scorecard
  1. Home
  2. Military & Defense
  3. US Army creates new office to rapidly deploy advanced technologies to the field

US Army creates new office to rapidly deploy advanced technologies to the field

Alex Lockie   

US Army creates new office to rapidly deploy advanced technologies to the field

electronic warfare counter IED afghanistan

US Army photo by Sgt. Michael J. MacLeod

A paratrooper with the 82nd Airborne Division's 1st Brigade Combat Team passes before the rising sun during a patrol into a village May 4, 2012, Ghazni Province, Afghanistan. The equipment on his back is used to block remotely detonated improvised explosive devices.

On Wednesday, the US Army announced the creation of the Rapid Capabilities Office to "expedite critical technologies to the field in an effort to counter urgent and emerging threats."

Essentially that means the Army now has an office with the authority to fast track technologies through the hulking, bloated, wasteful defense acquisition system that tried and failed three times to pick out something as simple as a new handgun.

Even vital systems can take 10 years to reach the field, which has greatly hamstrung the Army and made their tactics stale, predictable, and therefore vulnerable.

"Russia goes into the Ukraine and Russia goes into Syria [and] we realize that they've been watching us and learning from us and adapting. So we see some areas where we want to have a more pronounced 'overmatch,"' Army Secretary Eric Fanning told Bloomberg News in an interview.

Ukraine Russia

AP

A pro-Russian soldier is back dropped by Russia's flag while manning a machine-gun outside an Ukrainian military base in Perevalne, Ukraine.

Fanning told Bloomberg's Anthony Capaccio that the office would focus on "improvements to cyber operations, electronic warfare, survivability and GPS-enabled positioning, navigation and timing."

As Deputy Secretary of Defense Robert Work said of the US armed forces in 2015, "our greatest advantage is the vibrant technological community in the United States, and the vibrant technological communities in our defense industrial base."

However, as Daniel Gouré, Ph.D., of the Lexington Institute points out, with the current lag between technology's inception to its deployment on the frontlines, adversaries like Russia and China could gain technological supremacy over the US in as little as five years.

china hack

REUTERS/Edgar Su

Cyber attacks from Russia and China specifically have weakened the US' asymmetrical advantage in battle, and in some cases shaken political stability at home.

"There's no denying we have a troubled acquisition past," Fanning told Bloomberg. "We are bringing all elements of the Army together," he said of the Rapid Capabilities Office.

"We're serious about keeping our edge, so we need to make changes in how we get soldiers the technology they need," Fanning said in a US Army release. "The Army Rapid Capabilities Office is a major step forward, allowing us to prioritize cross-domain, integrated capabilities in order to confront emerging threats and advance America's military dominance."

NOW WATCH: An Army general explains the worst thing an enemy could do to America

READ MORE ARTICLES ON



Popular Right Now



Advertisement