Brussels Belgium Update – It was indeed an honor to be asked to contribute to the TSCM Working Group hosted at NATO-HQ this past week. The mighty Kestrel was well received during the exhibition. The event was well represented by an elite group of global spectrum warriors. Our presentation “Focus on the Future” addressed the reality faced by national security, defensive technical security vulnerabilities and the need for change. In a modern moving target threat model, understanding the real probability of detection and as a starting point in the fight against state-sponsored espionage and counter-intelligence is absolute. Our first week in Brussels Belgium included the delivery of out Certified Technical Operator (CTO) training program attended by participants from Belgium and The Netherlands. We have now shifted focus to a busy second week of training delivery for our government level spectrum warriors. We had the opportunity to meet with many professional colleagues and friends during during our first week in the EU. In honor of our trip to the EU, we were able to release a powerful new graphical spectrum allocation overlay feature, seen for the first time during our training delivery. End-users flocked to our exhibit to get the latest information on recent and planned software development activities. The Kestrel TSCM Professional Software has proven to be a highly-scalable, deployment-flexible, focused TSCM application. Kestrel is a critical mission ready application for fixed, mobile and can mean a wide-range of transitional mission requirements across at all known and emerging threat levels. Kestrel engineering and software development is moving ahead with its aggressive focus on developing features and functionality that meet ethically sources, and functional standards-based, TSCM specific resources for professional spectrum warriors. Watch for an exciting announcement relating to digital demodulation and protocol analytics. TSCM specific digital demodulation is on the way as a standard-included feature within the demodulation and visualizer control group. Our team of three (3) instructors are looking-forward to our training this coming week.