Thursday, September 07, 2006

Remembering 9/11: 1 of 5

In observance of September 11, 2001 each of the next 5 days will include a very small excerpt from the 'complete' 9/11 timeline (based on media accounts). Most of what you will read will not be common knowledge -yet it was reported in the media. Hyperlinks to the original media articles are included. The full blown (very detailed) timeline can be found at http://cooperativeresearch.org. We will begin today here:

9/11/2001 8:30 a.m.: US Military HoldingPractice Armageddon’ Nationwide Training Exercise
As the 9/11 attacks are taking place, a large military training exercise called Global Guardian is said to be “in full swing.” It has been going on since the previous week. [Omaha World-Herald, 2/27/2002; Omaha World-Herald, 9/10/2002] Global Guardian is an annual exercise sponsored by US Strategic Command (Stratcom) in cooperation with US Space Command and NORAD. One military author defines Stratcom as “the single US military command responsible for the day-to-day readiness of America’s nuclear forces.” [Arkin, 2005, pp. 59] Global Guardian is a global readiness exercise involving all Stratcom forces and aims to test Stratcom’s ability to fight a nuclear war. It is one of many “practice Armageddons” that the US military routinely stages. [Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, 11/12/1997; Associated Press, 2/21/2002; Omaha World-Herald, 2/27/2002; Omaha World-Herald, 9/10/2002] It links with a number of other military exercises, including Crown Vigilance (an Air Combat Command exercise), Apollo Guardian (a US Space Command exercise), and NORAD exercises Vigilant Guardian and Amalgam Warrior [US Department of Defense, 5/1997; GlobalSecurity (.org), 10/10/2002] Global Guardian is both a command post and field training exercise, and is based around a fictitious scenario designed to test the ability of Stratcom and its component forces to deter a military attack against the US. Hundreds of military personnel are involved. [Collins Center Update, 12/1999 ; Times-Picayune, 9/8/2002; US Congress, n.d.] According to a 1998 Internet article by the British American Security Information Council—an independent research organization—Global Guardian is held in October or November each year. [Kristensen, 10/1998] In his book Code Names, NBC News military analyst William Arkin dates this exercise for October 22-31, 2001. [Arkin, 2005, pp. 379] And a military newspaper reported in March 2001 that Global Guardian was scheduled for October 2001. [Space Observer, 3/23/2001, pp. 2 ] If this is correct, then some time after March, the exercise must have been rescheduled for early September. Furthermore, there may be another important facet to Global Guardian. A 1998 Defense Department newsletter reported that for several years Stratcom had been incorporating a computer network attack (CNA) into Global Guardian. The attack involved Stratcom “red team” members and other organizations acting as enemy agents, and included attempts to penetrate the Command using the Internet and a “bad” insider who had access to a key command and control system. The attackers “war dialed” the phones to tie them up and sent faxes to numerous fax machines throughout the Command. They also claimed they were able to shut down Stratcom’s systems. Reportedly, Stratcom planned to increase the level of computer network attack in future Global Guardian exercises. [IAnewsletter, 6/1998 ] It is not currently known if a computer attack was incorporated into Global Guardian in 2001 or what its possible effects on the country’s air defense system would have been if such an attack was part of the exercise.

Entity Tags:
North American Aerospace Defense Command, US Space Command, US Department of Defense, Global Guardian, US Strategic Command, Amalgam Warrior, Vigilant Guardian, Crown Vigilance, Apollo Guardian

Quickies:
A recent Government Accountability Office (GAO) report finds that "the U.S. isn't prepared to handle disasters and lacks an effective way to track $88 billion doled out to help rebuild the Gulf Coast after last year's killer hurricanes."

NATO's top commander, Gen. James Jones, said more troops are needed to in southern Afghanistan where Taliban militants are inflicting heavy casualties on foreign forces. "[The violence is] something akin to poking the bee hive and the bees are swarming," he said.

39 percent of Americans feel less safe now than they did five years ago. Only 14 percent say the feel safer, and 46 percent feel the same.

The newest tool in the war on terror: renewable energy. Without renewable power, US forces "will remain unnecessarily exposed" and will "continue to accrue preventable...serious and grave casualties," according to Marine Corps Maj. Gen. Richard Zilmer.

Congress is "giving up" on comprehensive immigration reform. "I think it would be next to impossible to pass a comprehensive bill that includes dealing with the diversity of 12 million people here in the next three weeks," Sen. Bill Frist (R-TN) said yesterday.

A homicide bomber sparked a massive blast Friday near the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, tearing apart a military vehicle and killing at least three people, including two U.S.-led coalition soldiers, witnesses said and police said.

The explosion in the Afghan capital blew a military vehicle into two burning chunks and scattered debris and body parts over a 50-meter (50-yard) radius.

A Senate analysis of intelligence-gathering activities leading up to the invasion of Iraq is certain to rekindle an election-year debate on the justification of going to war.

(Sources: USAToday, Reuters, CNN, CBSNews, Christian Science Monitor, ThinkProgress, FOXNews, cooperativeresearch, AP)

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