Army looks for long-term IT plan

With short- and medium-term plans for IT modernization in place, the Army remains on the hunt for a long-term vision.

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The Army has short- and medium-term plans for IT modernization but is still in search of a long-term vision, according to CIO Lt. Gen. Robert Ferrell. To fill that void, Ferrell last week convened a strategy session with the service’s technology gurus and outside experts, he said Sept. 25 at a conference hosted by AFCEA’s Washington, D.C., chapter.

The group comprised officials from the Army’s program executive offices, as well as representatives of Mitre Corp. and IT specialists at Johns Hopkins University, Ferrell told FCW. Prescribing technologies for the Army to target in the long term might be a fool’s errand because of the pace of technological change. Instead, Ferrell said, it would be wiser to focus on deliverable capabilities he would like the service to zero in on for the long-term.

Such a longer-term Army IT strategy would help contractors plan their R&D investments, Ferrell said at the conference. He floated software-defined networking and “self-healing” networks as types of capabilities the Army might explore. The lieutenant general expects to release the strategy in the second quarter of fiscal 2016.

The short and medium-term planning for Army IT is covered by the Army Network Campaign Plan that Ferrell released earlier this year. That strategy runs through fiscal 2021 and includes a push to make better use of IT at the edge of Army networks by taking advantage of tools such as data consolidation.

Ferrell made clear why more strategizing is needed. “Right now, we have so many disparate networks” and “too many vulnerabilities, too many backdoors that can get into our enterprise,” he said. “When you talk about the cyber threat, we can’t even see ourselves.”

On the cyber front, Doug Wiltsie, the Army program executive officer for enterprise information systems, said the service will award a big contact for cyber defense operations within a week. The contract will include conducting a pilot project for cyber infrastructure and supplying “toolkits” to the Army’s cyber protection teams, the specialists charged with network defense.