USTRANSCOM seeks industry solutions for contested logistics
A railcar loaded with M1A2 Abrams Main Battle Tanks is inspected by a Soldier with the 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team, 1st Infantry Division during railhead operations on July 24, 2022.

USTRANSCOM seeks industry solutions for contested logistics

BY JONATHAN STEFANKO, U.S. TRANSPORTATION COMMAND PUBLIC AFFAIRS

SCOTT AIR FORCE BASE, Ill. — Working with commercial partners could be the answer to modernizing the Department of Defense’s (DOD) in-transit visibility capabilities, Rear Adm. Philip Sobeck, director of U.S. Transportation Command’s (USTRANSCOM) strategy, policy, programs, and logistics directorate, said April 26 at an Industry Day event, on Scott Air Force Base, Illinois.

“From the port of debarkation forward, we lose visibility … [military services] make do to track their equipment,” Sobeck said. “But contested logistics … an adversary can reach us at home guard, they can reach us at every port and node we have and get after every one. We lose without having that discrete visibility.”

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Rear Adm. Philip Sobeck, director of U.S. Transportation Command’s strategy, policy, programs, and logistics directorate, talks at an Industry Day event April 26, on Scott Air Force Base, Illinois. (U.S. Transportation Command photo by Brien Vorhees)

Twelve commercial organizations attended Industry Day, armed with solutions to meet USTRANSCOM’s cargo tracking needs. Each presenter had one hour to solve three scenarios aimed at supporting the warfighter and Joint Deployment and Distribution Enterprise (JDDE):

— Unit movement and deployment;

— Sustainment;

— And vehicle shipment.

To protect company secrets, the presenters had the conference room, joined by only the audience of military members and government civilians from across the JDDE. The remaining eleven gathered in a common area to wait and mingle. One by one, they’d enter, pitch, and answer why their technology or process was perfect for the DOD.

In the room was subject expert Josh Hunt, logistics management specialist in USTRANSCOM’s in-transit visibility and automatic identification technology branch. He said industry days are vital because they offer unique and modern solutions to close in-transit visibility (ITV) gaps and better track cargo across DOD’s supply chain.

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U.S. Navy Sailors with Navy Cargo Handling Battalion ONE aboard the USNS Seay (T-AKR-302) prepare cargo for lift before onloading onto the ship during exercise Native Fury 22 at Yanbu Commercial Port, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, Aug. 27, 2022. The focus of Native Fury 22 is to execute a Maritime Prepositioning Force offload in a Western port of Saudi Arabia. MPF operations are the rapid deployment and assembly of a U.S. Marine Air Ground Task Force in a secure using inter-theater airlift and forward-deployed maritime pre-positioning ships. (U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Casandra Lamas)

“Industry Day is a chance for commercial organizations to show off their technologies and processes that could help shape the ITV requirements to more effectively provide information to users, operators, and the joint warfighter at large,” Hunt said.

Today, the Defense Department leverages an active Radio Frequency Identification, or aRFID, network that is less data-rich, fast, and flexible than newer non-modal technologies. To solve this problem, the panel of experts presented several questions to the industry sector to see how they would provide ITV using multimodal transportation methods.

“The hope is that these organizations can help the JDDE develop a better ITV network that will support improved data and, in time, feed data repositories that could leverage machine learning and artificial intelligence tools for better decision making,” Hunt said.

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Soldiers from the 25th Infantry Division observe a Joint Light Tactical Vehicle being loaded onto a C-17 Globemaster III at Joint Base Pearl Harbor Hickam, Hawaii, Jan. 10, 2022. The C-17 is capable of strategically carrying troops and cargo to any operating base in the world. (U.S. Air Force photo by Airman 1st Class Makensie Cooper)

The benefit of leveraging ITV is that customers know where their stuff is and when it will arrive. Hunt said this process is similar to a consumer making an online purchase. The main difference is that in-transit visibility provides an in-depth awareness of the product’s location in the supply chain.

“This [visibility] is incredibly important for the joint warfighter as they need to know when they will receive the weapons system they need to execute the fight, or sustainment to sustain the fight,” Hunt said. “The same can be said for exercises, normal operations, humanitarian aid, disaster relief, and more. The current network that helps create in-transit visibility is a system of systems. It is large, inflexible, and not very agile.”

Tracking where things are is key to knowing when operations can be executed, assets can be fixed, and when sustainment will arrive. Hunt sees Industry Day as an opportunity to build partnerships and evolve a critical DOD capability.

“We are using older technology and processes that need to be modernized,” the logistician said. “Industry Day is a step in the right direction.”

Jonathan Baba

Innovator / Transformer / Market Leader

9mo

In transit visibility is a key technology to have available. However it becomes a means to an end in a contested environment where that visibility helps inform dynamic rerouting of critical supplies as routes are hindered, events unfold, and Commanders requirements change. Seeing ITV in that light helps inform what is needed and how it works in conjunction with real time ISR to allow Transcom the flexibility it needs for mission success in a contested space

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Nino Marcantonio

An Augmented Defense Technology Innovation Leader

1y

Aligning perfectly with our next FORUM in support of NAVSEA, DLA, EUCOM and Contested Logistics and Innovations

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Misty Sullivan

Transportation and Logistics Manager

1y

I’m just curious why we keep offering the same opportunities every year every quarter yet we never take advantage of any of these opportunities that are offered to make the change but we constantly say how we want to change but never do

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Billy Bate

Event Director at Defence Leaders

1y
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Benjamin Schmidt

Cafeteria Assistant at Prime Inc.

1y

The way logistics is performed these days is often very difficult to figure out since we utilize all platforms via air, sea, land (semi tractor trailers, railroad, other conveyances). It is always amazing to see and hear about what the future holds for the movement of the various forms of traffic.

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