Technology Training - Click Here!

CACI to Support US Army Information Warfare Directorate under $900M TESS Contract

Related Stories: C4ISR, Delivery & Task Orders, IT - General, Intelligence & PsyOps, Other Corporation, Support Functions - Other

Advertisement
MIL_US_ARMY_CERDEC_I2WD_Logo.jpg

CACI International received a $75 million task order to support the US Army’s Communications-Electronics Research, Development and Engineering Center (CERDEC) Intelligence and Information Warfare Directorate (I2WD) under the Technical Engineering Support Services (TESS) contract.

CACI was awarded the 5-year, $900 million TESS contract on Aug 19/09. York Telecom Corp. and DSCI also were awarded TESS contracts.

Under this task order, CACI will provide engineering and technical support to assist I2WD in developing and deploying US Army intelligence and information warfare systems…

The contractor’s work for I2WD includes evaluations of commercial technologies, mission applications, and systems; enhancements of current systems; providing rapid response services in support of military missions in a coordinated and controlled operational setting; and supporting the directorate’s efforts to engineer, develop, test, and deploy prototype systems.

The I2WD, located at Fort Monmouth, NJ, provides the US Army with intelligence and information warfare tools. It capability areas are:

  • radar/combat identification;
  • electronic warfare air/ground survivability equipment;
  • information and network operations;
  • signals intelligence;
  • modeling & simulation;
  • information fusion;
  • measurement and signatures intelligence;
  • electronic warfare countermeasures; and
  • intelligence dissemination.

The CACI task order is for a base period of 2 years with 2 one-year options. CACI has supported the I2WD under TESS and prior omnibus service contracts for 21 years.

Images on Defense Industry Daily

Defense Industry Daily does not own the rights to the images displayed on our site. We use images under "fair use" copyright doctrine, from public sources and private organizations, or use images under Creative Commons/ GNU licenses that make them available to the general public, or with explicit and noted permission. All rights remain with the original image owners.

If you believe that a DID image may violate these conditions, please discuss it with us via an email to editorial@defenseindustrydaily.com

The sizes displayed on DID are the only sizes we have to offer.


Close