The Ashoka U Exchange is a working meeting between social entrepreneurship educators, students, practitioners, employers, and investors who are actively engaged in building the field of social entrepreneurship education. Together, we will ask: How can colleges and universities drive positive global change?
USAF Backs Off on Threat to Air Family Members….
06 Family, 07 Other Atrocities, 11 Society, Corruption, Cultural Intelligence, IO Impotency, Military, Officers Call

Air Force Rescinds New Guidance on WikiLeaks
Secrecy News reported Monday on strange new guidance from the Air Force Materiel Command declaring that Air Force employees and even their family members could be prosecuted under the Espionage Act for accessing the WikiLeaks web site. On Monday night that new guidance was abruptly withdrawn.
Lt. Col. Richard L. Johnson of Air Force Headquarters released this statement: read statement….
Airmen, It’s Illegal for Your Kids to Read WikiLeaks [Updated]
Spencer Ackerman, WIRED Magazine Danger Room, Feburary 7, 2011
“[I]f a family member of an Air Force employee accesses WikiLeaks on a home computer, the family member may be subject to prosecution for espionage under U.S. Code Title 18 Section 793,” the legal guidance reads. “The Air Force member would have an obligation to safeguard the information under the general guidance to safeguard classified information.”
Phi Beta Iota: We do not make this stuff up. If SecDef wants an excuse to dismiss Air Force leadership down to the one-star level, this is it. This is utterly insane, and a clear demonstration of moral and intellectual and leadership vacuum that exists in the US Air Force.
Journal: Chuck Spinney on Gallipoli
Censorship & Denial of Access (35)
CIA Re-Direction of Clandestine Operations
Advanced Cyber/IO, Corruption, Cultural Intelligence, Government
CIA's Panetta Shakes up His Spy Corps
Paul Bedard, Washington Whispers
US News & world report, Feburary 8, 2011
In a major shift to reinvigorate the post-9/11 spy world inside the Central Intelligence Agency, Director Leon Panetta has decided to change how the agency's National Clandestine Service operates, potentially impacting up to half the CIA's workforce. The shift is part of Panetta's long-range “CIA 2015″ reorganization plan and should make the agency much more agile and quick to respond in the war on terror and other national security flare-ups.
Phi Beta Iota: This is not a shake-up. This is an abandonment of language skills and cultural knowledge as a foundation for effective clandestine operations, and a general acknowledgment that the clandestine service is merely in liaison business, and “one size fits all” since English is the common languages for both spies and air traffic controllers. A “real” clandestine service would have five classes of personnel in more or less equal measure:
- Career Trainees 20%
- Mid-Career US Citizen Non-Official Cover Hires 20%
- Mid-Career Non-US Citizen Non-Official Cover Hires 20%
- Foreign Liaison Rotationals to Multinational Field Stations 20%
- One-Time “It's Just Business” Contracts 20%
What CIA has today is way too many youngsters with no real foreign experience, and way too many annuitants (contractors) and old guys who will finally retire when the money dries up, as it is about to. CIA clandestine operations have no bench, no middle, and no strategy for the future, in part because CIA analytics are not serious, CIA multi-lingual processing at machine speed does not exist, and CIA leverage of global open sources and methods is both out-sourced and pedestrian. At the same time that our Embassies have become “bunkers,” our spies are increasingly uninformed, disconnected, and ineffective for lack of language, context, and leadership.
Why Boeing is Imploding–Spinney, Sprey, & Reality vs Political Engineering & Government Spec Cost Plus
10 Security, Commerce, Commercial Intelligence, Corruption, Cultural Intelligence, Government, Military
Below are three separate contributions: Spinney on Sprey; Sprey on Boeing; and Seattle Times on Boeing.
CHUCK SPINNEY SOUNDS OFF
President Obama says that restoring America’s competitiveness is one of his top priorities. Yet under his watch, deindustrialization, financialization, and globalization continue without interruption. Many advocates of defense spending argue that spinoffs from the Pentagon's R&D and high tech engineering practices are keys to reinvigorating America’s manufacturing economy. For whatever reasons, Mr. Obama shows no intention of reining in defense spending by anything more than a cosmetic amount, even though the defense budget is higher now that at any time since the end of WWII (after removing the cumulative effect of 60 years of inflation), and despite the fact that the United States is spending about as much on defense as the rest of the world combined.
Event(s): 14-22 May, Local OpenGov “Innovation Summits”
Civil Society, Collective Intelligence, Open GovernmentThe Future of Journalism: A Conversation
Advanced Cyber/IO, Civil Society, Cultural Intelligence, Media
The Future of Journalism: a conversation
by jonl on February 7, 2011
With colleagues Pete Lewis, Tony Deifell, Kevin Anderson, Andrew Haeg, and Scott Rosenberg, I’m in a two week conversation about the future of journalism on the WELL. The WELL is the seminal online community; this conversation is in the Inkwell forums, where Bruce Sterling and I have our annual state of the world conversation. Inkwell usually has conversations with authors, but for this conversation we’re trying a panel format.
Here’s my latest contribution to the conversation:
Report Casts Doubt on Taliban’s Ties With Al Qaeda
08 Wild Cards, Analysis, Cultural Intelligence, Government, History, Intelligence (government), Policy, Strategy
N.Y.U. Report Casts Doubt on Taliban’s Ties With Al Qaeda
Published: February 6, 2011
KABUL, Afghanistan — The Afghan Taliban have been wrongly perceived as close ideological allies of Al Qaeda, and they could be persuaded to renounce the global terrorist group, according to a report to be published Monday by New York University.
The report goes on to say that there was substantial friction between the groups’ leaders before the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and that hostility has only intensified.
The authors, Alex Strick van Linschoten and Felix Kuehn, have worked in Afghanistan for years and edited the autobiography of a Taliban diplomat, many of whose ideas are reflected in the report. The authors are among a small group of experts who say the only way to end the war in Afghanistan is to begin peace overtures to the Taliban.
Phi Beta Iota: History is important not only to understanding others, but when used retrospectively to examine one's own actions, assumptions, beliefs, and motivations, most helpful in refining the art and science of intelligence (decision making) and public policy making (a mix of politics and professionalism that too often loses its integrity for lack of public intelligence).

