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CCA Protocols·2026-05-23·6 min

TTNT - Khan BMS Battlefield Management System

TTNT — Tactical Targeting Network Technology — is one of the unglamorous primitives modern BMS lives or dies on. Here is how Khan BMS engineers it.

In the EW-saturated battlespace the network is the first casualty. TTNT only earns its place in a serious BMS if it survives that casualty rather than depending on it.

TTNT earns its full keep at the Tumen — ten thousand nodes under a single human Khan. Span of control stays at ten because the hierarchy is fractal; TTNT state aggregates upward through Minghan and Zuun before it ever reaches the Khan's console.

Tactical Targeting Network Technology — TTNT for short — covers high-rate, low-latency IP-based airborne network optimized for closing kill chains. TTNT is a self-forming, jam-resistant, IP-based airborne mesh that emphasizes very low latency and high data rate (multi-Mbps) for time-critical targeting. It carries imagery, track data, and tasking among fighters, ISR aircraft, and ground sites with sub-second latency. TTNT is frequently cited as a candidate inter-platform link for CCA formations because it pairs IP semantics with tactical resilience.

Khan BMS's design choice on TTNT is unfashionable but defensible: keep authority bounded, keep schemas small, keep the cca protocols surface area legible to a human Khan. Cleverness at the edge is a liability when the link is contested.

The pitch is not that Khan BMS reinvents TTNT. It is that Khan BMS is the first commercial fabric willing to treat TTNT as structural rather than optional.

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