Formålet med bloggen er å bidra til informasjon om luftfart av alle slag. Også litt om ubåter og forsvarsspørsmål. Nyheter vil du finne her også, en del på engelsk som er det mest brukte luftfartsspråket. Har du selv noe som bør komme ut, så send meg en mail til per.gram@hesbynett.no
fredag 13. august 2021
US Navy med verdensomspennende øvelse - Defence Daily
NAVAL
STATION NORFOLK, Va. – The Large Scale Exercise 2021 taking place across the
globe is meant to validate the U.S. Navy and U.S. Marine Corps’ new operating
concepts — but it’ll also be the biggest test yet of a live, virtual and
constructive (LVC) training framework that has never been asked to connect so
many players around the planet in real time.
The LSE 21 exercise,
which kicked off Aug. 3, includes 25,000 participants across 17 time
zones — some at the tactical level on 25 ships at sea or at the pier, some at
the headquarters level in Navy maritime operations centers or Marine Corps
combat operations centers ashore and some in the middle at task groups and
strike groups scattered around the world.
For the first
time ever, these echelons are coming together in a single training event that,
in real time, pushes the individual sailor in a combat information center just
as hard as it pushes the four-star admiral trying to maneuver multiple battle
groups. It’s enabled by the Navy Continuous Training Environment web of
technologies.
The LVC
exercise scenario originates from the Navy Center for Advanced Modeling and
Simulation, located at the Navy Warfare Development Command headquarters here
at Naval Station Norfolk. The participants will be linked together as the
two-week exercise unfolds.
Though Navy leaders declined to discuss the details of the scenario, it will
include a buildup of tensions into a crisis and the eruption of war, in such a
way that forces in the Atlantic, Pacific and Europe all have to sense their
environments, track potential threats and communicate to the four-star
commander about how they are seeing the crisis unfold from their vantage
points. The admirals can then use the assets in their theaters to conduct the
war fight — the best sensors and the best shooters, under the distributed
maritime operations concept — within the LVC setup.
The Navy has
spent the last several years moving from an outdated and stovepiped simulator
training construct that focused on single platforms — a flight simulator for
just one type of airplane, or an Aegis Combat System trainer for one or two
warfare areas on a surface combatant — to a comprehensive network of ships,
simulators and laboratories that can play together in complex training
scenarios.
For LVC to
be successful and cost-effective, all the pieces must come together: 130
surface ships and 11 training ranges are now outfitted for LVC training as the
live piece; more than 70 aircraft simulators allow real people in fake
airplanes to play in the scenario as the virtual piece; and 14 simulation sites
and battle labs can insert constructive, or computer-generated, forces into the
scenario to add complexity.
Vice Adm.
Jim Kilby, the deputy commander of U.S. Fleet Forces Command, told reporters
training events earlier in his career would rely on Learjets with pods that
would make them appear as incoming missiles on a ship’s radar, for example. If
a shipboard operator didn’t respond correctly, if the pod malfunctioned or if
the jet needed to refuel, a whole day’s worth of training could be ruined.
Multiply that by the 25 ships that are participating in LSE 21 globally, and
it’s hard to imagine doing an exercise of this scale in a live-only manner.
With LVC,
though, dozens or hundreds of incoming missiles can be simulated without the
cost or logistics of flying the Learjets.
“That’s the
technology piece that we’re building up that has been really limited, limited
in my lifetime,” Kilby said. “Certainly in the last five years, it’s grown to
allow us to stimulate those conditions that we think we need to because of what
we think the adversary will do. That would be very expensive for us to do in a
live manner, so to me, all this connectivity” is the only way the Navy can
accurately rehearse distributed maritime operations.
Ron Keter,
who serves as the technical director for Large Scale Exercise 2021, told
reporters the Navy chose to create a single LVC training environment for
tactical training — preparing ships and units to deploy — as well as
operational-level exercises to train fleet headquarters staffs.
By having
this single LVC environment, he said, participants at all levels can be put
through their paces during LSE 21.
Ingen kommentarer:
Legg inn en kommentar
Merk: Bare medlemmer av denne bloggen kan legge inn en kommentar.