[ISN] Army taps DMS for wartime comm

From: InfoSec News (isnat_private)
Date: Thu Mar 27 2003 - 23:27:24 PST

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    http://www.fcw.com/fcw/articles/2003/middle_east/web-dms-03-27-03.asp
    
    By Dan Caterinicchia 
    March 27, 2003
    
    CAMP DOHA, KUWAIT - The Army recently implemented the Defense Message
    System (DMS) to provide users here with better-protected and faster
    communications than e-mail over the Defense Department's Secret
    Internet Protocol Router Network (SIPRNET).
    
    DMS messages travel over the Defense Information Systems Network,
    which distributes voice, video and data messages. The system - a $1.6
    billion effort to secure DOD communications worldwide - is designed to
    provide writer-to-reader service for classified and top-secret
    information, delivering messages to DOD users at their desktops and to
    other agencies and contractors, if necessary.
    
    Retired Air Force Master Sgt. Arthur Edgeson, senior systems engineer
    at the Fort Detrick, Md., office of Data Systems Analysts Inc., said
    DMS became active at Camp Doha at the end of last month and has
    experienced a noticeable increase in traffic since Operation Iraqi
    Freedom began March 20.
    
    "Yes, SIPR e-mail is classified, but it could be hacked into. Or if
    we're overrun by the enemy, they would have access to the computers
    and could send messages...to mislead or misdirect [coalition] forces,"  
    said Edgeson, who also serves as the Army DMS Program Management
    Office representative from Fort Belvoir, Va. He retired from active
    military duty in August 2001 after 23 years of service.
    
    The Army maintains three nonclassified servers in the "DMS shelter"  
    here separate from the DMS terminal at the command center of the
    Coalition Forces Land Component Command (CFLCC). Edgeson said the
    CFLCC terminal serves as the gateway for opening and decrypting DMS
    messages and those of its predecessor, the Automatic Digital Network
    (Autodin), and then forwards the messages to the approved recipient.
    
    Most DOD employees have Microsoft Corp.'s Outlook for e-mail. DMS
    messages look slightly different from Outlook messages because of the
    strict security parameters. However, users can compose DMS messages on
    their computers and then use a Fortezza card, which has a
    cryptographic token for securing messages, to sign and encrypt them, a
    Defense Information Systems Agency official said in an interview
    earlier this month.
    
    Edgeson said there are hundreds of DMS users in Kuwait, many of whom
    came here unfamiliar with the system. ITT Industries Inc., which
    manages DMS for the Army in southwest Asia, conducted training courses
    for those beginning users.
    
    "The feedback was, 'It's not as hard as I though it was,'" he said.  
    "It's basically sending e-mail with a couple of extra mouse clicks."
    
    In addition to the increased security and authentication that DMS
    offers Army users at the camp, the service also is working on a
    solution that forward-deployed troops can use, Edgeson said.
    
    The Tactical Message System would sit on the back of a Humvee and
    serve as a mobile DMS. However, that won't be available in southwest
    Asia until about August, he said. Currently, forward-deployed units
    use SIPRNET e-mail.
    
    Edgeson acknowledged that DMS still has bugs to work out and that many
    DOD users remain faithful to Autodin. "DMS' biggest challenge is
    resistance to change. With Autodin, they say, 'This is how it's been
    done for 30 years and it works, so why change it?'"
    
    But Autodin does not allow users to include attachments. It requires
    users to pick up messages at a central message center twice daily and
    is run on antiquated equipment. DMS may not be perfect, but it can
    send and receive all messages for both systems and deliver them to the
    user's desktop quickly and securely, Edgeson said.
    
    The other military services also are using DMS, but each has its own
    time lines, personnel and priorities, he said.
    
    
    
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