AWS Touts Modular Data Center for Defense Department

https://www.nextgov.com/technology-news/2023/02/aws-touts-modular-data-center-defense-department/382875/
   By Frank Konkel, February 13, 2023


Amazon Web Services on Monday announced its Modular Data Center, a cloud 
offering now available to Defense Department customers operating in austere, 
low-latency conditions, such as battlefields and areas in crisis.

Offered under the Pentagon’s $9 billion Joint Warfighting Capability Contract, 
AWS’ Modular Data Centers are built using ruggedized containers that are 
designed to be shipped—from rail to truck or via military cargo aircraft—to 
almost anywhere on Earth, including regions the Pentagon refers to as 
Disconnected, Disrupted, Intermittent or Limited, or DDIL, environments.

Once operational, the modular data centers provide users with cloud computing 
and storage capabilities and access to various AWS services and devices. They 
are equipped with components essential for data center operation, including 
power, networking, and connection and cooling capabilities.

The service is supported by AWS’ main government-focused regions, AWS GovCloud 
US-West and AWS GovCloud US-East. The cloud giant’s latest offering is 
specifically for Defense Department customers through its new $9 billion cloud 
contract.

“As the digital battlefield continues to evolve, our defense customers 
increasingly need access to cloud capabilities at the tactical edge, including 
DDIL environments all over the world,” Liz Martin, director of the Defense 
business at AWS, said in a statement to Nextgov.

“With AWS Modular Data Center, we are converting data centers from fixed 
infrastructure that is difficult to build and manage in remote environments, to 
a comprehensive service that is simple to use, secure, cost-effective and can 
respond to large-scale compute and storage needs wherever the mission demands.”

The JWCC contract, which the Pentagon awarded to AWS, Google, Microsoft and 
Oracle in December, required cloud providers to meet critical requirements for 
accessing, processing and sharing data at the tactical edge.

For years, Defense officials have clamored for more capabilities at the edge, 
forced instead to rely upon building brick-and-mortar data center 
infrastructure. Defense Department customers can now issue task orders against 
the JWCC contract.

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