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DoD/News
Rep. Robert Wittman: Threat Analysis Should Inform Trump’s 350-Ship Navy Fleet Plan
by Ramona Adams
Published on December 12, 2016
Rep. Robert Wittman: Threat Analysis Should Inform Trump’s 350-Ship Navy Fleet Plan


Rep. Robert Wittman: Threat Analysis Should Inform Trump's 350-Ship Navy Fleet Plan
Robert Wittman

Rep. Robert Wittman (R-Virginia) has said a threat analysis must take place in support of President-elect Donald Trump’s plan to grow the U.S. Navy‘s fleet to 350 ships from the current 272 number, USNI News reported Wednesday.

Megan Eckstein writes Wittman said at the U.S. Naval Institute’s Defense Forum Washington event that the composition of the 350-ship fleet should be designed according to warfighting requirements.

Wittman added the Virginia-class attack submarine, San Antonio-class amphibious transport dock and Ford-class aircraft carrier could help grow the fleet through accelerated build rates and hot production lines that could lead to cost savings, Eckstein reported.

Wittment also noted that efforts to start new ship classes could extend the timeline and increase risks, the report stated.

DoD/News
Cedric Leighton: DoD Works to Address Advanced Persistent Threats
by Scott Nicholas
Published on December 12, 2016
Cedric Leighton: DoD Works to Address Advanced Persistent Threats


Cedric Leighton: DoD Works to Address Advanced Persistent ThreatsThe Defense Department seeks to address cybersecurity concerns such as advanced persistent threats that use unauthorized entities to gain access to networks and steal data from an organization, C4ISR & Networks reported Wednesday.

John Edwards writes Cedric Leighton, former National Security Agency deputy director of training, said APTs can collect large amounts of information which may be operationally sensitive.

A Galois and Guardtime Federal team received a $1.8 million contract from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency in September to verify the capacity of Keyless Signature Infrastructure to serve as a monitoring system against security threats.

“The DoD, along with the Department of Homeland Security and the intelligence community, are working hard to protect all U.S. government networks from APTs,” said Leighton.

“We’re working in coordination with the [DoD], typically DARPA, on finding ways to effectively detect APTs and essentially amplify the attention of the defenders so that they can root them out and squash them,” added David Hamilton, Guardtime Federal president.

Civilian/News
Bob McDonald Expects Next VA Secretary to Build on His Work
by Jay Clemens
Published on December 12, 2016
Bob McDonald Expects Next VA Secretary to Build on His Work


Bob McDonald Expects Next VA Secretary to Build on His Work
Robert McDonald

Bob McDonald, outgoing secretary of the Department of Veterans Affairs, has said he expects the next VA chief to build on his current work at the department, Military Times reported Monday.

Leo Shane III writes President-elect Donald Trump has vowed to revamp the way VA operates in an effort to make the department behave more like a private business under his administration.

McDonald said he believes the VA has many improvements over the last two years in terms of new strategies, processes and evaluation systems to measure outcomes, according to the report.

“This transformation has probably gone farther and faster than any I’ve been involved in, but also it’s not yet far enough,” McDonald was quoted as saying.

McDonald, formerly CEO of Procter & Gamble, said he hopes for the next administration to consider the work done to address the 2014 medical wait times issue as a blueprint for operations, Shane reports.

McDonald also said he has started to work with Trump’s transition team and told current VA officials to continue the 2017 goals for the MyVA plans, Military Times reports.

Government Technology/News
NASA’s Ames Research Center to Demo Air Traffic Mgmt Simulator
by Scott Nicholas
Published on December 12, 2016
NASA’s Ames Research Center to Demo Air Traffic Mgmt Simulator


NASA's Ames Research Center to Demo Air Traffic Mgmt SimulatorNASA‘s Ames Research Center in Califonia has created a full-scale simulator designed to mimic a variety of air traffic management scenarios as part of efforts to ensure air travel safety and efficiency this holiday season.

The space agency said Friday that the FutureFlight platform works to help NASA, the Federal Aviation Administration and private-sector researchers study how to manage U.S. airspace.

Air traffic controllers and pilots also use FutureFlight to test NASA-developed tools in a virtual environment that can simulate airports under varying environmental and traffic conditions.

NASA’s Ames Research Center will host a demonstration at Los Angeles and Charlotte airports on Dec. 14 to simulate environments at night, day, rain, snow, sleet, sun and other conditions.

Government Technology
Army Vet James Gilman Named Chief Exec of NIH Clinical Research Center; Francis Collins Comments
by Jay Clemens
Published on December 12, 2016
Army Vet James Gilman Named Chief Exec of NIH Clinical Research Center; Francis Collins Comments


Army Vet James Gilman Named Chief Exec of NIH Clinical Research Center; Francis Collins Comments
James Gilman

The National Institutes of Health has appointed James Gilman, a retired U.S. Army major general, as the first CEO of NIH’s clinical research center in a move that takes effect January 2017.

NIH said Friday Gilman will oversee the 870,000-square-foot research center located inside NIH’s campus in Bethesda, Maryland, and guide the facility’s safety and care quality measures with the development of new hospital operations policies.

“Dr. Gilman is a cardiologist and highly decorated leader with rich experience in commanding the operations of numerous hospital systems,” said NIH Director Francis Collins.

Gilman previously served as commanding general of the Army Medical Research and Materiel Command at Fort Detrick and director of health policy and services in the Office of the Surgeon General of the Army Medical Command.

His 35-year Army career also includes leadership roles at various Army hospitals such as Brooke Army Medical Center, Walter Reed Health Care System and Bassett Army Community Hospital.

Gilman retired from the Army in 2013 and joined the Hopkins Military & Veterans Institute in Baltimore as executive director until June.

Collins also announced that John Gallin, former director of the NIH clinical center, has taken a new role as associate director for clinical research and chief scientific officer of NIH.

Civilian/News
Steve Cook, Greg Autry Among Donald Trump’s NASA Transition Team Members
by Jane Edwards
Published on December 12, 2016
Steve Cook, Greg Autry Among Donald Trump’s NASA Transition Team Members


Steve Cook, Greg Autry Among Donald Trump’s NASA Transition Team MembersPresident-elect Donald Trump’s transition team has named six additional individuals to the NASA landing team, Space News reported Friday.

Brian Berger and Jeff Foust write Steve Cook, a corporate vice president at Dynetics, has been selected to join the NASA transition team.

Prior to Dynetics, Cook previously worked at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama, where he was responsible for the development of the Ares 1 and Ares 5 rocket programs.

Other individuals named to the NASA transition team include Greg Autry, an assistant professor of entrepreneurship at the University of Southern California; Jack Burns, senior vice president of the American Astronomical Society and a professor at the University of Colorado; Rodney Liesveld, a former senior policy adviser at NASA; Sandy Magnus, a former NASA astronaut; and Jeff Waksman, a former research fellow at the House of Representatives.

The appointments come more than a week after the incoming administration tapped Chris Shank, former policy director for the House Science Committee, to lead the NASA transition team, the report added.

Civilian/News
White House Establishes Northern Bering Sea Climate Resilience Area Through Executive Order
by Jane Edwards
Published on December 12, 2016
White House Establishes Northern Bering Sea Climate Resilience Area Through Executive Order


White House Establishes Northern Bering Sea Climate Resilience Area Through Executive OrderPresident Barack Obama has signed an executive order to establish the Northern Bering Sea Climate Resilience Area in an effort to protect the natural and cultural resources as well as the communities in the Alaskan Arctic.

The executive order will create a task force that will work with a Bering intergovernmental tribal advisory council to coordinate federal programs designed to advance community and ecosystem resilience, safeguard cultural values and promote natural resources conservation in support of Alaskan native communities, the White House said in a news release published Friday.

The rule would establish a federal policy that would prohibit bottom trawling operations and require the U.S. Coast Guard to consider recommendations on “areas to be avoided” as part of the port access route study.

Obama also orders the Coast Guard to release its PARS findings by the end of 2016 and relay its conclusions to the International Maritime Organization to facilitate the development of new measures by 2018.

The executive order also covers the withdrawal from future oil and gas leasing of 40,300 square miles of the Norton Basin planning area and some parts of the St. Matthew-Hall planning area.

DoD/News
Navy Adm. Kurt Tidd: Innovation & Collaboration Key to Counter Threat Networks
by Scott Nicholas
Published on December 12, 2016
Navy Adm. Kurt Tidd: Innovation & Collaboration Key to Counter Threat Networks


Navy Adm. Kurt Tidd: Innovation & Collaboration Key to Counter Threat Networks
Kurt Tidd

U.S. Navy Adm. Kurt Tidd, head of the U.S. Southern Command, sought to highlight the role of collaboration, innovation and trust between partners to counter adversaries’ finances and threat networks, DoD News reported Friday.

Shannon Collins writes Tidd discussed collaborative ideas for regional security during his opening remarks at the 15th Caribbean Nations Security Conference in San Juan.

“We must seek out and leverage the expertise of civil society, academia, and the private sector, who can bring fresh perspective, unique skill sets and innovative solutions to bear on complex challenges,” said Tidd.

“We must hone the skills and capabilities our forces need to succeed in a transformed security environment.”

The report noted that the two-day event tackled discussions on informational sharing, regional security strategies, security synchronization and transnational threat networks.

Government Technology/News
Air Force Academy Students Introduce Cyber Issue Tracker Software
by Scott Nicholas
Published on December 12, 2016
Air Force Academy Students Introduce Cyber Issue Tracker Software


Air Force Academy Students Introduce Cyber Issue Tracker SoftwareA group of Air Force Academy cadets have developed a new software that can keep track of cyber issues for Air Force Space Command mobile and online applications with the use of a chat room, user ratings and social media features, the Colorado Springs Gazette reported Thursday.

Wayne Heilman writes an AFA design class developed the CyberWorx Responsive Dashboard to feature a chat room, incident response reporting system, glossary of acronyms and an option to click on any part of the map for a detailed view.

The class utilized a “design thinking” concept to determine how to tackle specific issues and how to develop a system that can address such challenges as opposed to having an engineer fix technical problems.

Lt. Col. Michael Chiaramonte, an Air Force Academy associate professor of computer science, told the Gazette another class will start in January which will cover how to rewrite Air Force policies used in cyber personnel command and control systems.

Acquisition & Procurement/News
Boeing to Supply 80 Passenger Aircraft to Iran Air Under $16.6B Deal
by Jane Edwards
Published on December 12, 2016
Boeing to Supply 80 Passenger Aircraft to Iran Air Under $16.6B Deal


Boeing to Supply 80 Passenger Aircraft to Iran Air Under $16.6B DealBoeing has entered into a potential $16.6 billion contract to produce and supply 80 passenger aircraft to Iran Air.

The sales agreement with Iran Air was reached under the terms of the U.S. government license that Boeing secured in September, Boeing said Sunday.

The contract covers 50 Boeing-built 737 MAX 8, 15 777-300ER and 15 777-9 passenger planes.

Iran Air expects Boeing to deliver the first batch of airplanes in 2018.

Boeing’s 737 MAX 8 and 777X are scheduled to enter service in 2017 and 2020, respectively.

The Wall Street Journal reported Sunday the aircraft sale is subject to approval by Congress and the departments of Treasury and State because the deal involves a state-owned airline.

Robert Wall and Asa Fitch write the Obama administration encouraged the Iran Air-Boeing transaction and other similar deals as part of efforts to solidify a nuclear agreement with Iran.

The report said the airline also seeks to buy 118 planes from Airbus for an estimated cost of $25 billion.

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