House renews call for multicloud JEDI
Appropriators continue to object to the Pentagon's $10 billion single-award cloud procurement, concerned that the contract will lock the Defense Department into the same platform for 10 years, even as technology advances.
Even as leadership in the House changed from Republican to Democrat in January, appropriators continue to object to the Pentagon's $10 billion single-award Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure procurement, concerned that the contract will lock the Defense Department into the same cloud platform for 10 years, despite ongoing improvements in technology.
Objections from lawmakers on the House Appropriations Committee echo concerns voiced during the last round of funding legislation.
DOD may be "deviating from established OMB policy and industry best practices, and may be failing to implement a strategy that lowers costs and fully supports data innovation for the warfighter," according to a legislative report accompanying the $690 billion fiscal year 2020 defense appropriations bill recently passed by the defense subcommittee on a voice vote
The lawmakers pointed out that the CIA is modifying its cloud policy to move from a single cloud to a multivendor approach in a follow-on competition to its 2013 contract awarded to Amazon Web Services. The report quotes market survey language from the CIA, noting that the agency is adopting "a multiple cloud strategy to increase access to cloud innovation and reduce the disadvantages associated with using a single cloud service provider."
Appropriators are encouraging the Pentagon "to adopt lessons learned from the CIA's experience implementing cloud computing over the past five years."
The committee intends to prevent the Pentagon from spending money to move data and applications to the JEDI cloud until top defense tech officials spell out a plan to eventually shift the warfighter cloud to a multicloud environment. Appropriators also want the DOD CIO to share details on any commercial cloud contracting DOD plans for the next two years, including specifics on how the contracts will be competed along with estimates of ceiling values.
The JEDI solicitation has been winnowed down to two vendors -- AWS and Microsoft. The two are the only cloud providers deemed to meet the basic requirements with regard to security, availability and capacity set by the Defense Digital Service. The JEDI program is also the subject of an ongoing lawsuit from Oracle alleging that the requirements run counter to law and regulations and were cooked by former AWS insiders to make sure that the web giant would win the final contract.
This article was published in FCW, a sibling site to Defense Systems.