The project modernises NATO’s command infrastructure, delivering unprecedented mobility without compromising classified data security, and sets a new benchmark for defense communications worldwide.
The defence sector is rapidly embracing mobile‑first strategies, yet secure, classified‑level communications have lagged behind commercial trends. NATO’s operational tempo demands that senior leaders exchange sensitive information regardless of geography, prompting a shift from static, hardened terminals to flexible, encrypted endpoints. This transition reflects broader geopolitical pressures where rapid decision‑making and information superiority are decisive factors.
HERMES represents a convergence of CGI’s large‑scale managed‑services platform and secunet’s SINA hardware, delivering a turnkey solution that includes a dedicated Service Operation Centre, continuous Security Operations Centre oversight, and a globally distributed support network. By provisioning a hardened VPN and integrating secure hardware encryption, the system ensures end‑to‑end confidentiality while maintaining NATO’s stringent interoperability standards across member nations.
Beyond NATO, the HERMES architecture signals a market‑wide opportunity for vendors that can fuse managed services with hardened mobile hardware. The scalable design anticipates future expansion to additional user groups and security domains, positioning CGI and secunet as reference partners for allied forces seeking similar capabilities. As other alliances evaluate mobile command solutions, the success of HERMES could accelerate adoption of secure mobile communications across the defence industry, reshaping procurement priorities and driving innovation in cryptographic hardware and cloud‑based security services.
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