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Mobile Deployable Communications
28 January - 29 January 2025
Mobile Deployable Communications

SAE Media Group is proud to announce the 18th annual Mobile Deployable Communications conference, taking place on 28th-29th January 2025.

From the strategic level down to the tactical, efficient and clear communications are key to operational success. The fast pace of modern warfare requires agile, highly adaptable forces capable of rapid movement whilst maintaining a consistent communication and situational awareness capability. Interoperability is also becoming increasingly important to ensure seamless command and control within a multinational coalition, especially given the rising operational tempo across Europe.

Why attend:

MDC will give you a unique opportunity to meet and network with senior military leaders and industry. Discover the latest communication technology to optimise battlefield C2. Join the discussion and shape the future of communications technology.

The Mobile Deployable Communications conference is designed to bring together global leading program managers, strategic decision-makers, industry experts and thought leaders to explore the latest developments in communications technology. MDC is the only truly international conference which focuses on deployable CIS.
 

FEATURED SPEAKERS

Brigadier (Ret.) Neil Couch

Brigadier (Ret.) Neil Couch

Strategic Programmes Consultant, Cartera Limited
Brigadier Jez Sharpe

Brigadier Jez Sharpe

Head, Tactical Systems Service Executive (TacSys), UK Defence Digital
Brigadier Mark Berry

Brigadier Mark Berry

Commander, 16 Air Assault Brigade Combat Team, British Army
Captain Martin Maynard

Captain Martin Maynard

SO3 Capability Development , CISTDU, British Army
Colonel Ian Fletcher

Colonel Ian Fletcher

Commanding Officer, Information Group, II Marine Expeditionary Force
Colonel Janos Poloskei

Colonel Janos Poloskei

Deputy Director, Communications, Information and Information Security Systems Directorate (J6), Hungarian Defence Forces
Colonel Mietta Groeneveld

Colonel Mietta Groeneveld

Director, NATO Command and Control Centre of Excellence
Dave Pheasant

Dave Pheasant

DE&S Future Capability Group, Strategic Command & Air Portfolio Team Leader, DE&S UK MoD
Dr Thomas Rondeau

Dr Thomas Rondeau

Principal Director for FutureG, OUSD(R&E), US DOD
Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Treiblmaier

Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Treiblmaier

Head of ICT Operations and Electronic Warfare Section, Austrian Armed Forces
Major General (Ret.) Bill Robins

Major General (Ret.) Bill Robins

CEO, BRL
Miguel Saiz

Miguel Saiz

Project Officer Support to EU Operations, European Defence Agency
Salvador Llopis

Salvador Llopis

Senior Project Officer Telecommunications and Information Systems, Team Leader C4ISTAR Capability Programme, European Defence Agency

Brigadier (Ret.) Neil Couch

Strategic Programmes Consultant, Cartera Limited
Brigadier (Ret.) Neil Couch

Neil Couch commanded signals units and formations of the British Army on NATO, UN and national operations and on training from the Arctic to southern Africa, deploying mobile, tactical communications in support of combined arms teams and brigade, divisional and corps headquarters. He held various staff jobs in the UK MOD with responsibility for operational planning of joint communications deployment and for future capability development. Since leaving the Army in 2012 he has worked as an independent consultant, principally in the mobile space communications sector.

Brigadier Jez Sharpe

Head, Tactical Systems Service Executive (TacSys), UK Defence Digital
Brigadier Jez Sharpe

Brigadier Mark Berry

Commander, 16 Air Assault Brigade Combat Team, British Army
Brigadier Mark Berry

Captain Kim Kristiansen

Master Instructor of Signals, Norwegian Army Land Warfare Centre - Norwegian Army Signals School (NORASIGS)
Captain Kim Kristiansen

Captain Martin Maynard

SO3 Capability Development , CISTDU, British Army
Captain Martin Maynard

Martin Maynard is the SO3 Capability Development within CISTDU, He has gained experience as a royal Signals technician with, in-service radio and EW systems. Following qualification as a Royal Signals Foreman of Signals (IS) he has gained extensive knowledge in the deployment of Divisional C2 assets within 3 Div and 4 MI, including enterprise support to deployed OPCIS systems.

His current role is supporting trials and development for in-service and future Land CIS capabilities. Part of his role is the experimentation and horizon scanning for future capabilities and systems as the SO3 and ToT (IS) within CISTDU, His main emphasis has been C2 development within deployed CPs and facilitating an effective Kill Web. 

 

Captain Raul Riiel

TACCIS Chief, MIL CIS Group, Estonian Defence Forces
Captain Raul Riiel

CPT Raul Riiel is currently holding position as TACCIS chief in the Estonian Defense Force Cyber Command ICT center MILCIS group.  The section commanded by CPT Riiel is responsible for all new tactical level C2 developments conducted in the EDF and maintaining these and current systems on firmware and base configuration levels. CPT Riiel has served prior to CybCom many years in artillery battalion on different C2 related positions up to the chief of S6 for multiple years. CPT Riiel has graduated Estonian Defense College (professional higher education) 2013 and Tallinn University of Technology (master’s degree, MsC, in Analysis and Design of Information Systems) 2023.

 

Colonel Ian Fletcher

Commanding Officer, Information Group, II Marine Expeditionary Force
Colonel Ian Fletcher

Col Ian Fletcher is currently commander of II Marine Expeditionary Force Information Group.  In this role, he leads a diverse team of Military and Civilian professionals responsible for generating, employing, and modernizing Marine Corps Information Warfare and Multi-Domain capabilities (C5ISRT) in direct support of II Marine Expeditionary Force, its subordinate Marine Air Ground Task Forces (MAGTFs) and the Joint Force. His elements connect the MAGTF to the Joint Response and Shaping Enterprise. Previously, Col Fletcher served as the Director of Combat Develop, Capability Integration and Resourcing for the Marine Corps’ Special Operations Component Command, and as the Director of Intelligence for Security Assistance Group – Ukraine.

Colonel Janos Poloskei

Deputy Director, Communications, Information and Information Security Systems Directorate (J6), Hungarian Defence Forces
Colonel Janos Poloskei

Col János Pölöskei is deputy director of the Information and Information Security Systems Directorate (J6), Hungarian Defence Forces.He started his career in 1987 and graduated as an artillery officer from the military college in 1990. Before starting with procurement activities he spent several years in tactical level positions from platoon to brigade level. After a successful career in lower positions he became an operations planner at operational and strategic level, where he participated several NATO and national planning activities.Col Pölöskei went for mission to Kosovo in 2003 and 2017, and to Afghanistan in 2005 and 2006 where he got valuable operational experiences.

Colonel Jennifer Carns

Commander, 5th Combat Communications Group, USAF
Colonel Jennifer Carns

Colonel Jennifer Ann Branigan Carns is the Commander of the 5th Combat Communications Group at Robins Air Force Base, Georgia. The 5th MOB is the last remaining active duty combat communications group. The group of over 700 Airmen, Civilians, and one United Kingdom officer from over twenty career fields is comprised of a combat communications support squadron, two combat communications mission squadrons and an engineering installation squadron. She directs the training, mobilization, and deployment of multi-capable personnel, computers, radios, transport systems, specialized engineering services and supporting equipment to enable wartime and peacetime operations for combatant commanders, joint task forces, and Air Force components and Department of Defense Agencies. These missions also include direct support taskings for the United States Northern Command and the United States Secret Service.

Colonel Carns entered into the Air Force through the University of Florida's Air Force ROTC program. She has served in a variety of assignments and deployed multiple times in support of Operations ENDURING FREEDOM and IRAQI FREEDOM. Her command experience includes the 85th Engineering Installation Squadron, 65th Communications Squadron and the 609th Air Communications Squadron’s Detachment 4. Prior to her current assignment, she was the Future Operations Division Chief at Joint Force Headquarters – Department of Defense Information Network.

Colonel Mietta Groeneveld

Director, NATO Command and Control Centre of Excellence
Colonel Mietta Groeneveld

Colonel Mietta Groeneveld is the Director of the NATO Command & Control Centre of Excellence (C2COE). The C2COE provides NATO with expertise in Command and Control, currently focusing on the development of NATO Multi-Domain Command and Control, the transformation of operational level headquarters driven by technology and MDO, and the cultural change of future decision makers.

 
Since joining the military in 1986, Colonel Groeneveld has occupied a range of command and staff positions across the technical, operational, and strategic levels. She earned a Master’s degree in Applied Physics and, in 2014, completed both the Canadian National Security Program (NSP6) in Toronto and the EU High-Level Course on Security & Defence.
 
Following these achievements, she has held several positions at the international strategic level. In the immediate aftermath of the Russian invasion of Crimea, she was the Branch Head for Multilateral Military Affairs. She also served as the Netherlands’ representative on the NATO Logistics Committee and the Committee on Standardisation. Furthermore, she was the Chair of the board for the BENELUX Arms Control Agency and the NATO CIMIC COE, as well as a board member for the Strategic Airlift Capability C-17 and the Movement Coordination Centre Europe (MCCE) and Chairmen of AFCEA The Hague.
 
Colonel Groeneveld’s deployments include a 2002 mission to Kyrgyzstan as part of Operation Enduring Freedom and a 2017-2018 tour in Afghanistan, where she was CJ4/EF5 of the Training and Advisory Command-North and held the NLD-SNR/red card for the Resolute Support Mission.

Dave Pheasant

DE&S Future Capability Group, Strategic Command & Air Portfolio Team Leader, DE&S UK MoD
Dave Pheasant

 Dave is Team Leader for one of the Capability Exploitation Teams that make up the 1* led Future Capability Innovation (FCI) area in the recently formed DE&S Gateway.  With a background of 25 years in DE&S and its predecessors, including time in both Defence Digital and the Submarine Delivery Agency, Dave has worked on a range of projects and having been through DE&S transformation Dave has seen first-hand how DE&S has changed over the years.  Now working in FCI the team are focused on ways to accelerate the pull through of experimentation and innovation into recognised projects as well as working with the Front Line Commands toward delivery of sustainable and supported capability to the end user community.

Dr Thomas Rondeau

Principal Director for FutureG, OUSD(R&E), US DOD
Dr Thomas Rondeau

Dr. Tom Rondeau is the Principal Director for the FutureG Office for the US Department of Defense, serving in the Office of the Undersecretary of Defense for Research and Engineering (OUSD(R&E)). In this role, Dr. Rondeau is responsible for the research, funding, and execution of programs to advance warfighting capabilities using future-generation wireless technologies.

Before assuming his role as Principal Director of the FutureG Office, Dr. Rondeau spent more than six years as a Defense Advanced Research Project Agency (DARPA) program manager, where he led efforts that challenged and advanced studies in a variety of warfighting domains, earning him the Distinguished Public Service Medal.

Prior to joining DARPA, Dr. Rondeau led the GNU Radio project, consulted on wireless communications problem sets, and worked as a visiting researcher with the University of Pennsylvania and as an Adjunct with the IDA Center for Communications Research in Princeton, NJ.
 
Dr. Rondeau holds a Ph.D. in electrical engineering from Virginia Tech, where his dissertation won the Council of Graduate Schools’ 2007 Outstanding Dissertation Award in math, science, and engineering.

Greger Potzscher

Head of Command and Information Systems - Ground, FMV
Greger Potzscher

Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Treiblmaier

Head of ICT Operations and Electronic Warfare Section, Austrian Armed Forces
Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Treiblmaier

Alexander TREIBLMAIER, MA, MSc (born 1981) was promoted as officer in 2011 and completed the Master studies at the University of Sopron (Management and Leadership) and at the Austrian National Defence Academy in Vienna. He completed his doctoral studies at the University of Belgrade in the Department of International Management. He is the Head of the Institute Cyber and electronic warfare at the signal school of the Austrian Armed forces in Vienna. His military professional career and experience reaches from the work as platoon-leader, staff officer (G-6 branch) at the 3rd mechanized infantry brigade and teacher for tactics at the signal school. During his academic career, he specialized in military leadership in combination with management science and the impact of international trends and the technological developments on the training and education in the Austrian Armed Forces

Lieutenant Colonel Christopher Dauer

Commander, 85th Engineering Installation Squadron, US Air Force
Lieutenant Colonel Christopher Dauer

Lieutenant Colonel Christopher L. Dauer serves as the Commander of the 85th Engineering & Installation Squadron, Keesler Air Force Base, Mississippi. He leads 175 military and civilian personnel providing specialized engineering services for telecommunications networks and radio frequency requirements as well as the installation, removal, and modification of command, control, communications, computer systems, cyber, airfield equipment, and RADAR systems worldwide during wartime and peacetime operations for the United States Air Force, Combatant Commands, and other Department of Defense agencies. The 85 EIS maintains a deployment force ready to depart on short notice to any location around the globe and continuously supports active combat engagements

Lieutenant Colonel Dauer is a career expeditionary communications officer who has served in a variety of positions, including Joint Special Operations Air Component J6, Commander, Security Forces Commander, Director of Operations, PME Instructor, graduate of the Marine Corp Expeditionary Warfare School, Executive Officer, acquisitions, and multiple chief positions. Lieutenant Colonel Dauer has completed multiple combat tours including Operation IRAQI FREEDOM as an air advisor and Operation ENDURING FREEDOM-Afghanistan as the Combined Joint Special Operations Air Component J6.

Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Zisa

Director, J6, Security Assistance Group - Ukraine
Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Zisa

Major General (Ret.) Bill Robins

CEO, BRL
Major General (Ret.) Bill Robins

Bill Robins led tactical communications in airborne, mechanized and armoured formations of the British Army. He commanded the Army’s Electronic Warfare Regiment in the early 80s during the Cold War, defined the requirement for the UK Government protected Crisis Management Centre and chaired the Management Board for the MOD/BT PFI programme for Defence Fixed Telecommunications.

He now runs his own Defence and Security consultancy, BRL. He is a Senior Associate Fellow of RUSI.

Major General Anthony Genatempo

Program Executive Officer, Cyber & Networks Directorate, US Air Force Life Cycle Management Center
Major General Anthony Genatempo

Major General Anthony W. Genatempo is Program Executive Officer for Cyber & Networks, Hanscom Air Force Base, Massachusetts. In this position, he is responsible for more than 2,700 personnel and acquisition execution of a $17 billion portfolio responsible for developing, producing, deploying and sustaining Department of the Air Force Aerial Networks, Enterprise Information Technology and Cyber Infrastructure, Cybersecurity and Cryptologic Systems, Software Development Factories and Platforms, combat communications, and special programs to enable reliable connectivity at the point of mission need for more than 600,000 users.

Major General Genatempo entered the Air Force in 1991 through the Rutgers University ROTC program. He is a career acquisition professional and has served in numerous program management and senior leader positions including avionics program manager for the F-22, Deputy Division Chief of the Tactical, Special Operations Forces and Trainer Aircraft Division at the Pentagon and as Commander, F-35 Aeronautical Systems Squadron, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio. He is a graduate of the Air Force Legislative Fellows Program where he served as a military legislative assistant for the Chairman of the House Appropriations Committee and was responsible for working all military and veteran’s issues for the chairman’s district, as well as monitoring all legislative activity concerning defense, veterans affairs and military quality of life issues. Following his assignment as a military legislative fellow, he served as the F-22 Program Director for the Air Force Life Cycle Management Center, Wright-Patterson AFB, Ohio. After serving as the F-22 Program Director, he was the Air Force Program Executive Officer for Weapons and Director of the Armament Directorate, Air Force Life Cycle Management Center, Eglin Air Force Base, Florida, where he was responsible for a $92 billion portfolio and oversaw procurement and development of state-of-the-art munitions, legacy weapons and ammunition, combat training systems, threat emitters, and aerial targets.
Prior to his current position, Major General Genatempo was the Commander of the Air Force Nuclear Weapons Center, and Air Force Program Executive Officer for Strategic Systems, Kirtland Air Force Base, New Mexico. As the commander, he was responsible for the lifecycle management of nuclear weapons systems, supporting two legs of the nation’s nuclear triad, including intercontinental ballistic missiles, air-launched cruise missiles, gravity bombs, nuclear certification, and nuclear command-and-control communications systems.

Miguel Saiz

Project Officer Support to EU Operations, European Defence Agency
Miguel Saiz

Miguel Saiz started his career in 1996 at IT Private Sector, leading numerous projects related to IT strategy, consulting, and Systems Implementation, Head of committees for the New Technologies across different Spanish Administration bodies. He joined the European External Action Service in 2013 as Chief of IT for the Civilian CSDP Missions in Africa and the Middle East, implementing his work in field of IT Systems, VSat and Secure Communications. In 2016 he joined CPCC HQ in Brussels as IT Strategy and Planning Manager, responsible for the governance and standardization of IT systems and VSat communications across all the CSDP Civilian Missions. In 2021 he joined EDA European Defence Agency as Project Officer in Support to EU Operations, in charge of the CIS side of the EU SatCom Market and the CSO Contractors Support to Operations.

Salvador Llopis

Senior Project Officer Telecommunications and Information Systems, Team Leader C4ISTAR Capability Programme, European Defence Agency
Salvador Llopis

Salvador Llopis is a Team Leader of the C4ISTAR capability programme and a Senior Project Officer on Telecommunications and Information Systems (CIS) within the Capability, Armament and Planning Directorate at the European Defence Agency (EDA) in Brussels. He chairs the Project Team CIS – a group of governmental experts from EU Member States whose mission is to assess the feasibility of cooperation activities and to harmonise military needs notably in the fields of CIS and Command and Control (C2) systems. He also chairs the working group on Data Centric Security and Zero Trust Architectures at EDA. Previously to his current position, he worked at EDA as Project Officer Cyber Defence Technology acting as moderator of the Cyber Research and Technology Working Group – precursor of today’s Cyber Defence CapTech. He graduated from the Spanish Army Military Academy as Signal Officer. He is an Academician of the Spanish Academy of Military Sciences and Arts. He holds a Doctoral Degree in Telecommunications from the Universitat Politècnica de València in Spain. He is a member of the editorial board of the Journal of Defence and Security Technologies and programme committee member of various international scientific conferences. His professional and research interests lie in the areas of tactical communications, C2, system engineering and architectures, cyber situational awareness, and decision-support technologies. He has several referred publications in these areas. 

The only event that will:

Deliver real insight from the strategic level down to the tactical. This conference will cover the importance of efficient and clear communications and how you can achieve operational success.

Learn how to create an agile, highly adaptable force capable of rapid movement whilst maintaining consistent communication and situational awareness capability, essential to the fast pace of modern warfare. And discover how interoperability is becoming increasingly important to ensure seamless command and control within a multinational coalition.

Key reasons to attend:

  • Networking opportunities
  • Knowledge sharing
  • Discover new products and solutions
  • Professional development
  • Collaboration and partnerships
  • Industry insights and trends

 Who should attend?

This is the ONLY truly international communications conference specifically designed to focus on deployable CIS. It is a critical forum where you will find senior officers, military commanders, and industry experts brought together to discuss interoperability and innovation in cutting-edge communications.

National militaries:

  • Military communications specialists
  • Equipment procurement officers

Industry:

  • Businesses looking to break into the regional market
  • Established players in the regional market
  • Developers and innovators in military technology

Transnational/Continental/Euro-Atlantic organisations/bodies:

  • Organisations who wish to equalise allied defence capability
  • Those who seek improvement of the security and strength of Europe’s front line

sponsors

Conference agenda

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8:00

Registration & Coffee

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8:50

Chairman's Opening Remarks

Major General (Ret.) Bill Robins, CEO, BRL

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9:00

Host Nation Keynote - Delivering and Sustaining World-Class C4I Capabilities for the British Warfighter

Brigadier Jez Sharpe

Brigadier Jez Sharpe , Head, Tactical Systems Service Executive (TacSys), UK Defence Digital

  • Overview of MORPHEUS, TRINITY and Falcon
  • Other programmes within TacSys
  • Collaboration with key industry partners
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    9:30

    Connecting Warfighters with Deployable, Secure & War-Winning Cyber, C3I & Network Systems

    Major General Anthony Genatempo, Program Executive Officer, Cyber & Networks Directorate, US Air Force Life Cycle Management Center

  •  Delivering net centric solutions to drive dynamic integration of information/systems
  • The digital infrastructure necessary to support Joint-All Domain Command and Control and the Advanced Battle Management System
  • Special communication projects to enable decisive combat operations
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    10:00

    Session Reserved for Lead Sponsor

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    10:30

    Morning Coffee

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    11:00

    Session Reserved for Gold Sponsor

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    11:30

    Enhancing C2 Resilience for the British Army

    Captain Martin Maynard, SO3 Capability Development , CISTDU, British Army

  •  Dynamic PACE
  • Manoeuvrability and survivability of C2 CPs
  • Future programmes and goals
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    12:00

    Future Capability Innovation and the DE&S Gateway

    Dave Pheasant, DE&S Future Capability Group, Strategic Command & Air Portfolio Team Leader, DE&S UK MoD

  • Projects and the DE&S Gateway
  • Working with the Front Line Commands
  • Timelines and Goals
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    12:30

    Networking Lunch

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    13:30

    Session Reserved for Sponsor

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    14:00

    Utilising FutureG Technology to Enhance Secure Battlefield Communications Capability

    Dr Thomas Rondeau, Principal Director for FutureG, OUSD(R&E), US DOD

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    14:30

    Military utilization of 5G in the Norwegian Armed Forces

    Captain Kim Kristiansen

    Captain Kim Kristiansen, Master Instructor of Signals, Norwegian Army Land Warfare Centre - Norwegian Army Signals School (NORASIGS)

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    15:00

    Session Reserved for Sponsor

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    15:30

    Afternoon Tea

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    16:00

    Enhancing Mobile Communications for the Swedish Armed Forces

    Greger Potzscher

    Greger Potzscher , Head of Command and Information Systems - Ground, FMV

  • Digital transformation of deployable comms tech
  • Specific requirements for the Swedish Armed Forces
  • Current programme efforts
  • Future goals and timelines
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    16:30

    Advancing Hungarian Army Battlefield Communications Technology

    Colonel Janos Poloskei, Deputy Director, Communications, Information and Information Security Systems Directorate (J6), Hungarian Defence Forces

  • Digitalisation as a focus of modernisation 
  • Secure Networks
  • Future plans and efforts
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    17:00

    Lessons Learned from the Exercise Schutzschild: a case study of the Austrian Armed Forces

    Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Treiblmaier, Head of ICT Operations and Electronic Warfare Section, Austrian Armed Forces

  • Deployable communication elements of the Austrian Army’s largest exercise in 10 years
  • Security and resilience as a focus
  • International cooperation within the exercise 
  • Path moving forward 
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    17:30

    Presentation from the Estonian Defence Force

    Captain Raul Riiel, TACCIS Chief, MIL CIS Group, Estonian Defence Forces

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    18:00

    Chairman’s Closing Remarks and Close of Day One

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    8:15

    Registration & Coffee

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    8:50

    Chairman's Opening Remarks

    Brigadier (Ret.) Neil Couch, Strategic Programmes Consultant, Cartera Limited

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    9:00

    Rapidly Deployable Resilient Comms for the British Army’s Global Response Force

    Brigadier Mark Berry

    Brigadier Mark Berry, Commander, 16 Air Assault Brigade Combat Team, British Army

  • The core missions and capabilities of the 16 Air Assault Brigade Combat Team
  • Communication requirements for rapid deployment 
  • Interoperability and allied partnerships
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    9:30

    Providing Rapid Communications Capability for Expeditionary Operations

    Colonel Ian Fletcher, Commanding Officer, Information Group, II Marine Expeditionary Force

  • The communications requirements for the II MEF
  • Current technology and capability 
  • Resilience and security as a core element of deployed networks
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    10:00

    Session Reserved for Gold Sponsor

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    10:30

    Morning Coffee

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    11:00

    Session Reserved for Sponsor

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    11:30

    Extending, Operating and Defending Warfighter Communications Securely and at Pace

    Colonel Jennifer Carns, Commander, 5th Combat Communications Group, USAF

  •  Changing the way we fight: establishing smaller footprints and being able to move with speed and agility
  • Agile Combat Employment and field training
  • Resilient connections to provide assured command and control in contested environments
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    12:00

    Delivering Secure Cyberspace and Expeditionary Communications Capabilities to Enable Airpower Anytime, Anywhere

    Lieutenant Colonel Christopher Dauer, Commander, 85th Engineering Installation Squadron, US Air Force

  • RETT – robust and resilient networks at pace
  • Enabling comms at deployed locations
  • Future requirements and goals 
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    12:30

    Assisting the Ukrainian Armed Forces in their Use of Mobile Deployable Communications Technology

    Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Zisa

    Lieutenant Colonel Daniel Zisa, Director, J6, Security Assistance Group - Ukraine

  • The role of SAG-U J6
  • Operational case studies and lessons learned
  • The importance of secure battlefield networks
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    13:00

    Networking Lunch

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    14:00

    Advancing Alliance C2 Capability Through a Focus on the Operational Level

    Colonel Mietta Groeneveld, Director, NATO Command and Control Centre of Excellence

  •  Supporting NATO, nations, and international institutions/organisations with subject matter expertise on Command and Control in the field
  • The timely deployment and establishment of the necessary command and control networks is a weakness faced by all armed forces
  • Enabling the ability to conduct operations from distributed and dispersed locations through deployable comms advances 
  • NATO C2COE Study - “The Future of the Command Post” 
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    14:30

    Zero-Trust Architecture as a Key Element of EU Deployable Communications Initiatives

    Salvador Llopis, Senior Project Officer Telecommunications and Information Systems, Team Leader C4ISTAR Capability Programme, European Defence Agency

  • Towards a collaborative programme of work on C4ISTAR that pioneers innovative solutions
  • Advancing C2 systems in a highly interconnected and dynamic battlespace
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    15:00

    Developing Deployable & Secure Communication Kits for EU Operations

    Miguel Saiz, Project Officer Support to EU Operations, European Defence Agency

  • Developing a single pack plug-and-play approach
  • Deploying restricted networks in the field
  • Crypto capability
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    15:30

    Afternoon Tea

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    16:00

    Tackling the Mobility, Scalability and Survivability of Army Command Posts

  •  Addressing the challenges posed by contemporary and future land conflict
  • Integrating approved commercial and government off-the-shelf systems
  • Inc 0 & Inc. 1 development goals
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    Justin Seehusen

    Justin Seehusen , Deputy Product Manager , PM I2S CPI2

    Major Jason Akers

    Major Jason Akers, Assistant Project Manager , PM I2S CPI2

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    16:30

    Enhancing Comms Resilience in Coalition Operations

    Major Ezrael Atajar

    Major Ezrael Atajar, USMC Interoperability Proponent , J-7, Joint Interoperability Division and Data Link Training Center (JID-TC)

  • Developing and training the warfighter in networked datalink interoperability concepts
  • Challenges of multinational data collaboration
  • Advances in networked warfare and emergent capabilities
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    17:00

    Chairman’s Closing Remarks and Close of Day Two

    Brigadier (Ret.) Neil Couch, Strategic Programmes Consultant, Cartera Limited


    Program Executive Officer
    Cyber & Networks Directorate, US Air Force Life Cycle Management Center
    Strategic Programmes Consultant
    Cartera Limited
    Head
    Tactical Systems Service Executive (TacSys), UK Defence Digital
    Commander
    16 Air Assault Brigade Combat Team, British Army
    Master Instructor of Signals
    Norwegian Army Land Warfare Centre - Norwegian Army Signals School (NORASIGS)
    SO3 Capability Development
    CISTDU, British Army
    TACCIS Chief
    MIL CIS Group, Estonian Defence Forces
    Commanding Officer
    Information Group, II Marine Expeditionary Force
    Deputy Director
    Communications, Information and Information Security Systems Directorate (J6), Hungarian Defence Forces
    Commander
    5th Combat Communications Group, USAF
    Director
    NATO Command and Control Centre of Excellence
    DE&S Future Capability Group, Strategic Command & Air Portfolio Team Leader
    DE&S UK MoD
    Principal Director for FutureG
    OUSD(R&E), US DOD
    Head of Command and Information Systems - Ground
    FMV
    Head of ICT Operations and Electronic Warfare Section
    Austrian Armed Forces
    Commander
    85th Engineering Installation Squadron, US Air Force
    Director, J6
    Security Assistance Group - Ukraine
    CEO
    BRL
    Project Officer Support to EU Operations
    European Defence Agency
    Senior Project Officer Telecommunications and Information Systems, Team Leader C4ISTAR Capability Programme
    European Defence Agency

    Sponsors

    Exhibitors

    VENUE

    Marriott Hotel Grosvenor Square

    Grosvenor Square, London, United Kingdom

    A number of our clients have been approached by third party organisations offering to book hotel rooms. We would advise that you do not book through them as they are not representing the SMi Group. SMi Group books all hotel rooms directly. If you are approached by a third party organisation then please contact us before making any bookings. If you have already booked a hotel room using a third party organisation, we would highly recommend contacting the hotel you were booked into to ensure a booking has been made for you. We would also advise you to please check the terms and conditions of the booking carefully.
    HOTEL BOOKING FORM

    Sponsors


    Babcock

    Sponsors
    https://www.babcockinternational.com/

    Babcock plays a critical role in international defence. In a world of significant geopolitical instability, national security has never been more important as defence requirements become increasingly complex to deliver. Ensuring those critical services are readily available, affordable and long-lasting is a vital task. And Babcock is built for that task. Now more than ever, what we do matters. Creating a safe and secure world, together.


    Exhibitors


    Hanwha Phasor

    Exhibitors
    https://www.hanwha-phasor.com/

    At Hanwha Phasor, we are at the forefront of pioneering enterprise-grade Active Electronically Steered Array (AESA) antennas for satellite communications on the move, designed to provide seamless connectivity across air, land, and sea. Our advanced technological capabilities cater to both commercial and military clientele.

    Diverging from conventional parabolic reflectors, our flat and modular antennas are designed to conformally fit onto aircraft, response vehicles, and marine vessels. Our innovative make-before-break technology ensures uninterrupted multi-orbit connectivity from virtually any environment, all while maintaining an ultra-low profile and uncompromising performance standards. This marks a revolutionary leap forward.

    We are headquartered in the heart of London and have a second location in Cambridge, England. Join us as we embark on the journey of shaping the future of satellite communications.



    Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace

    Exhibitors
    http://www.kongsberg.com

    Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace is a leading supplier of defence products and systems for command and control, surveillance, space, tactical communications, remote weapon stations and missiles systems. Collaboration and translating innovations from one business area to the others makes us among the best in our fields and allows us to deliver extreme performance for extreme conditions.


    Viasat

    Exhibitors
    https://www.viasat.com/defense/

    Viasat is a global communications company that believes everyone and everything in the world can be securely connected. With deep roots in defense and a modern, commercial-driven mindset, we use our 35+ years of experience in breaking down communications silos to help create seamless interoperability across complex forms of connectivity: Broadband Satcom. Tactical Networking. Advanced Cybersecurity. We deliver the secure and scalable communications our partners need to operate as a successful team, whether large or small—and maximize their collective strength when it’s needed most.


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    WHAT IS CPD?

    CPD stands for Continuing Professional Development’. It is essentially a philosophy, which maintains that in order to be effective, learning should be organised and structured. The most common definition is:

    ‘A commitment to structured skills and knowledge enhancement for Personal or Professional competence’

    CPD is a common requirement of individual membership with professional bodies and Institutes. Increasingly, employers also expect their staff to undertake regular CPD activities.

    Undertaken over a period of time, CPD ensures that educational qualifications do not become obsolete, and allows for best practice and professional standards to be upheld.

    CPD can be undertaken through a variety of learning activities including instructor led training courses, seminars and conferences, e:learning modules or structured reading.

    CPD AND PROFESSIONAL INSTITUTES

    There are approximately 470 institutes in the UK across all industry sectors, with a collective membership of circa 4 million professionals, and they all expect their members to undertake CPD.

    For some institutes undertaking CPD is mandatory e.g. accountancy and law, and linked to a licence to practice, for others it’s obligatory. By ensuring that their members undertake CPD, the professional bodies seek to ensure that professional standards, legislative awareness and ethical practices are maintained.

    CPD Schemes often run over the period of a year and the institutes generally provide online tools for their members to record and reflect on their CPD activities.

    TYPICAL CPD SCHEMES AND RECORDING OF CPD (CPD points and hours)

    Professional bodies and Institutes CPD schemes are either structured as ‘Input’ or ‘Output’ based.

    ‘Input’ based schemes list a precise number of CPD hours that individuals must achieve within a given time period. These schemes can also use different ‘currencies’ such as points, merits, units or credits, where an individual must accumulate the number required. These currencies are usually based on time i.e. 1 CPD point = 1 hour of learning.

    ‘Output’ based schemes are learner centred. They require individuals to set learning goals that align to professional competencies, or personal development objectives. These schemes also list different ways to achieve the learning goals e.g. training courses, seminars or e:learning, which enables an individual to complete their CPD through their preferred mode of learning.

    The majority of Input and Output based schemes actively encourage individuals to seek appropriate CPD activities independently.

    As a formal provider of CPD certified activities, SAE Media Group can provide an indication of the learning benefit gained and the typical completion. However, it is ultimately the responsibility of the delegate to evaluate their learning, and record it correctly in line with their professional body’s or employers requirements.

    GLOBAL CPD

    Increasingly, international and emerging markets are ‘professionalising’ their workforces and looking to the UK to benchmark educational standards. The undertaking of CPD is now increasingly expected of any individual employed within today’s global marketplace.

    CPD Certificates

    We can provide a certificate for all our accredited events. To request a CPD certificate for a conference , workshop, master classes you have attended please email events@saemediagroup.com

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    UK Office
    Opening Hours: 9.00 - 17.30 (local time)
    SAE Media Group , Ground Floor, India House, 45 Curlew Street, London, SE1 2ND, United Kingdom
    Tel: +44 (0) 20 7827 6000 Fax: +44 (0) 20 7827 6001
    Website: http://www.smgconferences.com Email: events@saemediagroup.com
    Registered in England - SMi Group Ltd trading as SAE Media Group




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