Strategic Homeland Integrated Emergency Logistics & Decision-support / All-Threat Layered Awareness System
Defense Capabilities Briefing — Software-Defined, MOSA-Compliant, JADC2-Aligned
The Department of Defense and the civilian emergency management community operate in separate technology stacks with incompatible data architectures and siloed training pipelines. In an era of software-defined warfare and JADC2-mandated interoperability, this fragmentation degrades mission assurance. When crises bridge both domains — a hurricane hitting a military installation, GPS jamming affecting civilian aviation, a CBRN event requiring DSCA — the technology gap becomes a mission gap. Affordable mass at scale demands MOSA-compliant, composable solutions that span portfolios.
All defense modules reside behind the zero-trust access gate. Each is MOSA-compliant and integrates with the broader 66-module platform shipping today for JADC2-aligned cross-domain situational awareness via a 17-route Event Bus mesh. DDIL-capable with full-stack congruence. Every module includes an interactive sandbox for guided training and validation.
AI-powered COA generation: produces 2-3 courses of action with risk scoring, resource requirements, timelines, and decision points. Supports hurricane, active threat, CBRN, and infrastructure scenarios. Multi-domain analysis across all platform modules.
Combat training center operations. Warfighting functions (movement/maneuver, intelligence, fires, sustainment, C2, protection). MDMP planning, OPORD/FRAGO generation, joint operations coordination.
Joint fires C2 with a human-authored ballistic engine (FT-style firing tables and verified MET corrections — AI does not author ballistic numbers and does not make the call to fire). Full call-for-fire chain: Observer ID, Warning Order, Target Grid, Target Description, Munition Selection, Method of Fire, CFF Validation, VTC Camera (stays LIVE in parallel, not serial), Target Designation (paired agreement), Ballistic Solution with TITAN interop export (CoT/JSON/USMTF/VMF). BDA visual assessment. 10-step interactive sandbox with voice input and human verification. FSCM, weapons effects calculation. Lethal-effect commit is always human-in-loop.
Full-spectrum effects using DIME framework (Diplomatic, Information, Military, Economic). Information operations, civil affairs, PSYOP, public affairs coordination.
Counter-drone operations with 10-platform adversary threat library (Shahed-136, Lancet, Orlan-10, Wing Loong II, CH-5, TB2, FPV Racing, Ababil-T, KUB-BLA, Mohajer-6). Asset manager: RF jammer, laser, HPM, kinetic, net gun inventory. Detection sensor network. Engagement log with auto ammo decrement.
Electromagnetic Spectrum Operations (JP 3-85). RF spectrum management, EW asset inventory, jamming operations, emitter tracker, spectrum deconfliction, readiness scorecard. Electronic warfare zone management.
Friendly unit positions, movement history, force disposition. Real-time force tracking, unit status, combat power assessment, logistics status reporting.
GPS constellation health (32 satellites), jamming/spoofing detection, satellite pass tracker. NOAA SWPC space weather (live). PNT resilience grid with 6 backup systems: eLoran, LEO PNT, atomic clock, CSAC, inertial nav, terrain matching. 9-jammer adversary reference library.
Acoustic intelligence. Sonobuoy planning, sonar propagation modeling, submarine detection. Underwater acoustic environment analysis, ASW coordination.
Maritime common operating picture. AIS vessel tracking, anomaly detection, threat identification, vessel classification, maritime domain awareness, port security.
Tactical decision support. Search patterns (expanding square, sector, parallel), engagement planning, mission analysis, decision matrices, risk assessment.
Unmanned systems fleet management. UUV and USV coordination, swarm control, mission planning, autonomous operations.
Maritime intelligence. Order of battle, fleet analysis, environmental intelligence (sea state, currents, tides, bathymetry) for operational planning.
Adversary C2 intelligence database. 7 preloaded OSINT systems: Svod, Polyana-D4M1, Barnaul-T, Baikal-1ME (Russia); KJCCS (China); PLA MOSIS (Iran); Sepehr (DPRK). C2 node tracker, activity timeline, doctrine patterns, Blue vs Red capability comparison. Auto-pushes to SENTINEL.
Full-spectrum meshed cyber defense. CISA KEV live feed with [RANSOMWARE] tagging. WATCHTOWER insider threat detection (entity behavior tracking, anomaly scoring, risk escalation — flags for human action, never auto-punishes). Ransomware Kill Chain Defense (5-phase lifecycle: Prevent/Detect/Contain/Eradicate/Recover, 22-item checklist, FBI/CISA payment guidance, OFAC sanctions check). Asset Vulnerability Crosswalk (register organizational assets, auto-cross-reference against CISA KEV, priority: internet-facing + ransomware-tagged = CRITICAL). Network Anomaly Detection (8 armed rules: data exfil, C2 beacons, lateral movement, canary files, honeypot logins, Kerberoasting, Tor tunnels). NIST CSF 2.0 mapping (85% compliant), CNSA 2.0 post-quantum readiness, FedRAMP tracker. Everything fires through Event Bus to BASTION, SENTINEL, CASCADE, CITADEL, GUARDIAN, ALERT.
Operations security, SCIF compliance, data classification (UNCLASSIFIED through TS/SCI), insider threat detection, security protocols, need-to-know enforcement.
Coalition coordination, diplomatic operations, embassy security awareness. Foreign partner liaison, NEO (Noncombatant Evacuation Operations) planning.
Nuclear materials monitoring, radiological detection networks. EPA RadNet, CTBTO IMS (International Monitoring System), WMD proliferation intelligence, contamination modeling, decontamination protocols.
Cross-domain situation aggregator pulling live SIGINT, Cyber, Logistics, METOC, and DIME data simultaneously. Correlation engine detects coordinated adversary operations across domains: COORDINATED_ATTACK (SIGINT + Cyber within 48hrs), SUPPLY_VULNERABILITY (shortages during active threats), C2_DISRUPTION_RISK (cyber events during logistics degradation). 1st/2nd/3rd order effects modeler with probability-weighted cascading impacts adjusted for real-time conditions. 6-step Joint Decision Wizard generates integrated cross-domain COAs. Commander approval before execution. 30-second auto-refresh. Full decision audit trail.
Operational environment assessment with 6-step intelligent planning wizard. Pulls live weather and terrain data for target area. AI-powered CARVER targeting analysis with vulnerability scoring. COA generation across Diplomatic, Information, Military, and Economic instruments of national power. Effects tracking across Political, Military, Economic, Social, Information, Infrastructure, Physical Environment, and Time domains.
5-step intercept wizard supporting COMINT, ELINT, FISINT, and MASINT signal classification. Pattern matching against known emitter databases. Automated threat analysis with analyst override at every decision point. Intercept logging with geolocation and confidence scoring. Feeds threat data to Joint Decision Support for cross-domain correlation.
10 classes of supply readiness dashboard tracking unit combat power. 4-step supply planning wizard auto-identifies shortages, calculates FLASH/IMMEDIATE/PRIORITY/ROUTINE request priorities, generates resupply requests. Commander approval gate. Feeds readiness data to Joint Decision Support for operational planning and cross-domain correlation.
Five integrated sub-modules providing full-spectrum maritime domain awareness from surface tracking through underwater acoustics to tactical engagement.
| Module | Function | Capabilities |
|---|---|---|
| NEPTUNE | Surface SA | AIS vessel tracking, anomaly detection, threat classification, port security, maritime domain awareness |
| TRIDENT | Undersea Warfare | Sonobuoy planning, sonar propagation modeling, submarine detection, acoustic environment analysis |
| AEGIS | Tactical Decision | Search pattern generation, engagement planning, mission analysis, risk assessment matrices |
| NEREID | Unmanned Systems | UUV/USV fleet management, swarm coordination, autonomous mission planning |
| OCEANUS | Maritime Intel | Order of battle, fleet analysis, environmental intelligence (sea state, currents, tides, bathymetry) |
NEPTUNE detects AIS anomaly → OCEANUS provides maritime intel → TRIDENT deploys acoustic surveillance → AEGIS generates engagement options → ODIN provides AI COA analysis → AIRSPACE deploys surveillance UAS → CONSUL coordinates coalition partners → FIRES prepares fire support if needed
Pre-loaded OSINT-derived threat databases enabling rapid threat identification and countermeasure selection.
Each entry includes: full technical specifications, combat employment history, known countermeasures, threat level assessment, radar cross-section estimates.
Each entry includes: technical specs, frequency bands, effective range, countermeasures, operational history, procurement status.
| System | Nation | Function |
|---|---|---|
| Svod | Russia | Theater-level integrated air defense C2 |
| Polyana-D4M1 | Russia | Brigade/division automated C2 for IADS |
| Barnaul-T | Russia | Tactical-level SHORAD C2 |
| Baikal-1ME | Russia | Automated fire control for GBAD |
| KJCCS | China | PLA joint C2 system |
| PLA MOSIS | Iran | Integrated air/maritime defense C2 |
| Sepehr | DPRK | Strategic-level automated C2 |
SHIELD/ATLAS spans multiple PAE portfolios rather than residing in a single program of record. This aligns with DOD's shift toward portfolio-driven acquisition, MOSA-compliant open architecture, and JADC2-mandated interoperability. Software-defined, composable modules deliver affordable mass at scale across acquisition boundaries. Mission-based cyber risk assessment (DoWM 5000.103/DoDI 5000.89) embedded at every tier.
Comprehensive PNT resilience across DDIL (Denied, Disrupted, Intermittent, Limited) environments. MOSA-compliant navigation composable with all C2 and fires modules. Zero-trust integrity verification on all PNT sources.
Multi-domain course of action analysis with automated risk scoring, resource calculation, and timeline generation.
MOSA-compliant, JADC2-aligned architecture serves civilian emergency managers and military commanders with full-stack congruence. Zero-trust zero-trust gate controls access levels while enabling authorized cross-domain data flows. DDIL-capable. Affordable mass at scale.
WEATHER tracks storm approach → METRO monitors city infrastructure → GUARDIAN calculates risk for installation and surrounding community → ICS establishes unified command (military + civilian) → CASCADE maps infrastructure dependencies across both → EMS coordinates military and civilian medical assets → TRANSPORT coordinates military and civilian evacuation routes → ODIN generates joint COAs → WARFIGHTER manages military force protection → RECOVER coordinates FEMA/DOD assistance
FEMA/NIMS-compliant emergency management, ICS forms, HSEEP exercises, municipal operations (METRO), community resilience, interoperability exports (CAP/EDXL/NIEF), weather, fire, EMS, transport, damage assessment, mutual aid, recovery.
MDMP/Joint Ops, AI COA generation (commander-approved, never auto-executed), fires C2 with a human-authored ballistic engine and TITAN interop — AI does not author ballistic numbers and lethal-effect commit stays human-in-loop. POSEIDON maritime suite, EMSO/EW, C-UAS, SDA/PNT resilience, adversary C2 intelligence, CBRN/WMD tracking, blue force tracking, coalition coordination, operations security.
Every defense module includes an interactive sandbox with guided step-by-step walkthroughs. Operators can learn, practice, and validate workflows in a safe environment with realistic scenario data. Hand them the device. Let them do it. Reset and repeat.
Training Mode → Observer ID → Warning Order + Grid → Target Description + Munition → Method of Fire → Validate CFF → VTC Camera Start → Target Designate (paired agreement) → Ballistic Solution + Interop Export (TITAN/CoT/USMTF/VMF) → BDA Visual Assessment
| Vehicle | Relevance | SHIELD/ATLAS Modules |
|---|---|---|
| DOD OTA | Other Transaction Authority for rapid prototyping | ODIN (AI/ML), POSEIDON (maritime AI), SDA (space), SPECTRUM (EW) |
| SBIR/STTR | Small business innovation research | All defense modules (VOSB eligible), GPS-denied nav, adversary threat libraries |
| DHS HSGP | Homeland security grant program | CITADEL, BASTION, C-UAS, CYBER, SENTINEL, interoperability |
| MTEC | Medical Technology Enterprise Consortium | EMS, HEALTH, CBRN, mass casualty management |
| SOCOM SOFWERX | Special operations innovation | NAV (GPS-denied), ODIN, RED FORCE, OPSEC, SPECTRUM |
| DARPA | Advanced research projects | ODIN (AI decision support), CASCADE (infrastructure modeling), SDA (PNT resilience) |
ISS LLC (Integrated Services and Solutions LLC), operating as SecureAssure, is a Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business (SDVOSB). Dr. Terry Flood (DHA, Retired U.S. Army 131A, Chief Targeting, EW, Fires & Intelligence Officer) brings decades of operational experience. SDVOSB certification provides preferential access to set-aside contracts, sole-source authority under simplified acquisition thresholds, and credibility in the defense acquisition community. CAGE: 9VKK3 | UEI: C7YDV3P8EHL7.
| Component | Implementation |
|---|---|
| Application | Progressive Web App (PWA) — runs in any browser, installable, offline-capable |
| Frontend | Vanilla JavaScript (~23,400+ lines), Chart.js visualization, Leaflet.js mapping with Turf.js geospatial |
| Backend | Node.js/Express (TypeScript), PostgreSQL database, Socket.IO realtime |
| Service Worker | atlas-v29 — network-first for JS/CSS, cache-first for assets, full offline capability |
| Security | zero-trust defense access gate, HTTPS, no-cache headers, SCIF compliance protocols (OPSEC module) |
| Interoperability | CAP 1.2 XML (IPAWS), EDXL-RM (EMAC), EDXL-HAVE (HAvBED), NIEF 2.0, CoT/TAK |
| Testing | 950+ automated health tests covering all modules, APIs, and integrations |
| Ecosystem | ThriveUp 20-platform ecosystem governed by AGOS (Adaptive Governance Operating System) — RAG AI, heartbeat (5 min), adaptive directive management, fidelity scoring, cognitive performance tracking, self-healing instructions, cross-platform orchestration. AGOS = governance brain. SHIELD/ATLAS = operational body. Force multipliers. |
SHIELD/ATLAS is software-defined — but operational deployment requires seamless connection to tactical radio systems, field sensors, and military hardware. The platform supports multiple hardware interface pathways for integration into existing tactical communication architectures. MOSA-compliant, DDIL-capable, zero proprietary lock-in.
| Interface Method | Hardware | Compatible Radios | ATLAS Integration Point |
|---|---|---|---|
| USB-to-Serial Adapters | FTDI-chipset USB-to-RS-232 cables with MIL-STD fill connectors (U-329/U, J-137 6-pin) | AN/PRC-117G, AN/PRC-152A, AN/PRC-163, SINCGARS (all variants), AN/PRC-148 MBITR | COMMS module — serial data ingestion for PLI, chat, and SA updates. CoT/TAK cursor-on-target messages parsed natively. |
| Ethernet/USB Network Bridges | Thales IMBITR (In-Band Modem for IP Tactical Radios), L3Harris USB data adapters | AN/PRC-152A, AN/PRC-163, Falcon III family, AN/VRC-110 vehicular | COMMS + EVENT BUS — IP data over voice channels enables full Event Bus mesh across tactical nets. ATLAS treats the radio as a network transport layer. |
| Mesh Network Radios | Persistent Systems MPU-5 (native USB/Ethernet), Silvus StreamCaster, Rajant Kinetic Mesh | Self-contained MANET radios with native IP interfaces | Full ATLAS deployment — mesh radios provide the DDIL-resilient transport layer. Multiple ATLAS nodes sync via mesh with conflict resolution on reconnect. |
| TAK Server Bridge | ATAK EUD (Android end-user device) with TAK Server, USB tethered to radio | Any radio running ATAK — AN/PRC-163, Nett Warrior EUD cables | BFT + TEAM modules — CoT position reports and SA data flow bidirectionally between ATAK and ATLAS. Blue force positions rendered on shared map. |
| Sensor Type | Connection | ATLAS Module | Data Flow |
|---|---|---|---|
| RF Detection (C-UAS) | USB/Ethernet to RF spectrum analyzers, DroneShield RfPatrol, Dedrone sensors | AIRSPACE — EMSO overlay | RF signature ingestion, auto-classification against 10-platform threat library, bearing/range plotting on common operational picture |
| Chemical / HAZMAT | USB-connected portable chemical detectors (RAE Systems, Draeger, ChemProX) | FIRE — HAZMAT panel | Real-time chemical concentration data feeds plume modeling. Auto-triggers HEALTH and EMS modules on threshold exceedance. |
| Weather Stations | USB/serial portable weather stations (Kestrel 5500, Davis Vantage) | WEATHER module | Local weather observations enhance NWS data in DDIL environments. Wind speed/direction critical for plume modeling and fires engagement geometry. |
| GPS / PNT Receivers | USB GPS receivers, M-Code capable DAGR/PLGR via serial adapter | NAV/PNT module | Multiple PNT source ingestion with integrity scoring. GPS-denied navigation uses inertial + terrain + celestial when GPS is jammed or spoofed. |
Hardware: Ruggedized laptop or tablet (Panasonic Toughbook, Samsung Galaxy Tab Active, Getac) + USB-to-serial adapter + tactical radio
Software: SHIELD/ATLAS PWA running in browser, service worker caching all modules for offline operation
Data Flow: ATLAS ↔ USB adapter ↔ tactical radio ↔ higher HQ ATLAS node. CoT/TAK and Event Bus messages traverse the radio net. Full DDIL resilience — all modules functional when disconnected, auto-sync on reconnect.
Use Case: Dismounted patrol, vehicle checkpoint, FOB operations center, DSCA liaison at civilian EOC
Hardware: Vehicle-mounted computing platform + AN/VRC-110 or Persistent Systems MPU-5 + USB hub for multiple sensor inputs
Sensors: RF detection, chemical detector, GPS receiver, portable weather station — all feeding ATLAS simultaneously via USB hub
Data Flow: Full sensor fusion at the vehicle level. ATLAS correlates RF signatures (AIRSPACE), chemical readings (FIRE), weather (WEATHER), and position (NAV/PNT) into a single operational picture shared via mesh radio to all connected nodes.
Use Case: Mobile command post, HAZMAT response vehicle, military convoy lead vehicle, CBRN reconnaissance
Hardware: Standard workstations + Ethernet to organizational network + gateway to tactical radio net
Integration: ATLAS connects to both enterprise IT (Ethernet/fiber) and tactical nets (via radio gateway). Unified Command operators and military liaisons access the same ATLAS instance from the same room with role-based access (zero-trust gate for defense modules).
Data Flow: Full bandwidth connection for federal data feeds (NWS, EPA, USGS, etc.) + tactical radio bridge for field units operating in DDIL. The EOC/TOC serves as the data aggregation point where enterprise and tactical data merge.
Use Case: Emergency Operations Center, Tactical Operations Center, Joint Operations Center, Unified Command post
SHIELD/ATLAS hardware integration capability directly supports SBIR Phase II and CRADA with DEVCOM ARL objectives:
One platform, four echelons. The same modules compose differently for the four-star, the J3 staff, the battalion S2, and the dismounted operator. No re-training, no re-licensing, no swivel-chair between layers.
| Echelon | Customer | Surfaces | Decision Cycle |
|---|---|---|---|
| Strategic | CCMD / OSD / Service HQ | DoD COP, Intel Fusion, DIME-PMESII, SITREP synthesis | Hours — days |
| Operational | JTF / Division / Wing / Fleet | Commander Dashboard, Maritime, Joint Ops, Decision Queue | Minutes — hours |
| Tactical | Brigade / Squadron / Battalion | CRAM, Swarm C2, Kill Chain, Sensor Lab, Peer-Locate | Seconds — minutes |
| Edge | Operator / Squad / Aircrew | ATAK plug-in, Mobile Hub, GPS-Denied Nav, Soldier UI | Sub-second — seconds |
Army G-6 calls ADOC the “9-1-1 for data.” SHIELD/ATLAS is the tactical-edge complement — the same thesis, one echelon lower. Plug into TAK, fuse the brigade picture, and shorten the targeting cycle from hours to minutes.
Agile Combat Employment scatters small force packages across austere fields with intermittent comms. SHIELD/ATLAS is the cheap, expendable C2 node that survives when the AOC link drops — and re-joins clean when it comes back.
Space is congested, contested, and competed. SHIELD/ATLAS is the terrestrial fusion layer that turns Space Domain Awareness and LEO-PNT signals into something a Joint Force commander can act on — and survives when those signals are denied.
Firestorm Labs builds additive-manufactured, mission-configurable small UAS (Tempest / xCell printable airframes) at the tactical edge. They make the mass; we make the mass actionable. Together: a brigade prints its own swarm in the morning, flies it under SHIELD/ATLAS Swarm C2 by afternoon, and feeds the Kill Web by evening.
Short version: we do not transmit on Link 16, and we are not the keeper of the secret keys. Link 16 is the military’s classified radio network — jets, ships, and ground units use it to share where they are and what they see. To get on it you need a special encrypted radio called a MIDS terminal and you need someone in uniform whose job is to safeguard the secret keys (the COMSEC custodian). We don’t do either of those. Instead, we sit next to a government-owned translator box that the unit already operates, and we read what it sends us in plain (unclassified) form.
Senior defense, intelligence, and industry leaders, in their own words, describing the exact gap SHIELD/ATLAS already closes — running, today, on the surfaces above.
“There is a structural gap between what defense users want — seamless multi-int fusion — and how the commercial market actually operates.”
“What we want is machine-to-machine APIs. If an RF collection sees something, I want capacity on somebody else's satellite in 30 minutes.”
“There's no incentive for us to build a tip and cue construct across the industry.”
“Actual tipping and cueing is very difficult unless you have dedicated capacity or ubiquitous sensing.”
“Not the most advanced. Just the most deployable.”
What Actually Wins: modular design, low-cost components, mass manufacturability, rapid replacement, software-driven control.
“As autonomous platforms multiply, the real challenge lies in interoperability and turning raw data into actionable intelligence.”
“One drone is one camera, one battery, one point of failure. The swarm isn’t the future of first response — it’s the first response the future deserves.”
DSFR (Drone Swarm First Responders) validates multi-manufacturer coordination for emergency response — the civilian side of SHIELD/ATLAS’s dual-use architecture.
“Who owns judgment, authority, and responsibility once AI is embedded inside intelligence, cyber, planning, and mission execution?”
SHIELD/ATLAS’s AI audit engine (Anthropic Claude; multi-provider lanes architected but currently off per program directive 2026-04-23) and human-in-the-loop kill chain gates directly address this Mission-Assurance requirement.
“The real shift isn’t in hardware — it’s in mindset. We’re moving from ‘buy and forget’ to ‘deploy and evolve.’”
Open APIs (ASTERIX, STANAG, ASTM), modular fusion upgradable without sensor replacement, edge resilience under degraded connectivity, human-AI teaming from sprint one.
“At 200 km/h, a 50ms lag means the target has moved 3 meters. You miss. The intelligence must live on the wing.”
Model Predictive Control replaces Proportional Navigation: simulates thousands of paths every 10ms, picks the mathematically optimum intercept trajectory.
“If the public starts asking ‘Will the system hold?’ before the first major strike, then the coercion campaign is already working.”
2.6M cyberattacks/day on Taiwan infrastructure (Reuters, 2025). 121 ADIZ incursions in March. Whole-of-society Mission Assurance validates SHIELD/ATLAS dual-use architecture.
“Protection isn’t a feature — it’s architecture. Design it from Day One.”
Hardware: spectrum filters reduce laser attacks 70-80%. Software: multi-spectral detectors boost accuracy 40-60%. System: quad-redundancy = 95% functionality with 2 channels jammed. Cue → Slew → Verify → Decision maps to SHIELD/ATLAS kill chain.
“Not just text. Context + location.”
Multi-modal ingestion → spatial feature extraction → geo-brain indexing → vector embedding → LLM reasoning → GEOINT output. 389 reactions, 37 reposts. Validates SHIELD/ATLAS RAG-enhanced geospatial decision support.
“Mitigation is not a button. It is a decision pipeline: detection→classification→response, with clear gates, auditable logic, human oversight.”
Layers 6-9: Soft Kill, Hard Kill, C2 Integration, Realistic Testing. Metrics: detection-to-mitigation <3 sec, false positive <1/24hr, operator workload tracked. “UX is a security feature.”
“We don’t have a data problem. We have a data management problem, and data becomes the ammunition.”
ADOC breaks down stovepipes for decision dominance. SHIELD/ATLAS = the tactical-edge complement. 66 modules shipping today, 11 event bridges. Same thesis, different echelon.
“CUAS is not about powerful jammers. It is about building trust: sensors, algorithms, operators, commanders. Technology enables. Doctrine, training, rules decide success.”
Common field mistakes: mitigation as afterthought, ignoring cognitive load, testing only in ideal conditions, no feedback loop from field data.
6 ballistic missiles + 29 drones (est. $2-3M) destroyed one E-3 Sentry AWACS, damaged KC-135 tankers, wounded 10-12 Americans. E-3 fleet down to ~16 airframes.
Cost-exchange: $2-3M attack vs. hundreds of millions in irreplaceable assets. Third attack in recent weeks — pattern of probing with cheap, massed systems.
“You don’t lose drones. You lose awareness. And that’s more dangerous.”
1,000-drone operation = 5,000-10,000 data points/sec. >200ms delay = lost synchronization. SHIELD/ATLAS’s sensor load manager with token-bucket shedding prioritizes critical data when bandwidth degrades.
Shield AI builds autonomous pilots. Anduril builds autonomous platforms. SHIELD/ATLAS coordinates everything they produce into a unified operating picture. We don’t sell sensors — we sell coordination.
$30 distributed sensor mesh vs. $270M single-point-of-failure AWACS. Prince Sultan proved the math. The future is distributed, layered, and software-defined.
Latest cached synthesis — cross-references the internal 468-doc RAG corpus against positioning docs, competitor movements, and procurement pipeline. Live auto-refresh is currently off (pay-per-use research APIs disabled per program directive 2026-04-23).
Action → Counter-Action → Counter-Counter-Action lifecycle — intelligence drives operational platform updates, not reports
SHIELD/ATLAS is available for live demonstration, pilot deployment evaluation, and partnership discussion.
Dr. Terry Flood, DHA
Retired U.S. Army 131A, Chief Targeting, EW, Fires & Intelligence Officer | ISS LLC / SecureAssure (SDVOSB)
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