Messages In This Digest (10 Messages)
=====================================
1.
India: U.S. Completes Global Military Structure From: Rick Rozoff
2.
Fifth Battlefield: U.S. Cyber Command Expands Scope From: Rick
Rozoff
3.
NATO To Open Permanent Mission In Georgia This Month From: Rick
Rozoff
4.
NATO Subordination: Czech Military Strategy Defers To U.S. From:
Rick Rozoff
5.
Three More NATO Vehicles Destroyed In Pakistan From: Rick Rozoff
6.
U.S. Military To Conduct Large-Scale Exercises Near Guam From: Rick
Rozoff
7.
After Simmons Visit, Uzbekistan Not To Attend SCO Exercise From:
Rick Rozoff
8.
Rising Chinese Mistrust Of U.S. Hand In South Asia From: Rick
Rozoff
9.
New U.S. Missile Attack Kills At Least Six In Pakistan From: Rick
Rozoff
10.
Japan: Defense Report Stesses Role Of U.S. Military From: Rick
Rozoff
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Messages
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1.
India: U.S. Completes Global Military Structure
-----------------------------------------------
Posted by: "Rick Rozoff" rwro...@yahoo.com rwrozoff
Thu Sep 9, 2010 8:12 pm (PDT)
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/09/10/ india-u-s-completes-global-military-structure
Stop NATO
September 10, 2010
India: U.S. Completes Global Military Structure
Rick Rozoff
A September 8 report by a leading Canadian newspaper cited the
Indian branch of the Deloitte consulting firm estimating the
world's second most populous nation plans to spend as much as $80
billion for its defense sector in the next five years.
It quoted an Indian journalist, Rahul Bedi, a contributor to Jane's
Defence Weekly, as stating "No one else is buying like India.b
[1]
Earlier this year the authoritative Stockholm International Peace
Research Institute (SIPRI) disclosed that India had become the
world's second-largest importer of weapons from 2005-2009,
"importing 7% of the worldbs arms exports." Only China imported
more weaponry, though that nation is slated to purchase less
foreign arms, both aggregate and percentile, in the coming years
and the largest foreign supplier of its weapons is a non-Western
country, Russia.
During the five-year period mentioned above, Indian arms imports
more than doubled from $1.04 billion in 2005 to $2.2 billion in
2009. Over the past 20 years Russia has been far and away the main
provider of arms to India, as the Soviet Union had been in previous
decades, though "The United States, currently Indiabs
sixth-biggest arms supplier, seems likely to leapfrog to second
position once New Delhi starts paying for a series of recent and
ongoing acquisitions." [2]
Those contracts include $1.1 billion for C-130J Super Hercules
transport planes, $2.4 billion for Globemaster airlifters and $2
billion for P-8I long-range maritime patrol aircraft. (A version of
Boeing's Poseidon reconnaissance and anti-submarine warfare
Multimission Maritime Aircraft modified for Indian use.)
Reports in both the Russian and Chinese press speculate that when
U.S. President Barack Obama visits India in November he "may secure
$5 billion
worth of arms sales," a deal that "would make the US replace Russia
as
India's biggest arms supplier" and "help India curb China's rise."
[3]
The unprecedented weapons transactions could include "Patriot air
defence batteries and Boeing mid-air refueling tankers.
"Observers point out that the role of India's biggest arms supplier
is shifting from Russia to the United States." [4]
A Chinese news source added that Washington will also supply New
Delhi with howitzers and that "the total cost of the deal may
exceed $10 billion...."
The Economic Times of India disclosed in July that "talks are
underway between Indian and US officials over a deal to sell 10
Boeing C-17 [Globemaster III] military transport aircraft to the
Indian Air Force (IAF)."
Wang Mingzhi, a military strategist at the People's Liberation Army
Air Force Command College, warned "once India gets the C-17
transport aircraft, the mobility of its forces stationed along the
border with China will be improved." [5]
The C-17 carries a payload of 164,900 pounds for 2,400 miles and
100,300 pounds for 4,000 miles without refueling.
In late August the U.S. signed a $170 million deal to supply India
with 24 Harpoon Block II advanced air-to-surface anti-ship
missiles.
This February the Wall Street Journal revealed that the Obama
administration, with a renewed focus on the Asia-Pacific region,
intends to massively increase arms sales to both India and its
nuclear rival Pakistan. U.S. military sales to Pakistan have risen
to $3 billion a year and are expected to nearly double in 2011.
As for its neighbor, "India is one of the largest buyers of
foreign-made munitions, with a long shopping list which includes
warships, fighter jets, tanks and other weapons. Its defense budget
is $30 billion for the fiscal year ending March 31, a 70% increase
from five years ago." [6]
In January U.S. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates visited India and
later in the month Washington secured a deal to sell India 145 U.S.
howitzers for $647 million.
"The Obama administration is trying to persuade New Delhi to buy
American jet fighters instead [of Russian ones], a shift White
House officials say would lead to closer military and political
relations between India and the U.S. It would also be a bonanza for
U.S. defense contractors, and [the White House] has dispatched
senior officials such as Mr. Gates to New Delhi to deliver the
message that Washington hopes India will choose American defense
firms for major purchases in the years ahead."
The Wall Street Journal quoted Tom Captain, vice chairman and
Global and U.S. Aerospace & Defense director at Deloitte
headquarters in New York, as claiming "For 2010 and 2011, India
could well be the most important market in the world for defense
contractors looking to make foreign military sales," where Russian
equipment accounts for about 70 percent of that currently in use.
Referring to India's plans to spend $10 billion for 126 multirole
combat aircraft, Captain added: "That's the biggest deal in the
world right now. If it goes to an American firm, that would be the
final nail in the coffin in terms of India shifting its allegiance
from Russia to the U.S." [7]
Chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Michael Mullen
was in the Indian capital on July 22-23 and met with Defence
Minister AK Antony, Air Chief Marshal Pradeep Vasant Naik and other
military leaders. As a local news agency divulged, "Mullen's visit
comes at a time when both sides are looking at expanding defence
cooperation across a swathe of areas.
"The visit also coincides with intensified lobbying for the $10
billion contract for 126 fighters for the Indian Air Force (IAF)."
[8]
The White House is negotiating new export control agreements with
India to assist American arms firms to sell more high-technology
weapons to the Asian nation.
At the top of the list of U.S. objectives in expanding military
ties with India are replacing Russia as the country's main arms
supplier and the concomitant supplanting of Russian political
influence, further tightening an Asian NATO around China [9] and
weakening the Shanghai Cooperation Organization [10], all to ensure
unimpeded American presence and domination in Eurasia.
After the end of the Cold War and the fragmentation of the Soviet
Union, the Pentagon was given free rein to operate worldwide,
including in parts of the planet hitherto inaccessible to U.S.
troops and bases.
U.S. European Command, through the expansion of NATO membership and
graduated partnership programs, has secured the Defense Department
a prevalent role in almost all of Europe and the South Caucasus.
Central Command has extended its role from the Middle East to
Central Asia and further into South Asia and the Indian Ocean.
On October 1, 2002 U.S. Northern Command was established to oversee
North America from Mexico's southern border to the Arctic Ocean.
Six years later U.S. Africa Command was launched to subordinate 53
nations on and off the continent to American military and
geopolitical strategy.
In the past decade the Pentagon has deployed troops, military
equipment and ordnance - in some instances missiles - to new
locations in Eastern Europe and the Black Sea region, the Middle
East including the Persian Gulf, the Indian Ocean, Central and
South Asia, and South America.
The final frontier is Asia from China to Iran, with those parts of
it not covered by Central Command assigned to U.S. Pacific Command,
the largest overseas military structure in the world. Its area of
responsibility takes in India, China and 60 percent of the
population of the Earth.
In the 1990s so-called neoconservatives and realists alike from
Paul Wolfowitz to Zbigniew Brzezinski triumphed in the emergence of
the U.S. as the first, uncontested and only international
superpower - what its current head of state Barack Obama called the
world's sole military superpower in Oslo last December - and
crafted plans to continue that unparalleled role into the
indefinite future. What they agreed on was the need to guarantee
that no other nation or group of nations rose to challenge American
global supremacy, either on an international or a regional basis.
By regional was understood any part of the world. The most likely
rivals would arise in Eurasia, the American geopoliticians warned.
The ultimate nightmare for the imperial strategists was some
version of what former Russian prime and foreign minister Yevgeny
Primakov promoted as a strategic triangle of Russia, China and
India.
An Indian commentary of approximately ten years ago described the
U.S. counter-strategy as a policy of cultivating closer
state-to-state relations with every nation in the world than any of
those countries have with any other state, even their neighbors.
Thus the U.S. is arming India and Pakistan, regional military
rivals possessing nuclear weapons outside the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty regime, as it is deepening defense ties
with other nations on both sides of local conflicts and disputes:
Armenia and Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh, Greece and Turkey
over Cyprus and the skies over the Aegean Sea, Croatia and Slovenia
over the Adriatic coast, Serbia and Kosovo over the latter,
recognized by almost two-thirds of United Nation member states as a
province of the former, and so on.
As the American corporate consultant quoted earlier pointed out,
the best way of transforming the foreign policy orientation of
other countries and subordinating them to Washington's global
political agenda is by penetrating and gaining control over their
armed forces.
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization and Africa Command alone
have provided the Pentagon mechanisms for initiating and
consolidating bilateral military ties with over 100 of the world's
192 nations (in the UN). NATO and AFRICOM have given the Pentagon a
continent apiece. That is in addition to other, frequently older,
military client states in Latin America and the Caribbean, the
Middle East and the Asia-Pacific region.
By supplying arms to those nations and eliminating traditional
rivals for that role, Washington is laying the groundwork for
integrating most every country in the world into its military
network. Weapons sales are followed by instruction, maintenance,
upgrade and field training agreements, with U.S. military personnel
assigned to the purchasing nations.
Regional and other multinational air, naval, interceptor missile,
armored and ground combat exercises and war games are held to test
weapons in live-fire and other maneuvers and to provide the U.S.
opportunities for simulated warfare against potential rivals'
equipment, tactics and warfighting doctrine.
Pilots, soldiers, marines and sailors, including special forces,
from military client nations are provided training in their own
countries, in the U.S. and in third countries to ensure weapons,
deployment, command, communication and combat interoperability with
the Pentagon for global missions.
This July the Reuters news agency reported that U.S. arms sales
abroad could surge from $37.8 billion to $50 billion next year, an
increase of almost one-third.
Vice Admiral Jeffrey Wieringa, director of the Pentagon's Defense
Security Cooperation Agency - in charge of international financial
and technical assistance, training and services and other
military-to-military contacts - estimated a year ago "that weapons
sales could reach a record $50 billion this year." [11]
He added that U.S. arms sales have expanded from $8 billion ten
years ago to $37.8 for the fiscal year ending this September 30
"and they are likely to continue growing in coming years...."
"Among the biggest potential arms deals on the table now are huge
fighter jet competitions in India and Brazil, various modernization
programs for Saudi Arabia, and continuing support for arms sales to
Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Lebanon."
Wieringa was also cited applauding "a drive by Defense Secretary
Robert Gates and other departments to reform cumbersome U.S. export
laws," thus opening the floodgates for U.S. weapons sales
throughout the world. [12]
Four years ago the New York Times documented that "A total of $21
billion in arms sales agreements were signed from September 2005 to
September 2006, compared with $10.6 billion in the previous year,"
according to Pentagon data. [13]
Nations that had never purchased American weaponry before and that
only had negligible armed forces now offer lucrative prospects for
American arms manufacturers. India is preeminent in the first
category.
The weapons manufacturers' wares are produced for - deadly - use
and not for simple display, deterrence and (dubious) prestige.
Weapons sales are promoted through international arms shows and
exhibitions, but more so through actual demonstrations. War games
suit that purpose, but war itself does it to a greater degree.
The U.S. offered the world large-scale military hardware
expositions in the three wars it launched in less than four years:
Yugoslavia in 1999, Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq in 2003.
The recent announcement that the U.S. will supply Saudi Arabia with
a staggering $80 billion worth of arms in the next few years is
paralleled by its plans to become India's main arms provider.
Weapons transactions are inextricably connected with overall
military integration, and since 2002 - immediately following the
U.S. invasion of Afghanistan and the Pentagon and its NATO allies
moving into new military bases in that country, Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan and Uzbekistan - Washington began regular (annual) air,
sea and land maneuvers with India of ever-increasing scope and
intensity.
Last October 12-29 the U.S. Army participated in the latest and
largest of Yudh Abhyas ("training for war") war games held since
2004 with its Indian counterpart. Exercise Yudh Abhyas 2009
featured 1,000 troops, the U.S.'s Javelin anti-tank missile system
and the first deployment of American Stryker armored combat
vehicles outside the Afghan and Iraqi theaters of war. The Strykers
were tested against Indian T-90 tanks, "currently the most modern
tank[s] in service with the Russian Ground Forces and Naval
Infantry." [14]
The U.S. ambassador to India, Timothy Roemer, said of the military
maneuvers: "The broadened and unprecedented scope of Yudh Abhyas
stands as a testament to the growing people-to-people and
military-to-military ties of the United States and India, one of
the key pillars of the expanded U.S.-India strategic partnership."
[15]
The Pentagon showcased both the Strykers and the Javelin third
generation anti-tank guided missiles during the biggest-ever joint
U.S.-Indian ground combat exercises and not without the desired
effect.
An American press agency disclosed on September 3 that "Russia has
traditionally been India's largest arms supplier but following
evidence of the capabilities of U.S. military equipment during
joint exercises with the Indian army, navy and air force, the
Indian army decided to purchase several hundred Javelin anti-tank
guided missiles, demonstrated during the war games....The Javelins
were deployed for Indian forces for the first time in the Yudh
Abhyas 09 joint military exercise in Babina, the largest war game
that the two armies have had." [16]
Last month the Times of India reported that "India will order a
'large' number of the quite-expensive Javelin ATGM systems from the
US.
"The deal for the man-portable, fire-and-forget Javelin ATGM
systems will once again be a direct government-to-government one
under the American foreign military sales (FMS) programme, without
any global multi-vendor competition.
"While the exact number of Javelin systems India will induct is yet
to be
decided, it could well run into thousands. The Army, after all, has
a shortfall of around 44,000 ATGMs of different types...." [17]
In July the Raytheon Company announced that India is evaluating the
Patriot ground-based anti-ballistic missile system for purchase and
deployment and that the U.S. had provided New Delhi with
"classified" material on it recently. Sales of Patriot Advanced
Capability-3 interceptor missiles to India are reported to be on
Barack Obama's agenda during his November visit.
By acquiring them, India would join fellow Asia-Pacific nations
Japan, South Korea and Taiwan as well as NATO members Germany,
Spain, the Netherlands and Greece and U.S. Middle East military
clients Israel, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
Joseph Garrett, Raytheon vice president and deputy for Patriot
programs, disclosed that "A number of exchanges have taken place
between the government of India and the US and information has been
given to India at the classified level."
Patriots were "successfully used during both Desert Storm and
Operation Iraqi Freedom, Patriot's manufacturer Raytheon has said."
[18]
Seven consecutive years of Yudh Abhyas war games aren't the only
joint U.S.-Indian military exercises held each year of late. In
fact they are full spectrum in their range.
Starting shortly after the end of the Cold War, Washington
initiated joint Malabar naval exercises with India. Suspended after
the latter's nuclear tests in 1998, they resumed in 2002 and have
grown in scale over the years.
Malabar 2002 included standard maritime maneuvers but also
anti-submarine warfare exercises. The 2003 drills featured an
American guided missile destroyer, a guided missile cruiser and a
nuclear-powered fast attack submarine and two Indian guided missile
frigates, a submarine and several aircraft which concentrated on
anti-submarine warfare tactics.
2004 saw a continuation of anti-submarine drills and included a
U.S. nuclear-powered fast attack submarine and anti-submarine and
maritime surveillance aircraft. The next year's war games featured
a U.S. nuclear-powered aircraft supercarrier for the first time and
included a 24-hour simulated "war at sea" with the two nations'
navies engaging in mock combat.
In 2006 an American expeditionary strike group (the USS Boxer
Expeditionary Strike Group) consisting of over 6,500 U.S. Navy
personnel, amphibious ships, cruisers, destroyers and submarines
participated in the exercise for the first time. Also, with the
inclusion of the Canadian navy the 2006 Malabar exercises expanded
for the first time beyond the bilateral format of the preceding two
years.
The next year was a watershed one in many respects. Malabar 2007
included 25 warships from five nations: In addition to the U.S. and
India, participating countries were Australia, Japan and Singapore,
at the time leading to suspicions of American plans to forge an
Asian NATO.
The drills were held for the first time in the Bay of Bengal off
India's eastern coast, which further raised Chinese concerns, and
extended into the Andaman Sea near the strategic Strait of Malacca.
The U.S. supplied 13 warships including the USS Nimitz nuclear
supercarrier, the USS Kitty Hawk aircraft carrier, the USS Chicago
nuclear submarine, two guided missile cruisers and six guided
missile destroyers. Japan provided two destroyers, Singapore a
frigate and Australia a frigate and a tanker.
Malabar 2008 returned to a bilateral context with the involvement
of the USS Ronald Reagan Strike Group, a nuclear-powered fast
attack submarine and a P-3 Orion anti-submarine plane.
4,000 personnel from three nations - the U.S., India and Japan -
participated in last year's exercise which included anti-submarine
warfare, surface warfare, air defense and live-fire gunnery
training drills.
Malabar 2010 was conducted in April with ships, submarines,
aircraft and personnel from the U.S. Navybs Seventh Fleet, among
which were a nuclear fast attack submarine, two guided missile
destroyers, a guided missile cruiser, a guided missile frigate, Sea
Hawk helicopters, anti-submarine aircraft and Navy SEALS.
The Pentagon hasn't been content to exercise its troops and weapons
on India's soil and off its coasts. Starting in 2004 the U.S. has
also led annual air combat maneuvers called Cope India.
The first series of bilateral aerial warfare exercises tested U.S.
state-of-the-art F-15 Eagle fighters against Russian-made MiG-21,
MiG-27, MiG-29 and Sukhoi Su-30 opposite numbers along with
French-made Mirage 200 fighters. The U.S. warplanes were
consistently bested by their MiG-21 and Su-30 rivals.
The Cope India maneuvers, like comparable ones in Romania and
elsewhere in Eastern Europe and the Red Flag air combat exercises
in the U.S., provide the Pentagon an opportunity to engage and
compete against advanced Russian military aircraft for use in real
war scenarios in the future.
Cope India 2005 pitted American F-16 Fighting Falcons against
India's most advanced, largely Russian-produced, fighters in - for
the first time in joint U.S.-Indian air exercises - a combat
environment controlled by airborne warning and control system
(AWACS) aircraft.
The next year over 250 U.S. airmen stationed throughout the Pacific
region accompanied F-16 Fighting Falcons to India for Cope India
2006. The F-16s were deployed against the most advanced fighter in
the Indian Air Force's arsenal, the Su-30 MKI (adapted from the
Russian Su-30) as well as MiG-21, MiG-27, MiG-29 and Mirage 2000
fighters.
In 2008 an Indian Air Force contingent of eight Su-30 MKI fighters,
two Russian-made in-flight refuellers, a Russian heavy lift
transport aircraft and almost 250 airmen "winged their way halfway
across the globe to the deserts of Nevada," to participate in an
Exercise Red Flag, held three or four times a year in Nevada and
Alaska and "acknowledged to be the most advanced and professionally
challenging fighter exercise conducted anywhere in the world." [19]
The exercise marked several precedents: It included the largest
single deployment of the Indian Air Force outside India. It was the
first time that the air forces of nations not in NATO or those of
major non-NATO allies - India and South Korea - participated in Red
Flag air combat maneuvers. "It was also the first time that the
SU30 MKI, a frontline combat aircraft of Russian design, made its
appearance in the American skies and that too in a multi-national
congregation." [20]
India was elevated to the status of an American strategic military
ally, on the level of a NATO partner, on June 28, 2005 when U.S.
Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld and Indian Defence Minister
Pranab Mukherjee signed the New Framework for the U.S.-India
Defense Relationship, in effect a ten-year defense pact.
India has become the convergence point for the U.S.-led NATO bloc
moving from the west into Central and South Asia and the expansion
of an Asia-Pacific NATO growing from its Japan-Australia-South
Korea-Taiwan nucleus to absorb the ten members of the Association
of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN): Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia,
Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and
Vietnam. Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal,
Mongolia, New Zealand and the five former Soviet Central Asian
republics - Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and
Uzbekistan - are to varying degrees being integrated into the
structure as well.
India is also intended as a central locus for the U.S. global
interceptor missile grid based on land and sea and in the air and
space, linking deployments in Eastern Europe, the Eastern
Mediterranean, the South Caucasus and the Middle East to those in
Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Australia and Alaska, including the
latter's Aleutian Islands.
Moving the Asian nation into the Pentagon's column will not only
affect the balance of forces in Asia but throughout the world.
1) Toronto Star, September 8, 2010
2) Business Standard, March 18, 2010
3) Global Times, July 13, 2010
http://wo rld.globaltimes.cn/asia-pacific/2010-07/550830.html 4)
Voice of Russia, July 11, 2010
http://english.ru vr.ru/2010/07/11/12033554.html
5) Global Times, July 13, 2010
6) Wall Street Journal, February 25, 2010
7) Ibid
8) Indo-Asian News Service, July 20, 2010
9) U.S. Expands Asian NATO To Contain And Confront China
Stop NATO, August 7, 2010
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2010/08/07/u-s-expands-asian-nato-to-contain-and-confront-chi
na
U.S. Expands Asian NATO Against China, Russia
Stop NATO, October 16, 2009
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/10/16/u- s-expands-asian-nato-against-china-russia
Australian Military Buildup And The Rise Of Asian NATO
Stop NATO, May 6, 2009
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/08/28/australian-military-buildup-and-the-rise-of-asia
n-nato
10) The Shanghai Cooperation Organization: Prospects For A
Multipolar World
Stop NATO, May 21, 2009
http://rickrozoff. wordpress.com/2009/08/29/150
11) Reuters, July 19, 2010
12) Ibid
13) New York Times, November 11, 2006
14) Wikipedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-90
15) Embassy of the United States, New Delhi, India, October 19,
2009
16) United Press International, September 3, 2010
17) Times of India, August 17, 2010
18) Raytheon Company
Asia Pulse Data Source
July 23, 2010
19) Indian Defence Review, Vol 25.3 July-September 10 2008
20) Ibid
===========================
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2.
Fifth Battlefield: U.S. Cyber Command Expands Scope
---------------------------------------------------
Posted by: "Rick Rozoff" rwro...@yahoo.com rwrozoff
Thu Sep 9, 2010 8:14 pm (PDT)
http://www.af.mil/n ews/story.asp?id=123221046
American Forces Press Service
September 8, 2010
Cyber Task Force passes mission to Cyber Command
by Army Sgt. 1st Class Michael J. Carden
-"Cyberspace has proven equal and just as important as air, sea,
land and space as a domain. It's clear that it must be defended and
operationalized."
ARLINGTON, Va. - After spending the better part of the past decade
defending the Defense Department's computer networks, the Joint
Task Force Global Network Operations command cased its colors.
The task force was deactivated in a ceremony Sept. 7 here at the
Defense Information Systems Agency. The task force's people and
operations and personnel now fall under U.S. Cyber Command at Fort
Meade, Md.
Gen. Kevin P. Chilton, the commander of U.S. Strategic Command,
presided over the ceremony.
....
The task force was short-lived, but it was the product of 12 years
of initiatives and foresight to develop the best ways to operate on
the cyber battlefield. JTF Computer Network Defense was created in
1998 under the U.S. Space Command.
That task force had a dual mission to conduct offensive and
defensive cyber operations. It was reorganized to fall under
STRATCOM in 2003. By 2004, the task force was redesignated as JTF
Computer Network Operations to assume the offensive role. The JTF
Global Network Operations also was established.
The new task force's mission was to direct the operation and
defense of the global information grid throughout the full spectrum
of warfighting, intelligence and business missions within the
department.
Since its activation, JTF Global Network Operations has ensured
support to Operation Iraqi Freedom, Operation Enduring Freedom in
Afghanistan, Operation Noble Eagle and the overall global war on
terror.
Cybercom was activated in May. The JTF Computer Network Operations
followed soon after. JTF Global Network Operations' deactivation
culminates years of work and effort to integrate Cybercom into its
operations, General Chilton said.
....
General Pollett assumed command of JTF Global Network Operations
and duties as the director of the Defense Information Systems
Agency in November 2008. He remains director of DISA.
JTF has played a significant role "in setting the conditions for
the future" of the department, cyberspace operations and the
nation, General Pollett said.
As the JTF Global Network Operations colors are retired for the
final time, General Pollett said he's reminded of the historical
significance of the transition of the task force to Cybercom.
The information environment, he said, has evolved dramatically, and
today the information grid is more than something that enhances
capabilities.
"(Information) has become an operational imperative in our ability
to deliver decisive capabilities to warfighters and our national
leaders," the general said. "Cyberspace has evolved into a new
warfighter domain.
"Cyberspace has proven equal and just as important as air, sea,
land and space as a domain," he continued. "It's clear that it must
be defended and operationalized."
....
===========================
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3.
NATO To Open Permanent Mission In Georgia This Month
----------------------------------------------------
Posted by: "Rick Rozoff" rwro...@yahoo.com rwrozoff
Thu Sep 9, 2010 8:14 pm (PDT)
http://en.trend. az/news/politics/foreign/1748384.html
Trend News Agency
September 9, 2010
NATO Permanent Mission to be opened in Georgia in September
N. Kirtskhalia
Tbilisi: NATO will open a Permanent Mission in Georgia in September
it has been announced as the matter is discussed Thursday by three
of the country's parliamentary committees.
The chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, Akaki Minashvili,
said that the opening of the NATO Permanent Mission will contribute
to the deepening relations between Georgia and the military
alliance.
"This is another step in deepening the integration of Georgia into
NATO," he said.
Minashvili said that the opening of a Permanent Mission will
enhance relations between the leadership of the NATO and the
Georgian government.
NATO is currently represented in Georgia by a liaison officer whose
office is located in the Georgian Defense Ministry.
===========================
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4.
NATO Subordination: Czech Military Strategy Defers To U.S.
----------------------------------------------------------
Posted by: "Rick Rozoff" rwro...@yahoo.com rwrozoff
Thu Sep 9, 2010 8:14 pm (PDT)
http://www.praguepost.com/news/5641-czech-militar y-strategy-looks-toward-u-s-.html
Prague Post
September 8, 2010
Czech military strategy looks toward U.S.
A new vision for the future of the armed forces will emphasize
trans-Atlantic interests, officials say, a decision criticized by
some who say this risks minimizing European Union interests.
The so-called White Paper (BKO) is being drafted by a team of 15
security and international relations experts, headed by former
Defense Minister and current NATO Assistant Secretary-General JiEC
E edivC=, and is set to be released next spring. The draft will be
largely dictated by the new NATO strategy coming out in November,
according to JiEC E tC!bl, a spokesman for the Defense Ministry,
reaffirming the country's longstanding pro-NATO stance and giving
EU initiatives a backseat role.
"The new strategic concept of NATO will be one of the important
works in creating the BKO," E tC!bl said. "The ambition is that
three quarters of the armed forces of the Czech Republic are
consistent with NATO standards."
EU Common Security and Defense Policy (CSDP) operations will
influence the White Paper, E tC!bl said, but as more of an
afterthought. E tC!bl said although the government believes CSDP
initiatives are an important part of international security, NATO
initiatives will take precedent and CSDP operations will be
undertaken depending on what funding remains.
One example of the harmonization of the White Paper with NATO
policy is the inclusion in the draft of efforts to coordinate
relationships between military and nongovernmental entities, an
approach that will be formally endorsed in the new NATO strategy,
E tC!bl said. To accomplish that, the draft panel was designed to
include nonmilitary advisers, including E imon PC!nek, director of
the nongovernmental organization People in Need.
....
- KlC!ra JiEiDnC! and Filip E enk contributed to this report
===========================
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5.
Three More NATO Vehicles Destroyed In Pakistan
----------------------------------------------
Posted by: "Rick Rozoff" rwro...@yahoo.com rwrozoff
Thu Sep 9, 2010 8:14 pm (PDT)
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2 010%5C09%5C09%5Cstory_9-9-2010_pg7_15
Daily Times
September 9, 2010
3 NATO trucks set ablaze
QUETTA: Unknown assailants set three NATO trailers on fire in
Khuzdar on Wednesday.
According to sources, two trailers, carrying logistic support for
NATO forces stationed in Afghanistan, were heading towards Kandahar
from Karachi when unknown armed men intercepted them and made the
drivers and cleaners hostage at gunpoint.
The assailants sprinkled fuel on trailers and set them ablaze. The
attackers managed to flee from the scene.
Separately, some unidentified men set another NATO trailer ablaze
in Wadh area of Khuzdar.
....
===========================
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6.
U.S. Military To Conduct Large-Scale Exercises Near Guam
--------------------------------------------------------
Posted by: "Rick Rozoff" rwro...@yahoo.com rwrozoff
Thu Sep 9, 2010 8:27 pm (PDT)
http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ ALeqM5iok7PR8SxK9W4MWZepiVor8aE5CgD9I4318O0
Associated Press
September 8, 2010
US military plans large-scale exercises near Guam
HONOLULU: The U.S. military plans to hold a large-scale military
exercise near Guam this month.
The U.S. Pacific Fleet said Wednesday an aircraft carrier,
amphibious ships, Marines and an Air Force expeditionary wing are
due to participate.
The 10-day Valiant Shield exercises are scheduled to start Sunday
near Palau. Ships then will steam east and the drills will end near
Guam.
The military had its first Valiant Shield exercise in 2006. This
year's drills are the third time they've been held.
Guam is a U.S. territory about 3,700 miles southwest of Hawaii and
1,500 miles south of Tokyo.
===========================
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7.
After Simmons Visit, Uzbekistan Not To Attend SCO Exercise
----------------------------------------------------------
Posted by: "Rick Rozoff" rwro...@yahoo.com rwrozoff
Thu Sep 9, 2010 8:27 pm (PDT)
http://www.itar-tass.com/eng/level2.html?NewsID=15479571 &PageNum=0
Itar-Tass
September 10, 2010
Uzbekistan to miss SCO anti-terror exercise the Peace Mission-2010
MOSCOW: The Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) will begin the
Peace Mission-2010 anti-terror exercise on Friday in Kazakhstan,
but one of the members, Uzbekistan, which was the last to join the
organization in 2001 will skip the event.
bUzbekistan will not participate in the exercise in any quality.
Neither Uzbek military leaders nor troops have arrived in
Kazakhstan although an invitation has been sent to the Uzbek
side,b Russian Ground Forces spokesman Oleg Yushkov told Tass.
The three-stage exercise at the Matybulak range in Kazakhstan will
engage over 5000 troops and 500 hardware from Russia, China,
Kazakhstan, Kirgizia, and Tajikistan. Russia sent over a thousand
men and 130 armor, as well as 10 aircraft and helicopters deployed
at its Kant base in Kirgizia. China and Kazakhstan are represented
by a similar force, while Kirgizia and Tajikistan dispatched
smaller units.
The active phase of the exercise will begin on September 24 and
will train preparations and conduct of a joint anti-terrorist
operation.
===========================
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8.
Rising Chinese Mistrust Of U.S. Hand In South Asia
--------------------------------------------------
Posted by: "Rick Rozoff" rwro...@yahoo.com rwrozoff
Thu Sep 9, 2010 8:27 pm (PDT)
http://www.hindustant imes.com/News-Feed/restofasia/Rising-Chinese-mistrust-of-US-hand-in-South-Asia/Article1-597833.aspx
Hindustan Times
September 8, 2010
Rising Chinese mistrust of US bhandb in South Asia
Reshma Patil
Beijing: Chinese analysts and military leaders are getting bolder
in criticising what Beijing perceives as rising American
binterferenceb in Chinabs ties with India, Pakistan and South
Asia. The Communist Partybs official newspaper, the People's
Daily, ended its editorial silence on the latest tension with India
over Chinabs Kashmir policy on Tuesday, with its first piece on
the dispute blaming the bUS disguised hand behind China-Pakistan
relationsb....
The writer accused the US of btwisting facts of Chinabs aid to
Pakistanb and trying to bfan up a donation raceb between
India and China in their aid to flood-hit Pakistan. Opinion pieces
in the newspaper are published after approval from Communist Party
officials.
The columnist claimed the US was bcolludingb with India to
ensure its comeback to the region. bFor this, it has to collude
with India, whose nerves would always be frayed even at the rustle
of leaves from China, and whose resentment of China is still
simmering,bb wrote the columnist. bThe media hype about
bKashmir issueb coincides with circumstances in which the US
after its Iraq pullout, is anxious to recalibrate its strategic
focus to Asia.b
China has always eyed the US influence in South Asia with
suspicion, but criticism from its influential think-tanks got
louder this year with Beijing's rising global clout.
bThe US complains that China is not transparent. We think that
the US is not transparent at all in South Asia!b Zhao Gancheng,
director of South Asia studies at the Shanghai Institute for
International Studies told the Hindustan Times. bWe only hope
that the US involvement will bring more peace than turmoil in the
world...we are not quite sure.b
Earlier this year, Chinabs military strategist and Air Force
colonel Dai Xu wrote that Washingtonbs anti-missile systems
encircled China in a crescent-shaped ring. bThe ring begins in
Japan, stretches through nations in the South China Sea to India,
and ends in Afghanistan.b
In August, Chinese major-general Luo Yuan accused the US of
bgunboat diplomacyb and 'bullying the weak'. Writing in the
official media, Luo said that the Americans showed up wherever
problems took place. bThings become worse with the involvement of
the US,bb he said.
Beijing's wariness of Indo-US ties is expected to keep growing. The
Chinese foreign ministry says 'ulterior motives' to spoil its ties
with India and Pakistan sparked the reports of Chinese soldiers in
Pakistan-occupied Kashmir. On Tuesday, the ministry's spokesperson
reminded the world that China is an bimportant member of Asiab.
++++++++++++++++
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9.
New U.S. Missile Attack Kills At Least Six In Pakistan
------------------------------------------------------
Posted by: "Rick Rozoff" rwro...@yahoo.com rwrozoff
Thu Sep 9, 2010 8:39 pm (PDT)
http://en.tre nd.az/regions/world/ocountries/1748281.html
Trend News Agency
Sepember 9, 2010
US drone attack kills six in Pakistan
At least six people have been killed in a fresh US drone strike in
northwestern Pakistan near the Afghan border, security officials
say, Press TV reported.
"Two US drones fired three missiles. We have reports that six
militants were killed," a security official told AFP early on
Thursday.
The US claims its drone attacks target militants. However, hundreds
of civilians have been killed in such attacks since 2007.
===========================
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10.
Japan: Defense Report Stesses Role Of U.S. Military
---------------------------------------------------
Posted by: "Rick Rozoff" rwro...@yahoo.com rwrozoff
Thu Sep 9, 2010 8:39 pm (PDT)
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/world/2010-09/10/c_ 13488603.htm
Xinhua News Agency
September 10, 2010
Japan stresses U.S. military role in Japan in defense report
TOKYO: Japan's annual defense report released on Friday underlined
the vital role played by U.S. military forces stationed in Japan in
protecting Japan and its neighbors in the region.
The 488-page Defense of Japan 2010 report also stressed Japan 's
bilateral security alliance with the United States, noting that
U.S. military presence in Japan was significant in providing
deterrence against a possible attack on Japan.
The report document said the U.S. Marines stationed in Japan need
to be positioned at a strategic place to ensure this deterrence. It
hinted that the southwestern prefecture of Okinawa is a better
geographic location for the Marines to respond to emergencies in
East Asia than Hawaii, Guam or the U.S. mainland.
Tokyo and Washington agreed in May to move the U.S. Marine Corps'
Futenma Air Station from the densely populated residential area of
Ginowan in Okinawa to the less crowded Henoko district at the
Marines' Camp Schwab in Nago within the prefecture by 2014.
The report reviewed defense-related developments in the past year
ending mid-August. It was the first defense white paper unveiled by
the government led by the Democratic Party of Japan (DPJ).
In addition, the document said that the Democratic People's
Republic of Korea's (DPRK) nuclear programs and missile activities
are an "extremely destabilizing factor" for the security of Japan
and other countries in the Northeast Asian region.
===========================
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