organization:department of defense

  • Drone Pilots Found to Get Stress Disorders Much as Those in Combat Do - NYTimes.com
    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/23/us/drone-pilots-found-to-get-stress-disorders-much-as-those-in-combat-do.html?
    Diriger des #drones, c’est pas bon pour la #santé_mentale, on s’en doutait

    In the first study of its kind, researchers with the Defense Department have found that pilots of drone aircraft experience mental health problems like depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress at the same rate as pilots of manned aircraft who are deployed to Iraq or Afghanistan.

    encore moins pour ceux qu’on dézingue, mais ça on ignore

    Those figures do not include drones operated by the C.I.A. in counterterrorism operations over Pakistan, Yemen and other countries.

  • Cyber, drone operators now eligible for ’Distinguished Warfare’ medal | Cutting Edge - CNET News
    http://news.cnet.com/8301-11386_3-57569265-76/cyber-drone-operators-now-eligible-for-distinguished-warfare-medal

    Cyber, drone operators now eligible for ’Distinguished Warfare’ medal

    The first new medal out of the Defense Department since the 1944 creation of the Bronze Star recognizes the growing importance of cyberwarfare and drone strikes.

  • DoD mints new medal for drone pilots and cyber warriors | Ars Technica
    http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2013/02/dod-mints-new-medal-for-drone-pilots-and-cyber-warriors

    The Department of Defense announced the creation of a new medal to honor the actions of members of the military who directly affect the course of battle without physically being there—in other words, drone pilots, cyber warfare experts, and other remote warriors.

    perso j’aurais plutôt vu une médaille de ce type :

    #drones #armée

  • The enemy within: Soldier suicides outpaced combat deaths in 2012 - U.S. News
    http://usnews.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/01/03/16309351-the-enemy-within-soldier-suicides-outpaced-combat-deaths-in

    More soldiers took their own lives than died in combat during 2012, new Department of Defense figures show. The Army’s suicide rate has climbed by 9 percent since the military branch launched its suicide-prevention campaign in 2009.

    Through November, 177 active-duty soldiers had committed suicide compared to 165 during all of 2011 and 156 in 2010. In all of 2012, 176 soldiers were killed in action — all while serving in Operation Enduring Freedom, according to DOD.

    Army suicides have increased by at least 54 percent since 2007 when there were 115 — a number the Washington Post then called “an all-time record.” An Army spokesman said Wednesday it is uncertain if 177 marks a new annual high (with December numbers still to come), or if suicides have ever outpaced combat deaths in a single year, because the Army has not always tracked suicides.

  • The Military’s Dirty Secret [in United States] - NYTimes.com

    http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/31/opinion/the-militarys-dirty-secret.html?nl=todaysheadlines&emc=edit_th_20121231

    Sexual assaults at the three military academies are at a record high, according to a December Defense Department report — 80 reported assaults for the 2011-12 academic year, up from 65 the year before and the third straight year that the number has risen. The report also found that 51 percent of academy women and 10 percent of men who answered a survey in the spring said they had been sexually harassed during the previous year. Twelve percent of women and 2 percent of men reported experiencing “unwanted sexual contact.

  • Kuwaiti Gitmo detainee in limbo « freedetainees.org
    http://freedetainees.org/2012/10/05/kuwaiti-gitmo-detainee-in-limbo

    Kuwaiti Gitmo detainee in limbo

    Fayiz Al-Kandari

    PITTSBURG/KUWAIT: Lt Col Barry Wingard has spent four years fighting a losing battle. Col Wingard, a military attorney and Allegheny County public defender, represents Fayiz Al-Kandari, a Kuwaiti who has been held at Guantanamo Bay detention center since 2002.

    In June, the charges against Al-Kandari were dropped with no explanation. In just about any judicial realm, that’s a victory.

    In Guantanamo, it means instead that Col Wingard’s client is now in the group of prisoners on indefinite detention. Since the government planned no prosecution against his client, it saw no reason for Col Wingard to work on the case.

    Col Wingard’s access to Al-Kandari was reduced. He can no longer travel to Kuwait or elsewhere to investigate the case. His correspondence with his client is reviewed. Government translators/interpreters are no longer provided to enable him to communicate with his client. He has regularly traveled to Guantanamo since taking the case, spending a week of each month there. His most recent planned military transport flight was canceled.

    These restrictions began about the same time as a new protocol for civilian attorneys representing Guantanamo prisoners was put into effect. Lawyers were told they had to sign a memorandum of understanding in which they agreed to certain restrictions in order to continue to see their clients.

    Col Wingard, 45, long maintained that the charges against his client — material support of terrorism and conspiracy — were based on flimsy, third-hand evidence. But now that they have been dropped, his client’s situation is worse, since there is now no real hope of a judicial proceeding, and his ability to advocate for Al-Kandari is reduced.

    Air National Guard Col Wingard served in the Army and then as a US Air Force JAG (Judge Advocate General) attorney. He prosecuted more than 100 cases in Iraq involving more than 170 individuals who had attacked coalition forces in Iraq. He also investigated various crimes in Bosnia during the conflict there.

    Col Wingard, of Dormont, is married and has two children, ages 3 and 5. He lives mostly in Washington, DC, where he works in the Office of Military Commissions (the military judicial system in place to handle Guantanamo). He intends to return to his job as an Allegheny County public defender when his Guantanamo work is done. There is no set date for that, but the colonel hopes to finish next year.

    Government rationale
    Al-Kandari is one of the 166 men still held at Guantanamo Bay. The prisoners now fall into three rough groups: those the government says can be tried; those that are cleared for release, but have not been released because there is nowhere for them to go; and the 40-plus who are to be detained indefinitely.

    Since it opened as a detention center for terrorism suspects in 2002, Guantanamo has spurred a torrent of litigation. (“They litigate everything but the breakfast cereal down there,” one Department of Defense official said — off the record.)

    At the heart of much of it is the question of whether the US government can lawfully hold prisoners without charging them or giving them an opportunity to appear in a judicial proceeding to hear the evidence and defend themselves.

    Department of Defense spokesman David Oten gave the rationale for the government’s position: “The United States is detaining individuals at Guantanamo Bay pursuant to the Authorization for the Use of Military Force, as informed by the law of war. Detention in wartime has long been recognized as legitimate under international law. We hold at Guantanamo detainees we assess as continuing to pose a threat in our ongoing armed conflict. And we will continue to hold these individuals in a manner that complies with our domestic and international obligations, and is consistent with our values.”

    Though President Barack Obama came into office saying he would shut the facility down, in the end his administration has taken much the same stance as that of the Bush administration regarding the need for the facility and the practice of indefinite detention for prisoners. It has vigorously defended a raft of legal challenges. Although detainees won a number of them — gaining the right to make habeas challenges in US courts — the practical effect has been negligible. Only four men charged have been tried. Men cleared for release remain imprisoned. And the group of men the government says it doesn’t plan to charge have no clear path to trial or release.

    Of the review procedures for detainees, Oten of the Defense Department said, “As a discretionary matter, the United States has reviewed the cases of each individual at Guantanamo and determined that some could be eligible for transfer, pending appropriate, credible security assurances from receiving governments. Just as we do with prisoners of war in more traditional armed conflicts, we acknowledge that the threat they pose may change over time.

    “In today’s conflict, the threat posed by a particular detainee may be mitigated through participation in a reintegration program or through other focused measures to prevent re-engagement. That is why we have transfer policies in place and review mechanisms to ensure we only detain those whose threat cannot otherwise be mitigated.”

    Limiting access
    But in claiming it has the right to restrict access to prisoners by their lawyers, the government was saying that it had control of how legal review of cases was to go forward.

    The Memorandum of Understanding requirement was challenged and on Sept 5, US District Judge Royce Lamberth said the government has no right to deny counsel access to detainees, issuing a stinging rebuke in his ruling. Writing that the federal government is confusing “the roles of the jailer and the judiciary,” Judge Lamberth struck down the military’s assertion that it could veto meetings between lawyers and detainees.

    The judge said the government has the right to run the facility at Guantanamo, but that the courts have authority to make sure prisoners have access to the courts, and that can’t happen unless they have access to their lawyers.

    Justice Department spokesman Dean Boyd said, “We have no comment on whether the Department plans to appeal the Lamberth decision on counsel access to GTMO detainees.”

    The nature of restrictions on military lawyers like Col Wingard is different, but the effect is the same.

    “They say, ‘We have no intention of prosecuting, so your request for travel is denied,’ ” he said.

    Similarly, translators and interpreters are denied. Though Col Wingard has top security clearance, his correspondence with his clients (he also represents an Afghani and a second Kuwaiti) is now being reviewed.

    Oten said the detention of Al-Kandari is legal — he filed a habeas corpus petition in federal court and the court ruled he was legally detained. The US Supreme Court declined further review of his case.

    “There is no precedent for indefinite detention,” said Col Wingard. However, he said, “if the government says it can hold prisoners forever, don’t they get a lawyer forever?

    “I take the position that I am still their attorney.”

    He acknowledges his ability to act in his clients’ behalf or take action to change his status is extremely limited. “It’s frustrating from our end. They are strangling our ability to do our jobs,” he said. “We’re pretty much on the ropes as far as defending these guys.” But, he said, he and other attorneys in the defense section of the Office of Military Commissions are close to one another and united in what they are trying to do.

    He has written opinion pieces for news organizations, including the Post-Gazette, and is active on social media in behalf of his clients and Guantanamo-related issues. What worries him most is what he sees as the acceptance within government and military circles of a situation that goes against basic American principles. “It has sunk in as the new norm.”

    Many people came into the military or into government positions after 9/11, he said. “For them Guantanamo, indefinite detention is the norm. They don’t know another system.”

    Once people accept the concept, “putting people away forever is the easy part.”

    He said the debate has moved from whether it’s legal or justified to detain foreign combatants on an indefinite basis to whether it’s acceptable to do so to US citizens.

    “The scariest development in the indefinite detention battle is that under the National Defense Reauthorization Act of 2012 recently signed, you as an American citizen can be detained forever without trial, while the allegations against you go uncontested because you have no right to see them.”

    On Sept 12, US District Judge Katherine Forrest of New York ruled against the administration and the National Defense Reauthorization Act on the basis that the practice of indefinite detention violates the First and Fifth Amendments. On Sept 17, Judge Raymond Lohier of the 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals stayed the ruling until Friday, when a 2nd Circuit motions panel took up the government’s request for stay pending appeal.

    His work as a military defense attorney has put him at odds with the military. “Once I’m done here I will probably never get promoted. But what can you do? They hired me to represent these guys. I’m going to do it to the best of my ability,” said Col. Wingard. “In the big picture, it definitely looks like we’re losing. [But] here’s the deal: You don’t fight on issues in hopes you’ll win. You fight on whether they’re right.” – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

    Source

  • 1,2 contractor pour 1 militaire en Afghanistan, selon le DoD - #mercenaires
    http://lignesdedefense.blogs.ouest-france.fr/archive/2012/08/04/1-2-contractor-pour-1-militaire-en-afghanistan-se

    Selon ces chiffres, et comme le montre le graphique ci-dessus, le nombre de contractors a baissé par rapport à la période précédente (même en Afghanistan). Toutefois, puisque le nombre de troupes déployées baisse aussi, le ratio contractor/militaire reste élevé : 1,19 contractor est déployé pour chaque militaire de l’ISAF.

  • EXCLUSIVE: DoD Report Reveals Some Detainees Interrogated While Drugged, Others “Chemically Restrained”
    http://truth-out.org/news/item/10248-exclusive-department-of-defense-declassifies-report-on-alleged-drug

    Detainees in custody of the US military were interrogated while drugged with powerful antipsychotic and other medications that “could impair an individual’s ability to provide accurate information,” according to a declassified Department of Defense (DoD) inspector general’s report that probed the alleged use of “mind altering drugs” during interrogations. In addition, detainees were subjected to “chemical restraints,” hydrated with intravenous (IV) fluids while they were being interrogated and, in what appears to be a form of psychological manipulation, the inspector general’s probe confirmed at least one detainee - convicted “dirty bomb” plotter Jose Padilla - was the subject of a “deliberate ruse” in which his interrogator led him to believe he was given an injection of “truth serum.”

  • U.S. expands secret intelligence operations in Africa - The Washington Post
    http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/us-expands-secret-intelligence-operations-in-africa/2012/06/13/gJQAHyvAbV_story.html

    The nature and extent of the missions, as well as many of the bases being used, have not been previously reported but are partially documented in public Defense Department contracts. The operations have intensified in recent months, part of a growing shadow war against al-Qaeda affiliates and other militant groups. The surveillance is overseen by U.S. Special Operations forces but relies heavily on private military contractors and support from African troops.

    The surveillance underscores how Special Operations forces, which have played an outsize role in the Obama administration’s national security strategy, are working clandestinely all over the globe, not just in war zones. The lightly equipped commando units train foreign security forces and perform aid missions, but they also include teams dedicated to tracking and killing terrorism suspects.

    #espionnage #surveillance #Afrique #Etats-Unis #mercenaires

  • Patrick Cockburn : America is deluded by its drone-warfare propaganda (The Independent)
    http://www.independent.co.uk/opinion/commentators/patrick-cockburn-america-is-deluded-by-its-dronewarfare-propaganda-78

    As the US and its allies ponder what to do about Syria, one suggestion advanced by the protagonists of armed intervention is to use unmanned drones to attack Syrian government targets. The proposal is a measure of the extraordinary success of the White House, CIA and Defense Department in selling the drone as a wonder weapon despite all the evidence to the contrary. The attraction of the drone for President Obama and his administration five months before the presidential election is self-evident. The revelation that he personally selected targets from the top ranks of al-Qa’ida for assassination by remote control shows the President as tough and unrelenting in destroying America’s enemies. (...) Source: The Independent

  • #Google Adds (Even More) Links to the Pentagon | Danger Room | Wired
    http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2012/03/pentagon-google

    On Monday, the Defense Department’s best-known geek announced that she was leaving the Pentagon for a job at Google. It was an unexpected move: Washington and Mountain View don’t trade top executives very often. But it shouldn’t come as a complete surprise. The internet colossus has had a long and deeply complicated relationship with America’s military and intelligence communities. Depending on the topic, the time, and the players involved, the Pentagon and the Plex can be customers, business partners, adversaries, or wary allies.

    au point que certains parlent du « prochain Halliburton »

    #militaires #armées #etats-unis #cyberguerre

  • À lire absolument : Afghan War Risks Are Shifting to Contractors
    http://www.nytimes.com/2012/02/12/world/asia/afghan-war-risks-are-shifting-to-contractors.html

    Last year, at least 430 employees of American contractors were reported killed in Afghanistan: 386 working for the Defense Department, 43 for the United States Agency for International Development and one for the State Department, according to data provided by the American Embassy in Kabul and publicly available in part from the United States Department of Labor.

    By comparison, 418 American soldiers died in Afghanistan last year, according to Defense Department statistics compiled by icasualties.org, an independent organization that monitors war deaths.

    That trend has been growing for the past several years in Afghanistan, and it parallels a similar trend in Iraq, where contractor deaths exceeded military deaths as long ago as 2009. In Iraq, however, that took place as the number of American troops was being drastically reduced until their complete withdrawal at the end of last year. And last year, more soldiers than private contractors died in Iraq (54 compared with 41, according to Labor Department figures).

    Et pendant ce temps-là, nos médias continuent à faire de jolis graphiques pour minimiser le nombre de #mercenaires employés par les américains, et répètent que ces « sociétés privées » fournissent essentiellement de la logistique. Mais alors, comment se fait-il que plus de « contractors » privés meurent que de soldats américains ?

    Ce que fait très bien le New York Times :

    There were 113,491 employees of defense contractors in Afghanistan as of January 2012, compared with about 90,000 American soldiers, according to Defense Department statistics. Of those, 25,287, or about 22 percent of the employees, were American citizens, with 47 percent Afghans and 31 percent from other countries.

    The bulk of the known contractor deaths are concentrated among a handful of major companies, particularly those providing interpreters, drivers, security guards and other support personnel who are particularly vulnerable to attacks.

    The biggest contractor in terms of war zone deaths is apparently the defense giant L-3 Communications. If L-3 were a country, it would have the third highest loss of life in Afghanistan as well as in Iraq; only the United States and Britain would exceed it in fatalities.

  • Pentagon Wants a Social Media Propaganda Machine | Danger Room | Wired.com
    http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2011/07/darpa-wants-social-media-sensor-for-propaganda-ops

    Defense Department extreme technology arm #Darpa unveiled its Social Media in Strategic Communication (#SMISC) program. It’s an attempt to get better at both detecting and conducting propaganda campaigns on social media. SMISC has two goals. First, the program needs to help the military better understand what’s going on in social media in real time — particularly in areas where troops are deployed. Second, Darpa wants SMISC to help the military play the #social_media #propaganda game itself.
    (...) SMISC algorithms will be aimed at discovering and tracking the “formation, development and spread of ideas and concepts (memes)”

    #armée #internet #idées #atla #silicon_army

  • Details of raid on bin Laden compound unfold - CNN.com
    http://edition.cnn.com/2011/WORLD/asiapcf/05/03/bin.laden.dead/index.html

    Carney, reading a narrative drawn up by the Defense Department, provided new details of the events that transpired early Monday when 25 U.S.

    Note bien, on dit « narrative » et « new details ». Ça veut dire qu’on modifie l’histoire qu’on raconte.

    Continuing their ascent to the second and third floors, the commandos found bin Laden and his wife, both of whom were unarmed, in a room, Carney said. “She rushed one of the U.S. assaulters and was shot in the leg but not killed,” he said. “Bin Laden was then shot and killed.”

    The U.S. official said bin Laden was shot when he made a threatening move.

    OK, donc cette fois, ils disent que les super-soldats ont zigouillé le « supervillain » dans son « secret hideout », alors que le supervillain et madame n’avaient aucune arme.

    #ben_laden

  • Number of DoD #Contractors in #Afghanistan at a Record High | Secrecy News
    http://www.fas.org/blog/secrecy/2011/03/contractors_high.html

    The number of private security contractors employed by the Department of Defense in Afghanistan has reached a new record high, according to DoD statistics in a recently updated report (pdf) from the Congressional Research Service.

    “In Afghanistan, as of December 2010, there were 18,919 private security contractor (PSC) personnel working for DOD, the highest number since DOD started tracking the data in September 2007. The number of PSC personnel in Afghanistan has more than tripled since June 2009,” the CRS report said.

    #états-unis #cdp

  • Néoconservateurs ❤ Kadhafi

    Puisque, de manière assez désespérée, on essaie de nous faire croire que les néoconservateurs se réjouissent de la démocratisation du monde arabe, et même que, peut-être, ils verraient enfin la victoire d’une idée qu’ils ont essayé de promouvoir avec Georges W. Bush, le papier de Laura Rozen est parfaitement réjouissant.

    Among Libya’s lobbyists - Laura Rozen - POLITICO.com
    http://www.politico.com/blogs/laurarozen/0211/Among_Libyas_lobbyists.html

    Prominent neoconservative #Richard_Perle, the former Reagan-era Defense Department official and George W. Bush-era chairman of the Defense Policy Board, traveled to Libya twice in 2006 to meet with Qadhafi, and afterward briefed Vice President #Dick_Cheney on his visits, according to documents released by a Libyan opposition group in 2009.

    [...]

    A 2007 Monitor memo named among the prominent figures it had recruited to travel to Libya and meet with Qadhafi “as part of the Project to Enhance the Profile of Libya and Muammar Qadhafi” Perle, historian #Francis_Fukuyama, Princeton Middle East scholar #Bernard_Lewis, famous Nixon interviewer #David_Frost, and MIT media lab founder #Nicholas_Negroponte, the brother of former deputy secretary of state and director of national intelligence #John_Negroponte.

  • Daily Kos : UPDATED : The HB Gary Email That Should Concern Us All
    http://www.dailykos.com/story/2011/02/16/945768/-UPDATED:-The-HB-Gary-Email-That-Should-Concern-Us-All

    toujours plus de #HBGary/#Anonymous : le consultant en sécurité prévoyait de créer des logiciels permettant à des agents de venir infiltrer, provoquer, etc. online sans s’emmêler les pinceaux.

    But for a defense contractor with ties to the federal government, Hunton & Williams, DOD, NSA, and the CIA - whose enemies are labor unions, progressive organizations, journalists, and progressive bloggers, a persona apparently goes far beyond creating a mere sockpuppet.

    According to an embedded MS Word document found in one of the HB Gary emails, it involves creating an army of sockpuppets, with sophisticated “persona management” software that allows a small team of only a few people to appear to be many, while keeping the personas from accidentally cross-contaminating each other. Then, to top it off, the team can actually automate some functions so one persona can appear to be an entire Brooks Brothers riot online.

    Voilà qui rejoint une fois de plus … le film Catfish

    A lire aussi l’infiltration de flics chez les écolos anglais : http://www.liberation.fr/monde/01012320222-royaume-unil-espion-qui-aimait-trop-les-verts

  • L’amiral #Francisco_Torrente, secrétaire général pour la politique du Ministère de la défense espagnol, rassure les américains :
    http://wikileaks.ch/cable/2006/09/06MADRID2335.html

    Non, pas de problème avec l’utilisation des bases espagnoles par les avions de NCIS/OSI pour le gouvernement, même si ces andouilles de gauchistes et de médias confondent avec les vols de la CIA.

    On the NCIS/OSI issue, Torrente emphasized that the GOS doesn’t disagree with the DOD concept of force protection and doesn’t want to restrict NCIS/OSI activities - it just wants to be involved in these activities from the start. He said that he believes that NCIS/OSI is not carrying out illegal activities, so there would be no reason for the GOS to prohibit any activity. Torrente said that NCIS/OSI is a tricky issue for the GOS, particularly because the press has mixed up NCIS/OSI with the CIA flights issues, and because radical parties that are the governing Socialist party’s legislative partners in Parliament can be hard to control. Torrente acknowledged that the US may think that he is being stubborn on this issue, but they have to understand that he represents the GOS position.

    Platitudes d’usage : content de maintenir la paix au #Liban en participant à la Finul :

    Similarly, Torrente said that Spain expects to be in Lebanon for a long time, and therefore other European allies would need to rotate their troops in to support the UNIFIL mission. He specifically mentioned the Poles and their prior UNIFIL experience.

    Et là c’est la grosse boulette pour quelqu’un qui participe à la #FINUL : le Hezbollah est une organisation terroriste et la résolution 1701 ne résout pas le problème.

    Torrente also mentioned that while UNSCR 1701 is important, it doesn’t fully address the issue of Hizballah, which is both a terrorist organization and part of the government.

    #Espagne #cablegate