National Security Space Policy & Architecture Symposium
"Commitment to Space Partnerships"
1 - 2 February 2007
Washington, DC
Thursday, February 1, 2007
Keynote Speaker:
- Back to Basics – Block Acquisition Strategy, The Honorable Ronald M. Sega, Under Secretary of the Air Force
Roundtable Discussion – Managing the Space Enterprise
Moderator: Mr. Hal Hagemeier, Chief Operations Manager, National Security Space Office
Panelist:
- Lieutenant General Michael A. Hamel, USAF, Commander, Space and Missile Systems Center
- COL(P) Richard F. Matthews, USA, Deputy Commander, U.S. Army Space & Missile Defense Command/ U.S. Army Forces Strategic Command
- Major General John T. Sheridan, USAF, Deputy Director, National Reconnaissance Office
- Dr. Gary Federici, Deputy Assistant Secretary, C4I and Space Programs, Assistant Secretary of the Navy (Research, Development, Acquisition)
Disasters in Space
- Mr. Gary E. Payton, Air Force Deputy for Military Space SAF/US(D)
Panel – Turning Architectures into Capabilities
Moderator: Dr. William F. Ballhaus Jr., President and CEO, The Aerospace Corporation
Panelist:
- Major General James B. Armor, USAF, Director, National Security Space Office
- Dr. Steven M. Huybrechts, Director, Space and Principal Director, C3, Space, and Spectrum (Acting), Office of the Under Secretary of Defense (ASD/NII)
Friday, February 2, 2007
USAF Space Summit Discussion
- Major General Roger W. Burg, USAF, Director of Strategic Security, Office of the Deupty Chief of Staff for Air, Space and Information Operations, Plans and Requirements, Headquarters, U.S. Air Force
Operationally Responsive Space - Now is the Time to Step-Out Smartly
- Mr. Joseph Rouge, Associate Director, National Security Space Office
Panel – The Way Ahead
Moderator: Major General William L. Shelton, USAF, Commander, 14th Air Force
Panelist:
- Dr. Peter Hays, Associate Director, Center for Space and Defense Studies, U.S. Air Force Academy
S&T Ingredients for the Back to Basics Recipe
- Brigadier General Duane Deal, USAF (Ret), Director, National Security Space Programs, Applied Physics Laboratory, The Johns Hopkins University