ARRC Journal 2019 | Page 77

READY FOR TODAY – EVOLVING FOR TOMORROW The ARRC augmented geospatial cell, which added representatives from the Czech Army, Polish Army, NRDC-ITA, NRDC-TUR, MND-SE and the UK’s 42nd Engineer Regiment (Geospatial). Having a variety of different countries, working practises, ranks and experience levels was a deliberate act in order to force an effective spirit of collaboration, which resulted in the harnessing of best practises from across the Alliance. be using the same baseline data; this is a vital ingredient to prevent fratricide (cognitive or physical). Prior to deploying on the exercise, all the participants were sent the same authorised data. This simple process was very time consuming. It put a great deal of pressure on data-managers as they were working on compressed timelines to ensure that data processing and husbandry was correctly achieved. There is currently no other way of doing this as the NATO Force Structure and national elements work on national CIS, NRDC-ITA’s geospatial warrant officer using UK bulk production equipment. thus precluding a ‘plug and play’ option. Fighting off the same map NATO geospatial practitioners have always considered best practise the ability to ‘fight off the same map’; why would anyone do differently? Whilst this concept is easy to understand, it is challenging to achieve. The underpinning resource that allows the creation of ‘the same map’, along with a variety of other analytical and decision support products, is the data. No matter what the exercise or operation, all NATO countries should Whilst using common baseline data meant that everyone had the same start point, the end points reached varied. This is salient when one thinks of ‘the rifleman in the foxhole’ analogy. It must be straightforward for troops on the ground to read and understand a map so as not to inhibit tactical thinking. There is currently no NATO standardisation for symbology and the marginalia of a map, which has resulted in a wide spectrum of products displaying the same information, but in a multitude of different ways. The result is that end-users are often not ‘fighting off the same map’. Conceived collaboration through multinational design From the outset of the planning it was clear that participants were keen to attend given the multinational nature of the exercise, which has been a theme of Exercise ARRCADE GLOBE throughout time. Whilst there have always been participants from various countries and organisations, it has not always been possible to achieve a collaborative working environment, which is something ARRCADE GLOBE 18 aimed to address. UK reservists manning the mobile field deployable bulk distribution system. ALLIED RAPID REACTION CORPS 77