Author Topic: Tactical data link puts Marine units on the same page  (Read 397 times)

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rangerrebew

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Tactical data link puts Marine units on the same page
« on: August 15, 2015, 08:18:44 am »
Tactical data link puts Marine units on the same page
By Mark Pomerleau
Aug 13, 2015
 
Marines Huey Cobra interop exercise

A UH-1Y Huey and AH-1W Super Cobra take off during the interoperability exercise.


The Marine Corps, which has been working to improve interoperability with various radio and communications equipment, recently tested a data link that can integrate operations among helicopter crews, unmanned aerial vehicles and ground forces, in the process replacing a paper-based operation.

The exercise at Marine Corps Air Station Cherry Point, N.C., involved the Marine’s Light Attack Helicopter Squadron 467, Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Squadron 2 and Marine Corps Forces, Special Operations Command. It made use of Link 16, a military tactical data network used by U.S., NATO and other forces to facilitate data interoperability between various aircraft pilots and joint terminal attack controllers – the soldiers on the ground coordinating targets for airstrikes.   

The exercise “focused on integrating field radios and commercial off-the-shelf tablet systems to rapidly and securely pass converted Link 16 messages to HMLA aircraft in a tactical training exercise,” Capt. Justin Pavlischek, the intelligence officer with VMU-2, said in a release.

“[D]igital interoperability is the way the Marine Corps will be able to communicate between multiple type/model/series aircraft in an objective area that is comprised of enemy threats, friendly air positions and ground forces,” said Capt. Michael Marron Jr., an AH-1W Super Cobra pilot with HMLA-467. “A lot of our systems have requirements and are difficult to modify… We overcome that by leveraging a specific combination of current technology to provide access to two tactical networks and move some specific messages between those networks – in this case Link 16 and ANW2.” 

This access can have much wider reverberations for better communication between both manned and unmanned aircraft and new close air support solutions such as the Kinetic Integration Lightweight Software Individual Tactical Combat Handheld, or KILSWITCH, which enable greater situational awareness in calling for close air support. Marines tested KILSWITCH during the spring, using Android tablets to identify targets and send the targeting information to an MV-22 Osprey, which then delivered a simulated strike in just over four minutes, well under the goal of six minutes. 
 

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http://defensesystems.com/articles/2015/08/13/marines-link-16-interoperability-exercise.aspx
« Last Edit: August 15, 2015, 08:19:25 am by rangerrebew »