Leaders of any successful operation will tell you that communication is the key to making everything work. This is why communication infrastructure is always one of the first targets in a conflict. If the enemy can affect one’s ability to communicate, they can affect their ability to fight. Shooters and spotters need to talk, which is why having a robust communications system matters.
Early this year, the Air Force’s Air Mobility Command inked a deal with Persistent Systems to ensure airmen could stay in constant communication, no matter where they are or what the situation at hand may be.
From satellites to cell towers, it is easy to assume communication is a given. But what happens if those satellites are taken out or there are no cell towers? One answer is an ad-hoc radio network. Such networks are decentralized types of wireless networks that do not rely on pre-existing infrastructure. Instead, each node participates by forwarding data to other nodes. This is known as cloud networking.
Adrien Robenhymer, Persistent Systems’ vice president of business capture, explained, “We are connecting space, terrestrial, and all sorts of other data links that are common throughout the Air Force or the full DOD. We are able to utilize those in ways that they were just built for single purpose, like the walkie talkies. So now we can talk to jets that have radios that were made 30 years ago as if they were right next to us and they are on the other side of the country. We can update their target packages within seconds, as opposed to waiting for minutes or even hours as they come into other communication architectures.”
Creating that kind of mobile networking environment is one reason why Air Mobility Command inked a deal worth more than $5 million for more than 280 of their MPU5 handheld radios and 10 integrated sector antennas.
Robenhymer added, “The critical technologies that we are providing are specific. It is not something that is just, I would say, open. And there is a lot of innovation that goes into it, you know, from the standpoint of what our company provides as a non-traditional contractor. So we are providing technology ahead of what the requirements are asking for, because that is what it is going to take.”
Another reason the Air Force was willing to make the high-dollar deal was that the service saw Persistent Systems’ work firsthand during the Valiant Shield 2024 exercise in the Indo-Pacific. Over 11 days, their Wave Relay and Cloud Relay networking enabled U.S. commanders operating from forward-deployed and fixed operations centers all over the Pacific to test the Air Force’s Agile Combat Employment concept through the MANET C2 High Mobility Radio. This meant warfighters could talk to other warfighters no matter where or who they were.
Robenhymer noted, “Everything in the kill chain is reduced to seconds instead of minutes, and that gives them better situational awareness, better lethality and better accuracy when working with partner nations.”
Persistent Systems plans to deliver the full complement of MPU5 radios and integrated sector antennas to the Air Force in January, 2025.
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