Army Invites Air Force ABMS To Big Network Test: Project Convergence

May 29, 2020

Breaking Defense

Damn the pandemic, full speed ahead. The four-star chief of Army Futures Command plans to hold a high-tech field test in the southwest desert this fall, COVID-19 or no.

Called Project Convergence, the exercise will test sharing of targeting data amongst the Army’s newest weapons, including aerial scouts, long-range missile launchers and armored vehicles. The Army also wants to plug in its new anti-aircraft and missile defense systems, AFC head Gen. Mike Murray told reporters, but those technologies are at a critical juncture in their own individual test programs – some of which was delayed by COVID – and they may not be ready on time for this fall.

“I’m going to try to drag them all into this,” Murray said. The experiment, set to begin in late August or early September, will definitely include the Army’s Artificial Intelligence Task Force, as well as four of its eight modernization Cross Functional Teams. That’s Long-Range Precision Fires (i.e. artillery), Future Vertical Lift aircraft (including drones), and the tactical network, he said, plus the Next Generation Combat Vehicle team in “a supporting role.”

The Air Force’s ABMS experiment will be separate from the Army’s Project Convergence exercise happening at roughly the same time this fall, Murray said. But he wants to hold a Convergence test each year from now on, he told reporters, and he wants to bring in ABMS in 2021.

“In ’20, we’re parallel, not interconnected,” he said. “Our desire is to bring them closer and closer together, beginning in ’21.”

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