Title: DSB Summer Study
1- DSB Summer Study
- on
- Special Operations and Joint Forces in
- Support of Countering Terrorism
- Friday
- August 16, 2002
- Final Outbrief
For Official DSB Use Only -- Do Not Distribute
2Special Operations Joint Forces in Support of
Countering TerrorismDr. Ted GoldMr. Don Latham
Sponsors
USD(ATL)/Commander JFCOM
Prior CT Insights MG Bob ScalesDr. Wick Murray
Advanced CT Technologies SystemsDr. Mim
JohnDr. Ron Kerber
Future Force CapabilitiesGEN Bill HartzogVADM
Dave Frost
We drew on past DSB studies
Intel PanelDr. Joe MarkowitzADM Bill Studeman
Enduring Freedom
Psyops
Unconventional Use of Nuclear Weapons Against
U.S. Dr. Rich WagnerDr. Bill Graham
Managed Information Dissemination
We leveraged current DSB Studies
Precision Targeting
Defensive Information Operations
Biological WarfareDr. Anna SkalkaMr. Larry
Lynn
Discriminant Use of ForceDr. Ted GoldDr. Josh
Lederberg
Others
2
3The Global War on Terrorism (GWOT) A Real War,
A New Type of Adversary
- Committed, resourceful, globally dispersed
adversary with strategic reach
- A long, at times violent, and borderless war
- Requires new strategies, postures, and
organization
This study only scratches the surface of what
will eventually be needed
4Elements of a National Strategy Orchestrate All
Instruments of National Power in a Global
Campaign
- Preemption/proaction/interdiction/disruption/quick
-response capabilities - Be proactive in securing partners and help from
allies, friends, and others - Hold states/sub-state actors accountable
- Foster information sharing
- Fight forward
- Focus particular attention on WMD
- Sophisticated, aggressive public diplomacy
All the above in parallel with consequence
management and protecting the homeland and DoDs
missions and forces
5Guidance From Our Terms of Reference
- Focus is overseas military operations
- Military instrument is only part of the necessary
capabilities - Examined the role of intelligence in some detail
- Did not address homeland defense explicitly
- But difficult to segment theaters in this war
- We did consider threats to US military force
projection from the US
6The Toughest Challenge Identify and Find
Terrorist Networks
- Very small signals hidden in massive clutter
and noise - Some similarities with Cold War anti-submarine
warfare (ASW) efforts - Extensive differences as well
7Conducting Military Campaigns in States Harboring
Terrorists
- OEF demonstrated substantial progress toward
desired force capabilities - From
- Air, land, sea, space
- To
- Robust connectivity
- Horizontally integrated, pervasive ISR
- Agile ground forces able to operate dispersed
- Effective remote fires
- Adaptive joint command and control
- Assured access and supply (expeditionary mindset)
These emerging capabilities will be critical for
an effective military role in GWOT
8Characteristics of Afghan Campaign That Will
Persist
- A more central role for SOF and specialized
capabilities
- Joint integration at very low levels
- Discriminant use of force
- Interagency partners play major roles
- Creative operational arrangements with coalition
partners
9Recent DoD Initiatives in the GWOT
- Expanded Joint Warfare Analysis Center (JWAC) and
Land Information Warfare Activity (LIWA)
initiatives - Interagency Link analysis
- Operational net assessment (ONA) capabilities at
Combatant Commands - JFCOM CENTCOM NORTHCOM
- New Campaign Support Group at Ft. Bragg
- Multi-agency Joint Global perspective
New analysis tools Multi-option
analysis - Joint Program Office Special Technology
Countermeasures Mission Assurance Analysis - Counter-terrorism Technology Support Office
Technical Support Working Group - Physical Security Equipment Action Group
- Special Operations Joint Interagency
Collaboration Center - J8 Chem/Bio Warfare Requirements Section
- DoD Support to DEA Special Intelligence
- JFCOM Initiatives
- Standing Joint Force Headquarters Joint
Interagency Coordination Group - Joint Enroute Mission Planning and Rehearsal
System - Near Term - Enhanced C4ISR Homeland Operations Center
Joint National Training Capability - USN Deep Blue (Navy Operations Group)
- USN/USMC Expeditionary Strike Group Proof of
Concept - USMC/SOCOM Integration Initiatives
10Recent DoD Initiatives in the GWOT
- DARPA projects, e.g.
- Genoa
- Evidence Extraction and Link Discovery
- Translingual Information Detection, Extraction,
and Summarization - Babylon
- Human Identification at a Distance
- Modern Internetted Unattended Ground Sensors
- Foliage Penetration Radar (SAR and GMT I)
- Standoff Precision Identification from 3D Data
- Digital Radio Frequency Tags
- Advanced ISR Management
- ACTDs
- High-Altitude Airship
- Pathfinder
- Active Denial System
- Thermobaric
- Adaptive Joint C4ISR Mode
11Major Concerns
- DoD should take the terrorist threat as seriously
as it takes the likelihood and consequences of
major theater war
- DoD still struggling to get joint C4 right
- Pentagon processes overly focused on materiel
- Defense and Intelligence processes and cultures
remain input- rather than product-oriented
12Achieving Decision and Execution Superiority Over
Terrorists and Their Sponsors
Tools to handle tough environments and
difficult targets
Adaptive and responsive national-level decision
making
Tailoring forces for more SOF-centric operations
13Achieving Decision and Execution Superiority Over
Terrorists and Their Sponsors
Tools to handle tough environments and
difficult targets
Adaptive and responsive national-level decision
making
Not the focus of our study
Tailoring forces for more SOF-centric operations
14Achieving Decision and Execution Superiority Over
Terrorists and Their Sponsors
2
Tools to handle tough environments and
difficult targets
A much more responsive, flexible, and effective
military capability
Adaptive and responsive national-level decision
making
3
Tailoring forces for more SOF-centric operations
4
Operationalizing new approaches and
capabilities
15Discussion Outline
- Organization, context, and themes
- Understanding new adversaries and providing
actionable intelligence - Tools to handle tough environments and
difficult targets and understand our
vulnerabilities - Tailoring forces for more SOF-centric operations
- Operationalizing new approaches and capabilities
- Recap
16A Much More Responsive, Flexible, and Effective
Military Capability
- Understanding new adversaries and providing
actionable intelligence deep penetration -
understanding, finding, and tracking the
terrorists and their networks - Tools to handle tough environments and
difficult targets and understand our
vulnerabilities - Tailoring forces for more SOF-centric operations
- Operationalizing new approaches and capabilities
17Understanding New Adversaries and Providing
Actionable Intelligence Deep Penetration -
Understanding, Finding, and Tracking the
Terrorists and Their Networks
- - Key Initiatives
- Transformation of HUMINT (and human-technical)
operations - Aggressive, proactive, preemptive, operations
- Intelligence surge/unsurge capability
- Expanded analytical capabilities and throughput
against asymmetrical adversaries - Understand adversaries as complex adaptive
systems
18Transformation of HUMINT Operations
- SecDef (working with DCI) expand overall
Directorate of HUMINT Services (DHS)/Service
roles and explore SOF opportunities - Increase HUMINT forward/operational presence
- Work with DCI to deploy new DoD clandestine
technical capabilities - NSA/Combatant Commanders/Services pay more
attention to support of DoD HUMINT in the field - SOF continue to work Advance Force Operations
(AFO) - Define HUMINT role in Proactive Ops ensure
Covert Action (CA) and IW/IO connections - Explore development of USAF/Navy HUMINT
capabilities (beyond current compartmented
programs) - A major covert HUMINT program needs to be made
joint - Explore new and more varied HUMINT modes
described on next chart
19Classified HUMINT Chart
Transformation of HUMINT Operations
20Aggressive Proactive, Preemptive Operations Group
(P2OG)
CLASSIFIED
21Aggressive Proactive, Preemptive Operations
- Creation of a Proactive Preemptive Operating
Group (P2OG) of creative subject matter
operational experts such as - IW/IO Covert Action Diplomacy Cover
Deception - Intelligence Operations PSYOPS HUMINT
SIGINT SOF - Improves information collection by stimulating
reactions - Enhance operational preparation of the
battlespace to support preemptive options and
actions - Signal to harboring states that their sovereignty
will be at risk - Vest responsibility and accountability for the
P2OG to a Special Operations Executive in the
NSC who shall - Define the national strategy
- Coordinate action
- Enunciate policy
- Execute to a plan coordinated with the SecDef and
DCI and others as appropriate
The position exists in the NSC and is called
National Director and Deputy National Security
Advisor for Combating Terrorism, NSPD-8, Oct.
24, 2001
22Intelligence Surge/Unsurge Capability
- Maintain a robust global cadre of retirees,
reservists, and others who are trained and
qualified to serve on short notice, including
expatriates - Make investments now
- Exercise and engage (through gaming) at least
annually - Maintain a database of individuals and skills
- Focus on Tier 4 countries where CT operations may
be necessary - Contracted roles for industry, universities, and
think tanks - Focus on analytic expertise and capabilities,
CA/SOF issues, scientists and engineers,
linguists/area experts, and personnel recovery
skills - Work with DoD and Congress on unsurge issues,
particularly related to callups - Develop innovative data surge capabilities
23Improving Analytical Capabilities and Throughput
- Create a new and larger analytic workforce with
skills and innovative tools focused on
counterterrorism (CT) - Focus on actionable intelligence, improved
situational awareness, targeting and reachback
support and connecting the dots using JWAC-like
analysis approaches - Full-time collaborative connections between all
the critical centers working CT intelligence and
support - Analysis components of national intelligence
organizations physically or virtually collocated
to improve all-source multi-INT analysis
collaboration and production - Support for intelligence collection-related
target development - Develop new security/sanitization concepts to aid
analysts in protecting new sources and methods - Identify roles for analysts in operational net
assessment process/joint experimentation,
vulnerability analysis/Red Teaming, and
CT-related gaming and simulation
24Greatly Improving Customer Access to Intelligence
Counterterrorism Information
- SecDef/DCI establish a group to define a future
path to achieve a truly joint interoperable CT
Common Operating Picture (COP) - Improve chat windows and secure collaborative
means/directories for direct access to relevant
analysts and related data environments - Converge large e-gov programs currently underway
in SIGINT and IMINT for improved customer access
to intelligence data/collaboration - Pursue an integrated family of small terminal
programs for field/small unit access to
intelligence data (data, imagery, etc.)smart
push and pull - DCI/SecDef provide portals, tools and pointers
for access to unclassified open sources data
bases, commercial sources etc. - Develop advanced visualization concepts for
conveying intelligence and situational
information
25Understanding Adversaries as Complex Adaptive
Systems
- Further expand and enhance Joint Warfare Analysis
Center (JWAC)-like capabilities - Expand the number of countries/actors as well as
the factors considered - Address non-physical as well as physical
dimensions - Address money flow, cronies, family,
intra-military, other
- The capabilities must be coupled closer to
campaign planning and execution (effects-based
operations) - To influence as well as respond
- Support information/influence ops in
peace/crisis/war as well as more traditional
maneuver/fires
- These capabilities are also needed to
- Focus information collection efforts
- Provide context to better understand collected
data
26 Recommendation Proactive Operations
- Cost
- 100 new people
- 100M/yr for operations and support
- Recommendation
- Develop an entirely new capability to
proactively, preemptively evoke responses from
adversary/terrorist groups - Form a new elite Counter-terrorism Proactive
Preemptive Operations Group (P2OG) at the NSC
level - Highly specialized people with unique technical
and intelligence skills such as information
operations, PSYOP, network attack, covert
activities, SIGINT, HUMINT, SOF, influence
warfare/deception operations - Reports to NSC principal level
- Lead Responsibility
- NSC lead with DCI, SecDef, State, Justice
participation
27 Recommendation Improve Intelligence
- Cost
- 1.7 Billion/FY beginning in FY-04 and continuing
- 100M/yr for exercises, engagement in the form of
gaming, and real operations
- Recommendation
- Develop new capabilities, sources, and methods to
enable deep penetration of adversaries - DO/DHS develop new modes and methods for covert
operations See classified chart on HUMINT - Increase emphasis on CT CA to gain close target
access - Develop new clandestine technical capabilities
- Create a surge capability in intelligence to
preempt and deal with rapidly emerging crises in
the GWOT - Maintain a robust cadre of retirees reservists
and specialists, qualified to serve on short
notice - Contract roles for industry universities and
think tanks
- Lead Responsibility
- DCI Lead SecDef/CJCS
- ASD(C3I) and DCI Community Management Staff
(CMS) - DCI/DoD co-shared lead
Supports CIA DO/DDST initiatives
28 Recommendation Improve Intelligence (cont.)
- Cost
- 800M/yr for technical capabilities development
and 500 new staff
- Recommendation
- Expand counter terrorism and asymmetric adversary
analytical capabilities and throughput - Increase Service and intelligence agency analytic
specialties, unique to CT challenges, by 500
people over the next 18 months to add depth of
expertise - Focus on understanding effects of globalization,
radicalism, cultures, religions, economics, etc.,
to better characterize potential adversaries - More virtual collaboration architecture for
analyst support and customers interaction
- Lead Responsibility
- CMS shared lead with ASD(C3I)
29Recommendation Gain Deeper Understanding of
Terrorist Organizations and Their Supporters as
Complex Adaptive Systems
- Cost
- Add to existing initiatives up to 100M per FY as
appropriate - 100M initiative at JFCOM, CENTCOM, NORTHCOM, and
DARPA
- Recommendation
- Establish additional centers of excellence to
handle the greatly increased work load and to
augment JWAC to support targeting (in the
broadest sense) of terrorist organizations and
their supporting infrastructurethese activities
will draw upon intelligence feeds, Red Teaming,
and a great variety of subject matter experts
(regional, cultural, psychological, soft and hard
sensors) - Pursue and expand JFCOMs operational net
assessment activity employed in millennium
challenge
- Lead Responsibility
- JFCOM
30A Much More Responsive, Flexible, and Effective
Military Capability
- Understanding new adversaries and providing
actionable intelligence deep penetration -
understanding, finding, and tracking the
terrorists and their networks - Tools to handle tough environments and
difficult targets and understand our
vulnerabilities - Tailoring forces for more SOF-centric operations
- Operationalizing new approaches and capabilities
31Tools to Handle Tough Environments and
Difficult Targets and to Understand Our
Vulnerabilities
- - Key Initiatives -
- Tough Environments Urban Warfare
- Counter-Weapons of Mass Destruction
- Theater and CONUS protection
- The consequence management challenge
- In-theater
- CONUS
- Finding terrorists and WMDpersistent ISR
- The Red Team
- Asymmetric Adversaries and Force Projection
32Inadequate Attention and Resources Devoted to
Improving Capabilities to Operate in Urban
Environments
- URBAN OUR FOCUS Most likely terrorism
environment and the one for which we are the
least prepared - Shortfalls in doctrine, training, and technology
for urban operations - Doctrine JFCOM Executive Agent in FY03
- Put priority and resources behind the effort to
create joint urban operations doctrine and
address DOTMLPF challenges - Training Current urban ops training facilities
inadequate - Include an urban facility in the Joint National
Training Capability Initiative - Technology Develop urban-specific technologies
including - Knowledge systems
- Movement capabilities
- Precision fires
- Special sensor systems
- Communications unique to urban environment
- Integrated system solutions
33Challenges for Military Operations in Urban
Terrain
- Urban terrain presents unique challenges in
- Precision strike to avoid collateral damage
- Command and control communications limitations
- Need for diverse, manpower intensive operations
- Standoff weapons advantages diminish
- The need to call for and control supporting arms
at platoon and squad levels
- To meet the unique urban challenge, we need
better capabilities in - Ground and aerial surveillance (GPS-guided UAV
helos) - Situation awareness (persistent layered ISR)
- Urban training and development (dedicated center)
- Command, control and communications (DARPA
SUO/SAS system) - Low level combined arms maneuver
- Precision supporting fires
- Detecting and preempting WMD threats
34Progress USMC Project Metropolis
- USMC battalion-sized MAGTF experiment
- Concept
- Penetration, thrust
- Combined arms to squad level (infantry, tank,
helo, etc.) - 4-5 weeks intense training
- Packaged combat support teams
- Bounding overwatch
- Spherical security
- Schedule
- Victorville, California Summer 02
- Urban ground reconnaissance
- Rotary-wing tactics
- Command and control
- Small unit logistics
35The Way Ahead
- Develop an urban strategy on the strategic and
operational levels - We dont do cities
- We do cities into rubble
- We have some good ideas for new urban warfare
operations - Develop a dedicated joint urban training and
development center - Part of joint West Coast training centers
- Subordinate to JFCOM
- Develop specialized tools for urban environments
- Many good ideas
- Develop joint tactics, techniques, and procedures
(TTPs) emphasizing - Urban intelligence preparation of the battlespace
(IPB) techniques - Small unit action
- Leadership initiative and flexibility
- Low level call for and control of supporting
fires - Develop a precise urban environment representation
36Urban Point Position Database(CityMap)
- Creation
- Theater-based sensors (LADAR, IFSAR) update a
priori maps - Semi automated feature extraction to model
structures - Update/revisit rate much higher than traditional
maps - Urban context added to basic geometry using other
sources (e.g., building plans, Integrated Survey
Program, )
- Utility
- Gridlock sensor and report data for fusion and
handoff - Precisely locate targets for remote fires
- Perform accessibility analysis to find routes in
and around city - Coordinate movement and position of forces
- Construct urban IPB
- Precision 3D representation of
- Structures (windows and doors)
- LOCs (minor streets and alleys and underground)
- Obstacles (power lines)
- Critical infrastructure elements (water, power,
comm) - Database of supporting information
- Addresses, occupants, functions, more
37Urban OPS Are Enabled by Precise Environment
Representation
- Gridlock of sensor data
- Enable HD multi-sensor processes
- Locate and track targets for long epochs
- Gridlock of report data
- Fuse disparate INT types precisely
- Locate targets for remote precision fires
- Urban C2
- Coordinate movement
- Select / prioritize targets for remote precision
fires
- Mission planning and rehearsal
- Critical node analysis
- Accessibility analysis (ground and air)
- Precision 3D representation of
- Structures
- LOCs (minor streets and alleys and underground)
- Obstacles (power lines)
- Critical infrastructure elements (water, power,
comm) - Database of supporting information
- Addresses
- Occupants
- Functions
- More
38Finding the Enemy and WMD in Complex Environments
39The Integrated Battlespace
Space
ISR SIGINT Imagery of Earths Surface
Air
Navigation / Position Fixing
Precision Time
ISR SIGINT Imagery of
Ballistic Missile Launch Warning
Ground and Sea
Weather
Airborne Object Detection /
Tracking / ID
Atmospheric Sampling
Localized Weather
Terrestrial / Ocean Surface
ISR SIGINT, EO / IR, Acoustic, Seismic, Magnetic
Terrain Man-made Feature Data
Undersea
Weather
Oceanographic Data
ISR
Internet World Wide Web
Oceanographic Data
Weapons of Mass Destruction Data Warning
Other
40Improved and Persistent Battlefield ISR
Capabilities
- Capable of search, synoptic coverage, and space,
air, ground sensor dwell (persistent ISR) - Balanced space, air and ground capabilities to
create a layered capability and an integrated ISR
battlespace - Optimize resource allocation to achieve
localized, persistent, high density coverage - Address the unique urban ISR problems
- Include ground-based improved tagging, tracking,
locating (TTL), close and clandestine
technologies - More centralized planning and coordination of
architectures, technology, and capabilities
Joint SIGINT Avionics Architecture (JSAA) program - Acquisition of system-of-system
(strategic-operational-tactical) ISR
architectures and systems Multimission Command
and Control Constellation (MC2C) - New approaches to acquisition, architecture
development and systems engineering
capabilities-based approach being used in the MDA
41An Integrated Joint C2/BM Capability Supported
Through A Network Centric Information
Infrastructure (NCII)
Synchronous Orbit Relay Satellite
Optical Link
Intel Data / CONUS Commands
Communications Node with Multi-Beam Antenna and
Data Switching Capability
Optical Links
Broad-Area Surveillance Radar UAV
Airborne Command Center
Covert Uplink Multiple RF Circuits
Forward deployed data to everyone
Low-Altitude UAVs
Ground/Maritime Sensors
Forces
Attributes
- All entities people, platforms, sensors, weapons
are interconnected - All entities can pull data in real time
- All entities have access (as appropriate) to
relevant data at all times
42New Sensor Capabilities Are Needed for Locating
People and WMD
43Tracking Individuals
- Many ideas are in the laboratory phase
- Passive/active
- Line of sight/non-line of sight
- Cooperative/non-cooperative
- Emphasis is on tags vs. systems/emplacement/enviro
nment - Spectrum of ideas/options
- Short term (6 mos.)/long term (years)
- Physical tags
- Remote biometrics
- Need coordinated program to provide a toolkit of
capabilities and operationalize concepts,
especially in placement and exfiltration schemes
44Priority Challenge for Counter-WMD Warfare
Detecting, Identifying, and Localizing WMD
- Needed
- Standoff detection and tracking at kilometer
ranges - Active interrogation high-resolution,
high-efficiency devices - Passive spectral systems with kms stand-off
range for detection - Low false alarm
- Remotely emplaced sample collection and retrieval
- Handheld units for ID characterization in seconds
to minutes with low false alarms - Emplacement, networking, data processing,
exfiltration all clandestine
45WMDThe Way Ahead
- Remote sensing has not proved outseems to
require in place sensors - Sensor systems should be considered end-to-end,
but initial work should focus on phenomenology
and sensing techniques - Network monitoring and analysis of inferential
signatures (e.g., deliveries, manifests, people
movement) should be undertaken - Stimulated emissions may hold promise for nuclear
choke point monitoring - Energize followup on the Zebra Chip
recommendation - No matter the sensing, agent defeat is critical
and requires additional resources
46WMDThe Way Ahead
Network and Inferential Signature Analysis
Precision Sensor (Stealth) Deployment
Sensor Physics/Chemistry
(LPD) Data Exfiltration
Choke Point Monitoring
Agent Destruction
Attack Sensing
Chem
Consider Provocative Deployment CONOPS
Nuclear
Proposed
Relative
Bio
Investment
Among N, C, B
47An Expanded In-Theater and CONUS Counter-WMD
Consequence Management Capability
- The Counter-WMD Force Element expanding on
todays capabilities - A joint, deployable counter-WMD force element,
trained and equipped for CONUS or overseas
force/base protection, quarantine ops, WMD ISR,
helping to plan counter-WMD offensive ops, search
and render-safe
- Must address consequence management capabilities
and serious shortfalls - CONUS
- National Guard has civil support teams in 32
locations today - Greatly expand role of National Guard and
Reserves and improve training and equipage - The 50 states need to define their roles and
budgeting for this mission and other disaster
relief missions - Overseas
- Any use of WMD in-theater directly impacts host
nation as well as US forces - A coalition developed plan for consequence
management is needed country by country with
US assistance - No plans, and little capability, in place today
48Counter-WMD Mission and Relation to CONUS
Protection
- Create a special WMD Red Team dedicated to
planning, as terrorists might, ways to attack the
US homeland and forces overseas - Establish specialized sub teams with knowledge in
WMD mischief making and terrorist cultural
beliefs - Scenarios are made widely accessible to analysts
and collectors who derive observables from
scenarios and focus collection on these - Major reach out to creative people outside
government for their ideas, scenarios, and
postulated adversary capabilities - Major intelligence analytic support on
counter-terrorism, counter-proliferation, and WMD
49Assessing DoD Force Projection Vulnerabilities in
a GWOT Environment
- DoD GWOT force projection capabilities are
highly dependent on both commercial and Defense
Department infrastructure - Approximately 450 DoD bases involved in some
aspect of force projection - (Unknown numbers) of commercial sites are
involved as well
- No systematic mapping of this infrastructure and
associated vulnerabilities to mission
requirements exists - Currently multiple DoD entities have some
responsibility for assessing site-by-site
vulnerabilities - Local installation/base commanders
- Joint Program Office-Special Technology
Countermeasures (JPO-STC) at Dahlgren with NIMA
and DTRA in support - Joint Staff Integrated Vulnerability Assessment
(JSIVA) with DTRA in support - Others responsible based upon the attack vector
- The responsibilities for DoD force projection
risk assessment effort must be clarified - DoD asset vulnerabilities must be ranked in
importance and reported to the appropriate levels
within DoD - The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and
NORTHCOM must add the DoD critical commercial
infrastructure required for force projection to
their critical national infrastructure protection
priorities
50Responsibilities for Force Projection Risk
Mitigation
- Responsibilities for mitigation of identified
force projection risks must be clarified - The Combatant Commander does not have the
resources to fix the problem - Resources must flow from who owns the site day
to day, not the gaining command - At the base level, risk assessment and mitigation
funding competes with other installation
sustainment demands - SecDef should consider establishing a new line
item in each Service and Agency budget for force
projection risk mitigation - Segregates the funding
- Enables assessments to be matched against
mitigation efforts - Provides senior DoD leadership better visibility
into this issue
51Missiles Made in Tucson
The following list of missiles are manufactured
in Tucson, Arizona
- AIM-9X
- AMRAAM
- EKV (Exo-atmospheric Kill Vehicle for the BMD
system) - ESSM (Evolved Sea Sparrow)
- Javelin
- Maverick
- Phalanx
- Phoenix
- RAM
- Sparrow
- Standard Missile
- Stinger
- TOW (anti-tank missile)
- Tomahawk
All of Raytheons missiles except Hawk and
Patriot (Massachusetts)
52Classified
Sustainability Enables Force Projection
53Recommendation Take Urban Environment
Seriously by Building on Emerging Activities
- Recommendation
- Create infrastructure to enable new capabilities
in urban operations - New urban-like facility able to support
battalion-size forces to train, exercise, and
experiment realistically - Replicates different types of urban environments
- Large numbers of structures some high rise
- Networked to other ranges/facilities
- Mission rehearsal capability
- Equipment evaluation
- Develop urban-unique modeling and simulation
tools - Develop the Urban Point Positioning Database
- DARPA develop a major RD thrust
- Provide guidance and resources to JFCOM in their
new role as Executive Agent for Joint Urban
Operations - Develop new concept at operational level
- Integrate Service efforts
- Conduct and sponsor experiments, exercises, and
ACTDs - Work with allies and draw lessons learned
fostering urban-relevant MS
Cost 300M/yr for POM period
- Lead Responsibility
- JFCOM with Army, USMC
- DARPA
- NIMA
54Recommendation Improve ISR
- Cost
- 1.6 Billion/FY over FY-04 POM period
- IOC in FY-06
- FOC in FY-09
- Recommendation
- Significant improvement in battlespace ISR and
supporting analysis - Develop the capability to employ a 24/7
Persistent ISR in a designated area for days or
weeks - A layered architecture from space, air, and a
rich set of new ground sensor capabilities for
now, next and after-next ISR systems - Overlay with Network Centric Information
Infrastructure (NCII) for support of network
centric and gridlock capabilities
- Lead Responsibility
- ASD(C3I) and CMS
55Recommendation Scenarios, Plans, and Templates
An Important Initiative For a Red Team
- Lead Responsibility
- DCI with support from SecDef and CJCS
Cost Hiring/finding the two dozen
skilled people Resources to reach out to
non-government skills Operations support cost of
20M/yr
- Recommendation
- For the WMD issues, there should be a dedicated
team of smart, creative individuals dedicated to
planning, as terrorists might, ways to attack the
US homeland and forces overseas - Collect and collate terrorist MOs from previous
incidents - Establish specialized sub teams with knowledge in
WMD mischief making - Scenarios are made widely accessible to analysts
and collectors who derive observables from the
scenarios and focus collection on these - Includes comprehensive tagging, tracking and
locating critical componentry - Includes monitoring of support structures
- Monitoring individuals and institutions with
critical know-how - Provide the systems support so that the notional
components can be stored and recombined, and can
index into intelligence reports - Avoid premature focus on one or several
end-to-end scenarios - Reports to Director CIA
56Recommendation Develop and Implement a
Comprehensive Counter-WMD Plan
- Lead Responsibility
- USD(ATL), ATSD(NCB)
- Services, SOCOM
- SOCOM
- Services
Cost 1B/yr 500M/yr
- Recommendation
- Execute consolidated oversight and funding of an
aggressive and coordinated RDTE program - Create and exercise WMD operational decision
support systems - Push RD on WMD sensors, sampling, and retrieval
concepts - Develop networked C4ISR systems specific to WMD
targets - Get serious about acquiring a WMD agent, device,
and/or delivery defeat - Provide resources for near-term staffing and
equipage for an expanded Counter-WMD Force
Element - Joint, deployable CONUS or overseas
- Force protection, offensive action, consequence
management
57Recommendation Identify and Redress Force
Projection Vulnerabilities
Cost gt 100M Personnel costs. Need to
coordinate multiple groups conducting
vulnerability assessments 150M/year
- Recommendation
- Increase tenfold (over three years) the people
and resources devoted to assessing
vulnerabilities of our DoD force projection
capabilities and critical infrastructure - Support with extensive Red Teaming and RD on new
analysis techniques - Assign Assistant Secretary of Defense for
Homeland Security ASD(HLS) as Executive Agent
for DoD Critical Infrastructure Protection and
assure the vulnerabilities are addressed - Task NORTHCOM and ASD(HLS) to coordinate the
vulnerability assessments and develop a plan to
redress the vulnerabilities - Move funding for the JPO-STC to a new NORTHCOM
funding line
- Lead Responsibility
- JPO-STC
58A Much More Responsive, Flexible, and Effective
Military Capability
- Understanding new adversaries and providing
actionable intelligence deep penetration -
understanding, finding, and tracking the
terrorists and their networks - Tools to handle tough environments and
difficult targets and understand our
vulnerabilities - Tailoring forces for more SOF-centric operations
- Operationalizing new approaches and capabilities
59Preparing for SOF-Centric Operations
Traditional
SOF
Allied Conv. Forces
US Conventional Forces
Combat Support Combat Service Support
60Preparing for SOF-Centric Operations
- - Key Initiatives -
- Provide operational command flexibility
- Increase SOF capabilities
- Couple SOF and conventional forces more tightly
- Enhance the contributions of conventional forces
- Make SOF more central in our military planning
with our Allies
61Provide Operational Command Flexibility
- Prepare SOF to be the supported command in at
least some phases of future campaigns - Enhance the robustness of the theater special
operations commands and joint special operations
task force (JSOTF) headquarters (level/resources,
skills, C4) - Expand exercises and training with conventional
forces - Provide for seamless transition of
supported/supporting commands during a campaign
task JFCOM and SOCOM to - Develop transition phasing experiments and
exercises - Ensure interoperable situational awareness
capabilities among SOF and conventional forces
62Increase SOF capabilities
- A greater role in preparing the battlefield
- Focus SOF worldwide day-to-day presence to
exploit human and geographic access in potential
crisis locations - Exploit SOFs inherent intelligence collection
capabilities - Modest increase in personnel
- 2 per year ( some additional growth from
transfers possible) - CENTCOM crisis response element
- Substantial increase in equipage
- Blue force tracking
- Sensor emplacement
- Common Operating Picture
- Communications and other equipment
- Upgrade special mission aircraft, maritime and
ground mobility
63Couple SOF and Conventional Forces More Tightly
- More training and rehearsal for both SOF-led and
conventional-led operations - Standardize TTPs between SOF and conventional
forces for SOF-initiated operations - Command relationships
- Enhanced institutional and unit education
- Tailor force packaging to enhance
pre-conflict/post-conflict capabilities - Identify packages of engineers, civil affairs,
military police, and medical personnel that can
be coupled to in-theater SOF - These resources reside mostly in Reserve
Component (RC)
64Enhance Conventional Forces Contributions in the
GWOT
- Improve selected conventional capabilities to
support SOF-centric operations - Night vision/night flying/tactical resupply
- Sea-basing
- Fire support
- Foreign internal defense (training)
- Accelerate development and fielding of
specialized capabilities in selected conventional
forces - Includes changes to training, professional
military education, equipage, personnel practices - Operate dispersed and distributed
- Leverage remote fires and aerial ISR
- Use language and cultural awareness as force
multipliers - Leverage indigenous ground forces
- Have conventional forces with requisite
capabilities assume missions currently being
performed by SOF - E.g., USMC MEU(SOC)
- Explosive ordnance disposal
- Consequence management
- Force protection
- Combat service support
65Make SOF More Central in Military Engagement
Planning With Our Allies/others
- One of few areas where allies can be near peer
partners - JSOTF-South in OEF provides a model forces of
eight nations - Focus efforts at early stages of emerging crisis
- Center Allied and coalition planning operations
at Combatant Command level - Prioritize engagement opportunities
- Aggressively fund combined exercises and training
events
66Recommendation Preparing For More, Larger and
More Complex Operations in Which SOF (and
SOF-like) Capabilities Play a Central Role
- Recommendation
- Provide operational command flexibility
- Increase SOF capabilities
- Couple more tightly SOF and conventional forces
- Enhance the contributions of conventional forces
in - Warfighting
- Shaping
- Make SOF more central in our military planning
with our Allies and coalition partners -
Cost 10s of M Billions 10s of M 100s of
M 10s of M
- Lead/Supporting Responsibility
- SecDef/JFCOM
- SecDef/SOCOM
- CJCS/JFCOM SOCOM/Services
- SecDef/JFCOM/Services
- SecDef/ASD(SO/LIC)
67A Much More Responsive, Flexible, and Effective
Military Capability
- Understanding new adversaries and providing
actionable intelligence deep penetration -
understanding, finding, and tracking the
terrorists and their networks - Tools to handle tough environments and
difficult targets and understand our
vulnerabilities - Tailoring forces for more SOF-centric operations
- Operationalizing new approaches and capabilities
68Operationalizing New Approaches and Capabilities
- Key Initiatives - Business as usual puts us at
risk of not having capabilities when needed.
Achieving capabilities will require
-
- Extensive joint experimentation, training, and
doctrine development - Adaptive joint C4 systems
- Interoperability at low levels
- Hard-headed assessment of real world operations
and experiments
69Creating an Organizational Center for Developing
Joint and Special Operations in GWOT
- SecDef/CJCS should formally and visibly recognize
JFCOMs new focus - As their executive agent for joint doctrine,
training, experimentation, and joint integration
to meet GWOT requirements - Linchpin for integration of joint and special ops
efforts by services, USSOCOM, and other Combatant
Commands - Relieved of geographic and homeland defense
responsibilities - Transition to NATO functional Supreme Allied
Commander-Transformation or divest SACLANT
70Accelerate Maturation of JFCOM to Fulfill Joint
Doctrine, Training, Experimentation Roles
- Create and sustain continuous experimentation/spir
al development capability - flexible to connect to real world operations
- New responsibility for joint doctrine
- Establish closer links to other Combatant
Commands and Services - Enlarge interagency and multinational initiatives
- Serve as Executive Agent for improving Joint
Urban Operations - Joint training capability
71Accelerate Development and Fielding of More
Adaptive and Capable Joint Command, Control,
Communication, and Computer Systems
- Provide, through spiral development, continuous
improvement of joint C4 systems (including Joint
Headquarters) at the Regional Combatant
Commanders - Work closely with
- Regional Combatant Commands to tailor to theater
- SOCOM to empower SOF-centric operations
- The new STRATCOM in their potential role as
provider of global sensors and comms
72Empower JFCOM to Ensure Jointness and
Interoperability at Appropriate Levels
- Establish Service acquisition program standards
for processing/formatting (not just interface) - Make JFCOM effective gatekeeper for
interoperability for all Service requirements - Accelerate integration of common operational
pictures
73Turning Lessons into Lessons Learned and Acted
Upon
- Needed a standing process for development and
top-down direction of lessons learned - Make Joint Center for Lessons Learned subordinate
to JFCOM - Collect from operations, experiments, and
training events (US and others) - Create synthesis capability
- Develop an integrated electronic library
- Facilitate horizontal dispersion
- Create action plan
- Routinely report high priority lessons to
SecDef/CJCS - Result Greater likelihood of discovering
weaknesses before our adversaries do
74Resourcing Jointness to Support the GWOT
- Create a program (set of program elements) to
provide JFCOM the resources (through control of
the funds) to fulfill the responsibilities we
have laid out for - Joint training, doctrine development, and
experimentation - Providing of joint C4 at the Combatant Commands
- Ensuring interoperability at all joint levels
- Joint urban operations
- Joint Center for Lessons Learned
- Should include funds and contracting authority
for limited acquisition of products and other
opportunities in support of this mission - Should make maximum use of existing acquisition
and procurement organizations in carrying out
these responsibilities - Provide JFCOM additional intellectual resources
- JFSC and NDU
- A formal relationship with counterpart activities
in the Services (TRADOC, NWDC, AFDC, MCCDC/MCWL) - Establish a premier system-of-systems engineering
and integration capability to support JFCOM
75Recommendation Creating an Organizational Center
for Developing Joint and Special Operations in
GWOT
Cost
- Lead Responsibility
- SecDef/CJCS
- Recommendation
- Create a program to provide JFCOM the resources
(through control of the funds) to fulfill the
responsibilities we have laid out - Provide them premier system engineering and
integration support - Assign NDU/JFSC to JFCOM to ensure more influence
of Service institutional counterparts
76What Will You Get If You Implement Our
Recommendations
- Understanding of the adversary
- Proactive operations for Intelligence
- Deeper understanding and broader coverage
- A new and new kind of expansion of HUMINT
- Intelligence surge capability
- Understanding the enemy as a complex adaptive
system (beyond physical dimensions) - Deeper, broader, and more expert analysis
- Customer and query-driven analysis
- More capabilities for tough operations
- Facilities for urban operations, experiment,
training, and mission rehearsal/planning - 3D maps of urban environments
- Responsive ISR, persistent focus
- Tagging, tracking, and locating even of people
- Sensors for WMD
- A red team to anticipate the terrorists
- A SWAT-like team to contain WMD weapons
- Powerful SOF-centric military options tailored to
the GWOT - Greater contributions from the conventional
forces - Robust, adaptive, and flexible operational-level
C4
77What It Will Mean
- Much better able to anticipate terrorist behavior
and react to bolts-out-of-the-gray - Much richer set of proactive/preemptive options
- More responsive, flexible, and effective military
instrument to prosecute the GWOT - better prepared for simultaneous campaigns
- more capable in tough environments and against
difficult targets - Allies much more capable (and perhaps willing) to
contribute militarily - DoDs missions much less vulnerable to terrorist
disruption - A catalyst for a broad and deep transformation of
DoDs capabilities and practices
78- Americans should not expect one battle, but a
lengthy campaign unlike any other we have ever
seenWhat is at stake is not just Americas
freedom. This is the worlds fight. This is
civilizations fight. This is the fight of all
who believe in progress and pluralism, tolerance,
and freedom. - President George W. Bush
- September 20, 2001