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Pull, push or shove: Global Broadcast Service and intelligence support to maritime forces.
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Pull, push or shove: Global Broadcast Service and intelligence support to maritime forces.
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The Department of Defense developed the Global Broadcast Service (GBS) to increase the amount of national and theater level information provided to deployed forces, resolving some shortcomings in information dissemination identified during the Gulf War. Using direct broadcast satellite technology, GBS is expected to deliver information at rates exponentially faster than what is available now. The broadcast service makes possible the near-simultaneous transfer of critical information to multiple users. While GBS may speed the flow of information, it does nothing to improve the quality of intelligence. Given the large capacity of GBS, intelligence managers may be under unreasonable pressures to release information to fill available bandwidth. The result could be more raw information for commanders, and less finished intelligence. GBS has constraints and limitations inherent in its design. Not all users in a theater will have access to high-capacity bandwidth at the same time. Where the GBS broadcast beams are positioned will determine who gets what level of GBS bandwidth. Naval forces deploying into an area of operations could experience as many as five variations on broadcast support from the service. Theater CINCs will have to share GBS resources, and the system probably will not be able to support multiple crises in the same theater at the same time. The small antenna size of GBS receive suites allow the lowest-level tactical forces to receive intelligence support previously only available at the flag-level. Tactical forces will also have access to vastly greater amounts of data. Passive recipients of large broadcast products may experience information overload and other unintended negative consequences. To make the best use of the technology, under the proposed dissemination architecture intelligence planners must take the time actively manage the flow of information they receive. GBS offers new and unique dissemination capabilities. Theater intelligence centers do not plan to dedicate significant intelligence production for the broadcast. Users seeking to fill gaps in their knowledge may find the formal dissemination architecture inefficient in response to direct or ad-hoc requests. The web-based architecture of Intelink provides a known and familiar method for users to find and retrieve needed intelligence. Theater intelligence centers dedicate a significant portion of their production effort to supporting Intelink. Providing a GBS connection to lntelink would allow users to browse for information interactively. This would be an efficient way for deployed forces to find intelligence not available by scheduled broadcast, and allow them to scale their requests based on available bandwidth.
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