The companies have partnered to deliver a secure communications system for the Royal Australian Air Force’s AIR 6500-1 Joint Air Battle Management System.
To continue reading the rest of this article, please log in.
Create free account to get unlimited news articles and more!
Lockheed Martin Australia has partnered with Australian secure communications systems provider C4i for the delivery of advanced secure communications capabilities, collaborating on the design, test, integration and authentication of secure voice communications capabilities within the risk reduction phase of the prime’s bid for AIR 6500-1.
The partnership is expected to prioritise the integration of locally developed communications systems for use within the Joint Air Battle Management System’s C2 networks, and enhance the security, rapidity, and interoperability of the RAAF’s Integrated Air and Defence Missile capability.
Lockheed Martin Australia explained that the system will be underpinned by a human machine interface to network operators with an array of systems such as data, radio, telephony, facility control and recording to facilitate rapid information driven decision making.
Lockheed Martin and Northrop Grumman Australia have been downselected for the delivery of the AIR 6500-1 Joint Air Battle Management System.
Kerrie Murphy, sales and marketing director at C4i, welcomed the opportunity to partner with Lockheed Martin Australia and develop the system.
“C4i is delighted to work with Lockheed Martin Australia on AIR 6500-1, which further builds on our joint work for the Air Battle Management enterprise,” Murphy explained.
“C4i is committed to delivering a purpose-built cyber-proof communication system that enables the Australian Defence Force (ADF) to communicate securely and seamlessly across multiple domains and in the most demanding operations.
“We provide secure voice C2 systems that can scale to support hundreds of operators [to] connect, allowing operational flexibility, multiple data paths and no single point of failure. This ensures that personnel on the ground or in the air have the freedom to complete the task at hand — knowing the system behind them is always up to the job.”
Kendell Kuczma, Lockheed Martin Australia’s international business development director of Rotary and Missions Systems, explained that the partnership demonstrates the prime’s commitment to building stronger sovereign defence capability. “Lockheed Martin Australia is delighted to collaborate with C4i.”
“We understand the ADF needs reliable, fast, secure voice communication systems they can depend on during operations. This contract demonstrates our commitment to build a sovereign voice communication system for AIR 6500-1 to enable rapid decision making at tactical and strategic levels of command and control across joint force operations,” Kuczma said.
“This vital work strengthens the cyber security of Lockheed Martin Australia’s open systems architecture program solution for AIR 6500-1 to meet current and future operational needs of the ADF.
“Our trusted record of delivering highly sophisticated C2 joint all domain platforms, combined with C4i’s cutting-edge expertise in interoperable C2 voice systems, means we are the natural strategic partner of choice to deliver an AIR 6500 system of systems that will ensure persistent defence against future air and missile threats to protect Australia’s national security.”
[Related: Lockheed Martin Australia unveils veteran employment initiative]