Army fine-tunes missile defense C3

The Army Space Command recently completed a joint battle planning exercise designed to finetune national missiledefense command, control and communications

The Army Space Command recently completed a joint battle planning exercise

designed to fine-tune national missile-defense command, control and communications,

the service announced Thursday.

The Aug. 16 exercise was the eighth in a series sponsored by the U.S. Space

Command and was held at the Ballistic Missile Defense Organization's Joint

National Test Facility.

The exercises were conducted at the joint facility to take advantage of

the operational software and analytical tools. The facility focuses on interservice,

interoperability and integration aspects of the national and theater missile-defense

programs.

"Today's exercise had two purposes. Our first goal was to examine the importance

and impact of the rules of engagement. Our second goal was to give those

of us in the operational community a chance to practice making critical

operational decisions using the current version of the national missile-defense

battle management software," said Maj. Tom Anderson, an official with the

Army Space Command's plans division, in a written statement.

"This exercise was important because it focused our attention on ways the

national command authorities might use a national missile-defense system

to counteract a wide range of possible threats to North America, both intentional

and accidental. The exercise also revealed a lot of policy work that remains

to be done on engagement and doctrine," said Lt. Col. Stephen Sovaiko, who

is assigned to the North American Aerospace Defense Command's Cheyenne Mountain

Operation Center in Colorado Springs, Colo.