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CCJ6 Director May 2013

USCENTCOM CCJ6 Building Regional Partner Communications and Cyber Security Capacity Armed Forces Communications & Electronics Association (AFCEA ) Luncheon. CCJ6 Director May 2013. The Overall Classification of this Brief is: UNCLASSIFIED//FOUO. Challenges to Building Partner Capacity.

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CCJ6 Director May 2013

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  1. USCENTCOM CCJ6Building Regional Partner Communications and Cyber Security CapacityArmed Forces Communications & Electronics Association (AFCEA) Luncheon CCJ6 Director May 2013 The Overall Classification of this Brief is: UNCLASSIFIED//FOUO

  2. Challenges to Building Partner Capacity DID YOU CONVINCE 83 COUNTRIES TO ADOPT STANDARDS THAT ONLY BENEFIT THE US WHILE DOOMING THE ENTIRE COALITION IN THE LONG RUN? HOW DID THE MULTINATIONAL STANDARDS MEETING GO?

  3. “4-3-2” Strategic Environment - 2015 Kazakhstan • SUNNI-SHIA • Social unrest, sectarian violence to increase Uzbekistan Kyrgyzstan • WAR ON TERROR • AOR instability portends a persistent AQ Movement • Hizballah-linked threats persist • ARAB-ISRAELI • Emotionally charged and unlikely to be resolved • Fuels sectarianism, violence Turkmenistan Tajikistan Syria Lebanon Afghanistan Iran Iraq • PAKISTAN-INDIA • PAK militants threaten high value targets in India • Sporadic cross-border fire • SYRIA • Internal unrest, sectarianism & civil war • Emerging safe haven for AQ Jordan Pakistan Kuwait Egypt Bahrain Saudi Arabia Qatar U.A.E. • ARAB AWAKENING • Political & economic drivers will lead to regional unrest • Future “awakenings” possible • IRAN • Persistent nuclear ambitions • Expanded operational reach, lethality and defense of spheres of influence Oman Yemen • PERCEPTION OF U.S. WITHDRAWAL • Regional competitors will project influence & engage emerging powers as an alternative to U.S. • AFGHANISTAN • Internal stability challenges • PAK haven an enabler for insurgency The CENTCOM AOR will be characterized by protracted conflict and unrest through 2015. The strategic environment will remain volatile, driven by Iran’s nuclear ambitions, the ongoing impact of the Arab Awakening, growing regional unrest and sectarianism, an expanding al-Qaida movement, and the withdrawal of U.S. forces in Afghanistan and Iraq.

  4. It all begins with Key Leader Engagement Developing trust through personal rapport Outward manifestation of commitment Evolving CCJ6 Engagement Strategy Developed from the USCENTCOM Theater Campaign Plan (TCP) Synchronized with Inter-Agency Plans, Policies, and Activities Central Region Communications Conferences Emergence of Cyber Security as an engagement enabler Cyber attacks stimulated immediate urgency Shared concerns – threat vectors have encouraged partnership Building Partner Capacity Building relationships first…

  5. Governance – common adjudication authority Policy – common set of rules /guidelines Bilateral agreements - Communication Interoperability and Security Memorandum of Agreements (CISMOAs) Security and Releasability Resources and Commitment Standards – common technical parameters Network, Hardware, and Software Data and Meta-Data PhysicalInfrastructure – interconnected networks and communities of interest Secure Gateways and Gateguards Challenges of C2 in a Coalition Environment Effective Coalition C2 requires… Making progress with networks solutions… still working on the policies

  6. UNCLASSIFIED//FOUO How do we create Cross-Combatant Command Communities of Interest? Today 2015 CENTCOM Partner Network Coalition Networks SIPR-Rel BICES CENTRIX Bilateral Requires Authorized Transfer Agent (ATA) to bridge the Air Gap Trusted Network Environment Current Without CMNT • Requirements to join a Community of Interest: • Existing Communications Interoperability and Security Memorandum of Agreement (CISMOA) • Formal request to join and comply with guidelines • Fund the partner’s portion of the network Common Mission Network Transport (CMNT) is a key enabling technology Future With CMNT Federation of Trusted Network Environment provides a global information sharing capability UNCLASSIFIED//FOUO

  7. UNCLASSIFIED//FOUO CENTCOM PARTNER NETWORK (CPN) FRAMEWORK USCENTCOM’s enduring secure network for strategic and operational information sharing up to SECRET RELEASABLE CPN = Trusted Network Environment integrated with bilateral and other U.S. networks Planning Intelligence Sharing Exercises CENTCOM Partner Network Command and Control Mission Network • Lines of Effort • - Bilateral Networks to regional partners • - Cross Domain Solution • - Engagement with regional partners • Partnerships with Office of the Secretary of Defense for Intelligence (OUSDI) and NSA • Key capability to fill information sharing gap with key partners in AOR • Joint Staff-validated requirement Acronyms: FMS – Foreign Military Sales VoIP – Voice over Internet Protocol HACI – High Assurance Control Interface COP – Common Operational Picture UNCLASSIFIED//FOUO

  8. UNCLASSIFIED//FOUO Way-Ahead Meet Plan Enable Act UNCLASSIFIED//FOUO

  9. At the end of the day…

  10. UNCLASSIFIED//FOUO Questions? UNCLASSIFIED UNCLASSIFIED//FOUO

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