NextGov: 
https://www.nextgov.com/cxo-briefing/2022/12/amazon-google-microsoft-oracle-awarded-9b-pentagon-cloud-contract/380596/

December 7, 2022 05:34 PM ET

The Pentagon has awarded its JEDI cloud contract replacement.


The Pentagon on Wednesday announced the awardees of the Joint Warfighting Cloud 
Capability—or JWCC—contract, with Amazon Web Services, Google, Microsoft and 
Oracle each receiving an award.

Through the contract, which has a $9 billion ceiling, the Pentagon aims to 
bring enterprisewide cloud computing capabilities to the Defense Department 
across all domains and classification levels, with the four companies competing 
for individual task orders.

Last year, the Defense Department had named the four companies as contenders 
for the multi-cloud, multi-vendor contract.

“The purpose of this contract is to provide the Department of Defense with 
enterprise-wide, globally available cloud services across all security domains 
and classification levels, from the strategic level to the tactical edge,” the 
Defense Department said in a Wednesday announcement.

The awards come after a years-long effort to provide enterprisewide cloud 
computing across the department, with a significant delay in March as the DOD 
conducted due diligence with the four vendors.

JWCC itself was announced in July 2021 following the failure and cancellation 
of the Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure—or JEDI—contract, DOD’s previous 
effort aimed at providing commercial cloud capabilities to the enterprise.

Conceptualized in 2017, JEDI was designed to be the Pentagon’s war cloud, 
providing a common and connected global IT fabric at all levels of 
classification for customer agencies and warfighters. A single-award contract 
worth up to $10 billion, JEDI would have put a single cloud service provider in 
charge of hosting and analyzing some of the military’s most sensitive data. 
Ultimately, JEDI was delayed for several years over numerous lawsuits that 
ultimately caused the Pentagon to reconsider its plan, opting for a multi-cloud 
approach more common in the private sector.

For many years, Amazon Web Services—by virtue of its 2013 contract with the 
Central Intelligence Agency—was the only commercial cloud provider with the 
security accreditations allowing it to host the DOD’s most sensitive data. In 
the interim, however, Microsoft has achieved the top-secret accreditation, and 
Oracle and Google both achieved Impact Level 5—or IL5—accreditation, allowing 
the two companies to host the department’s most sensitive unclassified data in 
their cloud offerings. Oracle has also achieved top secret accreditation.

JWCC is just one of several multibillion-dollar cloud contracts the government 
has awarded over the past few years. In late 2020, the CIA awarded its 
Commercial Cloud Enterprise, or C2E, contract to five companies: AWS, 
Microsoft, Google, Oracle and IBM. The contract could be worth “tens of 
billions” of dollars, according to contracting documents, and the companies 
will compete for task orders issued by various intelligence agencies.

Last April, the National Security Agency re-awarded its $10 billion cloud 
contract codenamed “Wild and Stormy” to AWS following a protest from losing 
bidder Microsoft. The contract is part of the NSA’s modernization of its Hybrid 
Compute Initiative, which will move some of the NSA’s crown jewel intelligence 
data from internal servers to AWS’ air-gapped cloud.

==
_______________________________________________
Link mailing list
[email protected]
https://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link

Reply via email to