ALL SOURCE ANALYSIS SYSTEM
Abstract
The All Source Analysis System (ASAS) provided US Army commanders at all echelons from battalion to Army Service Component Command (ASCC) with automated support to the management and planning, processing and analysis, and dissemination of intelligence, counterintelligence, and electronic warfare. ASAS provided the means to enhance the commander's timely and comprehensive understanding of enemy deployments, capabilities, and potential courses of action. The system used standard joint and Army protocols and message formats to interface with selected National, joint, theater, and tactical intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance systems and preprocessors and Army, joint, and coalition battle command systems. The ASAS Family of Systems migrated into the Distributed Common Ground System-Army (DCGS-A) program and Army is using it as the initial platform to provide accelerated DCGS-A capabilities to the force. The Counterintelligence (CI) and Human Intelligence (HUMINT) Automated Reporting and Collection System (CHARCS) is the Army's CI and HUMINT tactical collection and reporting system. CHARCS provides automation support for information collection, reporting, investigations, source & interrogation operations and document exploitation. The CHARCS automation architecture extends from the individual HUMINT team soldier or CI agent to the Corps Analysis and Control Element (ACE). CHARCS reports digital data such as maps, overlays, images, video, biometrics, scanned documents and audio files. These media are transmitted through secure networks and interfaces with the Distributed Common Ground Systems-Army (DCGS-A) for detailed analysis and creation of finished intelligence products. Collection and reporting teams at Military Intelligence (MI) battalions and their operational managers are equipped with one of two CHARCS systems. The first is the AN/PYQ-8 Individual Tactical Reporting Tool (ITRT) which provides collection and processing devices for individual HUMINT team member or CI agents. The second is the AN/PYQ-3 CI/HUMINT Automated Tool Set (CHATS) which provides the team leader (who normally directs 3-5 team members) tools to process and manage team-collected information and a robust set of devices such as printers, scanners, cameras and audio recorders to assist the collection mission. The CHATS is also used by Operational Management Team (OMT) (who normally directs 5-10 collection and reporting teams). Each CHATS has an associated Mission Support Peripheral Sets and Kits (MS-PSK) or Collection Peripheral Sets and Kits (C-PSK). The Machine Foreign Language Translation System (MFLTS), formerly Sequoyah, develops, fields, and sustains a basic automated foreign speech and text translation capability for Army tactical systems to augment and compliment limited human linguistic resources. These integrated automated translation capabilities will be applicable across three different system configurations; a hand-held/wearable portable device, a laptop/mobile device, and in a networked/web-enabled system. The software modules will translate English from a prioritized list of languages in a prioritized collection of domains (e.g. medical, intelligence, base security). MFLTS will be interoperable with Commercial Off-The-Shelf (COTS) or Government Off-The-Shelf (GOTS) automation equipment to include the Distributed Common Ground System-Army (DCGS-A), Nett Warrior (NW), and Counterintelligence Human Intelligence Automated Reporting and Collection System (CHARCS).
Document Details
- Document Type
- R2 Budgetary Justification
- Publication Date
- Oct 01, 2015
- Source ID
- 0604321A_5_2040_PB_2015
- Change Summary Explanation
- Service Agency Name
- Army
Entities
Organizations
- United States Army
Related Documents
- Child Project: CI/HUMINT Software Products (MIP)
- Child Accomplishment: RDTE: Software testing; increased SW performance capability; security accreditation; and HW integration of SW.
- Child Cost Item: 4d08c4de9274f6b2f8250450f4948e91
- Child Cost Item: 35c42e441e2ab6acc1dff70e1716738f
- Child Cost Item: b0552a2d2dca12a881d8c62b46dcf05f
- Child Cost Item: 944336c1f3b510d8fadc8d0d25389e93
- Child Cost Item: 0fcdc0f33cb8302b53a9fbdc82a4258b
- Child Cost Item: 45cb1e1afa46cfe2922469944c7cc000
- Child Cost Item: 21dcc9f41d28cac073bbea2425e57ca9
- Child Cost Item: 278640e32e1aa2924ed452ed6c168081
- Child Cost Item: b4556cc8dd251e6a0d444909c69be302
- Child Cost Item: 950f7bed6a39405cfcfa7b7394c7606d
- Child Cost Item: 3d075a404ddfc8d9241fe939b1015b8c
- Child Cost Item: cf306f8b92316bd820e2ac2a8d00d00b
- Child Cost Item: 08ae28432ce6e56455c39d25fcd1138e
- Child Cost Item: 7923ffc40f590c73fd03ae037930d7d7
- Child Cost Item: d010899707dad2e316eebfe207365ca5
- Child Cost Item: db69bf121294544e03ebcd5eb0e20a46
- Child Project: Machine - Foreign Language Translation System
- Child Accomplishment: Product Development and Engineering
- Child Accomplishment: Test and Evaluation of MFLTS Capabilities
- Child Accomplishment: PD Support and Management Services
- Child Cost Item: 37f37bab009904ebfb95e0f7d0130aed
- Child Cost Item: 824f54c870778dd3881da4e87391d137
- Child Cost Item: db9ad86f437a25d2e9c96adf5364f1ee
- Child Cost Item: d548ea4d6b11bb5f5c870d94f6ef580b
- Child Cost Item: 27f1dccd3e1275df5da165c26b7486f1
- Child Cost Item: 621340205adb19c9ce228f90d93b957a
- Child Cost Item: f3f7225892b9ac94653c9647fbaad7f1
- Child Cost Item: ab009d42256fb6a8babceb7680cc8e47
- Child Cost Item: 11947c07468ba6dc9ae0f6b2fdaea15c