In a past
post, ComNavOps stated that the Army seems to be beginning to understand what a
future war will entail (see, “Army Gets It”).
That recognition is belated, to be sure, and still incomplete but at
least aspects of reality are starting to be recognized by the Army. Here’s the latest demonstration of the Army’s
slowly dawning recognition via a Breaking Defense website article about combat
communications as put forth by Maj. Gen. Peter Gallagher, head of the Army’s network
Cross-Functional
Team (1).
“Instead of video, the screens will
show minimalist messages and abstract icons on digital maps, updated
by telegraphic bursts of data designed
to avoid detection. Instead of constant
micromanagement, there’ll be a taut silence broken by terse litanies of codewords, soldiers
getting on and off the radio before the
enemy can trace the transmission. Instead of direct uplinks to bulky, vulnerable satellites high
in geostationary orbit, signals will bounce from low-orbiting
mini-satellites to relay drones to ground antennas, following
dozens of possible paths, too many for the enemy to block them all. Instead of
specialist soldiers and contractor field service reps laboriously configuring
and reconfiguring the network, artificially
intelligent software will adapt autonomously to avoid jamming,
hacking, and interference.”
[emphasis added]
The full
featured, video-intensive, real time documentation of military operations that
our leadership has come to assume as normal will be impossible. Electronic countermeasures, jamming, signal
disruption, equipment destruction, cyber attacks, etc. will ensure that we’ll
have sporadic communications, at best.
The article sums it up nicely.
“Instead of optimizing the network
to provide the best user experience in normal circumstances — the current
standard — you optimize it to provide acceptable performance in extreme circumstances.” [article’s
emphasis]
This
demonstrates that the Army has at least a glimmer of understanding about a
future peer war and is beginning, just beginning, to prepare for it.
Gallagher
noted,
“in a
high-intensity, fast-moving fight against a great power adversary, he said, the
network will be under attack, so you have to
prioritize to ensure that at least three essentials get
through:
- secure voice, so troops can
talk to each other, because typing a text message under fire isn’t always
practical, and nothing tells you whether a subordinate is confident or
cracking up like his tone of voice;
- Position Location Information
(PLI) that’s not reliant on the Global Positioning
System, so you know where your people are even when GPS is jammed;
and
- telegraphic updates on each
unit’s status and enemies spotted so you can populate your digital map
with what the Army calls a Common Operational Picture.”
All of this
is fascinating and worth a tip of the hat to the Army but what does it have to
do with the Navy since this is, after all, a Navy blog? Well, it should be obvious – the Navy will
face the same attacks on its communications and networks and, therefore, should
be working towards the same goals as the Army.
The really
disturbing aspect to this is that far from working towards minimal, but
assured, communications in recognition of the reality of peer combat, the Navy
is actually increasing its dependence on highly suspect and even more complex
and “bulky” communications such as Distributed Lethality, Co-operative
Engagement Capability, Third Offset Strategy, unmanned vehicles, Navy
Integrated Fire Control – Counter Air (NIFC-CA), etc.
Did you
note the use of the term “bulky”? This
means that communications and data are becoming ever more demanding of
increased bandwidth, signal strength, and signal duration. It takes a LOT of bandwidth and time to transmit
video as opposed to a couple of word text transmission. Enemy electronic countermeasures are going to
ensure that our communications and network data transmissions are interrupted,
degraded, and sporadic. This is the
antithesis of the path the Navy is on.
Here’s an
example. The LCS was designed to
self-monitor its machinery, instrumentation, and condition and transmit all
that data back to a shore station so that the shore support group could
anticipate maintenance and repair needs and have the proper personnel and parts
waiting when the LCS arrived back in port for its all too frequent maintenance
visits. However, during the first two Singapore public relations deployments the
reality was that the LCS lacked the communications bandwidth and fidelity to
transmit the monitoring data and the entire system broke down and this was
during peacetime when communications were unchallenged! How much worse will the situation be during
war when communications are contested?
Those high
resolution videos of terrorists from overhead UAVs that we’ve all grown so
accustomed to on the news are simply not going to be possible in a peer war -
of course, neither will UAV survival over the battlefield so the inability to
transmit video won’t really be that big an issue, I guess!.
The point
is that the Navy needs to take a lesson from the Army and begin reducing its
reliance on communications and networks rather than increasing it. We also need to greatly increase the
robustness of our communications but that, in turn, depends on reducing the
demands, complexity, and bandwidth requirements. In other words, we need to train to fight
silently and isolated. If we find that
our communications and networks perform better than we anticipated, all the
better but we must not count on it.
__________________________________________
(1)Breaking
Defense website, “Can’t Stop
The Signal: Army Strips Down Network To Survive Major War”, Sydney
J. Freedberg Jr., 26-Mar-2018 ,
The Army isn't driving this. Industry is, especially with the sitcom and satnav systems, many of which have important ground stations in Russia.
ReplyDeleteSorry, I don't get your point at all. Try again?
DeleteGPS doesnt have important ground stations in Russia, just locally owned ones that might add services improve reliability for the region.
Deletehttp://www.bbc.com/news/technology-27662580
The changing landscape.
ReplyDeleteRecent BreakingDefense article April 18 on the Chinese 'experimental' satellite SJ-17 launched with its most powerful rocket that just happens to have rendezvoused with three different Chinese satellites in totally different areas of space and parks within a couple of hundred meters, the last satellite being dead and parked in a graveyard orbit.
Should be noted lasers effective in space as there is no atmosphere to degrade the beam, would not expect any large gps, comms and reconnaissance satellites to survive a hit by laser at close range.
To be noted that US deploys the secret X-37B manoeuvrable orbital test vehicle whose location is classified and the DARPA Robotic 'Servicing' satellite is also manoeuvrable.
Air Force still plans to place $10 Billion contract for additional 22 GPS III satellites.
https://breakingdefense.com/2018/04/china-satellite-sj-17-friendly-wanderer/
"secure voice, so troops can talk to each other,"
ReplyDeleteHarris radios did that 10 years ago, I know because we used them in exercises.
"Position Location Information (PLI) that’s not reliant on the Global Positioning System"
Very easily doable, you just have to addapt some kind of inertial nav systems from aviation tech.
I know this article isn't specifically about the LCS, but
ReplyDeleteI had a thought about how to use them.
Use them for emergency vessels in the US. Every time a hurricane hits Puerto Rico, Florida etc- Send out a LCS loaded with several RHB's, drones and supplies and medical staff..
It's perfect for it- it's designed to go into littoral areas- flooded land is pretty littoral. It's got a huge flight deck- set up extra tents, communication centres etc. Use two fire scouts, or dozens of smaller drones- to locate people, drop off some supplies- it can be done eg there's an Aussie drone used by lifesavers which lifesavers use to find the drowning victim, and then the drone ejects an inflatable into the water for the drowning person to hold onto while the lifeguards reach them.
All the LCS are current dockside on continental USA. Excellent- keep them there. In between disasters, do a little coast guard work.
And if they come across looters while the LCS slowly drifts through the flooded streets....well well! Finally, something the 57 and 30mm guns can be used for!
Andrew
While we are at war with jihadis the Russians have been investing in electronic warfare as evidenced by live implementation in Ukraine. A throwback article that illustrates this is below.
ReplyDelete"...if you see a carrier in plain sight, the only problem to solve is how to radio reliably the reports and targeting data against the US electronic countermeasures. Ironically, since the time lag of Soviet military communication systems compared to the NATO ones is quite clear, the old Morse wireless telegraph used by the Soviet ships was the long-established way to solve that problem...While obsolete, strictly speaking, and very limited in information flow, Morse wireless communication was long the most serviceable for the Soviet Navy, owing to its simplicity and reliability."
https://www.lowyinstitute.org/the-interpreter/how-soviets-planned-go-war-americas-navy
"While we are at war with jihadis the Russians have been investing in electronic warfare"
DeleteYour observation is quite astute. We allowed ourselves to be lulled into complacency by a couple of decades of third world terrorist operations instead of continuing to prepare for high end combat. We are only now just beginning to reverse that trend.