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Air Force considers new computer technology and communications networking to stop nuclear attacks quickly
1. 2/14/2020 nuclear attack computer communications | Military & Aerospace Electronics
https://www.militaryaerospace.com/computers/article/14115302/nuclear-attack-computer-communications 1/5
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Air Force considers new computer technology and communications
networking to stop nuclear attacks quickly
FORGE seems to align with a Missile Defense Agency program described as Command and Control, Battle
Management and Communications System.
Feb 4th, 2020
WASHINGTON – The U.S. Air Force and industry are taking new technical steps to increase the time that decision makers have to
defend and potentially retaliate if the U.S. comes under nuclear attack. Kris Osborn at Warrior Maven reports. Continue reading
original article
The Military & Aerospace Electronics take:
4 Feb. 2020 -- This includes using emerging computer software, hardware, and architecture to migrate time-sensitive targeting
data to the cloud, increase network resiliency, and better connect space, air and ground nodes into a fast, seamless integrated
threat analysis system.
The current work, which includes new ways to engineer communications network nodes is part of an overall Pentagon strategy to
improve missile warning systems as quickly as new technology becomes available.
Part of this effort involves a recent $197 million deal between the Air Force and Raytheon to advance an emerging system called
Future Operationally Resilient Ground Enterprise (FORGE) to gather, store, safeguard, and network missile-attack related sensor
information.
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2. 2/14/2020 nuclear attack computer communications | Military & Aerospace Electronics
https://www.militaryaerospace.com/computers/article/14115302/nuclear-attack-computer-communications 2/5
Related: Nuclear ballistic missile command and control technology still a prime military concern
Related: Nuclear proliferation raises the specter of EMP attack
Related: Raytheon to build command-and-control SATCOM system to link nuclear forces to national command authorities
John Keller, chief editor
Military & Aerospace Electronics
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