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Ideal Sharing of Information NetCentric

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Platoon Leader disseminates information through PSG and SQD Leaders. Soldiers receive information from ... Camp Taji - 1st Cavalry Division 1BCT (COL Funk) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ideal Sharing of Information NetCentric


1
Ideal Sharing of Information (Net-Centric)
2
Traditional Information Flow
  • Platoon Leader disseminates information through
    PSG and SQD Leaders
  • Soldiers receive information from chain of
    command
  • Mission is conducted patrol debrief completed
    and sent higher

3
Patrol Information Goes Higher
Patrol Leader
  • Patrol Leader completes a debrief sends to BN
  • BN receives approx. 30 debriefs a day
  • BN inputs approx. 20 of debriefs into ASAS-L
  • BDE/DIV pull intelligence data from ASAS-L to
    gauge activity and plan future operations

BN S2
ASAS-L
AFATADS
BDE S2
Division G2
4
Obvious Gaps
  • How is patrol debrief information shared below
    the BN level under the current structure?
  • If only 20 of shared data is going higher what
    percentage makes in down to the Soldier on the
    ground?
  • There is currently an intelligence void that
    prevents the collection and collaboration of data
    at the company level and below.

5
Tactical Ground Reporting System(TIGR)
  • In counter-insurgency warfare, it is particularly
    important to provide right tools at the
    company/platoon level for our junior officers who
    are the most important information providers and
    consumers.
  • TIGR allows a combat soldier to share his
    knowledge about people, places and events, and
    quickly tap into the collective knowledge being
    gathered by all the other soldiers.
  • TIGR is a multimedia debrief system coupled with
    a powerful yet easy-to-use search and analysis
    engine.

6
Tactical Ground Reporting System(TIGR)
  • Enables Users To
  • create standardized reports with collected data
    (digital photos, GPS track etc) on returning from
    a mission
  • search the database for relevant geo-indexed
    information prior to going on a mission
  • analyze and view data to look for patterns in
    both red and blue activities.

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12
TIGR Deployment Status
  • Camp Taji - 1st Cavalry Division 1BCT (COL Funk)
  • -1 battalion fully integrated, 2 battalions being
    set up
  • -As of Feb 18 (3 weeks into deployment)
  • 4206 events, 600 reports, 67 users, 43000
    queries
  • -Six field support contractors
  • -Awaiting approval from G6 to connect to SIPR
  • 3rd Infantry Division
  • -2BCT (COL Terry Ferrell) users trained
  • -Field Exercises Mar, 2007
  • -May Deployment

13
What does this mean?
  • Soldiers are placed in an infectious position
    which empowers them to collect, collaborate, and
    process real time information.
  • With this technology we achieve a net-centric
    approach to the collection of data.
  • Patrol level leaders are better informed and
    better prepared to face the enemy.

14
What Happens Next?
  • When TIGR extends beyond 2 Brigades in Iraq how
    do we control the input of information?
  • How is the information put into the database
    analyzed and interpreted at the higher HQs?
  • With emergent technologies such as facial
    recognition software, thumb prints,
    helmet-mounted video feeds, etc. how much is too
    much information for analysts?
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