GPS News  
Defense Focus: FCS follies -- Part 1

disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only
by Martin Sieff
Washington (UPI) Jan 28, 2008
Are the cyber-pigeons coming home to roost?

For the past 2-1/2 years, we have been reporting in these columns about the growing problems generating by former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld's visionary Future Combat Systems program to make the U.S. armed forces unbeatable in the 21st century.

FCS had the ambitious vision of integrating the firepower of combat forces of the U.S. Army through a wireless network in real time. It offered the prospect of field commanders video conferencing with front-line officers in tanks on the battlefield. It offered the vision of minimizing combat casualties by sending in large numbers of robots to defuse mines and open ways through battlefields.

The program was one of the most costly in the history of the U.S. Army. The Washington Post Friday said its estimated cost was $200 billion. As we have previously reported in these columns, some estimates from the Congressional Budget Office and the Government Accountability Office have already gone 50 percent higher than that. And even those estimates assumed that the basic concepts of the program were sound and that it would work as projected.

In fact, as the Post reported Friday, the number of lines of software code required by the project has more than doubled in only the past five years. The Army originally reckoned it needed 33.7 million lines of code. Now it reckons it needs 63.8 million. The paper also cited Dennis Muilenberg, Boeing's project manager on the FCS, as maintaining that the original estimate was 55 million lines of software, not 33 million.

No one doubts that interconnectivity and rapid response is vital on the battle field. No one doubts the U.S. armed forces have enjoyed a decisive global superiority in applying these key technologies over the past quarter century. And no one with any sense doubts that it should be a top priority goal to seek to retain that advantage through the coming decades.

But as we have warned in these columns before, the FCS from the very beginning appeared doomed to failure: It sought to replace the flexibility easily available in modern off-the-shelf communications technology with enormously ambitious and rigid integrated goals that swallowed up limitless resources.

Yet, as we reported 2-1/2 years ago, three-star Army generals were cautiously warning back in August 2005 that the very concept of the FCS leaves it dangerously vulnerable to cyber-attack -- a form of asymmetrical warfare that China in particular has given top priority to, and that is also being developed energetically by Russia and India.

These concerns have since become more widespread. The Post report cited a warning from the Defense Science Board, which advises the Office of the Secretary of Defense, as saying last year, "Malicious code is a key concern of the FCS program (and it) lacks confidence in current tools for detecting malicious code."

In other words, the key strategic conception for continuing U.S. battlefield superiority for at least 20 years to come depends on an integrated software system that is still being developed, and that is certain to be vulnerable to hostile cyber-attacks even when it is finally completed.

But that is only the first of the strategic and conceptual problems that the FCS mega-project faces. There are even more fundamental ones.

-- (Next: The dangers of over-control)

Related Links
The latest in Military Technology for the 21st century at SpaceWar.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Military eyes new robotic vision system
Washington (UPI) Jan 25, 2008
Researchers say the military may employ small robots equipped with advanced three-dimensional vision technology in as little as a year.







  • China to build 97 new airports by 2020
  • Qatar Airways looking to natural gas fuel
  • EADS offers to build military, civilian aircraft in US
  • Purdue Wind Tunnel Key For Hypersonic Vehicles And Future Space Planes

  • China's auto production to exceed 10 mln in 2008: official
  • Japan's TEPCO to test park and charge system
  • Chevrolet Equinox Fuel Cell Wins Green Car Vision Award
  • Ultrabattery Sets New Standard For Hybrid Electric Cars

  • SELEX Sistemi Integrati Contracts With EU For Command, Control And Information System
  • Schriever Tests Antenna And Prepares For AFSCN Connection
  • Northrop Grumman Team To Compete For US Army Aerial Common Sensor
  • JPEO Joint Tactical Radio System Announces Successful Momentum Of JTRS Program

  • Northrop Grumman Spehar VP Kinetic Energy Interceptors
  • Japan to boost air defences: report
  • Olmert Backs Iron Dome Of Layered Missile Defense For Israel
  • ABM Turnaround In Seoul With SM-3s For Sejong The Great

  • Drought Length Influences Survival Of Fish In Stream Pools
  • Gates donates 20 mln dollars to help rice farmers: institute
  • WWF calls for supermarkets to boycott bluefin tuna
  • Thousands Of Crop Varieties From Four Corners Of The World Depart For Arctic Seed Vault

  • China To Monitor Global Disasters Through Satellite
  • IAEA team back at Japan's quake-hit nuclear plant
  • China launches emergency rescue for missing Russian ship
  • Mass false limb find to help quake victims

  • Methane Storage Material Exceeds US DoE Goals
  • Odin Satellite Operations Prolonged
  • Russian Earth-Orbiting Satellites To Use US Microchips
  • Second Life cracks down on virtual world banking

  • Meet Blob The Robot
  • Russian Fuel Flows Into Jules Verne Automated Transfer Vehicle
  • ESA Training Team ATV
  • Honda's ASIMO robot gets smarter

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement