“JCR can talk to a SOSCOE-equipped vehicle. What this allows is the bulk of the Army to keep pace with the future battle command developments,” Taylor said. New capabilities JCR can bring to the battlefield include an L-band satellite network with an encryption device called KGV-72 that allows for secure exchange of information, said Tim Rider, Army spokesman at Fort Monmouth, New Jersey. The software also will allow forces to view a photo from a nearby UAV on the tracking systems, Taylor said.
JCR also has a simplified version of the Enhanced Position Location Reporting System terrestrial radio network, Rider said. This line-of-sight radio capability allows JCR to function without a satellite connection if needed. “You could pull in a photo of an objective that a UAV has provided,” Taylor said. JCR also brings a new map engine called Common Joint Mapping Tool Kit that expands use of current commercial imagery products, Rider said. These developments are seen as crucial steps in Army and Marine Corps efforts to employ a new, joint Blue Force Tracking-type technology called Joint Battle Command Platform, slated to be ready in 2010. The Army plans to field up to 120,000 new or retrofitted JBC-P sets. The Marines plan to receive enough gear to outfit 20,000 vehicles.