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Only Community with their own Fleet?

HeyJoe

Fly Navy! ...or USMC
None
Super Moderator
Contributor
Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) Adm. Gary Roughead salutes Vice Adm. Barry McCullough, commander of U.S. Fleet Cyber Command and U.S. 10th Fleet.
web_100129-N-8273J-048.jpg


100129-N-8273J-048 FT. MEADE, Md. (Jan. 29, 2009) Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) Adm. Gary Roughead salutes Vice Adm. Barry McCullough, commander of U.S. Fleet Cyber Command and U.S. 10th Fleet at the commissioning ceremony for U.S. Fleet Cyber Command at Ft. George G. Meade, Md. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Tiffini Jones Vanderwyst/Released)
 

VetteMuscle427

is out to lunch.
None
Does this mean my NMCI will work? Or... will I now be able to pay my bills online without having to wait until 0300 for bandwidth on the boat???
 

CalamityJean

I know which way the wind shines!
Wouldn't that also make us the only fleet that has no ships? Unless you count a banging virtual game of battleship ;)
 

HeyJoe

Fly Navy! ...or USMC
None
Super Moderator
Contributor
Cryptologists in Monterey Preview Navy's Newest Numbered Fleet

By Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Steven L. Shepard

MONTEREY, Calif. (NNS) -- The selected deputy commander of the soon-to-be reconstituted U.S. 10th Fleet/Fleet Cyber Command, addressed more than 70 prospective Navy linguists studying at the Defense Language Institute Foreign Language Center (DLIFLC) on Dec. 2 at the Presidio of Monterey.

Rear Adm. William E. Leigher spoke to Sailors attending DLIFLC as an "A" school for the cryptologic technician (interpretive) rating, about the role of the Navy's newest numbered fleet and the effects it will have on future fleet operations and the Navy's cryptological community.

"I have watched cryptology evolve over the last 20 years from a very tight and small field to a community that will lead what the Navy does in the Information Age," Leigher said. "We are going to be much more involved in defining the operations that we take part in."

In conjunction with the stand up of Fleet Cyber Command/10th Fleet, Adm. Gary Roughead, chief of naval operations (CNO), in a speech on Oct. 1, said that "the Navy is bringing together the resource sponsorship for all of our information-related capabilities into one entity and that will include intelligence, networks, electronic warfare, cyber, meteorology and oceanography, space and unmanned systems. They will all be resourced in one organization and we will manage those capabilities collectively and ballistically to achieve information dominance for the Navy and for joint interagency partners."

The reorganization is slated for completion by year's end.

The Navy is not the only branch of the military that is restructuring to better adapt to the challenges of the Information Age. The Air Force and Army also are standing up organizations that focus on information operations and network security.

Leigher explained to the Sailors that there has to be continued collaboration between the different military branches due to the extensive man-hours required to cover cyber threats, and that Navy cryptologists will play "a crucial part in the continuum of how information flows into the battlefield of today."

The new 10th Fleet which will be based out of Ft. Meade, Md., was originally active from May 1943 to June 1945 and was involved in efforts to thwart enemy submarines during World War II.

Fleet Cyber Command will be a subordinate unit to U.S. Cyber Command, the formation of which was directed by Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates on June 23.
 

HeyJoe

Fly Navy! ...or USMC
None
Super Moderator
Contributor
Navy Stands Up Fleet Cyber Command, Reestablishes U.S. 10th Fleet

From Fleet Cyber Command/10 Fleet Public Affairs

FORT GEORGE G. MEADE, Md. (NNS) -- The chief of naval operations (CNO) officially established U.S. Fleet Cyber Command (FCC) and recommissioned U.S. 10th Fleet during a ceremony at Fort George G. Meade, Md., Jan. 29.

At the ceremony, Adm. Gary Roughead, CNO, also named Vice Adm. Bernard J. McCullough III the commander of both FCC and 10th Fleet.

The new FCC and 10th Fleet are headquartered at Fort George G. Meade, taking advantage of existing Naval Network Warfare Command infrastructure, communications support and personnel already in place.

FCC and 10th Fleet have been created as part of the CNO's vision to achieve the integration and innovation necessary for warfighting superiority across the full spectrum of military operations in the maritime, cyberspace and information domains. This initiative will help raise information to the forefront of the Navy's 21st century arsenal.

U.S. 10th Fleet was first established in 1941 as the lead for anti-submarine warfare. During World War II, the United States needed a command in charge of protecting Allied merchant vessels and military convoys and against German U-Boats in the Atlantic, and 10th Fleet successfully fulfilled that mission until it was disestablished in 1945.

Roughead compared the global responsibility of today's 10th Fleet to that of its predecessor, which protected American forces through the use of intelligence and information.

"[Tenth Fleet] had a global responsibility to protect American forces and American trade. It was a command who success depended less on manned and massed fire power than on intelligence and information," he said. "Today, we recommission this fleet to confront a new challenge to our nation's security in cyberspace. It is a mission for which, even more so than before, victory will be predicated on intelligence and information rather than fire power."

Roughead emphasized that the information we use and must protect is markedly different from what we have protected in our past.

"The cyber domain is a domain all its own - one of great opportunity, new discoveries and vexing challenges. It is one into which Fleet Cyber Command must forge boldly ahead," Roughead said.

FCC is responsible for global Navy cyberspace operations designed to deter and defeat aggression and to ensure freedom of action to achieve military objectives in and through cyberspace. McCullough is also tasked with organizing and directing Navy cryptologic operations worldwide, supporting information operations and space planning and operations.

As 10th Fleet commander, McCullough maintains operational control of Navy cyber forces to execute the full spectrum of computer network operations, cyber warfare, electronic warfare, information operations and signal intelligence capabilities and missions across the cyber, electromagnetic and space domains. U.S. 10th Fleet will partner with and support other fleet commanders to provide guidance and direction to ensure coordinated, synchronized and effective preventative and response capability in cyberspace.

"To execute our defined mission we must be able to exercise command and control over our networks with dynamic, real time defense and information assurance enabled by intelligence collection. When called upon, we must be able to provide non kinetic effects in support of regional combatant commanders' assigned missions," McCullough said. "To do this, and do it well, we must work with our sister services, academia, agencies, industry, allies and partners, for the challenge is so large, to go it alone is not possible."

McCullough said we face a situation similar to the early Battle of the Atlantic where we are engaged in a domain under stress ? a domain where the potential exists for devastating consequences if the challenge is not addressed.

"Cyberspace is a unique domain with a totally different set of challenges. To operate successfully in this newly defined domain the Navy must first think differently about cyberspace operations," McCullough said. "This world travels at the speed of light and requires real time command and control. We must ensure seamless alignment and integration with fleet operations."

In the same fashion that the historic 10th Fleet enabled the prosecution of the German U-Boat threat and ensured access to the shipping lanes of the Atlantic, FCC and the modern 10th Fleet will enable the prosecution of threats in cyberspace and ensure the Navy has access to it.
 

helolumpy

Apprentice School Principal
pilot
Contributor
Wouldn't that also make us the only fleet that has no ships? Unless you count a banging virtual game of battleship ;)


Fourth and Sixth Fleets have no ships assigned. I can't remember of the minesweeps in Fifth Fleet are assigned or just attatched.
Second, Third and Seventh Fleet all have ships assigned.
 

Beans

*1. Loins... GIRD
pilot
In conjunction with the stand up of Fleet Cyber Command/10th Fleet, Adm. Gary Roughead, chief of naval operations (CNO), in a speech on Oct. 1, said that "the Navy is bringing together the resource sponsorship for all of our information-related capabilities into one entity and that will include intelligence, networks, electronic warfare, cyber, meteorology and oceanography, space and unmanned systems. They will all be resourced in one organization and we will manage those capabilities collectively and ballistically to achieve information dominance for the Navy and for joint interagency partners."


Is "ballistic" management something you learn in JPME?
 

Jim123

DD-214 in hand and I'm gonna party like it's 1998
pilot
Is "ballistic" management something you learn in JPME?

I've never heard of 'ballisitic mangagment" and I teach JPME...

I think it's a subset of "kinetic management," a leadership style based entirely on negative reinforcement and physics. The main advantage to "ballistic management" is that meetings tend to quick albeit loud and messy while the main disadvantage is frequent personnel turnover.

:)
 

HeyJoe

Fly Navy! ...or USMC
None
Super Moderator
Contributor
I think it's a subset of "kinetic management," a leadership style based entirely on negative reinforcement and physics. The main advantage to "ballistic management" is that meetings tend to quick albeit loud and messy while the main disadvantage is frequent personnel turnover.

:)

The Poster Boy for kinetic management
 
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