Adaptive Edge
CECOM SEC’s Continuous Integration and Continuous Delivery Approach to Readiness
By Kevin Deegan
Article published on: July 1, 2025 in the Army AL&T Summer 2025 Issue
Read Time:
< 3 mins
FIELD ENGAGEMENT
CECOM Integrated Logistics Support Center IT Radio Logistics Assistance
Representatives and SEC Software Support Representatives participate in a motor
pool terrain walk hosted by 210 Field Artillery Brigade at Camp Casey, Korea.
CECOM team members provide on-the-spot guidance in support of the Brigade’s
Joint Battle Command – Platform Mounted Mission Command – Software readiness
event. (Photo by Gaby Waters, CECOM SEC)
Software readiness is critical to American warfighting
efforts. That’s why the Pentagon is laser-focused on
enhancing readiness in a cyber-contested battlespace—it
is essential for responding effectively to threats, deterring
adversarial aggression and protecting American interests
and spaces.
Diplomatically, this is far from a new fight.
Rewind to October 2020. At that time, the U.S. Army Communications-
Electronics Command (CECOM) Software Engineering
Center (SEC) at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland, was forging
a path to establish strong and dynamic software readiness,
in part via the CECOM Software Repository. This one-stop hub
consolidated the software releases for over 70 commands, control,
communications, computers, cyber, intelligence, surveillance and
reconnaissance (C5ISR) systems. Now, the repository serves as
the authoritative, continuous-delivery source of system updates
and files for operational units. This end-to-end pipeline repository
also holds units accountable for having the latest software,
which is critical for Army lethality and preparedness. This was
the first effort of many to modernize legacy delivery methods
while also shortening the delivery path of critical software to
tactical network systems.
The digital domain that can decide the outcome of a war is everchanging.
As Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower once said, “Plans are
worthless, but planning is everything.”
In the cyber realm, it’s always a new fight.
TACKLING SOLDIER CHALLENGES
Meeting the demand for Soldier readiness means that CECOM
SEC can never sleep. Continuous integration and continuous
delivery (CI/CD) methodology enables CECOM SEC to rapidly
deliver stakeholder requirements while adhering to legacy maintenance
policies.
Traditional military policies were designed with hardware in
mind—vehicles, equipment or weapon systems—but software
can be deployed in mere minutes. Legacy maintenance policies
do not neatly accommodate software constantly being tested,
updated, fixed or deployed digitally.
Deployment complexity for tactical network systems is also due
to the Army’s use of various networks with hectic connectivity
challenges, different policies and several classification levels.
Soldiers who require software patches are often located in austere
environments, adding to the disarray.
To meet this challenge, CECOM SEC provides electronic
software delivery through the continuously integrated C5ISR
Software Repository. And yet ensuring that Soldiers have the
most up-to-date software isn’t the only obstacle on this fasttrack
highway: How does the Army effectively train Soldiers on
continuously updated software?
CECOM SEC is smoothing this obstacle with another CI/CD
tactic: embedded training, which starts with meeting users where
they are.
“The training needs to be considered as early as possible in the
development life cycle,” said John Fry, CECOM SEC’s field integration
branch chief. “You need to have an understanding of what
Soldiers already know and what they can figure out.”
Sticking to its Soldier-tailored CI/CD approach, CECOM SEC
is now building training directly into some systems. Embedded
training allows Soldiers to learn software while actively
using it instead of relying on external programs or solutions
that can be costly and create downtime. Training occurs during
workflow through a strategic user interface that integrates automated
prompts, tool tips, pop-ups and interactive walkthroughs.
Encouraging units to learn by doing results in faster readiness,
adaptability and operational efficiency.
From beginning to end, CECOM SEC is focused on meeting
the needs of Soldiers in the field.
“CI/CD brings the user up front. We understand their environment,
what the challenges are—and that gets fed into the
development process—so systems become less maintenanceheavy,
more user-friendly, with the capability still fully intact,”
said Fry.
FROM DEVELOPMENT TO DEPLOYMENT
CECOM SEC is the tip of the spear in the field. Fry’s team
consists of Software Readiness Officers (SROs) embedded with
every division and corps in the Army. Whether in a company or a member of division staff, these readiness officers are in
the field daily, providing crucial technical support and ensuring
that Soldiers are equipped with the latest patches. As the
Army elevates users by integrating them into the development
process, SROs stay closely engaged with the user community
by supporting the entire software life cycle from development
to deployment through ongoing user feedback, maintenance
requirements and cyber updates. They support Army users and
the software centers by ensuring operational readiness, while
integrating digital modernization.

MAINTAINING SOLDIER READINESS
Soldiers assigned to 3rd Brigade, 10th Mountain Division monitor footage from an Anduril Ghost-X Medium-Range Reconnaissance
drone during exercise Combined Resolve 25-1 at the Joint Multinational Readiness Center, Hohenfels, Germany, on January 15, 2025.
Embedded training allows Soldiers to learn by doing, resulting in operational efficiency and enhanced readiness. (Photo by Sgt.
Chandler Coats, 5th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment)
CECOM SEC validates that software capabilities are met before
release by performing test runs with units in the field. Testing
the software from a configuration and interoperability standpoint
is key because of the challenges of the units’ extreme
environments. Staying informed at the earliest level of development
allows CECOM SEC to make the most informed decisions
early, resulting in prioritized fixes and improved user experiences.
In today’s landscape, the Army views readiness partially through
a prism of data-centric comprehensiveness that allows units to
rely on real-time information for better decision-making. Data
integration allows Fry’s team to help units visualize their cyber
health. Accessing, aggregating and visualizing it in a way that
makes sense to decision-makers is critical for divisions that, for
example, need to be prepared to speak to relevant indicators
during logistics readiness reviews (LRRs).
CECOM SEC has been working with the United States Army
Forces Command (FORSCOM) over the past year to help
them create live data for their LRR. Typically chaired by the
FORSCOM G-4 and corps and divisional commanders, the LRR
is a comprehensive evaluation to assess and improve logistics readiness
across units. For example, SROs embedded at Fort Bragg,
North Carolina, work closely with FORSCOM headquarters
to ensure that all data is uniform across divisions. The focus is
on key areas such as equipment maintenance, supply discipline,
property accountability and overall logistical support to confirm
unit preparedness for deployment and sustained operations.
“Our tools are used at echelon, so FORSCOM commanders are
leveraged the same real-time authoritative data for software maintenance
accountability as a field maintenance shop,” said Fry.
CECOM SEC’s Data Analytics Readiness Team, in collaboration
with SEC’s Technical Services Directorate, recently created
a Power BI decision support tool that provides senior Army leaders
with real-time visual representations of critical programmatic data. The tool presents budget allocations, acquisition milestones
and equipment deployment timelines in a central and assessable
environment.
Conclusion
“The data environment in the Army is changing,” said Fry. “We
want to engage in and be able to leverage data sources from multiple
entities, and we have to have a collaborative effort with folks
within and external to CECOM to enhance unit readiness.”
The battlespace evolves, but CECOM SEC sees it keenly. Adapting
to Soldiers’ needs—with a strong emphasis on meeting units
where they’re at—remains a core focus in the foreseeable future.
For more information, contact John Fry at
john.fry23.civ@army.mil
.
Author
Kevin Deegan provides contract support to CECOM as a
strategic communications specialist at Aberdeen Proving Ground,
Maryland. He holds a B.A. in journalism from Temple University
and is certified as a Project Management Professional.