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A COMPARISON OF CIVILIAN AND MILITARY NETWORKED COMMAND AND CONTROL SYSTEMS

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Journal of Battlefield Technology, Volume 9 Number 2

P.G. Gilby, S.P. Stockley, J.A.K. Walker and C.R. Walters

 

Abstract. UK military command and control infrastructure is undergoing significant change due to the deployment of systems such as Bowman, introducing a network-enabled capability to support command. This paper reviews how other organisations operate in a networked environment, taking two comparators, one civilian and one military. The civilian comparator was the UK-based motoring organization, the Royal Automobile Club (RAC), which supports its emergency rescue activities with a Customer Management System, comprising a Microsoft Access database that structures each emergency call and provides an automated response, the aim being to use resources efficiently whilst minimising response time. The military organization was that of the French Army who have developed their digitized capability incrementally over a period of 20 years. Although there are major differences between RAC and the French military in mission and role, both have incorporated into their command structure a bespoke Information and Communication System (ICS), with resultant benefits in situational awareness, and fast and effective response. The advent of the UK defense Information Infrastructure (DII) should provide these same benefits and more when it is fully implemented.

Related topics:  Command support systemscommand systems

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