Press "Enter" to skip to content

Defense Agencies Can Access Amazon Cloud Through MilCloud 2.0

Fourth estate agencies now have the ability to make use of Amazon Web Services’ commercial cloud services through the Defense Department’s existing milCloud 2.0 contract.

MilCloud 2.0, an on-premise infrastructure-as-a-service offering operated by defense contractor General Dynamics Information Technology, has been the de facto cloud destination for all defense agencies—those not under military departments—since a 2018 order from the Pentagon’s tech chief.

Fourth estate agencies traditionally used milCloud 2.0—under the Defense Information Systems Agency—for cloud migrations, application modernization and new application development. According to a joint announcement Monday by both companies, milCloud 2.0 now offers an expanded suite of cloud offerings related to “artificial intelligence, machine learning, cyber sensing and other emerging technologies.” Any fourth estate cloud customer can now leverage additional analytics, compute or edge computing, end-user computing, security and other services through AWS “through a streamlined contracting process.”

“We’re pleased to announce milCloud 2.0 capabilities are now expanded to also provide mission partners leading cloud services from AWS,” said Leigh Palmer, senior vice president for GDIT’s Defense division said in a statement. “This aligns precisely with the DoD Hybrid Cloud Strategy and actually simplifies acquisition and choice for the DoD and DISA mission partners.”

Per the announcement, AWS is the only commercial cloud provider with services available through milCloud 2.0, which went live in early 2018. AWS is the only commercial cloud provider able to host the Defense Department’s most sensitive secret and top-secret classified data, though other companies, like Google, Microsoft, IBM and Oracle, are seeking similar capabilities.

“We look forward to continuing to support the Department’s modernization efforts and the mission critical needs of our nation’s warfighters,” Dave Levy, vice president of U.S. Government, Nonprofit and Healthcare at AWS said in a statement. 

source: NextGov