
Photo Credit: Amy McLaughlin IMG_6766 British Staff Sgt. Leighton Davies of the 4/7 Regiment, Royal Artillery out of Portsmouth, England, explains the capabilities of the unmanned aerial vehicle Desert Hawk during a demonstration as part of Empire Challenge 2011 at Fort Huachuca.
Currently, required is a cross-domain secure guard to enable U.S. and coalition collaboration. Lockheed Martin’s development and employment of the latest generation of DIB technology within the DCGS Enterprise verifies data classification tags against user security credentials before allowing them access to data. This trusted computing layer enacts authentication and authorization access controls to enable coalition partners to discover and access intelligence via the DIB as it became available using interoperability standards. The benefit is twofold: U.S. and coalition partners share the same intelligence as it becomes available and, more significantly in today’s fight, trusted credentials and open architecture increases the availability of intelligence while reducing delivery time. Empire Challenge is an annual joint and coalition interoperability demonstration that showcases emerging U.S. and multi-national intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance solutions that can be fielded rapidly. The 2011 demonstration was held at Fort Huachuca with distributed locations throughout the United States and coalition sites in the United Kingdom, Canada and Australia.

