SAIC's military maneuver

Under a $6.3 million Army contract awarded to Science Applications International Corp., information technologies developed for hospitals, universities, businesses and schools would be used to command missiledefense systems

Under a $6.3 million Army contract awarded to Science Applications International

Corp., information technologies developed for hospitals, universities, businesses

and schools would be used to command missile-defense systems.

The contract, awarded July 18 by the Army Space and Missile Defense

Command, supports the Ballistic Missile Defense Organization's Wide Bandwidth

Information Infrastructure program. The Army wants to create a network for

geographically distributed ground test facilities for the Theater High Altitude

Area Defense and Navy Theater Wide Missile Defense.

SAIC will also focus on networking technologies that meet national security

requirements for distributing imagery data needed by developers who are

tackling some of the tough algorithm issues associated with ballistic missile

defense.

SAIC received the award "based on the information technology and wide

bandwidth applications SAIC is integrating for the Hospitals, Universities,

Businesses and Schools [HUBS] program," according to SAIC. HUBS has been

supported by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency and the Education

Department.

HUBS aims to establish the world's first "smart region" in Delaware,

Maryland, New Jersey and Pennsylvania by creating an environment that will

foster business growth, create new job opportunities and develop telemedicine,

health data analysis and technology-based education programs.

To achieve those goals, SAIC is developing a suite of IT applications,

including data fusion, data warehousing, data mining, distributed modeling

and simulation, telemedicine, distance learning, and collaborative design

and engineering. The HUBS project grew out of a working group established

by Curt Weldon (R-Pa.), chairman of the House Military Research and Development

Subcommittee, and Da Hsuan Feng, general manager of HUBS for SAIC.

Although theater missile-defense technologies may seem an odd adaptation

for HUBS technologies, Weldon said they are a natural fit.

"The technical capabilities being developed and integrated for HUBS

have direct applicability for the nation's defense systems," Weldon said

in a written statement. "By finding solutions to the information technology

challenges posed by creating the nation's first four-state smart region,

HUBS is helping to improve our national security."