Wachtwoord vergeten?


   
 
A New Pearl Harbor (Sep. 5, 2001)
Gepost: 20 september 2006 06:34 PM   [ Negeer ]  
Rothschild's Spawn
Avatar
RankRankRankRankRankRankRank
Totaal Aantal Posts  17907
Geregistreerd  2007-01-01

Enkele dagen voor de aanslagen van 11 September, was er een interessante senate hearing in Washington, waarin gesproken werd over de risico’s van aanvallen zoals op Pearl Harbor in 1941. Erg interessant document wink

HEARING BEFORE THE COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN RELATIONS
UNITED STATES SENATE ONE HUNDRED SEVENTH CONGRESS
FIRST SESSION
__________

SEPTEMBER 5, 2001

Defend Against the Shadow Enemy
(By Joseph S. Nye, Jr. and R. James Woolsey)
http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=107_senate_hearings&docid=f:75040.wais

The destruction of the federal building in Oklahoma City and the bombing of the World Trade Center in New York shocked Americans. But those tragedies would have been far worse if nuclear, biological or chemical materials had been involved. After co-chairing a year-long study for the government, we believe it is increasingly likely they will be.

For 40 years Americans lived under the fear of Soviet nuclear attack. The end of the cold war reduced the prospect of a nuclear holocaust, but ironically, prospects of a nuclear explosion inside the United States probably have increased. And it is not just the nuclear threat. Terrorists worldwide have better access to anthrax or sarin than to nuclear materials. So far, we have been lucky. But we should not wait for another Pearl Harbor to awaken us to the fact that there is no greater threat to our security than terrorism involving weapons of mass destruction.

Skeptics may call us alarmists. Nuclear technology has been around for 50 years and chemical and biological agents for nearly a century, yet terrorists have rarely turned to them. Conventional high explosives are easier to obtain. Moreover, terrorists seeking to promote a cause run the risk of a moral and political backlash if the destruction they wreak is disproportionate to their cause.

But recent years have seen the rise of a new type of terrorist less interested in promoting a political cause and more focused on retribution or eradication of what they define as evil. Their motives are often a distorted form of religion and their imagined rewards are in the next world. For them, weapons of mass destruction, if available, are a more efficient means to their ends.

Such devices are becoming more available. The breakup of the Soviet Union and the rise of the mafias in Russia have increased the smuggling of nuclear materials. Chemicals and biological agents can be produced by graduate students or lab technicians. General recipes are readily available on the Internet.

Our overriding recommendation is to give the threat of terrorism with weapons of mass destruction the highest priority in U.S. national security policy.

Of the threats that could inflict major damage to the U.S., such terrorism is the threat for which we are least prepared.

The nation needs a national response program, directed by the White House. The program must be coordinated and integrated across the entire federal bureaucracy. And end-to-end systematic strategy to encounter this threat must address all phases of a potential terrorist attack, from detection and prevention to response. Such a strategy must include and coordinate program initiatives by all involved departments and agencies.

To this end, we recommend that:

- Policy direction be clarified at the White House level by a committee chaired by the Vice President.
- Interagency and interdepartmental coordination and integration be handled by deputies of the involved organization.
- The program be supported by a long-term funding strategy.
- The program be managed by a single director and supported by a technical and systems planning staff.
- An independent advisory board of outside experts be appointed by the President to monitor and advise the program.

A joint legislative oversight committee be appointed.

The very nature of U.S. society makes it difficult to prepare for this security problem. Within recent memory, we have not had to battle a foreign invading force on U.S. soil.

Because of our “Pearl Harbor’’ mind-set, we are unlikely to mount an adequate defense until we suffer an attack.

Because the threat of terrorism with weapons of mass destruction is amorphous (rogue states, transnational groups, ad hoc groups or individuals) and constantly changing, it is difficult to make predictions and preparations. However, given the current geopolitical state of the world, there is every indication that terrorism will be the most likely physical threat to the U.S. homeland for at least the next decade.

Only if we go beyond business as usual and respond in a broader and more systematic manner do we stand a chance of dealing with this problem before the horror of another Pearl Harbor.

(bijdrage van Sam Nunn is ook interessant, zie link boven)

Profiel
 
 
Gepost: 20 september 2006 06:34 PM   [ Negeer ]   [ # 1 ]  
Rothschild's Spawn
Avatar
RankRankRankRankRankRankRank
Totaal Aantal Posts  17907
Geregistreerd  2007-01-01

dank deze kende ik niet

Profiel
 
 
Gepost: 20 september 2006 06:36 PM   [ Negeer ]   [ # 2 ]  
Rothschild's Spawn
Avatar
RankRankRankRankRankRankRank
Totaal Aantal Posts  17907
Geregistreerd  2007-01-01

Meer pre-911 relevante documenten :

Rumsfeld: Every Nickel Important in 2002 DoD Budget Request
WASHINGTON, Sept. 6, 2001
http://www.defenselink.mil/news/Sep2001/n09062001_200109064.html

Rumsfeld told the senators DoD’s priorities in the budget. “As we prepare for the new challenges … certainly U.S. homeland defense takes on an increasing importance. We will face new threats. Today we’re vulnerable to missile attack. That’s a fact. And as has been suggested by the chairman, weakness is provocative. It invites people into doing things that they otherwise would avoid.”

The Accidental Strategy
Philip Gold, The Washington Times
July 6, 2001
http://web.archive.org/web/20030309100508/http://www.discovery.org/viewDB/index.php3?program=Defense&command=view&id=662

Would the American people tolerate two major wars, especially if they grow long and bloody and endanger the homeland? In this Age of CNN, would they tolerate forces victorious on one front immediately dispatched to another?

It’s possible, perhaps even comforting, to believe that the American people would never accept one or two major defeats, and that a strike at the homeland might steel us to teach somebody a lesson the world will never forget. But in truth, no one knows.

Senator Warner, Testimony Before the Senate Armed Services Committee
Thursday, June 28, 2001.
http://www.defenselink.mil/speeches/2001/s20010628-secdef3.html

I’ll be scrutinizing your budget submissions to make sure that it’s adequate, because we’ve got to prepare for an attack here at home of a terrorist nature in some form right in the cities here in the United States, and how best this nation responds.

Why the Pentagon Fears Rumsfeld’s Review
Philip Gold
The Seattle Times
June 13, 2001
http://web.archive.org/web/20010720175145/http://www.discovery.org/viewDB/index.php3?program=Defense&command=view&id=652

The Rumsfeld initiatives point toward transformation based on need. The Pentagon, although not always wrong, responds to the two fundamental imperatives of any bureaucracy: protect your budget and your bureaucrats. The confrontation between statesmanship and bureaucracy is already ugly and intense. It’s going to get worse.

The American people need to listen. The issues may be complex, but it should be clear, soon enough, who’s talking horseshoes and who’s talking needs.

The commission predicts a direct attack on the United States:
Hart-Rudman Calls for Homeland Defense
April 2001 Vol. 84, No. 4
http://web.archive.org/web/20020602013703/http://www.afa.org/magazine/April2001/0401hart.html

Preventing or deterring attacks against US soil or responding to them if preventive measures fail will require a comprehensive strategy and new government structures.

All signs are that the Pentagon will play a vital role in responding to a terrorist attack on US soil using Weapons of Mass Destruction, the report said. The Defense Department itself “should pay far more attention” to homeland security, and it should be reorganized to better support the overall mission.

The report acknowledges the role strong nuclear and conventional forces can play in deterring attacks against the homeland, but it added that those forces may not deter nonstate actors that wish to strike the United States.

The New Apathy: How an Uninterested Public Is Reshaping Foreign Policy
Author: James M. Lindsay (Council for Foreign Relations, September 2000)
http://web.archive.org/web/20001020070645/http://www.foreignpolicy2000.org/library/issuebriefs/readingnotes/fa_lindsay.html

The key to fighting apathetic internationalism is persuading the public to act on its internationalist preferences. If politicians believe they will be rewarded for defending broad interests and penalized for tending to narrow ones, they will pay more heed to foreign policy, and squeaky wheels will lose out to a not-so-silent majority.

But how to raise the political stakes in foreign policy? A renewed threat to American security would clearly do the trick. So might a recession.

New World Coming
December 1999 Vol. 82, No. 12
By Peter Grier / Air Force Magazine
http://www.afa.org/magazine/dec1999/1299newworld.asp

America is the strongest military power the world has ever seen--by far. Yet its strength is a ponderous shield, and, over the next 25 years, the US will become increasingly vulnerable to hostile attack on its homeland.

Rogue states, terrorists, and other adversaries will acquire weapons of mass destruction, and some will use them.

“Americans will likely die on American soil, possibly in large numbers,” concludes “New World Coming,” the first report of the US Commission on National Security/21st Century.

Zie ook :

http://www.team8plus.org/e107_plugins/forum/forum_viewtopic.php?1200.post
http://www.team8plus.org/e107_plugins/forum/forum_viewtopic.php?2405.0
http://pegasus.fastsolutions.eu:8182/plone-site/various/homeland-security-resources
http://www.vkmag.com/forums/viewthread/5084/

Profiel
 
 
Gepost: 20 september 2006 07:47 PM   [ Negeer ]   [ # 3 ]  
Rothschild's Spawn
Avatar
RankRankRankRankRankRankRank
Totaal Aantal Posts  17907
Geregistreerd  2007-01-01

kende ik een aantal wel van,,toch bedankt voor het leesvoer..

Happen, snappen , bijdrage mag,,,,zapruder meeting te teteringem 30-09-2006

Profiel
 
 
Gepost: 20 september 2006 08:40 PM   [ Negeer ]   [ # 4 ]  
Rothschild's Spawn
Avatar
RankRankRankRankRankRankRank
Totaal Aantal Posts  17907
Geregistreerd  2007-01-01

waar is teteringen ? wink

Profiel
 
 
Gepost: 21 september 2006 03:56 AM   [ Negeer ]   [ # 5 ]  
Rothschild's Spawn
Avatar
RankRankRankRankRankRankRank
Totaal Aantal Posts  17907
Geregistreerd  2007-01-01

een beetje CT’er wist al waar Teteringen lag voor het was uitgevonden......zie topic meeting

Profiel
 
 
Gepost: 22 januari 2007 08:10 PM   [ Negeer ]   [ # 6 ]  
Ramtha Lover
RankRankRankRank
Totaal Aantal Posts  1035
Geregistreerd  2007-01-02

Interessant artikel uit Augustus 2001 met betrekking tot het anti-terrorisme beleid in de VS, mede met het oog op de aanslagen die een maand later plaats vonden :

In the name of national security: U.S. Counterterrorist Measures 1960-2000
Laura K. Donohue, John F. Kennedy School of Government
August 2001.
http://bcsia.ksg.harvard.edu/BCSIA_content/documents/In_the_Name_of_National_Security.pdf

Finally, caught up in the dynamics driving counterterrorist policy, the U.S. is spending increasingly more time and money on the issue. Here the national security dialogue assumes a level of threat that justifies extensive resource allocation. The state is assumed to be under attack, and so reason of state justifies spending more and more money on the issue.

But the nature of terrorism makes it difficult to determine if the resources are being spent effectively: in the event of an attack, immediate calls for more resources to be spent proliferate. In its absence, the secretive nature of terrorism -the possibility that it might occur- leaves much to imagination.

In a post-Cold War era of declining budgets and lack of a clear enemy, the bureaucratic incentive is there to continue to build the threat and act to steadily increase the range of American counterterrorist measures.

Radio programma’s op National Public Radio voor de aanslagen omtrent de militaire strategie van de Bush regering :

Talk of the Nation: An American Empire? (September 10, 2001)

Thomas Donnelly (Project for the New American Century)
Joseph Nye (Kennedy School of Government)
Victor Davis Hanson (California State University)


The Unites States has military forces in many countries around the world. And despite promises to cut back on military commitments, President Bush has decided to maintain the U.S. force in countries like the Balkans.

Is it time to abandon euphemisms and hail the establishment of the American Empire?

The U.S. As an Empire, Revisited

Morning Edition: Rumsfeld Opposition (July 17, 2001)

Host Bob Edwards talks with The Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol about his editorial calling for the resignation of Defense secretary Donald Rumsfeld and his deputy Paul Wolfowitz. Kristol says while the demand may seem extreme, he wants to call attention to Rumsfeld’s failure to push for an increased Defense Department budget.

All Things Considered: National Defense Strategy (June 21, 2001)

It’s time for the United States to adopt a new strategy for its national defense, says Pentagon boss Donald Rumsfeld. The Bush administration’s secretary of defense told a congressional committee today that the aftermath of the Cold War is giving way to new challenges that require preparation now for conflicts well in the future.

Morning Edition: Broke Pentagon (June 1, 2001)

NPR’s Tom Gjelten reports on the Pentagon’s money problems. Officials claim they don’t have enough left in their budget to make it through the remainder of fiscal year 2001. The White House is now set to request an extra $5.6 billion from Congress to tide the Pentagon over until 2002.

Talk of the Nation: Review of U.S. Defense Policy (February 13, 2001)

President Bush says the U.S. military is suffering from morale problems and has vowed to improve the quality of life for those in the military. He’s devoting this week to issues of national security and has promised a thorough review of the armed services. Join guest host Neal Conan for a look at the Bush Administrations efforts to reform U.S. defense policy.

Morning Edition: The Defense Budget (February 8, 2001)

NPR’s Tom Gjelten reports on President Bush’s decision to stick with last year’s defense budget, offered by President Clinton. Mr. Bush says his administration needs time for a thorough review of defense needs, but critics maintain that the president is breaking his campaign pledge to rebuild the U.S. military.

Talk of the Nation: Bush Defense Priorities (January 11, 2001)

President-elect Bush has named Donald Rumsfeld as his Defense secretary and Rumsfeld is in the Senate this week for confirmation hearings. Rumsfeld favors a missile defense system, one of many high-priced and high-tech weapons systems being considered for the U.S. military in the 21st century. Join Juan Williams and guests for a discussion of George W. Bush’s defense priorities.

All Things Considered: Bush - Defense (January 8, 2001)

President-elect George W. Bush met today in Austin with top leaders from both parties on the House and Senate Armed Services Committees. The group talked about the Bush administration’s plans for re-energizing the nation’s military. As a candidate for president, Bush said military morale could be improved with higher pay and a redefined mission.

Talk of the Nation: Bush’s Foreign Policy (December 18, 2000)

Over the weekend, president-elect George W. Bush officially named Colin Powell as his Secretary of State and picked Condoleeza Rice for National Security Advisor. Join Juan Williams and guests for a discussion about Bush’s appointments and their role in shaping the new administration’s foreign policy.

Profiel
 
 
Gepost: 22 januari 2007 11:36 PM   [ Negeer ]   [ # 7 ]  
Ramtha Lover
RankRankRankRank
Totaal Aantal Posts  1035
Geregistreerd  2007-01-02

Nog wat links m.b.t. het feit dat de beslissing om een oorlog te lanceren tegen Al Qaeda en de Taliban genomen werd op de dag voorafgaande aan de 911 aanslagen :

U.S. sought attack on al-Qaida: White House given plan days before Sept. 11
May 16, 2002
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4587368/

U.S. OK’d plan to topple Taliban a day before 9/11
March 25, 2004
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4585010/

Profiel
 
 
Gepost: 22 januari 2007 11:44 PM   [ Negeer ]   [ # 8 ]  
Alien Abductee
Avatar
RankRankRank
Totaal Aantal Posts  583
Geregistreerd  2006-12-30

Geen wonder dat Rummie de ochtend van 911 wist dat er iets ging gebeuren.

[big]Ze hadden de TALIBAN kwaad gemaakt met hun aanvalsplannen[/big] rasberry

 Signature 

Knowledge is Power

Profiel
 
 
Gepost: 23 januari 2007 12:15 AM   [ Negeer ]   [ # 9 ]  
Ramtha Lover
RankRankRankRank
Totaal Aantal Posts  1035
Geregistreerd  2007-01-02

Tja hij verklaarde zichzelf niet voor niets de oorlog op 10 September 2001 wink

Donald Rumsfeld: Bureaucracy to Battlefield

The topic today is an adversary that poses a threat, a serious threat, to the security of the United States of America.

This adversary is one of the world’s last bastions of central planning. It governs by dictating five-year plans. From a single capital, it attempts to impose its demands across time zones, continents, oceans and beyond. With brutal consistency, it stifles free thought and crushes new ideas. It disrupts the defense of the United States and places the lives of men and women in uniform at risk.

The adversary’s closer to home. It’s the Pentagon bureaucracy. Not the people, but the processes. Not the civilians, but the systems. Not the men and women in uniform, but the uniformity of thought and action that we too often impose on them. That’s why we’re here today challenging us all to wage an all-out campaign to shift Pentagon’s resources from bureaucracy to the battlefield, from tail to the tooth.

We know the adversary. We know the threat. And with the same firmness of purpose that any effort against a determined adversary demands, we must get at it and stay at it. Our job is defending America, and if we cannot change the way we do business, then we cannot do our job well, and we must.

So today we declare war on bureaucracy, not people, but processes, a campaign to shift Pentagon resources from the tail to the tooth. All hands will be required, and it will take the best of all of us.

Some might ask, how in the world could the Secretary of Defense attack the Pentagon in front of its people? To them I reply, I have no desire to attack the Pentagon; I want to liberate it. We need to save it from itself.


Donald H. Rumsfeld, The Pentagon , Monday, September 10, 2001
http://www.defenselink.mil/speeches/2001/s20010910-secdef.html

Profiel
 
 
Gepost: 23 januari 2007 12:53 AM   [ Negeer ]   [ # 10 ]  
Illuminatus
Avatar
RankRankRankRankRank
Totaal Aantal Posts  2477
Geregistreerd  2007-01-01

We know the adversary. We know the threat

Natuurlijk net zoals de nooit gevonden WMD’s bedankt voor de info Freedomfiles.

LIES LIES LIES pokke neocons.

 Signature 

6 jaar zonder Televisie,Priceless.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DYfM8FqSIRs

W.M.D.’s staan in veel huiskamers.... de TV

Profiel
 
 
Gepost: 14 augustus 2007 11:46 PM   [ Negeer ]   [ # 11 ]  
Ramtha Lover
RankRankRankRank
Totaal Aantal Posts  1035
Geregistreerd  2007-01-02

Nog een interessant artikel over een symposium dat 2 weken voor 9/11 werd gehouden :

Responding to Terror: Consequence Management Symposium
21-23 Augustus 2001
http://www.carlisle.army.mil/usacsl/Publications/Consequence%20Management.pdf

Uitleg waarom Amerika een nieuwe bedreiging nodig had in het boek “While America Sleeps” wat eind 2000 werd gepubliceerd :

While America Sleeps
By Donald Kagan and Frederick W. Kagan
November 3, 2000
http://www.fpri.org/enotes/military.20001103.kagankagan.whileamericasleeps.html

Profiel
 
 
Gepost: 19 augustus 2007 08:30 PM   [ Negeer ]   [ # 12 ]  
Alien Abductee
Avatar
RankRankRank
Totaal Aantal Posts  529
Geregistreerd  2007-07-12

Zeg eens beste Abraham, waarom stuurt u me door naar het grote volkomenkut forum? rolleyes

 Signature 

We are the revolution!
Mijn Forum

Profiel
 
 
Gepost: 19 augustus 2007 08:52 PM   [ Negeer ]   [ # 13 ]  
Ramtha Lover
RankRankRankRank
Totaal Aantal Posts  1035
Geregistreerd  2007-01-02
Arwin Rummel - 19 augustus 2007 08:30 PM

Zeg eens beste Abraham, waarom stuurt u me door naar het grote volkomenkut forum? rolleyes

Doordat dit forum destijds onder het vkmag.com domein viel ?

Profiel