Army enhances NetOps, the eyes and ears of the network
by Amy Walker, PEO C3T Public Affairs
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Photo Credit: Spc. Aura E. Sklenicka, 21 ABCT PAO
During battlefield operations, a brigade's fleet of
Warfighter Information Network-Tactical (WIN-T) network
equipped vehicles, such as the Strykers seen here at Network
Integration Evaluation 16.1, are often spread out across
great distances and austere terrain, supporting both
stationary command posts and on-the-move missions. Newly
enhanced and simplified Network Operations tools will make
it easier for communications officers to see the "big
picture" as they plan, manage and defend the vast tactical
mission command network, increasing its security and
strength. (Photo by Spc. Aura E. Sklenicka, 2/1 ABCT PAO)
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Photo Credit: Amy Walker, PEO C3T Public Affairs
Newly enhanced and simplified Network Operations tools will
make it easier for communications officers to see the "big
picture" as they plan, manage and defend the vast tactical
mission command network, increasing its security and
strength. This Warfighter Information Network-Tactical
equipped vehicle (center right) traverses the battlefield
during Network Integration Evaluation 16.1 in September 2015.
(U.S. Army photo by Amy Walker, PEO C3T Public Affairs)
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As part of Network Integration
Evaluation 16.2, the Army is
operationally evaluating newly
enhanced and simplified Warfighter
Information Network-Tactical (WIN-T)
Network Operations tools that make
it easier for Soldiers to manage the
vast tactical communications network
that spans the battlefield. In the
photo, Soldiers from 101st Airborne
Division and 10th Mountain Division
support the WIN-T Increment 3
Functional Qualification Testing of
Network Planning and Management
Software in December 2015. (U.S.
Army photo)
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Photo Credit: Amy Walker,
PEO C3T Public Affairs
The Army has been testing Network
Operations software upgrades as part
of the Warfighter Information
Network-Tactical (WIN-T) Increment 3
Limited User Test, conducted at
Network Integration Evaluation (NIE)
16.2 at Fort Bliss, Texas, in May
2016. Col. Charles J. Masaracchia,
Commander for 2nd Brigade, 1st
Armored Division, provides an
operational brief inside the Brigade
Main Tactical Operations Center
(TOC) during NIE 16.2 Media Day on
April 26, 2016. The communication
and mission command equipment seen
inside the TOC is enabled by the
WIN-T network. (U.S. Army photo by
Amy Walker, PEO C3T Public Affairs)
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FORT BLISS,
Texas -- During battlefield operations, a brigade's
fleet of Warfighter Information Network-Tactical (WIN-T)
network equipped vehicles are often spread out across
great distances and austere terrain, supporting both
stationary command posts and on-the-move missions. Newly
enhanced and simplified Network Operations (NetOps)
tools will make it easier for communications officers
(S6s/G6s) to see the "big picture" as they plan, manage
and defend the vast tactical mission command network,
increasing its security and strength.
"In a battlefield environment
where everything is transferring over the network and
cyber security is a constant concern, NetOps is
absolutely critical," said Col. Charles J. Masaracchia,
commander for 2nd Brigade, 1st Armored Division (2/1
AD), the main operational unit for the Army's Network
Integration Evaluations (NIEs). "With these tools we
have the ability to see the network and identify and fix
anomalies; we can identify a problem with a node and
start troubleshooting from right here [at the brigade
command post] and sometimes even fix it without ever
having to go to the distant station. That's incredible."
The Army has been testing the new
NetOps software upgrades this month as part of the WIN-T
Increment 3 Limited User Test, conducted at NIE 16.2 at
Fort Bliss, Texas. Successful evaluation results will
support the software technical insertion of the new
enhancements into both the at-the-halt and on-the-move
increments of the WIN-T network, which is currently
projected for fiscal year 2017. Feedback gained from the
evaluation will also support future network
improvements.
During the NIE's complex decisive
action exercises, the brigade's S6 and his network staff
used the improved NetOps tool suite for a wide array of
tasks, including configuring, operating, monitoring and
troubleshooting the network, as well as defending it
against continual cyber attacks. The new enhancements
automate many of these functions to make it easier for
the network team to manage the network and be more
effective.
"The enhanced NetOps tools will
allow the S6 to better fight the network in parallel
with the battle," said Col. Ward Roberts, product
manager for WIN-T Increment 3. "Through the
visualization tools and their integration with network
devices, the S6 can now adjust the network design to
better meet the commander's intent as the battle
evolves."
The Army continues to listen to
Soldier feedback from theater, user juries and test
events to make WIN-T NetOps, user interfaces and network
systems more intuitive, easier to operate, with a
consistent look and feel. Significant simplicity
improvements evaluated at NIE 16.2 include enhancements
to the NetOps planning, monitoring and troubleshooting
tools.
"These NetOps software
enhancements are much more intuitive to the Soldier and
are much easier to use," said Staff Sgt. Nicholas
Vettore, 2/1 AD assistant network technician and senior
satellite communication systems operator. "With this
quick responding software, almost any user who has had a
small amount of training will be able to use it and
provide the commander with critical summary reports in
minutes versus hours as it had been in the past, which
could [potentially] save lives and makes mission success
much easier [to obtain]."
As part of the WIN-T Increment 3
testing during NIE 16.2, the Army also evaluated the
next generation of Network Centric Waveform (NCW)
software, v10, which makes the network more robust. NCW
enables beyond-line-of-sight (satellite) communications
from division headquarters down to the company level.
The NCW v10 software enhancements provide efficiencies
through software coding, resulting in four times higher
throughput without changing any hardware. That equates
to more bandwidth available for the user with much less
overhead from the network.
"The increased throughput enables
the mission command network to absorb more traffic from
intelligence, medical and logistics networks," Roberts
said. "Now we can provide throughput for all of those
areas without needing extra antennas, satellites, and
bandwidth. So bandwidth can be available to push full
motion video, for instance, while still allowing the
mission command traffic to flow through smoothly."
The new WIN-T enhancements also
provide better firewall tools and defensive cyber
visualization to help signal Soldiers more easily
manage, protect, and harden the network from
vulnerabilities. During NIE 16.2 the enemy red team
posed a very robust insider cyber threat to fully stress
the systems and flush out any weak points, Roberts said.
One of these mechanisms, Public
Key Infrastructure (PKI), provides network resiliency
and an additional layer of security by supporting the
distribution and identification of public encryption
keys. PKI enables stronger authentication of identity
for users and devices on the network. It also reduces
system complexity by reducing the number of passwords
needed to manage the network.
"PKI helps track and deny access
without actually having to watch every person; it acts
like a network watch dog," Vettore said. "It helps us
make sure people aren't doing things they shouldn't be,
or getting information they shouldn't, and it ensures
devices are not entering the network that don't need to
be there."
Vettore, who has supported seven
NIEs and multiple focus groups, said he has witnessed
the NetOps improvements first hand.
"I am seeing the changes from
recommendations that we put out two years ago actually
being built into the software," Vettore said. "They take
it seriously; they don't just write it down and then
never follow up on it; they put the time in, they put
the work in, they realize that 'yes' it is helpful to
get our feedback."
The Army is also working to
improve the NetOps of the lower tactical internet (TI)
radio network through the newly enhanced Joint
Enterprise Network Manager (JENM), the Army's Joint
radio network manager. Looking forward, the Army plans
to continue efforts to further synchronize the WIN-T and
radio networks to better unify how it is managed and
fought.
"Through a synced upper and lower
TI, you can get a general or a very detailed overview of
the network," Vettore said. "Here at the brigade level
we can monitor the health of the network and
troubleshoot down at the furthest levels; and we are
also able to prioritize where a major mission should
take place. Being able to control the network from top
to bottom is extremely important."
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Photo Credit: Amy Walker, PEO C3T Public Affairs
Newly enhanced and simplified Network Operations
(NetOps) tools will make it easier for communications
officers to see the "big picture" as they plan, manage
and defend the vast tactical mission command network,
increasing its security and strength. Warfighter
Information Network-Tactical (WIN-T) networked vehicles
(front two trucks and back vehicle with mast) support
the 2nd Brigade, 1st Armored Division, Main Tactical
Operations Center during Network Integration Evaluation
16.2 on April 26, 2016. (U.S. Army photo by Amy Walker,
PEO C3T Public Affairs)
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Photo Credit: Amy Walker, PEO C3T Public Affairs
The Army is working to improve the Network Operations of
the lower tactical internet (TI) radio network through
the newly enhanced Joint Enterprise Network Manager
(JENM), the Army's Joint radio network manager. Looking
forward, the Army plans to continue efforts to further
synchronize the upper TI (Warfighter Information
Network-Tactical) and radio networks to better unify how
they are managed and fought. To prepare for Network
Integration Evaluation (NIE) 16.2, Soldiers from 2nd
Brigade, 1st Armored Division, trained in February with
JENM. (U.S. Army photo by Amy Walker, PEO C3T Public
Affairs)
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Source: www.army.mil,
May 12, 2016 |
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