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The First 72 Hours: The Need for Rapid Mobile Command

The first 72 hours after a natural/manmade disaster are critical hours that make or break the speed of recovery. Power is gone. Terrestrial communications are denied if available at all. Worse, a nonpredictive inter-agency mash-up is about to hit and with it comes an interoperability nightmare. The ability to positively impact recovery requires communications and the rapid standup of mobile command in denied, disparate, and dysfunctional operating environments. That’s why agencies need an approach to communications and data sharing that works in these post-disaster environments.

Much of Blueforce’s experience comes from deploying to post-disaster environments, but also post-conflict, civil-military environments where network-centric and multi-domain doctrine is easily translated into business continuity or disaster response TTPs and CONOPs. “The First 72” hours will present three core complexities that must be considered and planned around for mounting an effective and timely response:

Blueforce built our new BlueforceMOBILE Command Kit based on lessons learned supporting civil-military operations in Iraq, counter-terrorism JTFs, and many natural disasters.  The first 72 hours can be dark and silent unless consideration is given to the environmental complexities where small, “man portable” command kits can quickly enable communications, coordination, and an immediate ability to “call in the cavalry”.  Our blog series this week will examine the core capabilities needed for the “First 72 Hours” and will include communications, edge compute, and an array of hyper-local incident management services that keep comms and data local to the incident thereby minimizing the need for heavy backhaul communications.

To learn more about the BlueforceMOBILE Command Kit, send a note to info@blueforcedev.com, or submit a CONTACT ME form here.

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