special feature
cisco
Give defence the power of IP Secure IP networks can bring high degree of synchronisation among armed forces and boost their ability to act and strike By Sandeep Raina
O
ur defence and military are our national pride and receive significant attention. Yet, investments in defence and security find their way to
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weapon systems rather than to platforms for collaboration that can bring transformational changes and improve overall defence capabilities. This tends to leave defence systems stuck
in a cycle of upgrading their weaponry without gaining much synergy. The most glaring impediments to growth have always been cultural and bureaucratic
conflicts and budgetary constraints, a lack of long-term commitment or foresight, pre-existing procurement commitments, and institutional biases for legacy systems over transformational ones. Overall, the transformation that is essential is viewed as challenging, expensive and threatening to the existing system. As a result, most of the military is merely modernising, not transforming their organisations. However, despite these obstacles, armed forces can achieve true transformation without increasing costs or sacrificing on purchase of new weaponry, through investment in robust, mission-critical Internet Protocol (IP)-based networks. True transformation can be achieved by providing a robust IP network, enabling seamless, highly-secure communications across different