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Defence Communication Services Agency

Defence Communication Services Agency
DCSA logo
Agency overview
Formed1 April 1998 (1998-04-01)
Dissolved31 March 2007 (2007-03-31)
Superseding agency
TypeExecutive agency
StatusDissolved
HeadquartersBasil Hill Barracks, Wiltshire, England
Employees5,000
Annual budget£1.2 billion
Parent departmentMinistry of Defence
Parent agencyDefence Logistics Organisation
WebsiteOfficial website (archived)

The Defence Communication Services Agency (DCSA) was an agency of the United Kingdom Ministry of Defence responsible for the procurement and delivery of Communications and Information Services (CIS) to the defence community and related public and private sector bodies. The Agency was formed on 1 April 1998, bringing together a range of CIS organisations across all three services.

Formally a component of the Defence Logistics Organisation, the Agency brigaded together elements of the Defence Procurement Agency, the DLO and operational support elements within the three military Front Line Commands.[1]

On 31 March 2007 the Agency was subsumed into Defence Equipment & Support, a new organisation bringing together the DPA and DLO, as the Information Systems & Services (ISS) cluster within that organisation.[2]

Organisation

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The DCSA was formed of a core headquarters, led by a military Chief Executive at Two-star rank, supported by an Operations Directorate, Directorate of Engineering and Interoperability, and a number of Integrated Project Teams, responsible for the procurement and support of systems and services. The Agency was headquartered at Basil Hill Barracks, Corsham, Wiltshire,[3] and had 5,000 staff at facilities in many locations in the UK and overseas.[4]

DCSA Headquarters

Integrated Project Teams

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Network Layer

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Presentation Layer

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Application Layer

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Formation

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The founding CE was Major-General Tony Raper CB CBE, late Royal Signals. He was succeeded by Rear Admiral Rees Ward in 2002, who continued as CE until 2007 when the Agency was disestablished.

References

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  1. ^ Defence through Information - Corporate Plan 2005 (PDF) (Report). Defence Communication Services Agency. 2005. Retrieved 10 February 2019.
  2. ^ "Ministry of Defence: Agency Changes". Hansard. 28 March 2007. Retrieved 10 February 2019.
  3. ^ "Agency's new role welcomed by chiefs". Gazette & Herald. Trowbridge. 15 April 2000. Retrieved 10 February 2019.
  4. ^ "DCSA Framework Document". Defence Communications and Services Agency. 2004.
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