Air Force officials reviewing command and control training infrastructure Published Aug. 16, 2010 By Bill Dowell 505th Command and Control Wing HURLBURT AFB, Fla. -- The U.S. Air Force awarded an independent-study contract to DP Technology Services Inc., Aug. 16, for studying the development of an advanced operational-level command and control (C2) training campus. "This study is the first step in developing a solution which will benefit Air Force C2 in the future," said Lt. Gen. William Rew, vice commander of Air Combat Command. "It will eliminate current stovepipe training and provide better, fully-integrated C2 support for combatant commanders." General Rew directed officials at the U.S. Air Force Warfare Center, Nellis Air Force Base, Nev., to formally conduct a study addressing training gaps and standardization for air, space and cyberspace C2 warfighters and standup of a C2 campus. The integrated campus will consolidate formal training for Component-Numbered Air Forces, Air and Space Operations Centers and Air Force Forces staffs. "Lack of standardization and integrated training has led to an inconsistent knowledge base for C2 warfighters," said USAFWC Commander Maj. Gen. Stanley Kresge. "Consolidating training in one location will leverage cross-functional expertise and provide a dedicated training venue standardized across the Air Force." The contractor will produce a comprehensive report and presentation for senior Air Force leaders addressing future integration of air, space and cyberspace training. It will provide recommendations for C-NAF, AOC and AFFOR staff training requirements at all levels -- initial and mission qualification, continuation, advanced and functional. The study will also address senior leader C2 training requirements. "Ideally, co-locating Air Force air, space, and cyber C2 training at Hurlburt Field, Fla., will enable critical cross-flow of expertise to fully integrate our USAF's capabilities," said General Kresge. "In addition, it will enable advanced integrated training and lessons learned." Key to this study will be ACC's 505th Command and Control Wing at Hurlburt Field. This U.S. Air Force Warfare Center organization's mission directive, to "Improve warfighter capability through command and control testing, tactics development and training," was published in April. The wing, through a multi-disciplinary approach, provides training and development of tactics, techniques and procedures for C-NAF headquarters; testing and training of key C2 and intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance systems; and comprehensive, realistic, cutting-edge operational and tactical-level live, virtual and constructive exercises for joint and coalition forces. This makes the 505th CCW the foundation for Air Force operational C2 development and will play a vital role in developing future C2 professionals. Officials expect the report and presentation to be ready for a senior-level decision briefing in January. The value of the contract was not disclosed.
Air Force officials reviewing command and control training infrastructure Published Aug. 16, 2010 By Bill Dowell 505th Command and Control Wing HURLBURT AFB, Fla. -- The U.S. Air Force awarded an independent-study contract to DP Technology Services Inc., Aug. 16, for studying the development of an advanced operational-level command and control (C2) training campus. "This study is the first step in developing a solution which will benefit Air Force C2 in the future," said Lt. Gen. William Rew, vice commander of Air Combat Command. "It will eliminate current stovepipe training and provide better, fully-integrated C2 support for combatant commanders." General Rew directed officials at the U.S. Air Force Warfare Center, Nellis Air Force Base, Nev., to formally conduct a study addressing training gaps and standardization for air, space and cyberspace C2 warfighters and standup of a C2 campus. The integrated campus will consolidate formal training for Component-Numbered Air Forces, Air and Space Operations Centers and Air Force Forces staffs. "Lack of standardization and integrated training has led to an inconsistent knowledge base for C2 warfighters," said USAFWC Commander Maj. Gen. Stanley Kresge. "Consolidating training in one location will leverage cross-functional expertise and provide a dedicated training venue standardized across the Air Force." The contractor will produce a comprehensive report and presentation for senior Air Force leaders addressing future integration of air, space and cyberspace training. It will provide recommendations for C-NAF, AOC and AFFOR staff training requirements at all levels -- initial and mission qualification, continuation, advanced and functional. The study will also address senior leader C2 training requirements. "Ideally, co-locating Air Force air, space, and cyber C2 training at Hurlburt Field, Fla., will enable critical cross-flow of expertise to fully integrate our USAF's capabilities," said General Kresge. "In addition, it will enable advanced integrated training and lessons learned." Key to this study will be ACC's 505th Command and Control Wing at Hurlburt Field. This U.S. Air Force Warfare Center organization's mission directive, to "Improve warfighter capability through command and control testing, tactics development and training," was published in April. The wing, through a multi-disciplinary approach, provides training and development of tactics, techniques and procedures for C-NAF headquarters; testing and training of key C2 and intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance systems; and comprehensive, realistic, cutting-edge operational and tactical-level live, virtual and constructive exercises for joint and coalition forces. This makes the 505th CCW the foundation for Air Force operational C2 development and will play a vital role in developing future C2 professionals. Officials expect the report and presentation to be ready for a senior-level decision briefing in January. The value of the contract was not disclosed.