Welcome back to this new edition of Aerospace and Defense Review !!!✖
JANUARY 2026AEROSPACEDEFENSEREVIEW.COM9to promote interoperability and rapid information sharing that will help battle management command and control by providing the clearest common operating picture across all domains (Air, Sea, Land, Cyber and Space) and services. By following MOSA standards and Universal Command and Control Interface (UCI), our tactical ISR satellites will readily connect with other warfighting platforms and battle management systems, which will help facilitate the making sense component of JADC2..`Make Sense'Last year, I participated in a JADC2-centric panel at the Mitchell Institute's first-ever Space Power forum. I challenged forum participants to think beyond the traditional parts of space architectures (minus the launch segment) and instead think of each part as a distinct, autonomous node that is capable of processing information and transmitting data at the speed of need and the speed of relevance. At Lockheed Martin Space, we are fully leveraging SmartSat TM to perform onboard data processing, greatly reducing the time it takes to get actionable data into the hands of mission operators and decision-makers on the ground. After all, one of the primary goals of JADC2 is to get the right information to the right person at the right time using any available sensor or network while avoiding data paralysis.`Act'A few months ago, one of our self-funded Independent Research and Development Programs (IRAD) --Pony Express II -- completed a successful drone-based technical demonstration where they employed delay-tolerant mesh networking; Lockheed Martin's mission-flexible SmartSatTM distributed application technology; and HiveStarTM autonomous mission tasking capabilities to enable a comprehensive bid-to-auction mission scenario (similar to the popular transportation app Uber). More pointedly, the demonstration simulated a fifth-generation fighter jet sensing a credible threat; rapidly relaying threat information across multi-domain platform sensors; while swiftly transmitting plausible solution sets to the command authority to allow them to act based on available weapons capabilities and desired effects, all within the threat envelope. Spoiler alert -- the desired outcome was successfully executed, which is why we are excited about the Pony Express II on-orbit tech demo scheduled for later this year!Moving ForwardSpace will continue to play an inextricable and inexorable role in bringing JADC2 to full capacity, which in turn will give our tactical warfighters a decisive advantage by allowing them to fluidly operate in contested and denied environments. After all, we owe it to our nation's warfighters to fearlessly innovate and fiercely collaborate across all of our business areas to outpace emerging threats, uphold our nation's credible deterrence and, if necessary, give our warfighters the upper hand to defeat potential adversaries at anytime and anywhere around the globe.That means continuously improving the technical readiness levels (TRL) of JADC2-enabling technologies like persistent communications, artificial intelligence & machine learning (AI/ML), secure cloud & edge computing, electromagnetic techniques, cyber hardening as well as systems integration to allow critical capabilities to be fielded faster. It also includes partnering with other companies to collectively bring our best forward as well as the keen integration of commercial-off-the-shelf technologies to deliver sought-after capabilities to our customers faster than ever before. Make no mistake, the concept of JADC2 transcends one company's undertakings; nevertheless, we are honored to be doing our part to make JADC2 a reality. < Page 8 | Page 10 >