New Communication
System Will Link Marines Ashore to Sea Base
By RICHARD R. BURGESS
Managing Editor
It had never been done before: a major assault launched from 658 miles
away, at sea. Task Force 58 — initially composed of 2,000 Marines
of the 15th Marine Expeditionary Unit — landed in southern Afghanistan
in November 2001 and established a base camp 55 miles south of the Taliban
stronghold in Kandahar. The Operation Enduring Freedom ground campaign
against al Qaeda and the Taliban was under way, with the new base — Camp
Rhino — as its initial hub.
But the assault created significant challenges in communications because
of the great distance between Task Force 58 and the sea base that launched
it — an amphibious ready group in the North Arabian Sea. Although
the task force had tactical satellite communications with its base, bandwidth
was limited and commanders at Camp Rhino initially had to rely on aircraft
such as U.S. Navy P-3C patrol planes and U.S. Marine Corps KC-130 transports
to relay communications to commanders on ships. Eventually satellite
dishes were brought in for wideband communications.
The mountainous terrain proved even more challenging. Backpack satellite
communications were used by ground troops, but they had to restrict the
number of radios in use due to bandwidth limitations.
To resolve these problems, the Marine Corps Warfighting Laboratory,
Marine Corps Base, Quantico, Va., developed a new portable, over-the-horizon
communications system that is being tested by Marine units in Iraq to
assess its link between command centers, fire-support commanders and
tactical units ashore during operations.
The Expeditionary Tactical Communications System (ETCS) is a voice and
data link between tactical units — down to the company, platoon
or squad level — and their combat commanders. It is envisioned
as a solution for rapidly advancing units that outstretch their ability
to communicate with commanders.
The new technology may lead to the development of a lightweight, flexible
network that will provide reliable communications from a sea base to
the expeditionary units farthest inland.
The ETCS is a 1.5-pound handset integrated with a Global Positioning
System receiver and a group radio controller to manage voice and data
traffic. Built by General Dynamics C4 Systems, Scottsdale, Ariz., the
handset can be connected with data terminals, Hammerhead Tablet ruggedized
laptop personal computers and handheld Commander’s Digital Assistant,
a militarized personal data assistant.
The vest-mounted handset — which can operate for 12 hours on the
charge of a 1.5-pound battery — is capable of encryption and can
conduct voice and data transmission and reception simultaneously over
a single channel. The handset also can be connected to helmets, mounted
on vehicles and linked to unmanned remote sensors.
The ETCS handset communicates via the constellation of Iridium mobile
satellites, enabling units to connect over mountainous terrain or with
a sea base far offshore. Satellite time on the Iridium constellation
is free to operational units, said Michael Fallon, director for Marine
Corps Programs at General Dynamics C4 Systems.
The Global Positioning System provides location information for all
ETCS users in the net, allowing commanders to view where their units
are on display screens.
The ETCS is designed to supplement current tactical satellite communications
capability.
The developmental ETCS units were to have been evaluated this year during
a planned experiment — Sea Viking 2004 — on the West Coast,
a live experiment without using fixed radio relays, to evaluate the system
in a beyond line-of-sight, “on the move” exercise from a
sea base to an objective, said Vince Goulding, director of Sea Viking
live experimentation at the Warfighting Lab. The deployment of the I
Marine Expeditionary Force (I MEF) to Iraq in March forced the cancellation
of the experiment, but the I MEF requested the ETCS be sent to Iraq for
end-user evaluation.
Ten ETCSs and three Hammerhead personal computers were deployed to Iraq
in August for field-level user evaluation with the I MEF, according to
Lt. Col. Pincher Martin, ETCS project officer and a Royal Marine exchange
officer with the Marine Corps Warfighting Lab.
A Warfighting Lab officer deployed to Iraq, Capt. Matt Simmons, is visiting
numerous units and introducing the ETCS “all over the area” for
testing and training, Goulding said. He noted that one specific ETCS
test scenario was its use in command and control of vehicle convoy operations.
“We hope to deploy another 400 production systems in November
to allow full MEF-wide concept evaluation,” he said.
General Dynamics was awarded $100,000 for an initial task order study
of ETCS, and has been provided approximately $3 million so far to develop
the system, Fallon said. The ETCS has been installed in a vehicle-mounted
version of the Unit Operations Center (OUC) — called the Combat
Operations Center — for an evaluation by the Warfighting Lab.
Also built by General Dynamics C4 Systems, the UOC — designed
to be set up on land in less than 40 minutes — is a scalable, portable
command-and-control center that is established as a sea-based maneuver
unit goes ashore. Shipped by Humvee-towed trailers that are air-transportable,
the UOC is set up as an air-conditioned tent complex with laptop computer
workstations, large-screen data displays and communications gear. The
UOC is designed to provide a commander with full battlefield awareness
and access to multiple-source information from command networks.
The Combat Operations Center — being evaluated in Scottsdale — is
a UOC with “on the move” capability for a battalion commander.
General Dynamics has delivered 15 UOCs to the Marine Corps. Eight are
now in Iraq with the I MEF, four are with ground units and four are with
units of the 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing. Last month, General Dynamics was
awarded a $7 million contract modification to provide engineering upgrades
to the UOCs in Iraq.
“My hat is off to [Brig. Gen. William D. Catto, commander, Marine
Corps Systems Command] for pushing [the UOCs] into Iraq for a field-user
evaluation.” Fallon said. “He took the program manager, Col.
Paul Ortiz, and 10 General Dynamics field engineers into Iraq to stand
up the capability.”
“The UOC is making a difference on how units coordinate information
and expidite decisions,” said Ortiz, who returned from Iraq in
July. “Operations are more cohesive.” He said the I MEF is
submitting an urgent need statement for 30 more UOCs.
The Marine Corps has a requirement for 372 UOCs. General Dynamics delivered
the first 15 under a low-rate initial production and expects to build
20 to 30 UOCs in fiscal year 2005. Fallon estimated that the total program
value would range from $370 million to $400 million. |