NATO Interoperability Standards and Profiles

Description

NATO, through its interoperability directive, has recognized that widespread interoperability is a key component in achieving effective and efficient operations. In many of the operations world-wide in which NATO nations are engaged, they participate together with a wide variety of other organizations on the ground. Such organizations include coalition partners from non-NATO nations, Non-Governmental Organization (NGOs - e.g. Aid Agencies) and industrial partners. The NATO Interoperability Standards and Profiles (NISP) provides the necessary guidance and technical components to support project implementations and Federated Mission Networking.

The Allied Data Publication 34 (ADaTP-34) NATO Interoperability Standards and Profiles (NISP) STANAG 5524, catalogs Consultation, Command and Control (C3) standards usable in NATO. Work on the NISP is performed under the NATO Consultation, Command and Control Board.

gollark: Your comparison operators are backward I think.
gollark: It's either a very good and hard to avoid system, or something ingrained enough that people can't think of alternatives.
gollark: Who uses digital video disks these days?
gollark: I mean, money/free trade is quite good at what it does, especially since the incentives naturally line up ish since you want to maximize effective use of resources you have access to, can directly fix things yourself without going through a central authority, etc. But it may be possible to implement this some other way without some of the issues wrt. externalities and stuff.
gollark: If we could use magical bee cuboids to produce all goods and services with no human labour, I would prefer this.

See also

Profile (engineering)

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