Adding reports to coalition battle management language for NATO MSG-048

  • Authors:
  • J. Mark Pullen;Douglas Corner;Samuel Suhas Singapogu;Nicholas Clark;Nicolas Cordonnier;Mohamed Mennane;Lionel Khimeche;Ole Martin Mevassvik;Anders Alstad;Ulrich Schade;Miłosław Frey;Nico de Reus;Paul de Krom;Nanne LeGrand;Adam Brook

  • Affiliations:
  • George Mason University, Fairfax, VA;George Mason University, Fairfax, VA;George Mason University, Fairfax, VA;George Mason University, Fairfax, VA;THALES Communications, Massy Cedex France;THALES Communications, Massy Cedex France;Délégation Générale pour l'Armement (DGA), ARCUEIL CEDEX France;Norwegian Defence Research Establishment, FFI, Kjeller, Norway;Norwegian Defence Research Establishment, FFI, Kjeller, Norway;FGAN-FKIE, Neuenahrer Straße, Wachtberg, Germany;FGAN-FKIE, Neuenahrer Straße, Wachtberg, Germany;TNO, Oude Waalsdorperweg, The Hague, The Netherlands;TNO, Oude Waalsdorperweg, The Hague, The Netherlands;TNO, Oude Waalsdorperweg, The Hague, The Netherlands;QinetiQ, Farnborough, Hampshire, UK

  • Venue:
  • SIW '09 Proceedings of the 2009 SISO European Simulation Interoperability Workshop
  • Year:
  • 2009

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Abstract

The NATO Modeling and Simulation Group Technical Activity 48 (MSG-048) was chartered in 2006 to investigate the potential of a Coalition Battle Management Language for multinational and NATO interoperation of command and control systems with modeling and simulation. Its initial work in defining and demonstrating a basic capability for this purpose has been reported in previous Euro-SIW papers. This paper addresses Phase 2 of the Technical Activity which expanded the BML paradigm by adding C2 Reports, enabling two-way flow of information between C2 and simulation systems. The new capability was demonstrated at the InterService/Industry Training, Simulation and Education Conference (I/ITSEC) 2008. The demonstration configuration combined three national C2 systems and three national simulations along with middleware from two other nations. The result was a generic C2-simulation linkage with no humans in the information exchange loop. This was achieved in only four months, using a network-enabled development approach with an Internet Reference Implementation combined with a powerful development environment based on a C2 Lexical Grammar graphical user interface for inspection of the exchanged information, plus a scripted approach for rapid development of expanded BML Web services. This paper provides a description of the BML Reports and the enhanced development methodology to support expansion of the BML concept in general and the work of the SISO C-BML Product Development Group in particular. We conclude with a projection of the work of MSG-048 in 2009, which focuses on operational validation of the C-BML concept.