Joint All-Domain Command and Control or JADC2 is the concept that the Department of Defense has developed to connect sensors from all branches of the armed forces into a § unified network powered by artificial intelligence.
Air Force and Navy aircraft (including F-22 and F-35 fighter jets), a Navy destroyer, an Army Sentinel radar system, a mobile artillery system, as well as commercial space and ground sensors, demonstrated their ability to collect, analyze, and share data in real-time to provide a more comprehensive picture of the operating environment.
[15] For more information, see JADC2 at the Army's Project Convergence experiments In July 2020, the Department of Defense carried out a second test of the JADC2 system.
Additionally, special operations personnel from eight other NATO nations and a simulated environment collaborated to deter a possible attack from Russia.
[19] Raytheon BBN demonstrated its Robust Information Provisioning Layer (RIPL)[29] which connects legacy links to ABMS.
A theater-level simulation tool will share data under a Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA), in order to visualize JADC2 scenarios.
[a][b] The Air Force's Common Tactical Edge Network joins 9 contractors, exploiting AI.
[38][39] The following material is split from Army Futures Command In April 2023 Joint Warfighting Concept 3.0 (JWC 3.0) was previewed.
[97] Released 27 August 2023, JWC 3.0 additionally involves °the ability to win in contested logistics,°information advantage, and °expanded maneuver.
Chance Saltzman, US Space Force[104] [105][106][107] By year-end 2025 there will be 126 Link-16 satellites operating in orbit, transmitting data in a world-wide mesh network.