The NATO Communications and Information (NCI) Agency has awarded Airbus a €40 million contract for the delivery of the first phase of the new NATO Communications Infrastructure Project.

The contract also includes options for future phases of the project, worth up to €50 million.

The NATO Communications Infrastructure project will replace a major part of the NATO General Communications System (NGCS), involving 72 NATO sites. It will provide a major upgrade of wide area network protected IP communications across the NATO command structure, NATO headquarters and NATO points of presence in NATO member nations.

The project covers the delivery of upgraded IP access and transport services across different security classifications with significantly increased capacity, quality of service and traffic engineering capabilities. It also covers NATO unclassified voice services through the replacement of old telephony switches by voice over IP telephony at 25 sites.

The design review is estimated to be completed in December 2018 while the first phase of implementation should be completed by the end of 2019.

The NATO Communications Infrastructure Project, together with the IT Modernisation Project and the Enterprise NATO Public Key Infrastructure Project, is part of the wider IT Modernisation Programme which aims to transform NATO’s static IT infrastructure into a homogeneous enterprise. It will include customer-funded service delivery systems, with a common service management and control layer, increased levels of virtualisation, modern cloud technology, and appropriate resilience mechanisms.

George Allison
George has a degree in Cyber Security from Glasgow Caledonian University and has a keen interest in naval and cyber security matters and has appeared on national radio and television to discuss current events. George is on Twitter at @geoallison

3 COMMENTS

  1. One of my old jobs was working in the NATO comms and CIS organization NCSA. A massive network over a WAN thats classified at NATO Secret level. Most NATO network traffic between NATO centers goes over standard commercial Internet connections. The clever bit is the IP encryption of the NATO traffic as it leaves the NATO system and goes onto the standard commercial fibre optic back bones and then the decrypt when it gets to its destination.
    This work will be upgrading the encryption/ decryption services on the interfaces between NATO and the commercial network providers.

  2. Airbus has got quite a good Comms security, crypto and cyber capability, some of it based in South Wales. I wonder if they’ll get any part of this work?

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