Tuesday, September 26, 2017
What is it?
The U.S. Army’s Science and Technology (S&T) program is an investment in the Army’s future, providing and informing technological options to our senior leadership and acquisition programs. The Army S&T enterprise is composed of over 22 Army laboratories, Research, Development, Engineering Centers (RDECs), and research institutes in the United States with 25,000 Army scientists and engineers. Army S&T pursues critical foundational technology developments for near- (now to 2025), mid- (to 2035) and long-term (to 2050) problems to achieve the Chief of Staff of the Army’s priorities for overmatch against adversaries in all operational domains.
What is the Army doing?
The Army S&T enterprise was developed to effectively and efficiently pursue planned technology goals through five distinctive, interconnected roles:
The Army S&T portfolio is focused toward the acceleration of synergistic capability concepts including:
What continued efforts are planned for the future?
The Army S&T enterprise supports the Army’s goals to balance current and future technology demands by providing new technologies to enhance upgrades and modernization of systems in the current force and enable new capabilities in the future force. Army S&T strategy will continue to support the Army’s research and acquisition process through:
Why is this important to the Army?
The Army S&T enterprise is a critical resource for maintaining the Army’s capabilities and is the key to developing enabling concepts and technologies to make the Army more lethal, expeditionary, and agile. The outcome is increased capability for conducting the full range of operations while maintaining technological overmatch now and in the future.
Resources:
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