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'Project Convergence' exercise tests Army's modernization efforts
by Ed Adamczyk
Washington DC (UPI) Sep 11, 2020

Pentagon rescinds order to shut down Stars and Stripes
Washington DC (UPI) Sep 11, 2020 - The Pentagon rescinded its order to close down the military newspaper Stars and Stripes, the publication announced.

The Defense Media Activity office also told Stars and Stripes ombudsman Ernie Gates that it will withdraw its request that Congress not fund Stars and Stripes in fiscal year 2021, the newspaper reported on Thursday.

The newspaper, funded by the Defense Department but independently edited, is supplied to U.S. service members across the world for news and information. It began publishing in the 1850s, and has been a military fixture since World War II.

The decision, several days ago, to defund the newspaper's operations provoked an outcry from members of Congress, many of whom are veterans who valued the publication while in military service.

The announcement comes after President Donald Trump on Sept. 4 tweeted that the funding, amounting to about $15.5 million per year, would not be cut "under my watch."

"It will continue to be a wonderful source of information to our Great Military!" Trump added.

Prior to Trump's announcement, a bipartisan group of 15 senators asked Defense Secretary Mark Esper to maintain the newspaper. In August, Esper said the funding was better used for "higher-priority issues."

The newspaper's long-term status, though, remains in doubt. It is not included in the Senate's version of the defense budget, although Sen. Lindsay Graham, R-S.C., and Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., announced their support for maintaining the publication.

"That's a concrete act," Gates said of Thursday's order to rescind. "Next, it's up to Congress to be sure there is money in the fiscal 2021 defense budget to keep it publishing."

The U.S. Army's "Project Convergence" is underway in Arizona to integrate its various fighting capabilities into a unified force, its chief said on Friday.

The exercise seeks to ensure that the Army can rapidly use all its domains -- air, land, maritime, space and cyberspace -- to contend with adversaries. It is part of a plan to bring together all weapons and capabilities into the Army's new Multidomain Operations warfighting concept.

The exercise, which began in August at the U.S. Army Yuma Desert Proving Ground, will conclude next week.

Project Convergence centers on delivering data and cloud technologies to tactical commands and includes an overarching requirement to reduce time in combat decision-cycles. Complete MDO capability is expected by 2035.

"When you look at the individual efforts of the Cross-Functional Teams and the labs and centers, it's impressive how far we have come in the past two years," Gen. John Murray, commander of the Army Futures Command said in a statement, "but unless all of those systems can talk and work together, it's going to limit our ability to effectively integrate into joint and allied systems."

"We couldn't afford to wait any longer. Understanding now where to focus our efforts, we're bringing all of these capabilities along together the right way," Murray said.

The exercises are the culmination of the Army's use of six modernization priorities, called Cross-Functional Teams.

The effort has led to development of Long-Range Precision Fires, the Next Generation Combat Vehicle, Air and Missile Defense, Future Vertical Lift, Army Network, Air and Missile Defense, and Soldier Lethality. Additional CFTs will include Synthetic Training Environments and Assured Position, Navigation, and Timing.

The Army cites three key phases of the MDO: penetrating and neutralizing enemy long-range systems from operational and strategic distances; disintegrating enemy anti-access and area denial systems by taking out enemy long- and short-range systems; and exploiting freedom to maneuver to defeat enemy objectives and forces.

"Convergence is one of the tenets," Murray told Defense News. "The ability to converge effects across all five warfighting domains -- we're really taking that tenet and putting it together in the dirt, live and bringing multiple things together. The key thing here is being able to act faster than any opponent in the future."

While structured experiments of the MDO have occurred regularly through 2020, the capstone event is in Yuma, bringing together all elements of the operation.

Murray compared the Yuma exercises to the "Louisiana Maneuvers," a series of mock battles during World War II to determine how available Army technology could effectively fight against Germany's use of aircraft, tanks and radios.

"It was a combination of those three technologies and how the Germans put it together to execute what we call Blitzkrieg," he said, a reference to Germany's fast-moving mechanized warfare technique.


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25-year-old soldier dies after collapsing during training exercise at Fort Hood
Washington DC (UPI) Sep 05, 2020
A 25-year-old soldier is dead after collapsing during a training exercise at Fort Hood in Texas, officials announced Friday. According to a press release from the installation, 25-year-old Pvt. Corlton L. Chee died Wednesday after collapsing during a training exercise last week. Chee was from Pinehill, N.M., and joined the Army in February 2020 as a tank crewman. He had been assigned to 2nd Battalion, 12th Cavalry Regiment, 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team, 1st Cavalry Division since July ... read more

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