-
Discover What the World Thinks About U.S., with Translated Foreign News Available NOWHERE Else In English.
Category: Other
links for 2006-04-20
-
OSI site. Good info.
links for 2006-04-19
-
remember IPOA and BSIA are very different creatures. BAPSC is specifically British not international; BAPSC is focussed on regulation rather than promotion; and they have an interest in peacekeeping but it is not the primary activity of many of their mem
-
IPOA is specifically international; IPOA is focussed on promotion through COE adoption
links for 2006-04-18
-
Very useful
links for 2006-04-16
-
Looking at General Billy Mitchell in the early 1920’s made heavy (very heavy) charges and was court-martialed.
-
"Heck of a job, Rummy"
-
The gloves come off. This is the afternoon re-broadcast / analysis of the morning public pronouncement by General Riggs for Rummy to resign. Citing an atmosphere of "arrogance" among the top civilian leaders at the Pentagon, another retired general is
-
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld should ignore all the calls for his resignation, says commentator Dan Goure. Focuses on the "image" of Rumsfeld and his actions that he "does not allow" his mistakes or "human frailties" to stand in the way of "protect
-
A better piece on the military than his NPR Commentary.
links for 2006-04-14
-
Architectural monuments to the Soviet. Reminds me of the great Embassy of Baghdad we are building, among other “noble” buildings.
-
Opposition to the US creates both real and imagined threats to national security, yet the biggest threat for the US and the world comes from US policy and its formulators, both Congress and President Bush. After 9/11, the world displayed sympathy for the
-
Looking at increased pace of ASW by USN
-
The navy recently decided to take six of its nuclear attack submarines from bases in Connecticut and Virginia and send them to Washington, California and Hawaii within four years. By 2010, Pacific ports will be home to 60% of US attack submarines.
The -
It is noteworthy that current PLAN Commander Adm. Zhang Dingfa is a nuclear submariner. Until the growth of carrier aviation in the next decade, submarines will remain at the core of China’s developing naval doctrines, which serve to achieve the strateg
Slight pause on posting…
My posting will continue to be sparse or non-existent for a few more days as I work heads down on some other projects. Keep the email and comments coming. — talk soon, going back under.
Stuff I’d like to post on, but can’t right now (some I may, others will slide by):
- NYT "Dash to Baghdad" and decision failures
- Top 10 Firms profiting in Iraq from the Independent and how much is spent on security. Don’t ignore the previous article and relative costs and timelines of escalation.
- Most Americans not Fit to Join from the AP. Come on parents, Xbox is no substitute for outdoor activities.
- GoogleAccelerator and Google’s expansion into the realm of Knowledge Broker. They now know where you go without needing to search from their site.
- AT&T profiteering?
- Delving into Dan’s 5GW model
- Continuing my discussion on 4GW, including this interesting piece on the shrinking autonomy of the state.
- Consider these two pieces, Fatal Divide and British Soldier Quits, from across the Pond and films like Valley of the Wolves and Metal Storm and our overall security future.
- and the continuing and expanding lead role DoD is taking in international affairs of the US.
Off Topic: Race across Manhattan
Off topic is this link I’ve been sitting on for a while. Not only a MountainRunner, I was also a MountainRider (bartered my 22.9 lb full-suspension cross country mtn bike for massages… a lot of massages) and a RoadRider (and tri-geek). Now the rollers, CompuTrainer, and bikes just rot in the garage begging to be used. Enough of the tears. To share the joy of riding, check out this vid of the NYC Drag Race of Feb 2004 (50mb so it’ll take a few to download, but it’s good, turn up the sound). If you don’t know anything about bikes, some of these guys are on track bikes: no brakes and no freewheel. You pedal and the wheels turn. Stop pedaling and the wheels stop turning.
FEMA and President Bush
Bush, the supreme CEO of the United States of America and especially of the agencies within the Executive branch, placed Mike Brown as head of FEMA through the political favors system.
In days passed by, conspiracy theorists loved to talk about FEMA’s black helicopters and their the future when a make-believe disaster occurred. This would be, according to these folk, the time FEMA would take over the US and a secret cabal of gentlemen would be another step closer to ruling the world.
Alas, President Bush has disproven that theory with his appointment of Mike Brown.
Link: Defense Tech: FEMA Chief’s Sorry Past.
From the Boston Herald:
Brown – formerly an estates and family lawyer –
this week has has made several shocking public admissions, including
interviews where he suggested FEMA was unaware of the misery and
desperation of refugees stranded at the New Orleans convention center.Before
joining the Bush administration in 2001, Brown spent 11 years as the
commissioner of judges and stewards for the International Arabian Horse
Association, a breeders’ and horse-show organization based in Colorado.
"We
do disciplinary actions, certification of (show trial) judges. We hold
classes to train people to become judges and stewards. And we keep
records,” explained a spokeswoman for the IAHA commissioner’s office. "This was his full-time job . . . for 11 years,” she added.
Brown was forced out of the position after a spate of lawsuits over alleged supervision failures.
"He was asked to resign,” Bill Pennington, president of the IAHA at the time, confirmed last night.
For those wanting to whitewash the Administration’s failure to lead, direct, and support, consider this:
-
Infrastructure has been one of the lowest priorities of this
Administration. Local officials have been trying for decades to shore
up the levees. - Local planning for a Katrina-like disaster was in the tabletop
stages. It was not unforeseen. Chertoff’s attempted excuse that an
exact response was not laid out is not valid because they cannot come
with every possible response but must have a toolbox. However, it was
foreseen and the storm had been building and was not all-of-a-sudden. - FEMA had been feared because of its ability to quickly mobilize and
supercede all laws, etc. What happened? Where is the leadership from
the President? No, he is not a God like some flippant post, but he has
the responsibility to make sure the people in charge are responsible.
What happened to "The Buck Stops Here"? This President is the real
TEFLON President with his ability to dodge criticism. It is his agency,
just like the intelligence services (congressional purse strings or
not) operate for and at the whim of the President. Congressional
oversight is *oversight*. FEMA is Bush’s responsibility. - Who did Bush put in charge of FEMA, a critical domestic component of Homeland Security?
This was a WMD attack, only by mother nature, not by man. the
response is woefully inadequate no matter how you slice it. Ultimately,
Homeland Security is not, must not be about manmade attacks.
Going beyond budget debates, consider the actualities and realities.
Stories of red tape and failure to respond properly, effectively, or at all, including
local officials bearing arms to prevent FEMA from interferring. Bush, as CEO, as President, puts together his management team to implement his policies. At what point will the blame rest with him? Where does that buck stop again?
The lack of focus on real threats (terrorist, natural, etc) is a core issue here. Focus people. How many days does it take to
respond? How quickly did the President respond to Terry Schiavo and how quickly did he respond to the hurricane? Not directly comparable, but consider what must have been his assumptions. In the Schiavo case, he had to rely on himself. In the hurricane, he figured he could rely on others. Others that he appointed. This includes Brown and it most definitely includes Chertoff.
The "you’re on your own" argument some have put forward to dismiss the response because people didn’t get out of the way is a whitewash, an attempt to obfuscate the issue. This was a WMD attack WITH WARNING and you’re on your own? I
live in Los Angeles, which is likely terrorist target, was a likely
Soviet target, and I’m on my own, right?
The core of the issue is the
RESPONSE, not the prevention. Stay on focus here and follow who is
supposed to react and respond to help the good citizens. Nobody? Let
them linger until somebody gets around to letting the mobile hospital
have permission (all while they are trying to get on location but
can’t)? Let them feel they’ll be rescued while nothing substantial is
really done and chiefs (Mr Brown and Chertoff, etc) talk about how it
wasn’t foreseen when it was in the process of a table top exercise?
While they talk about how a plan wasn’t ready therefore they couldn’t
be responsible for not reacting?
Consider the next time you need emergency
services (fire, police, hospital) and consider if they slow their
response because they hadn’t planned on YOU having to need their
assistance or that you YOU hadn’t filled out the forms or that YOU
should not have been where you where and got injured by your own fault
or somebody elses or if your house caught on fire or… pick a
scenario.
This is not
about warning civilians and how poor or rich people got away or didn’t or should have or could have. The issue here is
culpability and responsibility for responding to a disaster, man-made
or otherwise, to protect the citizens and infrastructure of our great land. The infrastructure that was damaged is not just the French Quarter, but important oil and natural gas and agricultural terminals the entire country depends on.
It is almost guaranteed that blame could be spread to local and state agencies, but let’s not let the focus be lost. The Feds have the greatest ability to respond and have promised through the magic color board to protect us. Some Some
agencies where hindered and some just moved slowly, or not at all. Others, like the ASPCA and related pet organizations, were
on the ball building on experience from the last hurricane to setup coordinated
resources.
Finally people are starting to see the colors of this Administration and their failure to really protect. Unfortunately, it took massive destruction and incurring the jibes of the world, but it happened. Now, let’s not lose the momentum. People, you must remember Katrina.
