Atnaujinkite slapukų nuostatas

Assessing the Value of Intelligence Collected by U.S. Air Force Airborne Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance Platforms [Minkštas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 144 pages, Illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 31-Oct-2021
  • Leidėjas: RAND
  • ISBN-10: 1977406939
  • ISBN-13: 9781977406934
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Paperback / softback, 144 pages, Illustrations
  • Išleidimo metai: 31-Oct-2021
  • Leidėjas: RAND
  • ISBN-10: 1977406939
  • ISBN-13: 9781977406934
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
The changes in intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) and processing, exploitation, and dissemination (PED) capabilities over the past two decades have led to ever-increasing demand from warfighters. Commanders, planners, and operators across the U.S. Air Force (USAF) ISR enterprise face difficult decisions about how to best meet ISR needs at the strategic, operational, and tactical levels. Yet USAF currently lacks a consistent, quantitative, empirically grounded method of assessing the value that the service's airborne ISR provides-which is essential to good resourcing decisions. This report presents an approach to ISR assessments that seeks to articulate the costs and benefits of USAF airborne ISR in specific operational contexts. Though aspects of this may be applicable across different USAF ISR organizations, this work focused primarily on the Distributed Common Ground System and the operational theaters it does or could support. The assessment methodology is designed to be flexible enough to support ISR resourcing decisions at different echelons, yet consistent enough to foster feedback, standardize data collections, and make use of empirical analysis methodologies.

This report presents an approach to intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) assessments that seeks to articulate the costs and benefits of U.S. Air Force airborne ISR in specific operational contexts.

Preface iii
Figures
vii
Tables
viii
Summary ix
Acknowledgments xviii
Abbreviations xix
1 Understanding the ISR Assessment Challenge
1(13)
Introduction to the USAF Airborne ISR Enterprise
1(2)
Why Assess ISR?
3(1)
How Are ISR Assessments Conducted Today?
4(3)
Project Motivation, Objectives, Scope, and Methods
7(5)
Definition of Terms
12(2)
2 Step 1: Identify the ISR Resourcing and Employment Decisions
14(11)
Why Context Shapes USAF Airborne ISR Assessments
14(1)
Types of Questions USAF Airborne ISR Assessments Could Help Answer
15(5)
How Do We Measure ISR's Value in Context?
20(3)
Conclusion and Suggested USAF Actions to Improve Assessment Step One
23(2)
3 Step 2: Select Cost and Benefit Indicators
25(11)
How Relevant Was the Information to the Operational Decisionmaker?
25(3)
Was the Decisionmaker Able to Make a Decision with the Available Information?
28(6)
What ISR Resources Were Expended in Those Functions?
34(1)
Conclusion and Suggested USAF Actions to Improve Assessment Step 2
35(1)
4 Step 3: Collect Data
36(17)
ISR Data Challenges
36(2)
Short-Term Mitigation Approaches
38(3)
Long-Term Mitigation Approaches
41(10)
Recommended Next Steps for USAF
51(2)
5 Step 4: Analyze the Value of ISR Using Real-World Data
53(18)
Reallocating ISR During Dynamic HVI Operations
54(10)
Deciding Whether to Reallocate Resources Between Theaters
64(4)
Conclusion and Suggested USAF Actions to Improve Assessment Step 4a
68(3)
6 Step 4b: Analyze the Value of ISR Using Simulations
71(24)
Approach
72(2)
Vignette
74(3)
Results
77(16)
Conclusions
93(2)
7 Step 5: Apply Results
95(6)
Supporting Decentralized Assessments
95(4)
Communicating Assessment Results
99(1)
Conclusion and Suggested USAF Actions to Improve Assessment Step 5
100(1)
8 Improving the USAF's ISR Assessments Capability: Conclusions and Recommendations
101(4)
Conclusions
101(1)
Recommendations for the USAF to Improve ISR Assessments
102(3)
Appendix A HVI Simulation Analysis Results 105(3)
Appendix B Mathematical Model of Fixed Point Security 108(12)
Appendix C Takeaways from Review of Selected Intelligence Community and Commercial Bibliography 120