By Cheryl Pellerin
DoD News, Defense Media Activity
WASHINGTON, Feb. 24, 2015 – The Defense Department is
seeking novel ideas to shape its future, and officials are looking to industry,
small business, academia, start-ups, the public –- anyone, really –- to boost
its ability to prevail against adversaries whose access to technology grows
daily.
The program, called the Long-Range Research and Development
Plan, or LRRDP, began with an Oct. 29 memo by DoD acquisition chief Frank Kendall.
The memo said the LRRDP will identify high-payoff enabling
technology investments that could help shape future U.S. materiel investments
and the trajectory of future competition for technical superiority. The plan
will focus on technology that can be moved into development programs within the
next five years.
Full and Immediate Support
“This effort is of the highest priority and requires full
and immediate support from across the department,” Kendall wrote.
On Jan. 28, the department published a request for
information, seeking to identify current and emerging technologies or
projections of technology-enabled concepts that “could provide significant
military advantage to the United States and its partners and allies in the 2030
timeframe.”
During a recent media roundtable here, LRRDP program lead
Stephen P. Welby, deputy assistant secretary of defense for systems
engineering, said the RFI deadline has twice been extended, and that more than
300 responses have come in.
“We have gotten some very talented folks replying to the
RFI,” Welby said. Ideas are coming from small businesses, from traditional
defense sources, and “some from surprising places we hadn't thought might
respond,” Welby said. “And that's exactly what we're hoping to get from this,”
he added.
Defense Innovation Initiative
The LRRDP is part of the larger Defense Innovation
Initiative, an effort to harness the brightest minds and cutting-edge
technology to accelerate the way the department innovates and operates.
Deputy Defense Secretary Bob Work is managing and
integrating the initiative’s five technology areas, one of which is the LRRDP.
In a summer meeting, Welby said, Work “introduced and drew out a historical
analogy to where we are today.”
In 1973, the nation was moving out of the Vietnam War, where
the military had been focused on counterinsurgency. Budgets were declining. And
the Soviets, among other things, gradually had begun to build up their
strategic nuclear forces, Work said during a January speech.
In the summer of 1973, with the dangers of nuclear
escalation growing, what would later become the Defense Advanced Research
Projects Agency, or DARPA, launched the first LRRDP program to give the
president and the joint force better tools for responding to a Warsaw Pact
attack, the deputy secretary said.
The group recommended going after conventional weapons with
near-zero miss capability -- “a very simple idea that had profound implications
throughout the entire defense program,” he added.
In 1977, the DoD leadership directed DARPA to integrate all
of the promising military technologies into a system of systems for deep
attack. The program, Assault Breaker, called for aircraft with
light-area-sensor cueing and surface-to-surface ballistic missiles that could
dispense a blanket of anti-armor submunitions.
Picking a Competitive Advantage
Assault Breaker demonstrated its capabilities in 1982 at the
White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico, and Work said the Soviets were
watching.
“The implications of that single demonstration … really
caused them to pause,” he added.
Ultimately, Assault Breaker led to development of the Air
Force’s 17 E-8 Joint Surveillance Target and Attack Radar System, or JSTARS,
aircraft, its air-to-ground BLU-108 sensor-fuzed weapon with terminally guided
submunitions, and the long-range, surface-to-surface Army Tactical Missile
System called ATACMS.
“We had picked a competitive advantage that we knew our
adversary, the Soviets, could not duplicate and therefore injected uncertainty
in their minds, changing their war-fighting calculus,” Work explained.
The joint force took over Assault Breaker, the deputy
secretary said, “and we continued to build [the advanced capability] even in an
era of declining budgets, starting in 1985.”
Demonstrating the Capability
U.S. forces demonstrated the capability, including that of
the E-8C JSTARS side-looking airborne radar system with moving target
indication, to the rest of the world in 1990 and 1991. This was during Operation
Desert Storm, Work said, “when the Iraqi heavy formations built on the Soviet
model were virtually reduced to an array of targets.”
Forty-two years after the plan’s inception, the second
iteration of LRRDP is still accepting idea submissions, Welby said, noting that
the LRRDP program page at the department’s Innovation Marketplace website
features a conspicuously placed green box that says, “Share your ideas.”
Submissions should focus on technology-enabled capabilities
that could to enter formal development in the next five to 10 years, the RFI
says, offering military advantage during the 2025 to 2030 timeframe.
The LRRDP is looking for relatively mature technologies that
can be applied in novel ways for a new kind of system capability, emerging technologies
that can quickly be turned to new military capabilities, or technologies for
nondefense applications that can offer new military capabilities.
Technology Priorities
Five technology priority areas include space, undersea
technology, air dominance and strike, air and missile defense, and other
technology-driven concepts.
When program officials find an idea interesting, one of five
teams will be sent to speak with the submitting person or company, Welby said,
adding that in mid-summer, the best ideas will be shared with Defense Secretary
Ash Carter.
“The customer for this is the leadership of the department,”
he said, “to help them think through the future and think differently about
what the world's going to look like.”
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