Naval Computer and Telecommunications Station, Far East

The Naval Computer and Telecommunications Station (NCTS) Far East is a Navy military unit headquartered in Yokosuka, Japan. The unit consists of nine geographically-dispersed sites in Japan, South Korea, Singapore, and Diego Garcia. NCTS Far East's mission is to "operate and defend mission critical, Navy warfighting networks and communications systems necessary for U.S. Naval, Joint, and Coalition Commanders to conduct secure command and control in the U.S. Indo-Pacific Command (USINDOPACOM) theater of operations."

Naval Computer and Telecommunications Station, Far East
Active1951–present
Country United States of America
Branch United States Navy
TypeOperational Shore
RoleCommunications and Information Systems
Nickname(s)NCTS Far East
Motto(s)Ready, Reliable, Resilient
EquipmentComputer Networks, Communications Equipment, Cryptographic Devices
Commanders
Current
commander
Commanding Officer: CAPT. Jenna Hausvik

Executive Officer: CMDR Cal Loper

Command Master Chief: CMDCM Damien Pulvino

History

1951–1960

NAVCOMTELSTA Far East was originally designated as Naval Communications Facility, Yokosuka Japan; it was commissioned on 8 January 1951, after the outbreak of the Korean War. In December 1952 U.S. Naval Radio Receiving Facility Kami Seya, Japan was completed, and the Security Group Department and general-service receivers were moved to Kami Seya. During the war, the rest of NAVCOMMFAC Yokosuka moved to Kami Seya. In 1960, the command was re-designated U.S. Naval Communications Facility Japan and relocated to Yokosuka. The following year, the command was again re-designated as U.S. Naval Communications Station, Japan.

1990s–present

This name lasted until 1991, when it was changed to U.S. Naval Computer and Telecommunications Station, Japan to acknowledge the increasing reliance on computers and telephones in telecommunications. Also in 1991, NTCCs Atsugi and Sasebo and NAVCOMM Dets Okinawa and Misawa were functionally transferred to NAVCOMTELSTA Japan. 1993 saw the transfer of Base Communications Offices (BCOs) at Atsugi, Sasebo and Yokosuka to NAVCOMTELSTA Japan. In 1995 another name change to U.S. Naval Computer and Telecommunications Station, Far East occurred, with the transfer of the Communications Department from Commander Fleet Activities Chinhae, Korea to this command and the establishment of NAVCOMM Det Chinhae.

gollark: And ever since the HKI update also allows *multiple keys* per channel.
gollark: It had different authentication things per channel though.
gollark: The v4 protocol even transcends its echo server roots and allows multiplexing multiple SPUDNET channels onto one connection.
gollark: Also, SPUDNET is a *mildly useful* websocket echo server, since it supports authentication!
gollark: Interesting!

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