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Army could be moving to eliminate radios at the tactical edge

1st. Lt. Michael Austin, platoon leader for Attack Co., 1-503rd Inf. Regt., 173rd Airborne Brigade, uses the End User Device to report information to his company commander through the Integrated Tactical Network during a live-fire exercise in Grafenwoehr, Germany, on May 2, 2018. (Photo by Spc. Joshua Cofield/173rd Airborne Brigade)

By Mark Pomerleau

The Army’s vision for its future network architecture likely won’t include radios for communication and data at the tactical level, according to top officials.

Next Generation Command and Control — the state of the Army’s future network and the service’s number one priority for modernization — has been billed as an entirely new way of doing business with a clean-slate approach rather than continuing to either bolt on or work within the confines of existing systems and processes. NGC2 aims to provide commanders and units a new approach to information, data and command and control through agile and software-based architectures.

A prototype of the system was recently tested at Project Convergence at Fort Irwin, California, in March.

Read more at DefenseScoop