Army’s Electromagnetic battle management solution Raytheon's Final Development Phase

Army’s Electromagnetic battle management solution Raytheon's Final Development Phase

The Electronic Warfare Planning and Management Tool is a first-of-its-kind tool that plans, manages and controls sensors and systems in the electromagnetic spectrum, providing critical information about what is happening in a crowded signal environment. It gives Electronic Warfare Officer’s ability to plan, coordinate, synchronize, manage and deconflict electronic warfare and spectrum management activities ahead of and during missions. EWPMT allows the operator to make better decisions faster with reduced workload. https://www.raytheon.com/capabilities...


U.S. defense contractorRaytheon Co has announced that it entering the final phase of development for the U.S. Army’s Electronic Warfare Planning and Management Tool or EWPMT.

According to a company news release, Raytheon is developing Capability Drop 4 of the EWPMT under a multi-million dollar contract from the U.S. Army over the next 24 months.

The EWPMT is an Army’s Electromagnetic battle management solution, first-of-its-kind tool that plans, manages and controls sensors and systems in the electromagnetic spectrum, providing critical information about what is happening in a crowded signal environment. Delivered in what the Army calls Capability Drops, CD4 represents the final stage of a fully operating capability, or Increment 1.

“EWPMT gives the Army the freedom to add new capabilities and algorithms so they can manage an increasingly complex electromagnetic spectrum,” said Niraj Srivastava, product line manager for Raytheon Electronic Warfare Systems. “And because it uses open architecture, the tool can be shared with other military services.”


Open architecture also allows the tool to execute cyber effects in multi-domain operations.

Raytheon delivered CD1 and CD2, and is currently working on CD3, which addresses using the tool in a tactical environment against threats. CD3 also includes all of the functionality of Raytheon’s Raven Claw, a mobile version of EWPMT that helps operators control signals in the field even without a host server or reliable connection to external data. Under the CD4 contract, Raytheon will continue to develop software and the user interface for a more connected, mobile system.

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