One imagines AUKUS includes JEDI .. now called the  Joint Warfighting Cloud 
Capability, or JWCC contract.


“Amazon, Microsoft, Google and Oracle to Bid on Pentagon’s Next 
Multibillion-Dollar Cloud Contract”

By Brandi Vincent,  U.S. Defense Technology Correspondent   NOVEMBER 19, 2021  
https://www.nextgov.com/cio-briefing/2021/11/amazon-microsoft-google-and-oracle-bid-pentagons-next-multibillion-dollar-cloud-contract/186975/


The U.S. Defence Department expands the pool of bidders for its 
much-anticipated JEDI replacement.

Four companies are poised to compete for the Defense Department’s 
multibillion-dollar Joint Warfighting Cloud Capability, or JWCC contract.

The department confirmed on Friday that it has issued formal solicitations to 
Amazon Web Services, Microsoft, Google and Oracle for enterprisewide commercial 
cloud services — marking a clear pivot from its previously stated plans.

“Point of Clarification: just because a particular [cloud service provider] 
receives a solicitation does not mean it will receive an award,” Pentagon 
Spokesperson Russ Goemaere told Nextgov in an email.

This announcement is the latest update in the DOD’s years-long and heavily 
litigated process to implement enterprise-wide cloud capabilities.

In 2017, the department first conceptualized the Joint Enterprise Defense 
Infrastructure contract to offer one common and connected information 
technology option across all classification levels and for all personnel.

That procurement was held up in lawsuits and protests for years and officially 
awarded to Microsoft twice.

The Pentagon canceled JEDI and announced JWCC as its replacement in July, amid 
a protest from AWS (Amazon) over issues with the evaluation process and more.

At that point, DOD released a presolicitation that called for bids from AWS and 
Microsoft because officials said market research suggested they were the only 
companies that could meet the department’s cloud demands.

Still, the department noted that other cloud service providers could be 
considered. DOD’s acting chief information officer at the time also explicitly 
mentioned he’d be reaching out to Google, Oracle and IBM, cloud offerers not 
named in the presolicitation. Since that point, Google also announced that it’d 
achieved security classifications necessary to be considered as a government 
cloud partner.

“We assessed each cloud service provider’s ability to meet the JWCC high-level 
requirements and projected capability delivery schedule, as outlined in the 
presolicitation notice,” Goemaere explained. “We had open dialogue with 
U.S.-based hyperscale CSPs and gave fair opportunity to the CSPs to submit 
their capability statements as they relate to the JWCC high-level requirements.”

Based on results of that research, the department then issued the four 
companies solicitations to compete for the contract.

Goemaere did not confirm whether other providers—namely IBM—would be able to 
compete for JWCC at a later date, but said, “We are confident that our market 
research was exhaustive and resulted in a fair and reasonable final 
determination.”

JWCC awards were originally slated to be made by April 2022 when the fresh 
contract was first unveiled.

“The award timeframe will occur according to the acquisition schedule developed 
by the department, with a goal of awarding [indefinite-delivery, 
indefinite-quantity] contracts in the third quarter of [fiscal year 2022],” 
Goemaere said.

Frank Konkel contributed to this article.

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