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Army Eyes System-Bridging Technology
New data-fusing, Web-enabling technology that promises to bridge
Iraqi Portal Breaks Coalition Information Barriers
Multi-National Force-Iraq, plagued by problems with incompatible data sources
Exercise Reveals Information Systems Interoperability Issues
The pace of fielding technology is increasing so quickly that testing, training and maintenance personnel
Defense Intelligence Charts Course
The U.S. Defense Department has designed a road map that plots the objectives
Tough Love Greets Military Transformers
The defense community's annual transformation-focused meeting offered
Experts Discuss Need for Speed in Communications, Acquisition
Homeland defense initiatives and the global war on terrorism are reshaping
International Leaders Call for Strategies and Changes That Support a Stronger NATO
Better intelligence and information management are key elements of a NATO
Panelists Explore Network Centricity's Many Facets
The role of networks in various environments was the topic of discussions
Brig. Gen. (Sel.) David B. Warner, U.S. Joint Forces Command
As director of the Command, Control, Communication and Computer Systems Directorate at U.S. Joint Forces Command (JFCOM), the question of which technology will most impact this command is not easily answered. In our network-centric, global-reaching environment, technology will be the fulcrum around which success or failure will pivot. The level of measured success for the warfighter will depend directly on how evolving technologies are used to enable JFCOM's role within of the U.S. Defense Department as an organization where the military services, combatant commands, multinational partners, industry and other governmental agencies rely on each other in a truly interdependent relationship.
A Call From the AFCEA Field
A little more than a month ago, the United States observed Memorial Day, during which it remembered the men and women who have given their lives in support of freedom. Many other AFCEA-chaptered countries celebrate the equivalent of Remembrance Day, Armistice Day or Veterans Day on the eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh month, commemorating the coming of peace in Europe after World War I and honoring those who have given their lives for freedom or another noble cause. Here in San Diego at Camp Pendleton, Maj. Gen. Richard Natonski, USMC, commanding general, 1st Marine Division, was the keynote speaker for Memorial Day services held May 30, 2005, at Camp Pendleton. He paid tribute to the 420 U.S. Marines who have died in the past 365 days of the global war on terrorism. Quoting George Orwell, he said, "People sleep peaceably in their beds at night only because rough men stand ready to do violence on their behalf."