoD/News
CAES to Deliver Upgraded Low Band Transmitter to US Navy & RAAF Under Potential $55M Contract; Mike Kahn Quoted
by Ireland Degges
Published on October 26, 2023
CAES to Deliver Upgraded Low Band Transmitter to US Navy & RAAF Under Potential $55M Contract; Mike Kahn Quoted

CAES has booked a U.S. Navy contract with a potential value of over $55 million to provide a transmitter for the service branch and Royal Australian Air Force.

Under the award, CAES will manufacture the AN/ALQ-99 Low Band Consolidation transmitter, a modified version of the earlier AN/ALQ-99 Low Band Transmitter that was used by U.S. and coalition forces in Operation Iraqi Freedom, Operation Enduring Freedom and the Global War on Terror, the Arlington, Virginia-based company announced on Wednesday.

“We are proud of our longstanding partnership with the U.S. Navy on next-generation electronic warfare technology,” said CAES President and CEO Mike Kahn.

The LBC, he explained, adds key enhancements to its predecessor to address new and evolving threats.

CAES won the pre-production contract for the AN/ALQ-99 LBC transmitter in April. Work under the new award is expected to continue through 2025.

The organization has already produced LBTs for the Navy and RAAF EA-18G Growler Airborne Electronic Attack fleets. Over the past few decades, CAES has manufactured over 850 transmitters that can deliver high power spanning multiple octave bandwidths in the challenging environment faced by aircraft that operate from Navy aircraft carriers.

Earlier this year, CAES won another award from the Navy to support its SEWIP Block 2 initiative by providing spares, engineering services and repairs on antenna array panel assemblies. The contract was issued in February and is valued at $38.5 million over five years.

CAES was also contracted by Raytheon, an RTX business, in August to deliver fully tested radar module assemblies for the Navy’s AN/SPY-6 family of radars. The $200 million award extends a partnership between the two companies intended to help the service branch attain the benefits offered by modern radars.

Industry News/News
SVDG Urges Congress to Back Defense Innovation Unit Through Hedge Portfolio Authorization
by Jane Edwards
Published on October 26, 2023
SVDG Urges Congress to Back Defense Innovation Unit Through Hedge Portfolio Authorization

The Silicon Valley Defense Group has called on Congress to include in the fiscal year 2024 defense appropriations bill a provision that would designate $1 billion in funding to the Defense Innovation Unit to support the establishment of a hedge portfolio, dubbed the Non-Traditional Innovation Fielding Enterprise.

“Additional funding provided by the NIFE would enable DIU to accelerate fielding of innovative capabilities to the services and the combatant commands at speed of relevance,” SVDG wrote in a Tuesday letter to congressional leaders.

The nonprofit organization also commended the inclusion in the House-passed FY 2024 National Defense Authorization Act provisions that would authorize NIFE, codify the authorities and raise the reporting structure of DIU.

According to SVDG, such provisions will enable the Department of Defense to further leverage the technological capabilities that commercial companies and non-traditional contractors offer to support warfighters.

Over 60 technology companies and venture capital firms cosigned the letter.

POC - 10th Annual Defense R&D Summit

Join the Potomac Officers Club’s 10th Annual Defense R&D Summit in January to learn about the latest developments in military technology. Register here.

Artificial Intelligence/Big Data & Analytics News/News
NSF-Funded Effort Seeking Data-Driven Approaches to Technology Assessment, Investment Concludes Pilot Year
by Jerry Petersen
Published on October 26, 2023
NSF-Funded Effort Seeking Data-Driven Approaches to Technology Assessment, Investment Concludes Pilot Year

The National Network for Critical Technology Assessment has released a report marking the conclusion of a $4 million pilot program that sought analytical approaches for determining the maturity, trajectory and impact of various technologies with the ultimate aim of helping the government make data-driven investments.

The work that the National Network performed focused on four technology areas — artificial intelligence, biopharmaceuticals, energy and critical materials and semiconductors — with the findings informing the Assessing and Predicting Technology Outcomes program, which aims to forecast the results of technology investments, the National Science Foundation said Tuesday.

Erica Fuchs, National Network director for its pilot year, said that the project demonstrated the feasibility of assessing critical technologies using new data and analytics approaches, adding: “This assessment can ensure that the country makes smart investments in the new technologies vital to national security, prosperity, and broad-based social well-being.”

For his part, NSF Director Sethuraman Panchanathan said: “This pilot helped map current capabilities and identify where additional investments are needed to develop the science and technology that will drive advanced technology assessment and prediction.”

He added that technology assessment and prediction could transform U.S. investment in research and innovation.

The National Network for Critical Technology Assessment is funded by the NSF.

Cloud/News
Treasury & AWS Helping Advance Cloud Adoption in Finance Sector, Says Treasury’s Graham Steele
by Naomi Cooper
Published on October 26, 2023
Treasury & AWS Helping Advance Cloud Adoption in Finance Sector, Says Treasury’s Graham Steele

Graham Steele, assistant secretary for financial institutions at the Department of the Treasury, said the department is working with cloud service providers — a.k.a. CSPs — like Amazon Web Services to support financial institutions in advancing their cloud adoption efforts.

Steele said AWS collaborates with Treasury’s Cloud Executive Steering Group to improve transparency and monitoring of cloud services within the financial services sector, the department said Tuesday.

“By bringing CSPs into the fold alongside other private sector and regulatory stakeholders, we are working toward establishing a more transparent model that places less pressure on cloud customers and asks CSPs to take more responsibility for the security of those customers,” Steele shared at the AWS Gov2Gov Summit.

In his speech, Steele also noted the benefits and risks of using artificial intelligence and automated systems in the financial services sector.

“AI may offer benefits, such as reducing costs and improving efficiencies, identifying more complex relationships, and improving performance and accuracy,” he said.

However, financial institutions may also face challenges and risks arising from the design, deployment and use of AI technologies.

Cybersecurity/News
DARPA Gears Up for New Program to Protect Mixed Reality Users From Cognitive Attacks
by Jamie Bennet
Published on October 26, 2023
DARPA Gears Up for New Program to Protect Mixed Reality Users From Cognitive Attacks

The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency has begun accepting abstracts from vendors interested in participating in the Intrinsic Cognitive Security program.

ICS is a two-phase, 36-month effort that aims prepare for potential attacks on mixed reality, or MR systems, which are increasingly being adopted in military operations, DARPA said Tuesday.

The program will apply mathematical approaches called formal methods on MR user behavior models in order to prove guarantees that an MR system can protect users from cognitive attacks.

Phase 1 of the project will involve proving the guarantees and supporting the cognitive models, while the second phase will center on the guarantees’ validation as well as prototyping of the ICS technology.

“We need to develop methods to protect mixed reality systems before systems lacking protections are pervasive,” said Matthew Wilding, DARPA’s ICS program manager. “This program will show how to protect personnel using rigorous, math-based development practices that enable MR adoption plans in DOD organizations.”

The agency released a broad agency announcement on Oct. 16, with abstracts and proposals due Nov. 2 and Dec. 20, respectively.

Cybersecurity/DoD/News
Randy Resnick: DOD CIO Office to Oversee Review of Zero Trust Implementation Plans
by Jane Edwards
Published on October 26, 2023
Randy Resnick: DOD CIO Office to Oversee Review of Zero Trust Implementation Plans

Randy Resnick, director of the Zero Trust Portfolio Management Office within the Department of Defense’s Office of the Chief Information Officer, said the CIO office is set to review in the next few weeks 43 zero trust implementation plans that will serve as roadmaps for military services and defense agencies to address gaps in their cyber capabilities, Federal News Network reported Tuesday.

“We’re expecting to get these plans and whether or not they exceed our expectations will meet our expectations, that’s to be determined. We are confident that probably 80% to 90% will, but there will be some that we’re going to have to go back and forth,” Resnick told FNN in an interview.

According to Resnick, the CIO office developed from February through July a set of metrics that will be used to review each implementation plan, which he said will be analyzed by the different architectures, such as on-premise, all cloud or hybrid infrastructure.

He offered details on how the CIO office will look into each zero trust implementation plan.

“Our plan is that we’ve assembled probably the equivalent of maybe 17 or 18 full-time equivalents (FTEs), probably about 25 people, if you count them all, to spend the next four to six weeks analyzing every one of those plans and measuring the success of those plans, and whether or not they’re giving us the information,” Resnick said.

“We want to know how every single component is going to be hitting target level zero trust or higher by fiscal 2027 or earlier, and a layer on top of that is how are they going to achieve it,” he added.

Resnick said DOD will submit a report to Congress in December after conducting the internal review and then brief lawmakers on its assessment by January.

News
House Bill Suggests Improvements on Digital Service Delivery Across Federal Government
by Naomi Cooper
Published on October 26, 2023
House Bill Suggests Improvements on Digital Service Delivery Across Federal Government

Reps. Ro Khanna, D-Calif.; Byron Donalds, R-Fla.; Barry Loudermilk, R-Ga.; and William Timmons, R-S.C. have introduced bipartisan legislation to improve the delivery of digital services by increasing accountability and coordination across federal agencies.

The Government Service Delivery Improvement Act would mandate the Office of Management and Budget director to designate a senior OMB official to lead and coordinate efforts to improve the public’s online interaction with government agencies, Khanna’s office said Monday.

The bill would also require agency heads to build better trust with the public and appoint a senior agency official to spearhead agency-wide customer experience initiatives.

“The federal government has an obligation to efficiently and effectively deliver quality services that Americans rely on including Social Security, retirement benefits, Medicare health coverage, veterans programs, student loans and grants,” Khanna said.

Executive Moves/News
Michael Whitaker Confirmed as FAA Administrator
by Jane Edwards
Published on October 26, 2023
Michael Whitaker Confirmed as FAA Administrator

The Senate unanimously confirmed Michael Whitaker, most recently chief operating officer of Hyundai Motor Group subsidiary Supernal, to serve as head of the Federal Aviation Administration.

In September, President Joe Biden nominated Whitaker, who served as deputy FAA administrator between 2013 and 2016 and helped lead the transition of the country’s air traffic control system to the satellite-based Automatic Dependent Surveillance-Broadcast technology, the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee said Tuesday.

Whitaker has over three decades of aviation experience, including serving as group CEO at India-based travel conglomerate InterGlobe Enterprises, senior vice president at United Airlines and assistant general counsel of international and regulatory affairs at Trans World Airlines.

He has a juris doctorate degree from Georgetown University Law Center and is a private pilot who serves on the Flight Safety Foundation’s board.

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