A bird's-eye view of how the Navy sees the CAW and other fleet assets conducting net-centric warfare. Many components are already in place and while others are in varying stages of development but the overall architecture appears to capitalize on the strong points of individual platforms to create desired synergy. In particular, the value of the F-35C is apparent, providing a forward presence in contested airspace denied to other CAW aircraft. UCLASS is envisioned to serve as airborne tanker/ISR provider, downplaying the strike role that some proponents have been clamoring for.
Inside the Navy
Inside the Navy’s Next Air War
The heart of the new plan is a concept known as Naval Integrated Fire Control-Counter Air—or NIFC-CA (pronounced: nif-kah).
The central tenets behind NIFC-CA are situational awareness and extended-range cooperative targeting.
Every unit within the carrier strike group—in the air, on the surface, or under water—would be networked through a series of existing and planned datalinks so the carrier strike group commander has as clear a picture as possible of the battle-space... Beyond situational awareness, NIFC-CA forces naval planners to think creatively about the capabilities of individual platforms within the carrier air wing or even the carrier strike group at large. Under NIFC-CA, the sum of a carrier strike group’s firepower has to be considered in aggregate.
For example, targets spotted hundreds of miles away by one sensor—such as the emerging F-35C Lighting II Joint Strike Fighter (JSF) or E-2D Advanced Hawkeye intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) aircraft—could be engaged cooperatively by any number of shooters: a JSF, F/A-18 E/F Super Hornet tactical fighter, or future unmanned vehicles, all available to the strike group over vast distances.
The attacking aircraft could cooperate with Arleigh Burke-class (DDG-51) destroyers and even submarines working together as a coherent whole—connected via data-links—under the NIFC-CA construct. With the shared data, the effectiveness of each component in the NIFC-CA web can do more and see more.
“In the past, we bought platforms for platform capabilities,” Manazir said. “Really what we’re buying now, is we’re buying integrated capability to deliver an effect on the maritime battlefield.”
Lots more at the link.