Friday, May 19, 2006

Defense Tech: Winning (And Losing) The First Wired War


Image source: Defense Tech

Via Defense Tech.

This war in Iraq was launched on a theory: That, with the right communication and reconnaissance gear, American armed forces would be quicksilver-fast and supremely lethal. A country could be conquered with only a fraction of the soldiers needed in the past.

During the initial invasion in March 2003, this idea of "network-centric warfare" worked more or less as promised -- even though most of the frontline troops weren't wired up. It was enough that the commanders were connected.

But now, more than three years into the Iraq conflict, the network is still largely incomplete. Local command centers have a torrent of information pouring in. But, for soldiers and marines on the ground, this war isn't any more wired that the last one.

"There is a connectivity gap," a draft Army War College report notes. "Information is not reaching the lowest levels."

More here.

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