The Need for Dynamic Airspace Management in Coalition Operations (The International C2 Journal, Volume 5, Number 3, 2011)
Abstract
The United States' Central Command (CENTCOM) has highlighted Airspace Command and Control (AC2) as an area where national ISAF, and NATO systems can deliver enhanced benefits to forces in the Afghanistan theater of war through leveraging a new CENTRIXS-ISAF (CX-I) Afghanistan Mission Network (AMN). There is a need to streamline AC2 procedures and find the right mix of battle command systems to most effectively and efficiently perform AC2 planning and execution in a coalition environment on CX-I/AMN. The Coalition Attack Guidance Experiment (CAGE), conducted in May 2010, took the constructs developed by a CENTCOM Operational Planning Team AC2 Working Group and experimented with solutions that can have a direct positive operational effect in the near term; CAGE also focused on future capabilities and potential solutions. This manuscript will identify how CAGE contributed to evolving coalition AC2 operations toward Dynamic Airspace Management - a mission-execution centric approach - versus today's planning-centric processes. The efficacy of the U.S. Army's Tactical Airspace Integration System (TAIS) Dynamic Airspace Collaboration Tool (DACT), as demonstrated during CAGE, will be analyzed as one tool available today to improve coalition AC2 processes on CX-I/AMN.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Jan 01, 2011
- Accession Number
- ADA555716
Entities
People
- Anthony W. Potts
- James W. Kelton
- Stuart Grant
Organizations
- United States Assistant Secretary of Defense