FIELDING THE FUTURE
CONTAMINANT FREE ZONE
The NBCRV’s upgraded sensor suite package will use the manned-unmanned teaming concept to allow detection of CBRN threats at a distance using unmanned air and ground vehicles, reducing the risk to warfighters by keeping them out of the contaminant. (Photo by Jack Bunja, U.S. Army Combat Capabilities Development Command)
unmanned air and ground vehicles using the manned-unmanned teaming concept to allow detection of CBRN threats at a distance, reducing the risk to warfighters by keeping them out of the contaminant.
Manned-unmanned teaming is a new approach for the NBCRV sensor suite upgrade (SSU) program. Tey needed a means to quickly assess how these capa- bilities, along with other sensor suite enhancements, change the operational effectiveness of the NBCRV. Te program was also looking for a way to gain insights into the impact of the new NBCRV SSU capabilities on the larger maneuver force, since this is difficult to determine through testing. The NBCRV SSU program reached out to the analytical framework team for help.
WHAT’S THE MISSION IMPACT? Te analytical framework team modeled five battalion-level scenarios represent- ing the primary mission spaces for the NBCRV: offense; defense; tactical road march; movement to contact; and recep- tion, staging, onward movement and integration. Te scenarios are run in the combat simulation, One Semi-Automated Forces (OneSAF), to help understand the effects of new NBCRV SSU capabili- ties within the different mission spaces and to explore employment options for the unmanned systems. OneSAF models real-world representations of platforms, Soldiers, equipment, logistical supplies, communications systems and networks, emerging threats, and aviation assets to
achieve the level of fidelity required for a particular application or scenario.
Videos of the scenarios running within OneSAF were used to support the Mounted CBRN Reconnaissance and Surveillance Table Top Exercise held at the Maneuver Support Center of Excel- lence at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, in November 2019. Te videos were used as conversation starters before the table top exercise discussions. Tis has proven to be an effective way for participants to visualize how operations are likely to play out and has served as an added benefit derived from the modeling efforts. Insights gleaned from the table top exercise, as well as future coordination among the analyti- cal framework team and the Maneuver and Maneuver Support Centers of Excellence
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