Lockheed CEO Pitches Pentagon on Subscription Software

By: John Grady  October 4, 2023
https://news.usni.org/2023/10/04/lockheed-ceo-pitches-pentagon-on-subscription-software


A parallel acquisition system – buying needed apps by monthly or yearly 
subscription to meet changing mission requirements – could improve deterrence 
by complicating an enemy’s war planning, Lockheed Martin’s top executive 
suggested Wednesday.

Jim Taiclet, Lockheed’s CEO, said the idea behind this approach is similar to 
allowing a customer to buy a 5G phone in Seoul and have it operate with new 
applications as needed in Washington.

Although “digital insertion” in this manner “hasn’t caught on yet” inside the 
Pentagon, across the tech industry or the broad industrial base, Taiclet said 
it has the potential “to move that deterrence goal post every three to six 
months.”

Traditionally, the Defense Department and defense industry think in big 
contracts for platforms that take years to design, build and manufacture and 
service.

Taiclet, however, sees large defense contractors such as Lockheed Martin as a 
bridge from the subscription-based tech sector to the big-contract Pentagon 
acquisition process. “We have to get our expertise together.” He added this 
approach “is starting to get some traction” among large investors in the tech 
sector.

Building these “mission roadmaps,” Taiclet said, must “be done with everybody 
in the room” from the services – “pilots, line commanders, admirals” – to the 
tech sector and defense industry.

They would be working with a common architecture on existing platforms – “5G, 
AI, autonomy, how do we do that”– in moving vast amounts of data while not 
remaining undetected.

Taiclet emphasized “this is not the commercial 5G” that consumers have. “We 
call this 5G.mil, [that it] has to [work] in contested environments” a given.

The data link challenge “is not easily solved,” Taiclet said, but with common 
architecture, once in place, it can be continuously upgraded.

Taiclet added that in this “big tent” approach to Pentagon buying services for 
a specified time means the commercial side needs to move away from “vendor 
lock” – holding exclusive rights to proprietary information.

“We’ve got to start with what we have.”

He added Lockheed Martin is working with Northrop Grumman to merge their data. 
“We want to migrate as much commercial development technology to defense” as 
possible.

When asked about surge capacity in the defense industry today, Taiclet said “we 
must keep it resilient.”

He pointed to the problems that exist around single-year appropriations, which 
are exacerbated by continuing resolutions (CRs), basically holding spending to 
previous years levels for existing programs.

The U.S. government currently is operating under a CR set to expire before 
Thanksgiving.

To achieve the resiliency critical to overcoming the effects of a pandemic or 
blockade, he pointed to multiyear contracts that suppliers of large defense 
contractors use to gauge their own workloads.

In many cases, “defense work is not the driver” of a suppliers’ business.

Taiclet said 80 percent of contractor revenue comes from the commercial 
industry, and they direct their businesses that way.

He added that the defense industry “should have regional sustainment and 
production” as another way to build resiliency into its operations.

“We want a Blackhawk sustainment facility in the South China Sea.”

Industry experiments with direct contractors have been met with mixed success.

In particular, the Navy is moving away from the contractor-led maintenance 
model that prevents sailors from servicing equipment on ships.  In particular, 
Lockheed Martin’s Freedom-class littoral combat ship design relied on 
contractor maintenance.

---

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

Reply via email to