The Defense Department has sent a letter to Congress to explain its decision to pursue a single-award contract for the Joint Enterprise Defense Infrastructure cloud procurement program instead of a multiple-award contract, Fedscoop reported Monday.
Adopting a multiple-award contract for the JEDI cloud program âcould prevent DoD from rapidly delivering new capabilities and improved effectiveness to the warfighter that enterprise-level cloud computing can enableâ and could lead to âadditional costs and technical complexityâ on the Pentagon, John Gibson, DoD chief management officer, wrote in the letter obtained by FedScoop.
Gibson noted that DoD intends to implement multiple measures to address issues related to the vendor lock-in arrangement and limit the base term to two years.
Nextgov also reported that DoD aims for the JEDI cloud platform to host nuclear weapon design data and other classified information.
The department would require the winning contractor to secure the Energy Departmentâs âQâ and âLâ clearances that seek to facilitate access to restricted nuclear information and other top-secret security clearances, according to new contracting documents.
Heather Babb, a spokeswoman for DoD, told Nextgov that the department intends for cloud services under the procurement program to be âoffered at all classification levelsâ and would provide defense and military clients leeway to identify data and applications they want to move to the cloud.