Journal: DoD QDR–incomplete, incoherent, incredible…

Military, Non-Governmental, Peace Intelligence
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In simple terms, the collection of links below centered on the latest Quadrennial Defense Review (QDR), come to the general conclusion that the Department of Defense (DoD) can no longer think, strategize, complete staff work, or acquire the right capabilities to do what DoD is supposed to do (which is also a topic lacking consensus).

SMALL WARS JOURNAL ROBERT HADDICK: Not trusting the Pentagon’s staff to prepare a Quadrennial Defense Review that would be useful, the Congress established an independent panel of “wise men” to critique the QDR after its release. Last Thursday, the QDR Independent Panel, led by William Perry and Stephen Hadley and supported by a praiseworthy list of commissioners and staff members, released its critique of the 2010 QDR. With the exception of one glaring clunker, the Independent Panel’s report is superb and is the strategic defense review the QDR should have been. Yet the very fact that the Independent Panel was needed (confirming Congress’s suspicions) shows that something is seriously wrong with the government’s ability to formulate and execute strategy.  Read more from Haddick.

INDEPENDENT CONGRESSIONAL PANEL OF EXPERTS: CORRECTED ADVANCE COPY The QDR in Perspective:
Meeting America’s National Security Needs In the 21st Century.
Read the Report

ORIGINAL QDR (February 2010)

Phi Beta Iota: Business profit center opportunities abound, the most notable being the provision of intelligence and shared computing and communications to multinational, multiagency, multifunctional forces that do not speak English.  The following two short lists are pulled from the Executive Summary of the Independent Report, which is the best “old” thinking (do the wrong things righter) and while utterly brilliant as far as it goes, lacking in “new” thinking (create a prosperous world at peace).  This report fails to point out the obvious, to wit, for one quarter of what we spend on war today ($1.3 trillion a year), we can eradicate all ten high level threats to humanity (the top three of which are not recognized by this report (poverty, infectious disease, and environmental degradation), in the process reinventing capitalism to go after the four trillion a year the five billion poor gross, which just happens to be four time what the one billion rich gross per year.

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Search: davies j 1969 curve

Searches

Hmmm.    This should not have come up empty, it did for us as well.  Here is the  obvious hit followed by several others.  WordPress seems to do better with simpler searches, e.g. <davies j curve> without the year.

Journal: US IC Re-Discovers the Davies J-Curve

Also found with <davies j curve>:

Journal: Director of National Intelligence Alleges….

Journal: Fort Hood Cognitive Dissonance

Review: Blood Money–Wasted Billions, Lost Lives, and Corporate Greed in Iraq

Review: Orbiting the Giant Hairball–A Corporate Fool’s Guide to Surviving with Grace

Not found but relevant:

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Twitter & SMS Used to Help Election in Kenya

07 Other Atrocities, Civil Society, Counter-Oppression/Counter-Dictatorship Practices, Geospatial, Mobile, Peace Intelligence, Technologies
source article

How Twitter saved Kenya's election

Thu Aug 5, 2010

New York – Once again, social media has played a central role in a national election. During Kenya's recent ballot initiative to adopt a new constitution, citizens used Twitter, along with Facebook and a new breed of monitoring technology, to help eliminate the voter intimidation, bombings, and deadly violence that marred the struggling African country's disastrous 2008 election. Here, a quick guide:

How was social media used to monitor the election?
Voters reported any intimidation issues at the polls by posting Twitter messages with the hashtag #uchaguzi (the Kiswahili word for “election”), or sending SMS messages to a specially designated number. A group of volunteers tracked the messages and alerted local officials when necessary.

Besides Twitter, what other technologies were used?
A Kenyan-developed platform called Uchaguzi helped aggregate all reported problems, documenting incidents by location and type (security issues, hate speech, ballot issues) so that anyone with Internet access could get a quick overview on the Uchaguzi site. It's very new for Kenyans, Uchaguzi's Charles Kithika tells The Christian Science Monitor, to see that problems are being reported and investigated, effectively “discouraging” troublemakers.

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President’s Cancer Panel Report, Pharma Trace Contamination of Freshwater Supplies

03 Environmental Degradation, 07 Health, 12 Water, Corporations, Power Behind-the-Scenes/Special Interests

This year's report focuses primarily on environmental factors that contribute to cancer risk. According to the report, pharmaceutical drugs are a serious environmental pollutant, particularly in the way they continue to contaminate waterways across the country.

2008–2009 Annual Report from the President’s Cancer Panel
REDUCING ENVIRONMENTAL CANCER RISK: What We Can Do Now
(240 pages)

According to a U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) study conducted back in 2002, antidepressants, blood pressure and diabetes medications, anticonvulsants, oral contraceptives, hormone replacement therapy drugs, chemotherapy drugs, antibiotics, heart medications and even codeine are all showing up in the water supplies of American cities. This study was the first national-scale evaluation of pharmaceutical drug contamination in streams, and roughly 80 percent of the streams tested were found to be contaminated as well.

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Search: SOF OSINT Special Operations Forces OSINT

Searches

This post addresses difficulty in getting to SOF OSINT Handbook.

Civil Affairs and UN DPKO would other useful search branches.

2004 Special Operations Forces OSINT Handbook (Strawman)

Memorandum: USSOCOM Software List and STRONG ANGEL TOOZL

2004 Harrison (US) Open Source Intelligence (OSINT) Requirements Management: A U.S. Special Operations Command (USSOCOM) Perspective

2003 Hardee (US) Special Operations Panel on Open Source Intelligence (OSINT)

2003 Harrison (US) Open Source Intelligence (OSINT) Requirements, Collection, and Production Management

2002 Hardee (US) Growing an Open Source Program for the U.S. Special Operations Command and the Global War on Terrorism

See Also:

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