Underlying concepts



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SECTION 1 UNDERLYING CONCEPTS
1.4 MANAGEMENT
The overall integrated plan for the acquisition, installation, and maintenance of a common radio room on-board all classes of submarines requires a cooperative, coordinated effort among many organizations. Specifically, United States Strategic Command (USSTRATCOM),
Commander-in-Chief Special Operations Command (CINCSOC), the Submarine TYCOMs,
the Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) Staff (N6, N8), the Naval Systems Commands
(SPAWAR, NAVSEA), and Naval Laboratories (NCCOSC, NUWC) must work closely together to clearly articulate the requirements, solutions, and implementation of the plan. The
Submarine Communications Systems Program Manager, SPAWAR PMW 173, is designated as the overall coordinator of all aspects of submarine communications.
PMW 173 has designated the Navy Command, Control, and Ocean Surveillance Center
(NCCOSC), Research, Development, Test and Evaluation Division (NRaD) as lead laboratory for submarine communication design architecture since they are the lead activity for all
Navy communication architectural and system engineering designs. The Naval Undersea
Warfare Center (NUWC), Newport Division has been designated lead laboratory for


2022/12/29 08:58
SECTION 1 UNDERLYING CONCEPTS
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submarine platform integration. NCCOSC In-Service Engineering Division, East (NISE East)
has been designated the lead organization for coordinating submarine communications system in-service engineering management, including installations and life cycle support.
Submarine communications installations, currently managed by multiple organizations, will transition to a single, integrated management in 1996. Submarine Development Squadron
Twelve will continue to develop communication operational concepts and submarine communication procedures. As submarine missions evolve, the SCSS and supporting communications concepts must also evolve. The mix of missions carried out by both attack and ballistic missile submarines (and potentially Guided Missile Submarines (SSGNs)) has changed significantly since the end of the cold war. This change in mission emphasis is driving the revolution in submarine communications.

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