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News
Navy Commissions USS Hyman Rickover Virginia-Class Nuclear-Powered Submarine
by Naomi Cooper
Published on October 16, 2023
Navy Commissions USS Hyman Rickover Virginia-Class Nuclear-Powered Submarine

The U.S. Navy commissioned the USS Hyman G. Rickover Virginia-class nuclear-powered attack submarine — built by General Dynamics’ Electric Boat subsidiary — during a ceremony held at Naval Submarine Base New London in Groton, Connecticut, DVIDS reported Saturday.

The USS Rickover is the second Navy submarine named after Adm. Hyman G. Rickover, a figure seen as a pioneer of the nuclear Navy.

The first Hyman G. Rickover (SSN 709) is a Los Angeles-class submarine commissioned on July 21, 1984, and decommissioned in December 2007 after 12 deployments.

With a crew of nearly 135 Navy personnel, the new USS Rickover is capable of diving to depths greater than 800 feet at speeds faster than 25 knots.

“The crew of Hyman G. Rickover and our industry partners have worked tirelessly over the past several years to bring our nation’s newest submarine to life and we wouldn’t be here today without them,” said Secretary of the Navy Carlos Del Toro, a 2023 Wash100 awardee.

Industry News/News
SBA Seeks to Improve Small Business Participation in Federal Contracting With New Final Rule
by Jane Edwards
Published on October 16, 2023
SBA Seeks to Improve Small Business Participation in Federal Contracting With New Final Rule

The Small Business Administration has published a final rule stating that prime contractors with individual subcontracting plans may elect to receive credit for lower-tier subcontracts and must integrate the lower-tier subcontracting performance into their individual subcontracting plan goals.

SBA introduced the rule in accordance with the provisions of the fiscal year 2020 National Defense Authorization Act, per a Federal Register notice published Wednesday.

The notice dictates that section 870 of NDAA prohibits agencies from establishing tier-specific goals for contractors that use lower-tier credit.

Under the new rule, all prime contractors will have only one set of goals for first-tier and lower-tier subcontracting and should include in their subcontracting plans a written statement of the types of records they will keep to prove the subcontracting credit.

“In sum, the regulatory amendments implemented by this rule will not have a disparate impact on small businesses and will increase their opportunities to participate in Federal Government contracting as subcontractors without imposing any additional costs,” the notice reads.

The final rule will take effect on Nov. 13.

News
DHS S&T Relocates to New Washington D.C. to Boost Interagency Collaboration
by Naomi Cooper
Published on October 16, 2023
DHS S&T Relocates to New Washington D.C. to Boost Interagency Collaboration

The Department of Homeland Security’s Science and Technology Directorate has relocated its headquarters to the department’s St. Elizabeths Campus in Southeast Washington, D.C. as part of a broader effort to consolidate DHS leadership and agencies at the new location.

DHS S&T said Friday its new headquarters features a collaborative workspace with modern technologies, enabling the agency to boost internal coordination and teamwork.

“Bringing this directorate under the same facilities as the rest of headquarters will enhance collaboration,” said Alejandro Mayorkas, secretary of DHS and a previous Wash100 awardee.

Dimitri Kusnezov, DHS undersecretary for science and technology, said the new location will enable the DHS research and development arm to deliver technological support and expertise to agency partners and prepare the department for emerging technologies and future threats.

POC - 2023 Homeland Security Summit

Join the Potomac Officers Club’s 2023 Homeland Security Summit on Nov. 15 to hear from government and industry leaders about the latest digital transformation efforts to protect national security against evolving global threats. Click here to register for the highly anticipated event.

News
Department of Air Force Opens Proposed Space Force Strategy to the Public
by Jamie Bennet
Published on October 16, 2023
Department of Air Force Opens Proposed Space Force Strategy to the Public

The Department of the Air Force has opened for public review its Comprehensive Strategy for the U.S. Space Force, which includes training, equipment preparation and organization of the service branch.

The overview was submitted to Congress in August, and is comprised of three lines of effort: collaborating with mission partners, bolstering its workforce and building a field combat-ready fleet, DAF said Friday.

The strategy makes clear the agency’s commitment to developing a resilient, ready and combat-credible Space Force and emphasizes the enhancement of the branch’s data infrastructure as a joint function priority.

In the document, DAF also discusses its plan to cultivate Guardians with in-depth understanding of space operations, problem-solving skills and selfless public service. For its part, the department said it will improve management processes for military as well as civilian personnel.

The comprehensive strategy pledges to eliminate over-classification, incompatibility and other traditional barriers to USSF collaborations. The service branch will engage in mutually beneficial partnerships with industry and academia to expand its global competitive advantage.

News
Army Leaders Consider Foundational Elements of Data-Centric Force
by Ireland Degges
Published on October 16, 2023
Army Leaders Consider Foundational Elements of Data-Centric Force

According to U.S. Army Secretary Christine Wormuth, a 2023 Wash100 Award winner, the service branch must “continue to embrace innovation and transformation” to combat future threats.

In a keynote address at the 2023 Association of the U.S. Army Annual Meeting and Exposition in Washington, D.C. last week, Wormuth highlighted data centricity and technology-driven approaches as key considerations in the Army’s journey forward, the Army said on Friday.

Laying the foundation for data centricity, said Army Chief Information Officer Leonel Garciga, is a “big piece” of the service branch’s current direction. What this entails is the implementation of policy, guidance and resourcing.

“I don’t care how good an algorithm is. If you don’t trust the platform, or you don’t trust the network, do you trust the output of that algorithm?” he said during a panel discussion at the event.

Steering the Army’s shift toward a data-driven force is its Digital Transformation Strategy. Released in 2021, the plan is designed to accelerate the process of bringing data to the forefront of Army operations. Its three major focus areas are modernization and readiness, optimized digital investments and a technically savvy, operationally effective digital workforce.

A core part of the strategy’s foundation is ensuring that data is properly collected and labeled throughout the Department of Defense.

Gabe Camarillo, under secretary of the Army, said the service branch must make sure that there is a routine way of tagging, governing and ensuring data accuracy across all functional Army components. Once a common method is established, he expects the service branch to “be able to really start humming.”

He noted that many of the service branch’s technical challenges have already been “figured out” in the private sector.

“The real question is how quickly can we adopt and change our processes to make the most advantageous use of capabilities that are already in the market,” said Camarillo.

Wormuth emphasized the “close partnership” the Army has maintained with industry as it has stayed on course with its “most ambitious modernization effort in 40 years.”

Since data and software will “impact the entire range and spectrum of military operations in the future,” the Army has to get these technologies right to sustain a technological advantage, Camarillo said.

Army Leaders Consider Foundational Elements of Data-Centric Force

Interested in learning more about the Army’s modernization journey? ExecutiveBiz’s Army Acquisition Priorities: Balancing Readiness and Modernization Forum will bring together top Army officials and industry experts to discuss how the service branch is transforming its approach to acquisition. Click here to learn more, and click here to register for the event.

Government Technology/News
Schuyler Moore & Brig. Gen. John Cogbill: CENTCOM Transitions to Digital Capabilities Based on Live Data
by Jane Edwards
Published on October 16, 2023
Schuyler Moore & Brig. Gen. John Cogbill: CENTCOM Transitions to Digital Capabilities Based on Live Data

Schuyler Moore and Brig. Gen. John Cogbill of U.S. Central Command said CENTCOM has made its shift to digital warfighting tools based on live data feeds.

In an article published Sunday in Defense One, Moore and Cogbill discussed how several teams across the command tested software tools and developed digital plans based on a live picture of forces and supplies in theater during the Digital Falcon Oasis exercise.

The pair cited the importance of live data, which they said “serves as the anchor to operational reality” and the “bridge between conception and functional use.”

Cogbill and Moore also issued that the exercise has enabled the command to assess the flow of data between live assets and teams and called on technical communities to consider live feeds as the “backbone” of digital warfighting and advance the development of new tools.

“The series has proven that any shift to digital warfighting must be driven by live data. Without live data, operators will be slow to adopt the tools, and quick to abandon them in a crisis where timely data is critical,” they wrote.

Moore is the chief technology officer of CENTCOM and Cogbill is the command’s deputy director of operations.

News
Lockheed, MDA Complete Key Testing Stage in Next Generation Interceptor Program; Sarah Hiza Quoted
by Ireland Degges
Published on October 16, 2023
Lockheed, MDA Complete Key Testing Stage in Next Generation Interceptor Program; Sarah Hiza Quoted

Lockheed Martin has reached a new milestone in its Next Generation Interceptor initiative with the conclusion of its digital All Up Round Preliminary Design Review.

The completion of this testing phase, which was conducted in collaboration with the U.S. Missile Defense Agency, indicates that Lockheed is on track to deliver NGI to the military services on an accelerated timeline, the company announced from Huntsville, Alabama on Monday.

“I am proud of our team’s commitment to innovating with urgency to achieve expectations for this phase of the program,” said Sarah Hiza, vice president and general manager of strategic and missile defense at Lockheed Martin.

According to Hiza, the added confidence in the design gained from the joint review has kept the program on schedule.

A developing component of the MDA’s Ground-based Midcourse Defense system, NGI will offer a modern interceptor to deter long range ballistic missile threats from U.S. adversaries. During the Preliminary Design Review, or PDR, the MDA considered the NGI program’s readiness and maturity to determine that the technology still meets the requirements for this mission.

The review was carried out using digital engineering and model-based engineering tools that increased cost-effectiveness. These digital review methods allowed for early and repeated hardware and software testing, which secured the PDR with lab demonstrations of flight-like engineering hardware.

With the conclusion of this testing stage, Lockheed will start procuring long-lead hardware for use in the production of flight test vehicles. The next phase of the process, the Critical Design Review, is expected to occur in the third quarter of fiscal year 2025, and Lockheed projects the delivery of NGI to begin as early as fiscal year 2027. NGI’s previous milestone, the PDR of core subsystems, was completed in August.

News
NASA Delays 1st X-59 Experimental Aircraft Flight to 2024
by Naomi Cooper
Published on October 13, 2023
NASA Delays 1st X-59 Experimental Aircraft Flight to 2024

NASA has pushed back the first flight of its X-59 quiet supersonic research aircraft — manufactured by Lockheed Martin’s Skunk Works subsidiary — to 2024.

The X-59 aircraft will fly as part of NASA’s Quesst experimental mission that aims to demonstrate technology that can fly faster than the speed of sound while reducing the loudness of sonic booms to a quiet thump, the agency said Thursday.

According to NASA, the new flight schedule will give the agency extra time to fully integrate aircraft components and ensure system performance.

The Quesst team has transported the aircraft from its assembly facility to the flight line to commence safety and structural testing.

Cybersecurity/News
CISA Identifies Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Linked to Ransomware Campaigns
by Naomi Cooper
Published on October 13, 2023
CISA Identifies Known Exploited Vulnerabilities Linked to Ransomware Campaigns

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency has launched new resources to help organizations identify vulnerabilities and misconfigurations linked to ransomware campaigns.

The agency said Thursday it has added a “Known to be Used in Ransomware Campaigns” column to its catalog of known exploited vulnerabilities and a “Misconfigurations and Weaknesses Known to be Used in Ransomware Campaigns” table to its Stop Ransomware website.

The table features a short description of the misconfiguration and a column identifying the cyber performance goal action for each vulnerability.

With the new offerings, CISA aims to help critical infrastructure organizations boost their cyber resilience by providing mitigations against specific KEVs, misconfiguration and weaknesses targeted in ransomware campaigns.

Cybersecurity/News
NSA Creates GitHub Repository of Operational Technology Cyber Threat Detection Signatures
by Jamie Bennet
Published on October 13, 2023
NSA Creates GitHub Repository of Operational Technology Cyber Threat Detection Signatures

The National Security Agency has added a page to its cybersecurity site on GitHub that lists detection signatures and analytics for internet-accessible operational technology assets.

The repository, dubbed ELITEWOLF, aims to help network defenders of national security and critical infrastructure systems to catch malicious activity and vulnerabilities in their OT environments, NSA said Thursday.

ELITEWOLF builds on a 2020 cybersecurity advisory released by NSA and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, which called on critical infrastructure operators and owners create incident response and resilience plans to secure their OT assets.

The database includes records of malicious activity as well as signatures and analytics that require more in-depth investigation before being declared as a threat.

NSA urged OT critical infrastructure owners and operators to incorporate ELITEWOLF in their continuous and vigilant system monitoring practice.

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