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From: InfoSec News (isn_at_c4i.org)
Date: Fri Jan 10 2003 - 00:47:56 CST

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    http://www.fcw.com/fcw/articles/2003/0106/web-disa-01-09-03.asp

    By Dan Caterinicchia
    Jan. 9, 2003

    Rumors have been swirling for months around the Pentagon and in the
    private sector about a possible massive reorganization of the Defense
    Information Systems Agency, but a top DISA official said the rumors
    are untrue and that the agency is being given even more funding and
    responsibility.

    The war on terrorism and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's vision
    for transformation - focused on joint operations and enhanced command,
    control, communications, computer, intelligence, surveillance and
    reconnaissance (C4ISR) capabilities - has caused some DOD and industry
    officials to question whether DISA is the right agency to handle
    numerous tasks, including some of its core and "best-fit" (noncore)
    missions.

    DISA's five core missions are communications, command and control,
    defensive information operations, combat support computing, and joint
    interoperability support activities. One example of a best-fit mission
    is supporting White House and presidential communications systems,
    said Robert Hutten, director for strategic plans, programming and
    policy at DISA.

    DISA officials briefed DOD and service-level senior leaders on the
    agency's core and best-fit missions last year, and there were no
    proposals at that time to move functions to another agency, and there
    have not been any since then at that level, Hutten said.

    "There are always studies and people that propose things, but there is
    no active action right now that I know of that would cause that to
    happen," he said.

    One persistent rumor dogging DISA is that it will lose its authority
    over joint command and control programs to Joint Forces Command
    (JFcom). Army Lt. Gen. Joseph Kellogg Jr., director of command,
    control, communications and computer systems for the Joint Staff, has
    repeatedly called for JFcom to be put in charge of joint C2 programs,
    and late last year he said a decision was forthcoming to make that
    happen.

    Hutten said he had no doubt that JFcom's role in the joint C2 arena
    would be enhanced, but mostly at the tactical, or battle management,
    level as opposed to the strategic or operational level. He said that
    JFcom's role would be more "oversight and requirements gathering and
    generation," but that the acquisition programs would remain with the
    individual services and agencies that have them today.
     

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