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Tag: multidomainoperations

5 articles

Modern LVC Tools Essential to Meet NAVPLAN

Modern LVC Tools Essential to Meet NAVPLAN

When flight hours are scarce and threats grow more complex, NAVPLAN makes clear that integrating Live‑Virtual‑Constructive (LVC) training into daily practice is essential. LVC lets carrier air wings rehearse multi‑domain fights affordably and continuously while generating the data needed to prove and accelerate readiness.

Analyst 207
SPARTA Integrates E-2D Simulation into JSE

SPARTA Integrates E-2D Simulation into JSE

This summer Collins Aerospace will deliver SPARTA — a deployable afloat/ashore E-2D trainer — into the DoD’s Joint Simulation Environment, letting crews rehearse sensing, command-and-control, and joint multi‑domain operations in a single shared synthetic battlespace. By simulating the Advanced Hawkeye’s sensors and C2 functions, SPARTA slashes flight hours while sharpening the carrier strike groups readiness for real-world contingencies.

Analyst 207
Why Modern LVC Training Is Essential for NAVPLAN Compliance

Why Modern LVC Training Is Essential for NAVPLAN Compliance

NAVPLAN requires training that mirrors modern, multi-domain warfare — and Live, Virtual, Constructive (LVC) training is the scalable, lower-risk solution, blending real forces, simulators, and computer-generated scenarios. It expands realistic practice, cuts cost and danger, and helps sailors and aviators stay ready for the fights ahead.

Analyst 207
Futuristic missile launcher on rugged coastline with massive wave crashing in foreground at dusk.

Typhon launcher: Stunning, Risky Maritime Gamechanger

This summer the U.S. Army surprised many by using its new Typhon launcher to strike a maritime target in the Pacific—an operational shot at Talisman Sabre that signals a bold shift toward land‑based fires shaping outcomes at sea and forcing rivals to rethink how they defend maritime space.

Analyst 207
modern C2 centers: Must-Have Resilience for Victory

modern C2 centers: Must-Have Resilience for Victory

As battlefields blur and speed trumps certainty, modern C2 centers face three urgent hurdles: turning overwhelming, messy data into rapid, trustworthy decisions; staying resilient when networks and sensors are jammed or hacked; and knitting multinational, misaligned systems into a single, trusted command. Solving them will mean smarter tech, tougher doctrine, and real-world drills that bind militaries, industry and allies together.

Analyst 207