Title: Enabling Battle Command for Current and Future Forces
1Enabling Battle Command for Current and Future
Forces
- COL George F. Stone III
- Acting Director
- US Army Battle Command, Simulation and
Experimentation Directorate - Army G-37, Pentagon
- (703)601-0006
2Agenda
- What is Battle Command?
- CSAs Regression Equation for Warfighting
Effectiveness based on - Training
- Education
- Experience
- The Future of Battle Command
- Future Combat Systems (FCS)
- Joint Command and Control
- Conclusion
3What is Battle Command?
- BC is the art and science of applying leadership
and decision making to achieve mission success.
BCBL Web Site - Army Battle Command System (ABCS) employs a mix
of fixed/semi-fixed installations and mobile
networks and will be interoperable with theater,
joint, and combined command and control systems. - Future Combat Systems (FCS) will be a system of
systems featuring advanced network-enabled air
and ground maneuver, maneuver support, and
sustainment systems with manned and unmanned
platforms.
Battle Command entails the continual
collaboration between commanders, subordinates
and staff. --TRADOC Pamphlet 525-3-0.1, The
United States Army Objective Force Battle Command
(C4ISR) Concept, U.S. Army Training and Doctrine
Command, Fort Monroe, Virginia, 5 Mar 2003.
A web search for Battle Command resulted in
about 3,490,000 hits.
4The Process
5BATTLE COMMAND The Leaders Formula for Success
Battle Command provides agile dominant Teaching,
Learning and Leadership capabilities for
high-performing and adaptive warfighting teams.
Training (T), Education (E1) and Experience
(E2) factors highly affect the warfighters
effectiveness
TE1E2
Warfighting Effectiveness f(D O M) x (S x
L)
S Soldiers L Leaders T Training E1
Education E2 Experience
D Doctrine O Organization M Materiel
GEN Schoomaker
6Exponential Regression Equations for Warfighting
Effectiveness (WE) Training, Education and
Experience as variables
TE1E2
Warfighting Effectiveness f(D O M) x
(BC)
- The original regression equation is shown with
Battle Command (BC) as the main variable of
interest. - S x L is combined and replaced by Battle
Command since Battle Command entails the
continual collaboration between commanders,
subordinates and staff. 2 - Other variables are held constant to demonstrate
power of TEE Variables on BC.
7Battle Command Tasks
Each of these tasks will be assessed based on the
factors of Training, Education and Experience
how well is the task enhanced by these factors?
8Example BC Situational Awareness Tasks
- Benefits
- Synchronized
- planning process
- Consistent operational
- architectures (nodes
- their activities)
- Good understanding of
- capabilities
- requirements
- Strong habitual
- relationships forged in
- training
- Procedures enable success
- Ability and Flexibility to coordinate changes
- Results if not executed correctly
- Unsynchronized plans
- Ripple effect on planning to include fires
- Increased potential for sub-optimal use of
assets - Delayed offensive actions
- Increased potential for fratricide
- Inability to effect link-up
- BC1 Acquire and Distribute Relevant Information
- BC2 Apply Judgment and Analysis to Understand
the Situation
9Warfighting Effectiveness Prediction
Predicted (Exponential Regression) Values for the
Warfighting Effectiveness
- Warfighting Effectiveness is maximized through
Training, Education and Experience for the BC
tasks - BC1 Acquire and Distribute Relevant Information
- BC2 Apply Judgment and Analysis to Understand
the Situation
10Urgency of Need is based on the Future Growth of
BC Systems
- A Unit of Action (UoA) will have approximately
690 FCS systems - This involves an enormous amount of C2
- Battle command is for all entities on the network
- How much is automated vs. manual?
- Will commanders and leaders be able to control
and command UoAs? - Next level up is the Unit of Employment, likely
to have about 3500-4000 systems on its network - With about 150 different types of joint/DoD
systems, the UoE and UoA systems will link to the
Global Information Grid Enterprise System
11Battle Command vis-Ã -vis FCS
- The Army believes
- nontraditional fighting tactics coupled with
- an extensive information network
- will compensate for the loss of size and armor
mass - by utilizing information superiority and
synchronized operations to - see, engage, and destroy the enemy
- before the enemy detects the future forces.
GAO-03-1010R, FCS Program Issues, United States
General Accounting Office, Washington, DC, August
13, 2003.
12Future Battle Command Must Also be Networked in a
Joint context
- Network-enabled warfare will be used to
- Gain information superiority
- Locate and identify the enemy
- Kill from a standoff range before the enemy can
engage us - Joint interoperability will
- Network FCS to a joint C4ISR architecture
- Enable Synchronous operations
- Provide a complete and joint situational awareness
13Conclusion
- Battle Command is essential for effective
execution in both joint and combined operations - Experiences should also be garnered to share and
build and develop these factors. - The effects on training, education and experience
may potentially (and exponentially) raise
warfighting effectiveness to unprecedented
levels. - Recommend that the Army study and apply this
approach in order to - Enable the art of Battle Command for
network-centric operations using the CSAs
regression equation. - Enhance the experience, education and training
systems for soldiers and leaders for higher
levels of Warfighting Effectiveness