Journal: Barack Obama, College Administrator

Communities of Practice, Ethics, Policies, Reform, Threats
Full Story Online
Full Story Online

CBS replaying National Review Online

Other NRO Stories
Other NRO Stories

Victor Davis Hanson

23 September 2009

If you are confused by the first nine months of the Obama administration, take solace that there is at least a pattern. The president, you see, thinks America is a university and that he is our campus president. Keep that in mind, and almost everything else makes sense.

Many of the former Professor Obama's problems so far hinge on his administration's inability to judge public opinion, its own self-righteous sense of self, its non-stop sermonizing, and its suspicion of sincere dissent. In other words, the United States is now a campus, we are the students, and Obama is our university president.

Continue reading “Journal: Barack Obama, College Administrator”

Journal: The Afghanistan Impasse–Chuck Spinney Highlights NYT Review of Books

04 Inter-State Conflict, 10 Security, Military

The Afghanistan Impasse

By Ahmed Rashid New York Review of Books
Volume 56, Number 15 · October 8, 2009
Amazon Page
Amazon Page

To Live or to Perish Forever: Two Tumultuous Years in Pakistan by Nicholas Schmidle Henry Holt, 254 pp., $25.00

Amazon Page
Amazon Page
Seeds of Terror: How Heroin Is Bankrolling the Taliban and al Qaeda by Gretchen Peters Thomas Dunne/St. Martin's, 300 pp., $25.95
Full Story with Spinney Highlights
Full Story with Spinney Highlights

Follow the Frog to the full article with Chuck Spinney's highlights, nine pages in an easily downloaded document.

Highlights as we read them:

1) Massiviely fraudulent election in Afghanistan;

2) Military situation going from bad to worse for US and the (virtually non-existent) Afghan Army and Police;

3) Pakistan keeping 80% of its troops on the border with India;

4) Pakistan refusing to rein in its one really disciplined jihadist group that keeps attacking India (Mumbia plus).

Journal: Afghanistan–Connecting the Dots

10 Security, Military, Strategy

2001: What to do about Afghanistan?  Prospects for Stability

2008: Memo Leak Says Mission In Afghanistan Doomed

Meet the Afghan Army: Is it a figment of Washington's imagination? by Ann Jones

Afghan agony: More troops won't help by Ralph Peters in the NY Post

Time to Get Out of Afghanistan By George F. Will Tuesday, September 1, 2009


Journal: Information Arms Race

10 Security, Government, Reform, Strategy

Full Story Online
Full Story Online

Information as the New Arms Race

An official report last week reveals weaknesses in our effort to prevent another 9/11.

Gordon Grovitz
Gordon Grovitz

L. GORDON CROVITZ

Monday, September 21, 2009

The U.S. is the only country whose laws mandate the release of details of its intelligence goals and operations. Every four years, the National Intelligence Strategy document discloses the priorities of the usually hidden operations of the country's 16 intelligence agencies.

A key theme of last week's report is that we're now in what might be called an information arms race, driven by technology.

. . . . . . .

One previously top-secret disclosure last week was the amount the U.S. spends across its civilian and military intelligence operations. Mr. Blair said this is $75 billion a year, including 200,000 intelligence professionals. These details alert other countries to what it would take to close the intelligence gap.

Continue reading “Journal: Information Arms Race”

Worth a Look: One World Research

Commercial Intelligence, Methods & Process, Non-Governmental, Worth A Look

logo one world

One World Research
One World Research

With a tip of the hat to Intelligence Online, we recommend One World Research as being worth a look.  IO highlighted them as being part of the open source intelligence support to litigation against CIA for renditioin and torture.

One World Research is a research, investigation, and consulting firm that provides high-quality services to clients involved in promoting public interest causes. Our clients include law firms, universities, governmental agencies, non-governmental organizations, advocacy groups, journalists, and filmmakers.

Utilizing a network of experienced investigators, attorneys, public policy analysts, and human rights experts, One World Research provides a broad scope of services in the United States and throughout the world, including litigation and advocacy assistance, investigative services, research, and consulting.

Worth a Look: Peace Book One Now Online in Chapter Form

Communities of Practice, Peace Intelligence, Worth A Look
PKI Book I By the Chapter
PKI Book I By the Chapter

With apologies for taking so long to do this, we have finally gotten around to loading the first Peacekeeping Intelligence book, which has always been free as a single PDF, in chapter form.

The short URL (or click on the cover) is http://www.tinyurl.com/OSSPKIONE

The primary page for this book with Amazon and PDF links is here.

The next book can now pre-ordered on Amazon, see the page for the new book, INTELLIGENCE for PEACE: Multinational Multifunctional Information-Sharing and Sense-Making, here.

Journal: David Ignatius on “Paradigm Shift” in the Secret World Per Hayden (US) and Omand (UK)

Government
David Ignatius
David Ignatius

Citizen-Centered Intelligence Full Story Online
Citizen-Centered Intelligence Full Story Online

A New Deal for The CIA

By David Ignatius,The Washington Post

Thursday, September 17, 2009

Hayden drew a Venn diagram to explain where the CIA needs to operate. First, he drew three circles that represent the traditional parameters: An activity must be technically feasible, operationally relevant and lawful. Then he added a fourth requirement. The activity must also be “politically sustainable,” through more transparency with Congress and the public. “We need a program that does not have an on-off switch every two years,” he said.

Omand argued that the intelligence community must accept a “paradigm shift.” The old “secret state,” in which intelligence agencies could do pretty much as they liked, is gone. In its place is a “protecting state,” in which the public gives the intelligence agencies certain powers needed to keep the country safe. It's a “citizen-centric approach,” Omand explained, based on the reality of mutual dependence. The spies need information from the community (especially the large Muslim population in Britain), and the public needs protection.

Phi Beta Iota: Reformation finds new means for old ways, Transformation adapts new means to new ways.   Empires consume their own citizens at the same time they destroy other cultures.  For serious journalism, see the work of John Pilger.