• Media type: E-Book
  • Title: Implementation actions for improving Air Force command and control through enhanced agile combat support planning, execution, monitoring, and control processes
  • Contributor: Lynch, Kristin F. [Author]; Maletic, Amy L. [Author]; Romano, Daniel M. [Author]; Drew, John G. [Author]; Yi, Jin Woo [Author]; Tripp, Robert S. [Author]
  • Corporation: Project Air Force (U.S.)
  • Published: Santa Monica, CA: RAND Corporation, 2014
  • Published in: Technical report ; RR-259-AF
  • Extent: 1 Online-Ressource (xxiv, 58 pages)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN: 9780833090041; 0833090046
  • Keywords: United States Air Force Operational readiness ; United States ; Military planning United States ; Command and control systems United States ; Military planning ; Command and control systems ; Armed Forces ; Operational readiness ; HISTORY ; Military ; Aviation ; Electronic books
  • Origination:
  • Footnote: "Contract no. FA7014-06-C-0001."--Title page verso
    "RR-259-AF"--Cover page 4
    "Research report
    "Prepared for the United States Air Force, approved for public release; distribution unlimited"--Title page
    Includes bibliographical references (pages 53-58)
  • Description: "The focus of this analysis is on how enhanced ACS processes can be implemented and integrated into the Air Force and Joint command and control (C2) enterprise. Using the vision for enhanced C2 provided in the updated architecture developed as a companion piece to this analysis, we identify and describe where shortfalls or major gaps exist between current ACS processes (the AS-IS) and the vision for integrating enhanced ACS processes into Air Force C2 (the TO-BE). We evaluate C2 nodes from the level of the President and Secretary of Defense (SECDEF) to the units and sources of supply. We also evaluate these nodes across the operational phases, from readiness preparation through planning, deployment, employment, sustainment, and reconstitution."--Provided by publisher

    "The focus of this analysis is on how enhanced ACS processes can be implemented and integrated into the Air Force and Joint command and control (C2) enterprise. Using the vision for enhanced C2 provided in the updated architecture developed as a companion piece to this analysis, we identify and describe where shortfalls or major gaps exist between current ACS processes (the AS-IS) and the vision for integrating enhanced ACS processes into Air Force C2 (the TO-BE). We evaluate C2 nodes from the level of the President and Secretary of Defense (SECDEF) to the units and sources of supply. We also evaluate these nodes across the operational phases, from readiness preparation through planning, deployment, employment, sustainment, and reconstitution."--Provided by publisher
  • Access State: Open Access