This news is classified in: Defense Contracts Cyber Defense / IT Communications Military Aircraft
Oct 25, 2023
Cubic Defense, a technology-driven, market-leading provider of integrated solutions, has secured a Multiple Award Contract–Indefinite Delivery, Indefinite Quantity (MAC ID/IQ) from the U.S. Air Force Life Cycle Management Center, Architecture & Integration Directorate (AFLCMC/XA).
“Cubic solves difficult problems with our cutting-edge solutions to meet the needs of the end user,” said Scott Rosebush, Vice President and General Manager of Secure Communications, Cubic Defense. “The award of this contract is a testament to our unwavering commitment to excellence.”
Cubic Defense’s exceptional expertise and track record ensure a comprehensive and effective approach to fulfilling contract requirements. The project scope includes capability planning, systems and synthetic environment development. Cubic’s solutions fill warfighting gaps with secure capabilities, delivering adaptive and intelligent spectrum dominance.
Forecasts by Deployment Mode (Cloud-based, On-premise), by Component (Hardware, Software, Services), by End-user (Army, Navy, Air Force, Cyber Commands), by Security Type (Network Security, Endpoint Security, Application Security, Cloud-based Security, Data Security), by Solutions (Threat Intelligence and Response Management, Identity and Access Management (IAM), Intrusion Detection and Prevention Systems (IDPS), Security Information and Event Management (SIEM), Firewall, Other) AND Regional and Leading National Market Analysis PLUS Analysis of Leading Companies AND COVID-19 Impact and Recovery Pattern Analysis
Download free sample pagesThis award allows the AFLCMC/XA access to Cubic’s expertise in mission analysis and systems architecture planning and management. Cubic’s extensive experience in Modeling, Simulation & Analysis (MS&A), assured communications architectures, and Capability Development/Development Planning (CD-DP) will help the AFLCMC/XA develop and launch programs to meet the needs of the modern-day warfighter.