From Citizendium - Reading time: 2 min
Formerly the Defense Communications Agency (DCA), the U.S. Defense Information Systems Agency (DISA) continues to manage the strategic communications systems of the U.S., but has taken on an additional role in strategic applications such as the Global Information Grid. It controls the physical networks on which the various enterprise networks, of varying levels of security classification, are mapped as routed networks.
DCA and the initial DISA had been a field operating agency of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Today, it is responsible for command, control, and intelligence communications under the United States Strategic Command.
Common user networks are generally independent of the security level, security being enforced at levels overlaid onto them. There has been constant progression in both technology and bandwidth. Within the Defense Information Systems Network (DISN), transmission networks may be terrestrial, satellite or mixtures. Subnetworks of DISN are usually multiplexed or circuit switched, or use hybrid technologies such as Multi-Protocol Label Switching (MPLS):[1]
Over DISN are networks for data, voice, video.