Lessons Learned from the MSG- 128 Study on Incremental Implementation of NATO Mission Training through Distributed Simulation Operations

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Lessons Learned from the MSG- 128 Study on Incremental Implementation of NATO Mission Training through Distributed Simulation Operations Jean-Pierre FAYE (Behalf the MSG-128 TG) MSG-143 Symposium, Bucharest, ROU, 20-21 Sept 2016 Slide 1

AGENDA MTDS BACKGROUND SAS-034/MSG-001 First wave (2003-2005) NIAG SG-162 study (2011-2012) MSG-128 (2013-2017) Follow-on MSG-143 Symposium, Bucharest, ROU, 20-21 Sept 2016 Slide 2

MTDS value to NATO First WAVE successfully demonstrated potential value in NATO of networked simulation to enhance NATO s readiness for coalition air operations to prepare NATO Response Force Operational community in Nations enthusiastic F-16 ULT, Volkel, The Netherlands White Force RAF Lossiemouth CF-18 simulator, Bagotville, Canada Mirage 2000C simulator, Orange, France German Eurofighter Typhoon simulator, Munich Italian Eurofighter Typhoon pilots, Turin 15

NATO First WAVE FAC

1st Wave Lessons Learned Strengths 1. MTDS can provide relatively low cost training. 2. Time Saving due to use of national sim assets. 3. MTDS can be used as preparation for Live flying exercise. 4. Weapon employment (often not possible in live exercises). Opportunities 1. Carry out mission rehearsal with MTDS. 2. Unlimited options for the development and execution of varying scenarios. 3. To have actual threat reactions. Weaknesses 1. Unavailability of a permanent NATO (MTDS) network. 2. Infrastructure required. 3. Limited resources available for MTDS. Threats 1. Network security and site accreditation (caused withdrawal of the USAF assets in EFW and UK Tornado asset)

NIAG SG 162 Distributed Simulation for Air and Joint Mission Training MSG-143 Symposium, Bucharest, ROU, 20-21 Sept 2016 Slide 6

Vision of Mission Training via Distributed Simulation (NIAG SG 162) NATO MOC (Mission Operation Centre) NATO MTDS Network NAEW Air C2 Nation A MTDS Network NATO MTDS Exercices Daily training! National MOC Multinational MTDS Exercices FAC Nation B MTDS Network MSG-143 Symposium, Bucharest, ROU, 20-21 Sept 2016 Slide 7

NIAG MTDS Study Vision Team Training Collective Training Multi-Team Training, Multi-Platform, Service One Combined / Coalition Training National Capabilities Current GAP NATO responsibilities MSG-143 Symposium, Bucharest, ROU, 20-21 Sept 2016 Slide 8

NATO Mission Operation Centre (NMOC) Concept Simulation Information Processing Voice Comms Simulation Video Conference Telephone Facility Interactive Presentation Repository Repository Repository Repository POP POP POP POP National ARMY C2/ Simulators National Air Force C2/ Simulators Simulators National Navy C2/ Simulators and NATO/ National C2 Assets (Ex: NAEW&C) C2 DIREX (Current OPS or C2 roles) Point Of Presence, i.e: Interface between NATO and national network National Capabilities MSG-143 Symposium, Bucharest, ROU, 20-21 Sept 2016 NATO UNCLASSIFIED Releasable to PFP Nations Slide 9

NMTDS Roadmap (update) 2013 2017 2020 2025 Operational Technical Program NATO JCG C2 Governance Requirements Smart defence agr. MSG-128 Study MTDS standards National capabilities NAEW & JTAC Experimentations Follow-on NMOC (Direx) ISR, Joint Event IOC MOC MSG-143 Symposium, Bucharest, ROU, 20-21 Sept 2016 Slide 10

MSG-128 RTG Incremental Implementation of NATO Mission Training through Distributed Simulation (MTDS) Operations Team Leader: Dr Jean-Pierre FAYE (NIAG) Contributing NATO Members: CAN, DEU, ESP, FRA GBR, ITA, NLD, NOR, SWE (as PfP), TUR, USA/WPC, CASPOA COE, M&S COE, NAEW, NIAG Objective: - establish essential elements for a NATO MTDS environment, including: Concept, Standards and agreements, Legal and Security framework, Services infrastructure, Standing operating procedures - validate these elements through initial operational test and evaluation - support a Smart Defence project on NATO MTDS Themes/topics: - Missions - Assets - Organisation - Interfacing and Integration - Performance Contributing Partners: not open to Partners Start-End: Oct 2013 Oct 2016 Classification: NATO SECRET Related activity: MSG-001 / SAS-034 First Wave Output and Deliverables: - Final Report; - Initial implementation of a NATO MTDS environment; - Report including MTDS Concept (Employment and Use) and draft standards ratification plan; - Requirements document for NATO MTDS Initial Operational Capability. Exploitation: - Implementation of a persistent air combined and joint collective tactical training capability to support operational readiness of NATO collective and National air warfare capabilities. MSG-143 Symposium, Bucharest, ROU, 20-21 Sept 2016 Slide 11

MSG-128 Working Teams OPS TEK IMPL Define training objectives Define operational requirements Develop a CONOPS Identify and document MTDS assets Define MTDS missions and scenarios Develop the recommended reference architecture (MRAD) Conduct unclassified technical evaluations Describe a transition path to the MRAD Recommend required standards for MTDS in liaison with SISO and MS3 Develop and implement the initial architecture using existing assets Conduct initial exercises (including integration testing) Define and implement security requirements and a secure NATO network Assess the initial exercises and document the lessons learned Contribute to the MTDS CONOPS MSG-143 Symposium, Bucharest, ROU, 20-21 Sept 2016 Slide 12

Concept of Operations for MTDS 1. Same MTDS Exercise organization than CAX or Livex (ref Bi-SC 75-3) 2. Specific MTDS Exercise Mgt Infrastructure (MEM) for technical support of preparation, execution and debriefing 3. Subordinated centers to MEM and distributed responsibilities NSC: NATO/Nation Simulation Centre MSU: MTDS Simulation Unit 4. Human Resources by «Training Branche» MSG-143 Symposium, Bucharest, ROU, 20-21 Sept 2016 Slide 13

Implementation activity: 2 DIS exercises, 1 HLA ex. NAEW training Centre play NMOC role for the 3 exercises Network: CFBLNet (NCIA support) NS accreditation Legacy simulators: NAEW, CAN, DEU, FRA, NLD, NOR o Initially based on DIS evolution towards HLA RPR-FOM (gateway) o SIMPLE L16 and Radio voice communication for coordination between E-3A and Fighters HLA BOM L16, (Radio over HLA?) o Air to Air mission Air to Ground (correlated terrain objects) Supporting Tools o JCHAT, VoIP for instructors, DIS/HLA gateways, Encryption, Growing complexity of exercise and architecture Test Plan version for each exercise MSG-143 Symposium, Bucharest, ROU, 20-21 Sept 2016 Slide 14

Technical & Standardization activities MRAD architecture (MTDS Reference Architecture) DSEEP Multi-Architecture Overlay (DMAO) o DIS V7 & HLA 1516 o Radio communication (DIS HLA) o L16 messages Federation agreement MTDS FOM based on RPR-FOM Tactical data link (TDL) for MTDS Enumerations for entities and emitters Time representation and dead reckoning Simulated radio communications Federation states including startup and shutdown procedures Modelling responsibility and Common damage models Synthetic Natural Environment agreements. MSG-143 Symposium, Bucharest, ROU, 20-21 Sept 2016 Slide 15

3rd MSG-128 exercise architecture: DIS/HLA/L16/VoIP Cloud MSG-143 Symposium, Bucharest, ROU, 20-21 Sept 2016 Slide 16

MSG-128 Lessons Learned Strengths 1. Availability of a permanent network: CFBLnet 2. Cost for training decreasing and technology deployment growing, 3. Realistic mission training with real operators and war fighting capability (often limited in live exercises). 4. Availability of test and research simulators Opportunities 1. Multi Level Security technology 2. Availability of COTS: Gateways, CGF 3. CFBLNET services: VoiP, JCHAT, 4. Simulation for MTDS interoperability testing (DIS/HLA, L16, ) 5. NATO Operational exercise emerging (virtual magic, Spartan Warrior, ) Weaknesses 1. DMOC Availability 2. Limited availability of national and NATO simulation assets and resources 3. Lack of ownership and governance from the NATO training community 4. NATO Secret Accreditation required 5. Requested effort for Tests before exercise 6. Availability of Common terrain data for nations and federation of simulators Threats 1. Site accreditation is a long process 2. Planning conflict between usual national training activities and multinational training 3. MTDS Level of maturity within MTDS community MSG-143 Symposium, Bucharest, ROU, 20-21 Sept 2016 Slide 17

Recommendations for MTDS Follow-on (1/2) Governance of MTDS is essential Improve maturity level o Stabilization of implementations o Continue yearly tests and exercises for faster execution of the test plan and integration of new comers. o Transition towards operational exercises: Spartan Warrior, Virtual Magic Multi Level Security o Accredited bidirectional Information Exchange Gateway supporting: 1) Declassification of data for publication toward lowest network classification 2) Data integrity checking for data coming from lowest network classification Initiate MTDS Infrastructure developments: o Identify COTS for Collaborative tools for preparation, execution and analysis of exercises and test implementation MSG-143 Symposium, Bucharest, ROU, 20-21 Sept 2016 Slide 18

Recommendations for MTDS Follow-on (2/2) Toward Future combined / joint distributed tactical training, through simulation for joint and combined tasks and operations (NIAG study SG-215) o Extension to Air and Joint operations Scenario: Mission rehearsal and operational assessment of air and C2 systems (including data links) in all core air power roles and types of air operations (Counter-Air, Attack, Air Mobility, JISR, and Personnel Recovery) for aircrews, controllers (i.e. NAEW, Forward Air Controllers, Joint Air Terminal Controllers), and CAOC/JFAC staff. Scope: C4ISTAR, UAVs, Fighters, Ships and Land assets Ensure continuity of MSG-128 by addressing identified gaps o Scenario preparation tool at MEM level interfaced with Air C2 databases and JISR database o Standardization of scenario distribution o Full Sim-C2 interoperability for Air and Joint operations MSG-143 Symposium, Bucharest, ROU, 20-21 Sept 2016 Slide 19

MSG-143 Symposium, Bucharest, ROU, 20-21 Sept 2016 Slide 20