Navy to compete Distributed Common Ground System–Navy contract

The Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command is looking for a contractor to support an intelligence network that will connect command centers and fleet task forces.

In a request for information, Navy officials said they plan a limited competition, based on security restrictions, for the Distributed Common Ground System–Navy (DCGS-N) Prime Mission Product contract. They are seeking sources that can provide a wide array of technical capabilities, such as system design, development, integration, hardware and software, platform and site integration, testing, and installation support.

Navy officials plan to require that contractors’ engineering employees have top secret/sensitive compartmented information clearance and that contractors have an accredited sensitive compartmented information facility.

DCGS-N is the Navy’s component of the Defense Department’s family of systems that integrate intelligence, surveillance, reconnaissance and targeting support capabilities. Maintaining security is an important aspect because some of the program’s intelligence-gathering methods and sources are highly classified.

Navy officials expect to award the contract in the first quarter of fiscal 2010.

More detailed information is available at Spawar E-Commerce Central. Responses to the RFI are due by Oct. 9.

About the Author

William Welsh is the managing editor of Defense Systems.

Reader Comments

Please post your comments here. Comments are moderated, so they may not appear immediately after submitting. We will not post comments that we consider abusive or off-topic.

Your Name:(optional)
Your Email:(optional)
Your Location:(optional)
Comment:
Please type the letters/numbers you see above

Highlights from the current issue

eSeminar

  • Where Cyberwarfare and Cybersecurity Meet

    We invite you to attend the third event in this three-part series on Cybersecurity. 1105 Government Information Group will present a panel of government and cybersecurity experts, including Jeffrey Carr, cyber strategies consultant and author of Inside Cyber Warfare; Dean Lindstrom, strategic cybersecurity architect and CEO of Cyberström LLC; and Dr. George Stein, director of the Cyberspace and Information Operations Study Center, Air War College, U.S. Air Force, in this editorial webcast on Tuesday, April 13 at 11 a.m., where they will discuss the cyberwarfare threat to both industry and government, as well as strategies to consolidate the wider cybersecurity mission. Read more