BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//Session Board//Session Board//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:139847-20260429T114500Z@marinemilitaryexpos.com
DTSTAMP:20260609T104048Z
DTSTART:20260429T114500Z
DTEND:20260429T122500Z
SUMMARY:A Hitchhiker’s Guide to RxR in the WEZ
DESCRIPTION:In future conflict\, the first casualty will not be maneuver forces\, logistics nodes\, or command posts\; it will be certainty. As the character of warfare shifts from counterinsurgency to competition with near-peer adversaries\, the United States Marine Corps faces an operational environment defined by degraded sensing\, contested communications\, and persistent adversary reconnaissance. Nowhere is this challenge more severe than for reconnaissance forces operating as Stand-in Forces (SIF) inside a sophisticated anti-access/area denial (A2/AD) bubble. The Marine Corps Intelligence\, Surveillance\, and Reconnaissance Enterprise (MCISRE)\, long optimized for permissive environments and centralized intelligence architectures\, must adapt to a battlespace where detection is constant and survivability fleeting. By examining the limitations of current ISR constructs\, assessing adversary counter-reconnaissance capabilities\, and drawing lessons from historical case studies such as the Yom Kippur War\, we analyze how artificial intelligence (AI) and disruptive technologies are not merely force multipliers\, but prerequisites for effective reconnaissance and counter-reconnaissance in competition-to-conflict scenarios. We argues that the MCISRE should leverage low-cost\, unmanned\, commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) systems paired with AI-enabled autonomy to support distributed collections and tactical deception\, regain the information advantage\, persist within the weapons engagement zone (WEZ)\, and shape the battlespace in support of joint and naval operations. 
LOCATION:Warfighting Stage
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR