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Guest editorial

Guest editorial JDAL 1,2 Supporting capability development with analysis Today, the Army is conducting its most significant restructuring effort since 1973, designing and establishing a new Army futures command (AFC). The driving force behind this effort is a concern that the Army’s current acquisition system would make a future near- peer fight very challenging. Whatever its final form, a modernized, AFC-led acquisition system will hinge upon the Army improving its capabilities development and associated requirements-determination processes, which will necessitate an enterprise-level refocus across the Army’s analysis community. Leaders within the Army analysis community, in coordination with the task force designing AFC, recently drafted an initial concept for executing integrated analysis that supports the new command. Key to implementing this concept will be a commitment to supporting capabilities development. The Army’s Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) has spearheaded the Army capabilities development for the past 40 years. However, TRADOC and the Army have at times struggled to define and evolve capability requirements. Our decentralized capabilities-development enterprise can lead each of the Army’s branch proponents to establish requirements that can optimize that branch’s functional capabilities. This leaves Army senior leaders to adjudicate and prioritize these competing functional requirements as they attempt to address http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of Defense Analytics and Logistics Emerald Publishing

Guest editorial

Journal of Defense Analytics and Logistics , Volume 1 (2): 2 – Jun 11, 2018

Abstract

JDAL 1,2 Supporting capability development with analysis Today, the Army is conducting its most significant restructuring effort since 1973, designing and establishing a new Army futures command (AFC). The driving force behind this effort is a concern that the Army’s current acquisition system would make a future near- peer fight very challenging. Whatever its final form, a modernized, AFC-led acquisition system will hinge upon the Army improving its capabilities development and associated requirements-determination processes, which will necessitate an enterprise-level refocus across the Army’s analysis community. Leaders within the Army analysis community, in coordination with the task force designing AFC, recently drafted an initial concept for executing integrated analysis that supports the new command. Key to implementing this concept will be a commitment to supporting capabilities development. The Army’s Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) has spearheaded the Army capabilities development for the past 40 years. However, TRADOC and the Army have at times struggled to define and evolve capability requirements. Our decentralized capabilities-development enterprise can lead each of the Army’s branch proponents to establish requirements that can optimize that branch’s functional capabilities. This leaves Army senior leaders to adjudicate and prioritize these competing functional requirements as they attempt to address

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Publisher
Emerald Publishing
Copyright
© In accordance with section 105 of the US Copyright Act, this work has been produced by a US government employee and shall be considered a public domain work, as copyright protection is not available.
ISSN
2399-6439
DOI
10.1108/jdal-12-2017-023
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

JDAL 1,2 Supporting capability development with analysis Today, the Army is conducting its most significant restructuring effort since 1973, designing and establishing a new Army futures command (AFC). The driving force behind this effort is a concern that the Army’s current acquisition system would make a future near- peer fight very challenging. Whatever its final form, a modernized, AFC-led acquisition system will hinge upon the Army improving its capabilities development and associated requirements-determination processes, which will necessitate an enterprise-level refocus across the Army’s analysis community. Leaders within the Army analysis community, in coordination with the task force designing AFC, recently drafted an initial concept for executing integrated analysis that supports the new command. Key to implementing this concept will be a commitment to supporting capabilities development. The Army’s Training and Doctrine Command (TRADOC) has spearheaded the Army capabilities development for the past 40 years. However, TRADOC and the Army have at times struggled to define and evolve capability requirements. Our decentralized capabilities-development enterprise can lead each of the Army’s branch proponents to establish requirements that can optimize that branch’s functional capabilities. This leaves Army senior leaders to adjudicate and prioritize these competing functional requirements as they attempt to address

Journal

Journal of Defense Analytics and LogisticsEmerald Publishing

Published: Jun 11, 2018

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