House Republicans Signal Support for Cadre of Military Spies
The US Defense Department's desire to create an unprecedented cadre of military spies is one step closer to becoming a clandestine reality.
- May. 21, 2013
You will be redirected to the page you want to view in seconds.
C4ISR FeaturesThe US Defense Department's desire to create an unprecedented cadre of military spies is one step closer to becoming a clandestine reality.
The Defense Department will allow government-issued iPhones and iPads to connect to the military's networks, the Pentagon announced Friday.
Col. Charles Wells is the program manager for the Army's Distributed Common Ground System, the service's effort to integrate all streams of intelligence.
The Obama administration has floated the idea of putting the CIA's controversial targeted killing operations under the control of the armed services.
In 1989, two small U.S. planes took off in Colombia's expansive Aburra Valley, the first flights of a surveillance operation that would ultimately reshape the American way of war.
The intelligence community is pushing to make biometrically enabled intelligence — the art of identifying people by fingerprints, digital mugshots, iris scans or DNA — a regular part of business.
Anyone watching from the ground in Afghanistan might have stared in astonishment at the strange battle that broke out overhead one day in 2011.
When the 9/11 Commission recommended, and Congress enacted into law, the requirement to scan 100 percent of cargo containers bound for the United States, it was recognized that technology did not exist at the time to enable compliance, but Congress foresa
Nestled off a road at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md., is a complex of modern office buildings that house some of the Army's most innovative programs.
Every major US defense contractor is busy building a new cyber center or announcing a revolutionary new cyber tool.
DNI James Clapper, who spoke about the intel community's handling of the Boston bomb suspects, was among the speakers at the 12th annual C4ISR Journal Conference.
Sen. Cardin: 'Eyes Wide Open' During Cyber Talks with China
With cellphones, convenience often is at odds with security and privacy. And that's true whether one is a Defense Intelligence Agency case officer, an international banker or an investigative reporter.
Unmanned aircraft, valued for their ability to hunt down the enemy without putting pilots in harm's way, are being considered for a new mission: marking airdrop zones for resupplying troops in the war zone.
New efforts tackle soaring cost — and demand — for satellite communications
The U.S. Air Force's point man on ISR expects to deliver architectures for the future of ISR to Chief of Staff Gen. Mark Welsh by this summer.