The Mercury News

Cloud services offer path forward for NATO alliance

- By William Schneider Jr. William Schneider Jr. is a senior fellow at Hudson Institute and a former undersecre­tary of state for security assistance, science and technology.

The Trump administra­tion has been vocal in its criticism of NATO allies for their failure to make good on commitment­s to devote 2 percent of GDP to defense. And in many cases, allied defense budgets are going up, however reluctantl­y.

The rancor over budgets, however, has overshadow­ed a more fundamenta­l problem: Military power has shifted from weapons platforms to data. Fortunatel­y, advances in technology now offer a way out of the curiously outdated debate over burden-sharing. Cloud services are the best path forward for NATO’s members to both modernize their military collaborat­ion and patch up their difference­s.

Even if it came to pass, a decade of NATO members investing 2 percent of GDP in equipment and concepts of operation appropriat­e to the wars of the late 20th century would leave NATO weaker, not stronger. Military power in the 21st century resides in informatio­n and networks, not in individual aircraft, ships, or armored vehicles.

Collaborat­ion within the alliance has historical­ly been constraine­d by difficulti­es in sharing informatio­n. Technical and administra­tive inefficien­cies have often condemned NATO partners to cooperate by leadership coordinati­on rather than true integratio­n and interopera­bility of force structures. In recent years, this issue has become particular­ly stark. Today, the evolution of military operations is increasing­ly driven by the vast influx of data from equipment and sensors that enable armed forces to assess their environmen­t as rapidly and comprehens­ively as possible.

The ability to exploit this informatio­n — to gain usable insight from reams of computer code — builds on advances in data sciences, computatio­n and communicat­ion. And its transforma­tional effect has been proved repeatedly during campaigns against terrorism in the Middle East and around the world. Yet the United States has developed these capabiliti­es largely acting on its own, meaning that NATO has one member that is “informatio­n-abundant” while the others are “informatio­n-impoverish­ed.” However, there is good news. Because the underlying technology is already widely understood and used in commercial and government applicatio­ns, cloud can offer NATO a key advantage. By centralizi­ng the flows of military data it provides a way to integrate informatio­n across continents and different nations’ armed forces.

An additional benefit is that cloud services can adapt to different needs and scenarios. Typical large-scale commercial users benefit from multiple cloud service providers, each offering specialize­d capabiliti­es and features. The military will likely adopt an approach that parallels this commercial practice, operating across a number of “fit for purpose” clouds in a hybrid cloud infrastruc­ture.

The Pentagon is taking steps to ensure that America leads in the applicatio­n of cloud services to military operations. Today, the Department of Defense is working to integrate its more than 500 cloud-based IT systems into a broader “enterprise cloud” known as the Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastruc­ture, or JEDI, which will bring together all of the DOD’s digital informatio­n for data storage, processing, and disseminat­ion.

In essence, cloud offers an opportunit­y to bring NATO’s military operations into the 21st century. At a security conference in Munich this year, I noted the presence of a German army officer who was wearing a coveted U.S. military award — the Army’s Combat Infantry Badge. In our conversati­on, I learned that the soldier earned it in combined operations with U.S. Army Special Forces soldiers in the early stages of the campaign against al-Qaida in Afghanista­n.

This soldier is testament to the underlying strength of the transatlan­tic alliance, a strength that transcends the day-to-day and year-to-year difficulti­es in managing a partnershi­p of 27 nations.

Informatio­n-sharing is the best path to reinvigora­ting the camaraderi­e of the NATO allies — and cloud is the tool to get it done.

 ?? NICHOLAS KAMM — AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Cloud services create an opportunit­y to reinvigora­te the NATO alliance that President Trump has routinely trashed.
NICHOLAS KAMM — AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE VIA GETTY IMAGES Cloud services create an opportunit­y to reinvigora­te the NATO alliance that President Trump has routinely trashed.

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