Operational testers still busy processing NIE 16.2
data
by Mr. Michael M. Novogradac (Hood)
.jpg) |
During Network Integration Evaluation
Exercise 16.2, Fred Jones (right),
Operational Test Command's data
management lead and field operations
controller at McGregor Range, New
Mexico, shows test data collection
sheets to OTC Commander Brig. Gen.
Kenneth L. Kamper during Network
Integration Exercise 16.2 as OTC
Operations Research Systems Analyst
Mitch Hickman listens in. (Photo by
Michael M. Novogradac, Operational Test
Command Public Affairs) |
FORT BLISS,
Texas -- A 13-day exercise checking the Army's
battlefield network capabilities of hardware and mission
command applications wrapped up here Saturday, and test
data is still being collected to evaluate those systems.
Network Integration Evaluation
Exercise 16.2 -- the 11th iteration since 2011 --
evaluated seven systems, to include the latest version
of the Command Post Computing Environment (CPCE) version
2, which aims to provide a mission command application
experience while also simplifying software and hardware
command post infrastructure.
"NIE is the Army's largest
operational exercise that tests and evaluates
battlefield communication systems and capabilities, and
is our most critical modernization effort," said Brig.
Gen. Kenneth L. Kamper, commander of U.S. Army
Operational Test Command, the Army's only independent
operational test organization.
The NIE experience places Soldiers
in a desert landscape, 40 miles by 183 miles, wrapping
together enormous training areas of Fort Bliss Texas;
McGregor Range and White Sands Missile Range, New
Mexico; Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico's Tularosa
Basin between the Sacramento and San Andreas mountain
ranges.
NIE 16.2 also allows the Army to
test two core capabilities: a Command Initiated Munition
Weapon System (Spider), and Network Operations with a
Network Centric Waveform as an advancement to the
Warfighter Information Network-Tactical (WIN-T). The
exercise also provides the environment for the
operational assessment of the Mid-Tier Networking
Vehicular Radio (MNVR).
Kamper said NIE essentially
provides capabilities that translate information
superiority into combat power by interconnecting
Soldiers and systems -- no matter where they are on the
battlefield -- to achieve improved situational
awareness, access to knowledge sources and shortened
decision cycles on the battlefield.
"NIE tests systems that enable
commanders with the information they need to exercise
mission command," Kamper said.
"Our Army continually modernizes
equipment because of what Soldiers learn during combat,"
Kamper continued. "Our enemies are also advancing their
technologies and procedures, so through Soldier feedback
and lessons learned, we improve our capabilities."
Along with equipment improvement,
Kamper also said improvements are also made in doctrine,
organization, training, materiel, leadership education
systems, personnel support systems, and even in Army
facilities used to supply and maintain its equipment.
"This modernization effort
throughout our Army is critical to Soldiers taking the
fight to our enemies, and returning safely back home,"
Kamper said. "Test data is collected from Soldiers and
their feedback is provided to improve upon existing and
future systems they will ultimately use to train and
fight with."
All of the equipment tested during
NIE is part of a coordinated and controlled realistic
operational environment scenario by over 2,000 Soldiers
of the 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 1st Armored
Division here.
NIE is a collaborative effort
between the Brigade Modernization Command -- a
subordinate unit of U.S. Army Training and Doctrine
Command's Army Capabilities Integration Center, the U.S.
Army Test and Evaluation Command and the System of
Systems, Engineering and Integration Directorate, under
the Assistant Secretary of the Army for Acquisition,
Logistics and Technology.
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Source: www.army.mil,
May 16, 2016 |
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