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FEATURE ARTICLE
February 2005
Aerial Prowess Tested at ‘Virtual Flag’
by Roxana Tiron
The U.S. Air Force is entering the
last preparation phase for a mammoth weeklong training exercise,
called Virtual Flag.
Scheduled
to take place in March, the event is intended to bring together
simulations and live exercises conducted by the Air Force, Army
and Navy.
In many ways, the event is similar to the traditional Red Flag
annual war games that have been conducted at Nellis Air Force Base,
Nev., since 1975. They are designed to help prepare U.S. and other
NATO pilots for real-world combat. By comparison, Virtual Flag will
feature more advanced digital simulations and increased participation
by other military services.
Overseeing the event is Col. Michael Chapin, the director of the
Air Force training systems product group at Wright-Patterson Air
Force Base, Ohio. The service is investing in advanced technology
to integrate live exercises and computerized simulations in order
to enhance joint training, Chapin told National Defense.
The integration of live, virtual and constructive training is fundamental
to meeting the goals of the Defense Department’s joint national
training capability, a $1.3 billion effort to provide a seamless
environment for inter-service battle drills. The Air Force describes
its efforts as “distributed mission operations,” or
DMO.
The idea behind DMO is to enable trainees to rehearse missions
by networking a variety of simulators, ranging from fighter jets
to the airborne warning and control system, and eventually bomber
and unmanned aerial vehicle simulators.
For more than a year, the DMO center at Kirtland Air Force Base,
N.M., has been buzzing with preparations for training exercises.
Lockheed Martin is responsible for the networking and for training
operators. The center participates in about 18 simulation exercises
throughout the year, said Jeff Lombardi, program manager at Lockheed.
Planning an event such as Virtual Flag takes up to six months,
he said. “Most of that time is building the scenario,”
Lombardi said in an interview. “But the coordination of trying
to make sure that everybody who is playing gets something out of
the training, as opposed to being just a training aide for somebody
else—that is the time-consuming part.”
The synchronization of everyone involved in exercises that combine
live and virtual training is one of the major challenges, said Lombardi.
The DMO center can be networked to two-dozen sites at the same time,
but trying to fit everyone’s schedule is tough, he said.
Software incompatibility and insufficient bandwidth also pose obstacles.
The problem boils down to the difficulty of connecting older simulation
systems to the newer training devices, said Lombardi. “We
have developed some software tools that the Air Force distributes
now to other sites to help them get over bandwidth issues,”
he said.
Communication systems also cause problems, he said. “It is
difficult for the users, because they are not the same communications
systems they [normally] use,” Lombardi said. “Because
we simulate 100 communications frequencies, when a guy has a problem,
it is very difficult to tell whether he is on the right frequency,
or if his radio is not right, or is not powered up correctly.”
Another hurdle is the multi-level information security, said Lombardi.
Within different networks, for example, “we are going to hook
up simulations that work at different levels of security,”
said Chapin.
“I have to protect data when it goes on the network, so that
only people with top-secret clearance get the top-secret information,
while people with secret clearance get only secret information,”
he explained. “That is a very hard problem.”
The issue is not confined within the clearance system of the U.S.
military, but hampers other large-scale exercises with coalition
partners.
The Air Force had to pull out of this year’s “First
Wave” NATO exercise, because of its multi-layer security,
added Chapin. First Wave, which stands for war fighter alliance
in a virtual environment, was intended to demonstrate the interoperability
between air force simulators from Canada, France, Germany, Italy,
the Netherlands, the United Kingdom and the United States. The United
States was relegated to having only observers in the demonstration.
“The United States had to drop out,” said Chapin, because
there was no way to solve the security issue. “We want to
work closely [with NATO] in this respect, and it tore us up. We
did not want to do that.”
Fixes will require changes in hardware, software and policy, he
said. “We are working hard on all three of them.”
Lockheed Martin is working on a multi-level security lab at the
DMO center, explained Lombardi. The lab will be functional in July
and is designed to “connect the top secret networks down to
the secret networks,” he said. “We have been pushing
a policy solution for about 16 months,” he added.
The March event will combine six exercises, among them the Air
Force’s Red Flag and Blue Flag, which focuses on command-and-control
procedures, and the Army’s Roving Sands, a massive theater
air and missile defense exercise involving approximately 15,000
participants.
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