CENTCOMFinalRelease1

42
TALKING POINTS Visit of Defense Science Study Group uNcLAss,FIED 9 June 2006 US Centrat Command Se? FOIA Case #07 0222 Backwound The Defense Science StudvGrouo 1DSSGI selects voune orofessors from m a w of the natmn's development, and the systems, missions, and operations of the armed forces The mission o f the DSSG is to convey to members an understandmg of the technical dimcnsiom ofnational security issues and an appreciation for the people and operations involved The conference will present thrce briefings to the DSSG, a The Command Overview This is an unclassified over view ofCENTCOM's history' command relationships,essential tasks. forces deployed in the AOR. breakdownof coalition forces, strategy. mission and threat analvsis ICOL ibil61 ) h ~\d~.mc~C~~n.wt~ anal Tchn,d,w~ Dcmonwa!~~, l)~w~~~~ the .\('I U KTfl pcoeram I h S I I to\ 1181 -.I 'n The proyr.im iitlesigned 1%) m,%cra ( t~mmf.int (',imm.in,l ,-:ip~hitm yip .if shorimll i.-iirrcnth ni>l hemi; .id.ire'~icii hv 4 Service program of record. The program was designed to provide ajump slan to the acquisition process and provide a residual capability to the Combatant Commander while the technologes are integratedinto Service programs of record (Mr [W ) c Counter-Improvised Explosive Device: Discuses the threat ofworking in the CCNI.COM AOR, and other IED infcsted environments Presents information on the Commander's Counter-IED W ED) Guidance and an overview ofthc CENTCOM C- 1ED Campaign Plan (COL fmw APPROVED BY. l/Snmcdff PREPARED BY //Sfem&/ Heidi H Grant [bubl SES MAJ. USA Director. Resources & Science and Technology Assessment Dtwsmn 2 JUN 06 UNCLASSIFIED

Transcript of CENTCOMFinalRelease1

Page 1: CENTCOMFinalRelease1

TALKING POINTS Visit of Defense Science Study Group

uNcLAss,FIED

9 June 2006

U S Centrat Command Se? FOIA Case #07 0222

Backwound

The Defense Science StudvGrouo 1DSSGI selects voune orofessors from maw of the natmn's

development, and the systems, missions, and operations of the armed forces

The mission o f the DSSG is to convey to members an understandmg of the technical dimcnsiom ofnational security issues and an appreciation for the people and operations involved

The conference will present thrce briefings to the DSSG,

a The Command Overview This i s an unclassified over view ofCENTCOM's history' command relationships, essential tasks. forces deployed in the AOR. breakdown o f coalition forces, strategy. mission and threat analvsis ICOL ibil61 )

h ~ \ d ~ . m c ~ C ~ ~ n . w t ~ anal Tchn,d,w~ D c m o n w a ! ~ ~ , l ) ~ w ~ ~ ~ ~ the .\('I U K T f l pcoeram I h S I I t o \ 1181 -.I 'n The proyr.im iitlesigned 1%) m,%cra ( t~mmf.int (',imm.in,l ,-:ip~hitm yip .if shorimll i.-iirrcnth ni>l hemi; .id.ire'~icii hv 4

Service program o f record. The program was designed to provide ajump slan to the acquisition process and provide a residual capability to the Combatant Commander while the technologes are integrated into Service programs of record (Mr [W )

c Counter-Improvised Explosive Device: Discuses the threat ofworking in the CCNI.COM AOR, and other IED infcsted environments Presents information on the Commander's Counter-IED W E D ) Guidance and an overview ofthc CENTCOM C - 1ED Campaign Plan (COL fmw

APPROVED BY. l/Snmcdff PREPARED BY //Sfem&/ Heidi H Grant [bubl

SES MAJ. USA Director. Resources & Science and Technology Assessment Dtwsmn

2 JUN 06

UNCLASSIFIED

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,Document approved for relea. by UNCLASSIFIED !US central ~ ~ ~ ~ x a

34

History of LTC'ENTC'OM, Jmuary - December 2005

INTELLIGENCE BRIEFINGS T O VERY IMPORTANT PERSONS M P s ) AND

SENIOR OFFICERS iU)

(U) h m y - Congressman Jim Davis, Florida I 1' District Representative, United

Slates Congress; Vice Admiral (Retired) John McConnell, Vice President, Booz Allen

Hamilton; Major General (Retired) Leroy Barnidge, Deputy General Manager Northrup

Gmmman Melbourne: Lieutenant General H. Steven Blum. ANG. Chief, National Guard Bureau; Dynamics o f Strategic Leadership Group, National Geospatial-Intelligence

Agency; Mr. Wl6 l Booz Allen Hamilton, Principal Manager; Mr. Porter Goss,

Director o f Central Intelligence; Dr. Stephen Cambone, Under Secretary o f Defense for

Intelligence; Lieutenant General William Boykin. USA, Deputy Undersecretary of Defense for Intelligence and Warfighting Support; Major General Richard Quirk, USA,

Director Signals Intelligence, National Security Agency; Mr. Mark Wheat, Staff Director

and Chief Council, House Government Reform Committee, United States House of

Representatives; His Excellency Jean-David Levitte, French Ambassador to the United

States; Air Commodore Pieter Cobelens. Director o f Operations, Netherlands Military

Defense; Major General Charles E. Wilson. USAR, Deputy Commander. US. Army

Reserve Command; Tampa Community Civic Leader Group; Dr. Michael Doran. Assistant Professor, Department o f Near Eastern Studies, Princeton University: Brigadier General Brett D. Cairns, Director General, Military Plans and Operations, Canadian

Defense Forces; Lieutenant General Harry Radeugue, USAF, Director. Defense

Information Systems Agency; Ambassador Baktybek Abdrisaev, Kyrgyzstan Ambassador to United States; His Excellency Ilk0 Dimotrov, Deputy Minister of

Defense. Bulgaria; Ms Janice Gardner, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Intelligence and Analysis. Department of Treasury; Naval Staff College; Brigadier General Joseph Votel, USA. Director Joint Improvised Explosive Devices Defeat Task Force and CAPSTONE

Class 05-01.

(U) February- Mr. Lorenzo S. Hiponia, SES, Director Center for External and

I t r a t i o n a l Programs, Joint Military Intelligence College; Lieutenant General Hans

Sonneveld, Deputy to Chief o f Defense Staff, Royal Netherlands Defense Forces; Tampa

Connection; Honorable Michael L. Dominguez. Assistant Secretary of the Air Force for Manpower and Reserve Affairs; Joint Chiefs of Staff and Office of the Secretary of

Defense U.S. Army Interns: Brigadier General Daniel Wright, USA. Assistant Judge

Advocate General for Military Law and Operations; Industrial College of the Armed

Forces: Lieutenant General Duncan J. McNabb, USAF, Director for Logistics, Joint

^SECRETryNOFeRN** UNCLASSIFIED

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Chapter II Joint Planning, Operations, and Training

Staff M r Tom Fnedman New York Times Columnist, Brigadier General Charles

Neelev USAF. and Air Commodore David Pietsch. Director General of Interoperabilih,

Royal Australian Air Force, Aus t ra l id United States Combined Interoperabilit~ Team

(U) March - M r Ro? ApseloN. SES, Actmg Director o f National Media Exploitation

Center. U S A m y War College Po l iq Fellows Program, M r Avon Adams, SES,

General Counsel for the Army. M r George Pierce. SES. General Counsel, Defense Intelligence Agency, M r Leonard Jefferson. SES. Joint Material Command and Armv

Field Support Command Executive Leadership Program, Lieutenant General (Retired)

John J Cusick. USA, Rapid Deployment Joint Task Force Senior 25 ' Reunion,

Honorable Pete Hoekstra. Chairman, House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence,

United States Congress. Naval Command College (Internal!onal Fellows). Dr Linton

Wells, It. Assistant Secretary o f Defense for Networks and Informatm Integration, Joint

Capabilities Board. Major General (P) Elkenberry. USA, Incoming Combined Forces Command-Afghanistan Commander. Ambassador David Lin, PoIitical/Mihtarv

Counselor to Baghdad Iraq. Major General Mileb Wseiwes Fahed Ahhen , Vice

Chairman, Joint Chiefs o f Staff. Jordanian Armed Forces, Senior Executive Senice

APEX 20. Western Hemisphere Institute for Secunty Cooperation and General Staff

Officers Course. Naval Staff College (International Fellows). M r Michael Braun. SES,

Chief o f Operations. Drug Enforcement Agency, Major General Bahadur Gumng. Chief Quartermaster Department, Nepal Arm?, Major General Valdas Tutkus, Commander.

Lithuanian Armed Forces. M r Bill McGinnis, Staff Delegate, House Appropriations

Survey and Investigations Committee, Dr Marc Sageman, MD. Ph D , Clinical Assistant

Professor. University o f Pennsylvania. Air Force Science Advisory Board, and Major

General John T Brennan, USAF. Incoming Chief, Office o f Military Cooperation-

Afghanistan (OMC-A)

(U) - Lmtenant General E d w r d Hanlon, Jr. USA, U S Mh!+

Representatne to NATO Committee, Lieutenant General Walter E Buchanan Ill. USAF, Commander, U S Central Command Air Forces (CENTAF), Major General Frank R

Favkes. USAF. Director o f Financial Management and Comptroller. Headquarters Air Force Material Command. Foreign Defense Attache Operations Delegation. Brigadier

General Annette L Sobel, ANG. Director of Intelligence. National Guard Bureau. (b1161

l b w i , Ph D . Kennedy School of Government, Hanard. Mr Newt Gingnch, Former

Speaker o f the House and U S Representative. General Colonel Sertiiy Olekansandrovych Kyrychenko, Chief o f General Staff, Armed Forces o f Ukrme. U S

Council on Foreign Relations Delegation. Clearwater Community Civic Leader Group.

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36

History of USCENTCOM, J m l u a q - December 2005

Central Intelligence Agency Career Analyst Class. General Ray Henault, Canadian

Defense Forces, Chairman (Designate) Military Committee o f NATO. M r Dobie

McAnhur, Special Assistant to Deputy Secretary o f Defense, Brigadier General David

Capenell. United Kingdom Chief of Defense Liaison Officer 10 the Joint Chief o f Staff,

Ms Sue Payton. SES. Deputy Under Secretary of Defenses Advance Systems and Concepts. M r Douglas J Feilh, Under Secretary of Defense for Policy. M a p General

Timothy F Ghormley, USMC, Incoming Commander, Combined Joint Task Force, Horn o f Afnca. Ms Marina Pendes, Bosnia Deputy Minister o f Defense for Resources,

CAPSTONE 05-0, M r Frederic W Maerkle, POLAD (designate) to Combined Jom

Task Force, Horn o f Africa, Netherlands Advance Defense Course, and Colonel (P)

James E Moentmann, USA, Incoming Chief o f Staff for Coalition Forces Command -

Afghanistan

(U) May - Forengn Operat~ons Comnuttee, U S Senate, MI Jose Bono. Mm~ster o f

Defense for Spain. Dr (bii6) . SIS. Chairperson. A m Science Board. Marine

Corps War College. M r Forest Farlev. Director James A H a l q Veterans Hospital. M r

IbKW . Defense Intelligence Senior Leader. National Air and Space Intelligence

Center. Major General James A Kellev. USA, Chief o f Staff, U S Armv Reserve

Command. M r Mark Greer. SES. Vice Deputy for Information Management and Chief

Information Officer. Defense Intelligence Agency. Brigadier General Essa AI-Mwroiiei, Director o f lnlelligence, United Arab Emirates Minlstry o f Defense, General D L

Berlqn. Chief o f Defense Staff, Roval Netherlands Defense Force. Armed Forces o f the

Kingdom of Netherlands. Vice Admiral John Morgan, USN. Deputy Chief of Naval

Operations for Information, Plans, and Strategy. Brigadier General Arnun Hasenpusch,

Director o f Military Intelligence. Minister of Defense, Bonn. German". Brigadier Pail

Newton. Assistant Chief of Staff. Directorate of Intelligence. Permanent Joint Headquarters, United Kingdom, Ms Carol Haave, SES, Deputy Under Secretary o f

Defense for Counter Intelligence and Secuntv, Dr JeITrq Starr, SES. Office o f Secretary

o f Defense for Special Operations and Low Intensity Conflict, Major General John T B e n USA, Security Coordinator and Chief. Office of Military Cooperalion-

Afghanistan. Brigadier General Joseph L Volel. USA. Director Joint Improvised

Explosive Device Defeat Task Force. Mr Bard Glad Pedersen, Depuly Minister o f

Defense, Norway, Admiral Giampaola Di Paola, Chief of the Italian Defense General

Staff. Ms Monica Shephard, Director, Join1 Prototype Pathway, U S Joint Forces

Command. Vice Admiral John Morgan, USN. Deputy Chief of Naval Operations for

Information. Plans and Strate=. and the House o f Representatnes Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence

P UNCLASSIFIED

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Chapter I1 Joint Planning, Operations, and Training

(U) - L~eutenant General (Retred) James R Clapper, USA, Dmctm, Nattonal

Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, M r John P Walters, SES, Director o f White House

Office o f National Drug Control Policy, Major General Carlos Eduardo Caceres Flores,

Chief o f Joint General Staff, E l Salvador. M r Bruce Miller, SES, New' Zealand Signals

Intelligence Liaison Officer and National Crytologic Representative (Afghanistan),

National Security Agency, Brigadier General John M Ferryman, USA, incoming Chief

o f Training Mission. Afghanistan, Brigadier General Robert L Caslen, Jr, USA. Deputy Director for War On Terrorism. Joint Staff. M r Tom Fnedman, Foreign Affairs

Co lums l , New York Times. M a p General Hamad AI-Attiyah, Chief of Staff, Qatar

Armed Forces. Brigadier General Michael D Jones. USA. Deputy Director, Politico- Military Affairs for Middle East. Joml Staff, Major General Benoit Puga. Commander o f

French Special Operations Command. Honorable Richard Cheney, Vice President o f

United Stales, M r Bob Hite. News Anchor. Channel WFLA. M r (Wl . Depulv

Director, Office o f Military Affairs. Central Intelligence Agency. Honorable Carlos

Westendorp y Caben. Spanish Ambassador lo United States, Brigadier Simon Porter,

British Army, Assistant Chief of Staff for Plans and Poliq-SHAPE, Brigadier General

Kathleen Gainey. USA. Director o f Force Projection and Distribution. Office o f Depup

Chief o f Staff for the Army. M r Tadamichi Yamamoto, Minister, Plenipotentiary and

Depul? ChiefofMission, Embassy orJapan. Washington D C , M r Mike Evenson. SES.

Director of Combat Support. Defense Threat Reduction Agency, M r Brad Hanson,

Incoming Deputy' Chief o f Mission. U S Embassy', U~bekistan, Brigadier General Gary

M Jones. Commander United Slates Army Special Forces Command. Major General

Michael J C M Gauthier. Canadian Chief o f Defense Intelligence, M r Enk Abfomson.

SES, Office o f Iraqi Analysis. National Security Group, and Mr Menus Balu, Secretary

of State. Romania

(U) - Senator Alan Ferguson. L ~ k r a l Parly. Chairman J m t Standmg

Committee on Foreign AlTairs and Trade and Leader Australian Defense Sub-Committee. Brigadier General James R Myles, USA, Commanding General, US Army Test and

Evaluation Command. Brigadier General Joseph L Votel, USA. Director IED Task

Force. Brigadier General Rhetl A Hemande,, USA. Director, Officer Personnel

Management Directorate. Lieutenant General John F Saltier, USMC, Commanding

General, First Marine Expeditionaq Force (1-MEF). Ambassador David C Lilt,

Incoming Political Milnary Advisor to Baghdad, Media Blitr "Move America Forward. Radio Anchor personnel, M a p General Conrad W Ponder, USA. Deputy G-6.

Department ofthe Army, General Michael V Hayden. USAF. Principal Depup Director,

P UNCLASSIFIED

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History of LTSCENTCOM, Jnnuorj~ - December 2005

Nanonal Secunty Agency and Chief of Central Security Service, M r Michael S Dell,

Chairman. Board of Directors. Dell Corporation, M r Richard Norland, Incoming Deputy

Chief of Mission, U S Embassy in Afghanistan. His Excellency Jerw S,majdmski,

Minister of Defense, Poland. CAPSTONE Class 05-3. Lieutenant General Charles E

Croom, USAF, Director, Defense Information Systems Agency, Colonel General Ahmed

Arara, Moroccan Defense Attache to U S . General Carlos Ospina Ovalle, Commander,

Military Forces, Colombia. Ms Frances Fragos Townsend. Assistant lo the President for Homeland Secunty. M r Jeff Castell!, SES. Central Intelligence Agency, M r Richard

Chnstensen, SES, Deputy Chief o f Staff, G2, USA. Major General Richard J Quirk,

USA. Director Signals Intelligence. and MI 1Wl DISL, National Security

Agency. Brigadier General Danv Van De Ven. Belgian Defense Attache to U S . and General Gerhard Back. Commander. NATO Joint Force Command Headquarters

(U) &gml - M r Ken Olsen. Attorney. M r Mark Greer, SES, Vzce Deput, for

Information Management, Defense Intelligence Agency. Major General Ahmed Mokhtar, Chief Egyptian Training Authority, Honorable Mel Marline,, Republican-Florida, United

Stales Senator. Ms Beth Larson, Majority Staff Member. House Permanent Committee

on Intelligence. Admiral (Retired) Dennis Blair. President and CEO, Institute for Defense

Analysis, Nashville Committee on Foreign Relations, M r Stephen Norton, SES. Chief

Defense Human Intelligence Management Office. M r Jack Matheus, SES. Chief, Joint

Communications Security Monilonng Actnily. National Security Agency. Command

and Staff College. German Armed Forces. Brigadier General Marek Dukacmvski, Chief

Defense Intelligence. Polish Ministry of Defense, Major General Marl. A Welsh, USAF,

Deput) Commander. Joint Funclional Component Command for Intelligence,

Surveillance and Reconnaissance, U S Strategic Command. General (Retired) Bany

McCaffrev, USA, Adjunct Professor, United Slates Military Academy. Assistant

Secretary David Welch, Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs, Stale Department, General

Gerhard Back. Commander. NATO Joint Forces Command Headquarters and Ambassador Enc S Edelman, United Stales Ambassador lo Republic o f Turkey

(U) - General Herin Bentegeat. Chtefofthe Armed Forces Genecal StaK

Republic o f France, Major General R a n Muhammad Khan, Director o f Operations.

Plans and Senices, Pakistan Army, Colonel General Jaroslav Gofjar, Deputy Director.

Slovak Republic Milnary Intell~gence Service. His Excellency General Perve,,

Mushmar. President of Pakistan. Admiral Edmund P Giambastiani. Jr. Vice Chairman.

US Joint Chiefs o f Staff, Brigadier General Sandy Davidson, USA. Incommg Chief,

Office of Defense Represenlalne, Pakistan. His Excellency Martin Fedor. Slate Under

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P 39 Chapter I f Joint Planning, Operation's, and Training

Secretq. Ministry o f Defense, Slovak Republic. Senior Executive Service. APEX 21

Orientation. Dr Richard Gault, SES, Chief, Office for Cntical Infrastructure Protection

and Homeland Security, Defense Intelligence Agency, and Turkish Distinguished Visitors Orientation Program Tour

(U) Q@dm - Bn8e.d~ General Mark Solo, USAF, mcommg C h d , Office o f M t / Cooperation, Kuwait, CAPSTONE 06-1. Brigadier General Stephen Layfield,

USA, Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations with Allied Rapid Reaction Corps. Honorable

Donald Rumsfeld, US Secretary ofDefense, Dr Thomas P M Bametl. AuthorNew York Times Best Seller, "The Pentagon's New Map," Brigadier General Joseph L Votel, USA,

Director. Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Task Force, Office o f Deputy Chief

of Staff of USA. Ambassador James Larocco. Multinational Force and Observers Director General. NATO Reporting Tour 2005. General Sir Richard Dannatt.

Commander in Chief Land Command. Unned Kingdom. Lieutenant General (Retired)

Claude Kicklighter. USA, Special Assistant to Secretan of Defense for Transformation o f Afghanistan and Iraq, Honorable Ser~h Sargsyan, Minister o f Defense, Republic of

Armenia. M r Larry Hollingsworth. SES, Head 4 5 Aircraft Dnision Operations, Corps of Foreign Naval Attaches. and Joint Capabilities Board

I U j - M a p General Benogt Pus* Commander French Specad Operat~ons Command. M r Daniel J DelI'Orto. Principal Deputy General Counsel. Department of

Defense, Lieutenant General Johann Georg Dora Deputy Chief of Defense Staff. Germany, M r Pierre Kraehenbuehl. Director of Operations for International Committee

of the Red Cross. M r Robert J Olson. Interim Director. Near East South East Asia Center, Department o f Defense. General Intelligence Training Council. Rear Admiral

Richard Hunt, USN. Prospective Commander, Combined Joint Task Force. Horn o f

Afnca- M r Dick Vitale. American Sports Caster, Notable Bin/ Program. General Norton

A Schwart?. USAF, Commander, U S Transportation Command. Dr John P Rose.

Director, George C Marshall European Center for Secunty Studies, Garrnisch- Partenkirchen. General (Retired) Gary E Luck, USAF Senior Advisor to Joint Forces Command, M r Neils Hennk Hedegaard. Assistant Director. Danish Defence Intelligence

Service. Major General Jack D Gardner, USA. Deputy Commanding General o f

Detainee Operations and Commanding General Task Force 134, Multi-National Force

Iraq, Lieutenant General Claude V Chnstenson, USA, Director o f Logistics, Joint Staff. Dr Fareed Zakana- Commander Action Group, Guest Speaker. Lieutenant General

(Retired) Daniel Chnstman. USA. Senior Vice President. International Aflairs to the U S Chamber of Commerce. M r (bl(6i National Security Are"? Representative lo

P UNCLASSIFIED

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UNCLASSIFIED

40 P History of USCEVTCOM, January - December 2005

Department o f Defense, Brigadier General Markku Koli, DepuIy Chief o f Operations,

Finish Defense Forces. M r Grant Schneider. SES. Chief o f Enterprise Infrastructure

Senices Group, Directorate for Information Management and Chief Information Officer.

M r Thomas Gimble. SES. Action Inspector General. Department o f Defense, Lieutenant

General Ken Gillespie, Vice Chief of Defense Forces and Chief o f Joint Operations,

Australia- Honorable Stephen A Cambone, Under Secretary o f Defense for Intelligence,

M r . President. Foundation for the Defense of Democracies. Honorable John Young, Director o f Defense Research and Engineering. Commodore George

Zambellas. Commander Amphibious Task Force Group, Royal Air Force, United

Kingdom. Brigadier General Gary S Connor. USAF, Commander, Electronic Svstems

Center. Hanscom Air Force Base. and M r Paul Van Son. Director for Bureau of International Security and Nonproliferation Office o f Export Controls, Department o f

State

(U) - Jon11 Advanced Warfightmg School, Clms 2005. Bngadm General

Joseph L Void, USA, Director Joint Improvised Explosive Device Defeat Task Force.

Rear Admiral Anthonv WIMS, USN. Vice Director O f Operations. Joint Staff. M r Steve

Norton. SES, Director National Human Intelligence Management Office. Major General

Benjamin Freakley, USA, Commanding General, 10"' Mountain Divison. M r Dennis

Richardson. Australian Ambassador lo the United Slates. Business Executives for National Security. Major General Robert E Durbin. USA, Incoming Chief of Security

Cooperation - Afghanistan. Naval SlafTCollege (International Class of2006). Honorable

Fnis Arne Petersen, Danish Ambassador to the United Stales, Brigadier General Michael

Worden. USAF. Director o f Operational Plans and Joint Matters, Headquarters, United

States Air Force. M r Chuck Alsup, SRS. and M r Daniel Sheehan, SES. Depug Director

and Associate Director o f National Intelligence for Military Support, M r Kenneth

Pollack. Director o f the Saban Center for Middle East Studies at Brookings Institution,

M r ibw! Assistant Administrator for Democraw Conflict and Humanitarian

Assistance. Brigadier General Damen W McDew, USA, Incoming Director o f Mobility Forces. and Brigadier General James M Mungenast, USAF, Mobili/ation Assistant 10 the

Director of lhe Defense Intelligence Agenq

CCJ2-JC: Collection Manaeement Division (U)

P UNCLASSIFIED

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I98

Hkllliy of VSCENTCOM, January - December 2005

from requirements to the Joint Staff to sourcing solution back to USCENTCOM,

allowing for automated orders writing and requirements tracking '''

(U) In a major effort to rewrite DOD deployment doctrine, the branch hosted three 2006.08 planning conferences (January. February and a resubmission conference in JuK)

establishing o\er 1400 CENTCOM requirements Branch officials prepared for three global force management boards and a number of Joint Staff and JFCOM sourcmg

events Members were integral in defining force requirements for earthquake relief

efforts in support of Pakistan The branch processed more than 150 requests for forces

(RFFs) from components, which included landmark programs such as the Iraq Transition

Teams and the Afghanistan embedded training teams I t released 46 Redeployment

Orders (RFDEPORDs) closing out for requirements for units ranging in w e from a dog handler and do to entire brigade combat teams (BCTs) in Iraq and Afghanistan The

branch also released oicr 50 USCENTCOM deploimem order (DEPORD) mod~ficalions

in response to morethan 60 JCS actions '''

AOIUCounter Terrorism Branch lJ3P-AOIUCT I U l

(U) The branch was also mvohed in other OPTS including AOR Strategy AOR Command and Control the Regional War on Terror and the Combatting Terrorist

Weapons of Mass Destruction Branch personnel reviewed numerous strategic

documents such as the Joint Strategic Capabilities Plan (JSCP) and the Contingeno.

Planning Guidance (CGP) along with numerous joint publications and theater war plans

a67 i pu t (U) CCJ3P-FM CY 2005 Annual Histon

468 Ibid

UNCLASSIFIED

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Chapter /I Joint Planning, Operation'., and Trainins

Aside from reviewing documents. AOR & CT also produced numerous documents, not the least o f which was a number of high-profile briefings that enabled the Commander, USCENTCOM to tell of the g r m threat emanating from our theater of war The Commander presented these bnefs 10 a number of dignitaries and academics both at home and abroad (e g , Dr Pollack. Dr Fnedman, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs o f Star, President Mushanraf Prime Minister Blair Vice President Cheney and President Bush) "'

Strategic Deployment Division IU)

' Input (S). CCJ3P-CT. CY 2005 Annual History. info used (U)

IbU111 4a 1 b I l V 49

UNCLASSIFIED

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USCENTCOM ACTD Overview Briefing

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What are ACTDs?

An ACTD is an opportunity to evaluate mature technology from either civilian or military communities to solve existing military shortfalls in a cost effective and accelerated manner.

1 Key Elements of an ACTD are:

o CINC Sponsored, Joint in scope.

o 2 phase programs - Demonstration phase (2-4 years in length) - Residual phase (1-2 years in length)

o DUSD and Service funded L' C G S S I C ~ E D

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ACTD Streamlined Acquisition Cycle

Technology Military Utility

L i .. -_I L- 1 A Technology A Mihtav Utility .,,-,-..-,.... : Testing Demonstration Assessment : 1 '/' UNCLASSI~IED

/

~ ~ - p ~ ~ .- -

rn Developer COCOM - Sponsor10peralional Mgr Lead Sewice -Residuals lefl for COCOM us --

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USCENTOM ACTD Oversight Team

Government

- Major : Science Advisor 0-4 (USAF)

ACTD Contractor Support

M r - - - Lockheed Martin (Team Leader) Retired USA M r Lockheed Martin Retired USAF - M r - - Lockheed Martin Retired USA

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ACTD Selection Process with USCENTCOM Involvement Points

DUSD (AS8.C)

ACT0 Proposals Initial Reviews

to DUSD (AS8C) November to Dece nber t ip i - f rar P

June to Oct t meframe

* Highlighted blocks represent points In the process where USCENTCOM has involvement

2-3 year 2 year Development Transition

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USCENTCOM Complete ACTDs

o Airbasel Port Biological Detection with Chemical Add-on (

o Battle Damage Assessment for Joint Targeting Toolbox ( )

o Coastal Area Protection System ( )

o Information Operations Planning Tool ( )

o Unattended Ground Sensor ( )

The Science Advisor's Office acts as the Command point of contact for these programs following the technology transition within the Services.

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ADVANCED TACTICAL TARGETING TECHNOLOGY (AT3)

AT3 is a new FY04 ACTD Y?' - Problem: Timely destruction of anti-access

radar guided air defense systems can't be accomplished with current low-densitylhigh- demand aircrafUsystems

Objectives: -" - Reduce timeline for destruction of anti-

access threats to less than 10 minutes after they emit

- Derive target location to less than 50 meter CEP

- Derive target location from greater than 50NM Derive target location in less than 10 seconds

Technologies - Digital receivers capable of recise,

timely geolocation, modifiecfto coordinatelexecute net-centric attack with non-ARM weapons

- Inexpensive distributed digital

? recessing to bring decision-making orward to sensorlstriker

- Builds on existing DARPA r ram, basic technology proven, f ~ L S b y 3Q FY03

- Exploit precise and stable TDOA and FDOA measurements by networked digital sensors

Residuals - Digital equipped, AT3 capable (ALR-69U

RWR systems) F-16's in FY06

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Operational MAS1 NT

The COMWX ACTD will provide space based MASINT sensor weather data products using upgraded communications links in near-real-time

T i e concept f c ~ t i e 4CTD ,ass c n v w L, !"e I?-k a* WETSATs to perform certain quiremenis

- Geo-stationary METSAT refresh rates greater than 15 mins

- PolarSATs revisit at best very 4 hours - Foreign METSAT data does not provide adequate

resolution 14 Kmi - Lack of 3-D depiction of clouds &cloud forcasts

Lack of near-real-lime quick looks 1,

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Contamination Avoidance for Sea Ports of Debarkation

Whv have the CASPOD ACTD? -Vulnerability of SPOD I APODs outlined in Desert Breeze Study -Restoration of Operations for Fixed Sites (RestOps) ACTD did not address SPODs -Two General Accounting Office reports 98/00 stating

poor APOD I SPOD CB Defense Plans

USCENTC :OM DCINC: "I'm glad that this is moving forward something that is desperately needed."

Purpose: To identify and provide those technologies, capabilities, and improvements to doctrine, concepts of operations, concept of employment, and associated tactics techniaues. and orocedures that can be utilized prior to. during,and afteran attack or release, to mitigate the effects of a chemical-biological agent, toxic industrial chemical and material (TIC/TIM) on force flow and operational tempo during the initial stages of power projection operations at SPODs in immature theaters with limited US presence

End State: The CASPOD ACTD will increase operational warfighting capabilities (improve CONOPSfTTPs and equipment) throuah improved warning, detection, protection, and decontamination capabilities that will minimize the impact of a chemical- biological attack or TICfTIM release, on SPOD throughput.

L.",:.LA:.: r;:> Bottom Line: Bring Clean Forces to the Fight as Rapidly as Possible.

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Hyperspectral Collection and Analysis System (HyCAS)

HyCAS ACTD will provide the watfighter with end-to-end hyperspectral capability. The ACTD will demonstrate: . several hyperspectral sensors . military utility that can be integrated onto different operational platforms . incorporation into existing tasking, processing, exploitation and dissemination (TPED) architecture.

HyCAS ACTD will demonstrate military capability to. - detect and identify targets using CC&D techniques support Search and Rescue supportTagging and Tracking perform Intelligence Preparation of the Battiespace (IPB) -terrain analysis (water content, soil type, trafficability - detect and identify processes used in the development and deployment of WMD UNCLASSIFIED

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JISR provides Early Entry Forces with Improved Situational Awareness through

- Near Real Time Access to Traditional & Nontraditional Sensor Data

- FusedICorrelated Intelligence Products Ian

JISR will use a Web-Based Architecture working on existing C41SR workstations within existing Communications Archnectures

d,.,-&XSI:lE;

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The LOSAT ACTD was designed to improve the operational capability of light forces against armored weapons systems

LOSAT is a HMMWV mounted Hvoervelocitv Kinelic Enerov Missile, which provides a greaterkinetic kill than the M l

- Main Battle Tank (Greater than 1500 Mffiec Velocity)

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Key Mission Areas . Stand-off Surveillance . Support Targeting and Battle Damage Assessment . Support Targeting of Time Critical Targets - Intelligence Preparation of the Battlefield . Situational Awareness for the Battle Field Commandet

Goals & Objectives Develop and insert a video rate using classified

capability - visible and IR . into aerial platforms

Reduced image interpretation time and improved target recognition.

Demonstration focus will be: Time-sensitive targeting Real-time target cueingldetection Bomb Damage Assessment (BDA) Camouflage, Concealment, and Denial (CCD)

defeat

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- + TSV ACTD will support operational movement, repositioninQ

and sustainment of combat forces TSV gives the warfighter a high-speed, intra-theater, roll-on I roll-off, sealift capability.

A TSV will provide the capability to rapidly re-position a

Brigade Combat Team up to 400 nm (equivalent to 245 C-17 sorties).

TSV will allow for enroute mission planning and rehearsal providing the commander with the capability to choose multiple points of entry.

TSV will have tele-logistic technology for asset visibility and movement trackina. -

TSV ACTD will demonstrate military capability to: - I self-deploy, carry 600 short tons of cargo, at 40+ knots and have a fully loaded range of 4,500 nautical miles on transoceanic 1 crossings operationally move and maneuver combat ready unit sets from staging sites into forward areas

. prowde follow-on sustainment through degraded and minor ports, [ inland waterways, Logistics Over The Shore (LOTS), and augment Amphibious Operations

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Air Base 1 Port Biological

The purpose of the ACTD was to design a biological point defense networked system with the ability to integrate existing Chemical Alarms into the network

The Portal Shield networked system consists, in most cases, of the Mark 111 610-Oetection carousel and a sheltered control center.

The Portal Shield Mark 111 carous separate tests for eight agents

Portal Shield Chemical add-on allows direct interface with - M21 Remte Sensing Chemical Agent Alarm (RSCAAL) - M22 Automatic Chemical Agent Deteclor Alarm (ACADA)

Portal Shield is currently deployed in 4 countries and is a primary piece of the RESTOPS ACTD

Portal Shield continues to under ao enhancements imorovina . - the overall sensitivity and response time

U%.C./.Z5,F

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I h e CAPS toi-us is on the integration ofexisting components, decision and ci-inlrol logic, tactical procedures, and doctrinal concepts The CAPS system mi l l be capable of ohsenins a wide range of activities in a coastal environment, ftinning an mtegrated tactical picture, aiding deci-iions (in force emplovment. and providing non-lethal c a p o n ' s options to the command authority

Thc hwhlv m o b k ~ o n l i z u r a t ~ o ~ ~ allon 5

\ir r ip, I i l i - i l i~~mcnt A: I'K- ick-.led c ' v , ..,mpii-i~ni, .I. ii:t iti'i.1 ,*i.'~~g3ph\ cipcctcil threat i c ' i ~ l i

' ,> .A p > I t l ~ a l ~ w ~ t r v x .

1 The( \P i /\( ' ID Rc-n:~- i lq- ip i rc iT 1, .LJnm'.\ ~ ? p h \ d 1" 1 s # p ' T ' # ! , ~ ! b"

R i t r im and -, L S \-n i' I -i.:l.l'. in P-irtd - Ri<.i I'd" ul,,~ilthcC'\Ps M. I l l

r .am. .*-.,om

I Computer)

ISAT (Sensor

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Unattended Ground

The UGS ACTD consists of two parts. - Unattended MASINT Sensor [UMS) - Remote Miniature Weather Station [RMWS)

The UMS program is designed to provide acoustic seismic and thermal imaging of threat vehicles

-- - - There are two UMS systems ' Steel Rattler (Man-inserled) 1 Â Steel Eagle (Air-dropped)

e j sj..,E.e,..t,acm.6La F.,,,p r,,q n ,

-- I

The RMWS system is designed to detect temperature, humidity, wind directlon/speed, visibility, cloud ceiling height, and barometric pressure

Both the RMWS and MASINT Sensors were used d u n 9 OEF and OIF

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-

908 '~ L8S'I L89'E ZES'Z he; 528 SLZ SLZ SLZ 0 008 99Z 992 99Z zt'o't' z16 ZIS'I ~ I E ' I asc .

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uiqiit\ ¥iisou5'~1 'sa!iqiqfdf) ~IISOUSE!Q p?3uc\pv. s'-auipca JOIIIEN ~ ~ . I W I X E I U :IuauuIT'1um aiuapid?

1 ]e1!113uj 01 U I ~ ~ S , < S a3ue[p/v~ns [e31paiu ?\~suaqa~dwo."). :s[enp!san

c ~ ~ ? i s A s u o i i ~ a i o ~ ( ~ a x 0 3 UO!~EJSIUI pue A.ii'fi?1 qii n ?[qiieduioa sa!ii[!qedm uoisnj EIEQ.

s i < e i ] e o ~ ~ ~ ~ y ~ f l .ii~su?a q 8 1 ~ - (diqo eJqaz.1 suaSoq~ed ~ J P J J E M O I ~ pup

IIOUUIOI JOJ ( W ~ > I ) <e11r0131~ ua?01~1~d <~ole~ldsa">~. :sa1¤01ouq3 I

. . . - .. . . .. ~ g y j v y ~ :138euei\ uoIIIs-eJ1 pue jvsfl :;>a u a s p e q .

( U O I ~ E Z I U J ~ ~ O W ) 83s jysn : ~ a S e u e p ~ [e31uq?a1. fio-)jr~n :aSmvi\ I E U O I ~ E J X ~ ~ ~ W O J ~ - ) -

: s ~ u E ~ ~ ~ J B ( )

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Unclassified COSMOS

(Coalition Secure Management and Operations System)

P r n h l F m - ~ ~ _I Data overload during collaborative planning and

monitoring execution of large scale coalition operations. 0 Iranslation and redundant data. 2 Phvsicallv tenarate network for coalition members are

slow to sit-up or change when roles change and require "tennis shoe" interfaces

Technologies: Q Standard data model IC21EDM)

0 Trailed Servers

3 Portals & Agents

Residuals (Products) LI Three Software Soiral Protow~es

Objectives: bpid and secure ml and pmtmtion of critical 0 Glebal Enterprise Sewices (GES) Multinational Standards

infomation to and among coalition partners based upon and pmcrdures 'Or cOa'itiOn

,heir roles. 0 JC2 & DJC2 Products and Assured Delivery Service for . . ~~~

0 Rapid reconfiguration of network communities based upon chancing coalition roles

LI Information tailored to the user's role and user-deiined

Participants: 0 PACOM, MARFORPAC, DISA, IDA, MCCDC. 3 Coalition: Australia. Canada, UK & regional partners

Schedule: FY OS Spiral 1. Develop data model and trusted server, survey & integrate smart agents & portals. System high.

0 FY 06 Spiral 2; Migrate FY 05 products to existing programs of record. Add q i o n a l partners.

0 FY 07 Spiral 3; MLT.l: Upgrade agcrti; Rollout software i n JC2IDJC2

0 N 08-09 Transition & Maintenance

POC. - Col a USMC,

larger GES environment

Comments J Current coalition information architectures contain

missive information which easily overloads users. Emerging technologies can be used to help ensure critical information is focused to the right person

J Trusted, automatic controls on information r r leue are

nwded to replace a manual, time consuming processes.

J Wil l use mature information-based technologies to create the information-based interoperability for joint and coalition farces as specified in DoD Data Stratwy to meet GIG'S primary goal and purpose: end-to-end interoperability.

Unclassified 0 1

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Large Data ACTD FYOS ACTD Candidate

OBJECTWES . R",,d< "xn ~,in*I<. m,w,,,,e mean, ,o ,",C,X"' ~ 7 t h rnassh~ am"""ts ~pmch!8<$ c ~ n h w ~ ~ of dm8 thwgh I a q e - ~ c a l ~ sordgc m d m l ~ m <nmp",l,,gcap.,h,l,,,c5 . llandl<biMh slorrd and real time data and pimi,, i h m rapid <<mnh,"m,m , J c ~ ,,,7,,m, ,h.,Wh <.p"".l"". ,,3 ,he rhn <"",m"">can""~ \ \ . I L T > ~ wch a. GIG-RP.1 C'i.JTRS. etc. . Coniain multiple redundancies and ellttisiw information aisuranct feature, clvnugl~ m m p g and new w m n ~ y a n d pm<mt>on cdpahhltmc\

, . - . . . , ~equires enonnow collatoranon thpuzhout D ~ D (and ihe ~ n t i l l ~ g m w m u 1 d i l ! i-.ptfciall\ due topace ddcicloping 11 pri~!.rnl-. n inmates fwch a\ IPvfil mcrcaun,' senwr daia Im* ?mended ii, ~ J C ~ I

n,m 1P lhn' ,o",lJr r, t~mqr,? ""<mi< ,hot '"re "", h~,ne"dh\' ."d h ,A" "?'rA<,

"' :1 ?MU

R o d thee I I oraee, proces'tn?. ,,~"al>zm"n and < c w n pro%nmnd mdc, w h mamu18 vytm ramablc m fen mnute, at 85'0 w1111y I m d l L<a\c k h m d [or at l ? m OM year w p p m fur end (0 end q x m m < t u ~ w r s dqcndmg m fund8nemd wanvtm p l m l

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FY05 FY05 Advanc^($!^^"f^h^'%^?^istration Proposal pza, Interactive Command Environment (ICE)

(formerly Multi-Modality Command and Contr

improved decision-making tools Command and Control (C2) systems hurnan- software and

machine interfaces (HMI) are limited in associated

functionality to keyboards and mouse peripherals

1 Objectives: 1 1 Allow users to interact with GWOT tools and C2 Svstems usina a combination of entrv and data 1 Transition Path: 1 retrieval techniques (voice, keyboar; mo"i!, &) 1 ' ' 1 to'improve res~ons~vene~s and reduce training licenses and s"pL'On lw0 years

requirements

Partici~ants: USEUCOM. COMUSNAVEUR, Army (INSCOM G3, International Cooperative Programs), Navy (ONRG). Pacific Northwest National Lab (PNNLf

Schedule: - ..- - 7 . : . - 2 ,....--A.. - - \ ,A7

- Testing& Evaluation Demonstrations 1 and 2 - Residual Support and Transition ~ ~ 0 7

1

Comments: User-Sponsor: U.S. European Command - Lead Service: U.S. Navy (P) . program Manager: Office of Naval Research

Operations Manager: COMUSNAVEUR - Technical Manager: USA INSCOM - Transition Manager: USA INSCOM

BISfc Technical/lntegration/Schedule Risk: Low Funding Risk Moderate

Navy PUL. ~apta ln U ~ N ; lei [USNI: = emaiF 0'

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