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International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B2. Istanbul 2004
Figure 5. Example military overlay in GIS environment of C2IS
4 STANDARDS, STATED BY NATO
4.1 Automated Information Systems (AIS) Developed by
NATO
Over recent years the Strategic Commands’ (SC) operational
Command and Control (C2) Information Systems (C21S)
services have developed along independent paths and to their
own schedules. This has resulted in two main systems: the
Automated Command and Control Information System of
Allied Command Europe (ACE ACCIS) and the Maritime
Command and Control Information System (MCCIS) of Allied
Command Atlantic (ACLANT). In addition, a plethora of
operational C21S services have been fielded throughout NATO,
generally without reference to the achievement of wider
systems coherence or interoperability; many of these now fall in
the category of legacy systems requiring replacement.
In order to promote interoperabilty, portability, scalability and
cost effectiveness across the whole life cycle of AIS and to
comply with the relevant Defence Capabilities Initiative (DCI)
action items and the NATO Consultation, Command and
Control Organisation (NC3O) Goals and Objectives, the two
SC's have agreed to achieve architectural convergence and
management harmonisation with respect to all AIS services.
4.1.1 NC3O0 Objectives: The objectives of the NC3O are
identified below: :
® To integrate and improve the capabilities currently provided
by the AIS services within ACE and ACLANT and to
NATO HQ, in order to achieve effective and interoperable
consultation, command and control and general
administrative functions suitable for flexible direction and
execution of day-to-day operations within and beyond
NATO's Area of Responsibility (AOR).
® To merge MIS and C2IS to progressively attain an
integrated Bi-SC AIS.
* To facilitate the design and subsequent operation of systems
that provide improved information flow across hierarchical
boundaries, including operational forces, e.g. CJTF-
requirements, and that maximise interoperability with
_ national systems.
4.1.2 Evolution Steps :
maintained step by step :
* Establishment of the common configuration among system
users, including common software and hardware.
Evolution of the programme was
e In order to maintain interoperability among different user
groups, establishment of the Military Message Handling System
(MMHS) or NATO Messaging System Handling Project
(NMS).
e Through a combination of evolution steps it will expand the
geographic scope of CCIS and provide for information
exchange with a number of national sites concerned with
NATO planning and consultation. Next step will be
implemented as a Bi-SC effort in order to facilitate the
convergence of ACE ACCIS and MCCIS to a Bi-SC AIS Core
Capability by year 2004.
e The last step has been planned to integrate the Functional
Area Services (FAS) across the homogeneous application
platform built by the Bi-SC Automated Information System
(AIS.) These FASs, supported by common core products,
provide specific applications to one or more mission areas (e.g.,
OPS, LOG, and Personnel.) These are normally provided by a
database server and soflware applications, which run on either
the end-user desktop, or on a separate application server, and
render the requisite data to the end-users and facilitate data
transactions such as display and modification. This step will be
enabled by a specific set of FAS CPs, which are currently being
developed.
The Figure 6, provides a high-level system view that depicts the
Bi-SC AIS Services Paradigm adopted for the Bi-SC AIS
Architectural Framework. It comprises:
e the WAN;
e a Core Capability containing common services (e.g. core
services and system management services);
e Specific C2 (e.g. Land C2) and Administrative (e.g.
Financial) services, which are accessed by users via the
enabling functionality provided by the Core Capability.
The Wide Area Network is the data network infrastructure that
interconnects the Bi-SC AIS nodes. Its boundary lies within the
WAN gateway facilities (currently access routers). The WAN is
in the network domain, along with other communications
services such as video tele-conferencing and telephony. lt is
therefore not part of the Core Capability although it is essential
to interconnecting AIS nodes.
The Bi-SC AIS Core Capability is the foundation on which the
Bi-SC AIS will be built. As such it will provide the common
services to support the SCs end users' core business. The
achievement of the Bi-SC AIS Core Capability will be the first
Bi-SC AIS convergence milestone and will be the result of the
harmonisation and standardisation of the Core Capability
services of the two SCs: i.e. ACE-ACCIS core components and
the ACLANT MCCIS Architectural Convergence Initiative
(MACI) core components. This will include the common
implementation of other essential capabilities (e.g. message
handling, document management, etc.).