U.S. Troops Celebrate Last Thanksgiving in Iraq

On November 25, 2011, in Iraq, Uncategorized, by JuanGetalty

At Fox News : American troops marked their last Thanksgiving in Iraq Thursday with turkey, stuffing and a rocket fire alarm. Fewer than 20,000 American troops remain in Iraq at eight bases across the country. All of the forces must be out of Iraq by the end of this year, and American soldiers have been busily packing up their equipment and heading south. Many of the bases no longer have civilian contractors making meals for them, so the troops have been eating prepackaged meals. These folks deserve our everlasting thanks. Also: ” Video: Thanksgiving Feast: Last Real Meal in Iraq .”

Link:
U.S. Troops Celebrate Last Thanksgiving in Iraq

APNewsBreak: US drops keeping troops in Iraq (AP)

On October 15, 2011, in Iraq, Uncategorized, by AlexisChristensen28

AP – The U.S. is abandoning plans to keep U.S. troops in Iraq past a year-end withdrawal deadline, The Associated Press has learned. The decision to pull out fully by January will effectively end more than eight years of U.S. involvement in the Iraq war, despite ongoing concerns about its security forces and the potential for instability.

Go here to see the original:
APNewsBreak: US drops keeping troops in Iraq
(AP)

Hey, it’s only money. (CNSNews.com) – The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) announced last week that it has used $60 million of the $1.2 billion given to the agency in economic stimulus funds for purchasing  “advanced-technology research instruments” to study climate change. Some of this equipment was deployed at facilities in the Maldives, India and Australia. The DOE’s Atmospheric Radiation Measurement, or ARM program, was launched more than two decades ago as a way to improve scientific models for climate research and weather prediction. In a  statement released on Aug. 18 on the Recovery.gov Web site – the site tracking the $821-billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 – ARM is described by the Obama administration as a program focused on climate change. “A Department of Energy program that studies global climate change has nearly finished deploying 143 advanced-technology research instruments bought with $60 million in Recovery funding,” the announcement states. “The instruments–some new, others newly upgraded–will provide more precise measurements for researchers to use in developing computer models that simulate the earth’s climate.” “The models are used to study climate changes,” the announcement states. Keep reading…

The rest is here:
Good News: Obama Admin Used Stimulus Funds To Equip Climate Research Facilities In The Maldives, India And Australia…

NEW YORK (AP) — On a cold afternoon at the mouth of New York Harbor, a tiny yellow fishing boat bobs in the water as a flotilla of law enforcement vessels fitted with sophisticated radiation detection equipment closes in. The boat has drawn suspicion by emitting gamma rays — a sign it may be carrying a dirty bomb, packed with radioactive material. High-speed vessels from the New York Police Department and state Naval Militia halt the boat, tie it up and accomplish their mission of neutralizing an apparent terror threat. The radiation was real, but the threat wasn’t: The scene Thursday was a drill designed to test an ambitious NYPD-led effort called Securing the Cities. The program aims to detect and intercept radiological devices before they can wreak havoc on Wall Street and other high-profile targets in Manhattan, the heart of the nation’s largest city. The effort also has tested the limits of domestic counterterrorism logistics, costs and tactics. It relies on the manpower and expertise of more than 100 law enforcement and public safety agencies across New York, New Jersey and Connecticut, tens of millions of dollars in federal funding and a belief that plots already set in motion can be thwarted wherever necessary. “That includes the waterways,” NYPD Commissioner Raymond Kelly said. Security experts say such safety initiatives can’t just look good on paper. To work, first responders need to be drilled constantly using mock devices and various scenarios cooked up by their superiors. “That’s what these exercises are all about — so you can be better prepared to respond when there’s an actual event,” said William Bratton, a Kroll security firm executive who’s served as NYPD commissioner and Los Angeles police chief. “You need to identify what works and what doesn’t work.” The current commissioner has a “much-needed fixation on terrorism and keeping New York safe,” Bratton added. Still, critics question whether the prevention drills are a sound use of time and resources. The Securing the Cities approach is overly reliant on the rare instances when investigators receive a tip of trouble and ignores the fact that terrorists don’t have to travel outside the city to obtain dangerous materials used legitimately in the medical and construction fields, said retired Air Force Col. Randall Larsen, head of the non-profit Institute for Homeland Security. “It’s fine to do all the lights-and-sirens exercises,” Larson said. “But that doesn’t address what to do once a dirty bomb goes off. No one wants to do that exercise.” Police officials respond that while remaking the NYPD since the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks, the nation’s largest police department has diligently trained officers on how to both prevent and respond to attacks. More than 1,000 officers are assigned to counterterrorism on a daily basis — a force that eclipses that of most entire departments elsewhere. In the mid-2000s, the Department of Homeland Security came up with the concept of Securing the Cities to combat dirty bombs and decided that the NYPD, which currently has about 35,000 officers, was best suited to test if for the rest of the country, officials said. The city also was chosen based on accepted wisdom that it remains a ripe terror target. In the past two years alone, New Yorkers have seen an aborted al-Qaida-sanctioned plot to attack subways with homemade explosives and a failed attempt to set off a crude fertilizer car bomb in Times Square. By contrast, a dirty bomb — intended to spread panic by exploding and creating a radioactive cloud in urban settings — has never been discovered or detonated in a U.S. terror plot. But law enforcement considers dirty bombs a serious threat because they’re easy to build and because of intelligence that foreign terrorists want to use them against American cities. Officials also point to the case of Jose Padilla, who was accused in 2002 of receiving dirty-bomb training from al-Qaida for a potential attack. Padilla, a U.S. citizen who claimed he was illegally detained as an enemy combatant, was convicted of conspiracy in 2007 and was sentenced to more than 17 years in prison. Securing the Cities began with a series of meetings with officials from the NYPD and 12 other larger agencies from the region, including the New Jersey State Police, the New York State Office of Homeland Security and the Metropolitan Transportation Authority Police Department. With the backing of the FBI, the U.S. Coast Guard and various other federal entities, a plan was developed to respond to threats using checkpoints — on bridges, outside tunnels, in the water, along railways — and grid searches in and around the city. The program has faced fiscal challenges: Proposed federal budgets in 2009 and 2010 initially withheld funding before restoring it under pressure by lawmakers. But Homeland Security has since decided that what began as a pilot project in 2006 should be permanent and could be expanded to other cities. So far, it has received $69.2 million in federal funds, which has paid for the state-of-the-art detection devices, communication networks and other equipment. Securing the Cities planning has culminated this week in an ongoing five-day drill testing the line of defense — the largest exercise yet. The scenario in play “involves thefts of radiological material by four separate cells of a fictional terrorist group intent on targeting New York City with a dirty bomb,” officials said. Friday’s drills were to involve scores of NYPD vehicles at U.N. headquarters and increased police activity at both terminals of the Staten Island Ferry, which carries tens of thousands of people a day to lower Manhattan and the Wall Street area. Earlier in the week, hundreds of officers who fanned out across the city and suburbs located phony devices and stolen materials at a Cadillac dealer in Westport, Conn., inside an SUV near Yankee Stadium and on three fake terrorists caught inside New York’s Penn Station, one of the nation’s busiest rail hubs. On Thursday, 67 government boats were in New York Harbor, the Hudson River and other spots to monitor maritime traffic — specifically commercial and recreational boats under 300 tons — for evidence of mock bombs. The officers had been fed fictional information that radioactive cobalt and cesium had been taken from a hospital, said Capt. Michael Riggio, a coordinator from the NYPD’s Counterterrorism Division. Riggio watched as the boats, including specially designed NYPD boats with detection devices implanted in their hulls, converged on the fishing boat before officers boarded it with an array of other equipment that can further measure the threat level. The readings were transmitted by computer to a police headquarters command center and to federal scientists in Washington for analysis to help determine if the boat was indeed “hostile,” he said. Said the captain: “It’s all about stopping the bad guys and weapons from getting into the city.”

More here:
NYC’s Ambitious Dirty-Bomb Defenses Put to Test

Tagged with:
 

**Written by Doug Powers There’s a chance, albeit slight, that the environmentally-conscious celebrities who push these “green” vehicles will loan the Queensland police some of their SUVs, Hummers and limousines so they can have enough room for their equipment, but I’m not counting on it : Queensland Police have been left red-faced over its choice of new “green” patrol cars. The service boasts it is going green, taking delivery of 100 hybrid Toyota Camrys. Shame no one checked the boot size. Frontline officers say the boots of the new patrol cars are too small to carry all their essential equipment, including flak jackets and emergency equipment. They can’t put it on the back seats – that’s where the criminals go – leaving them little option but to ditch it, or keep it under their feet in the front. And the front seats are already a tight squeeze for officers wearing accoutrement belts and cargo pants. The police union said the decision showed how far removed top brass were from the frontline that they could approve cars that aren’t big enough to be useful. The Queensland Police Service (QPS) boasts about its green car choice in this year’s annual report, saying its “smarter vehicle purchases” meant it had “the most operationally suitable vehicles” Proposed new rule: Nobody should be forced to drive a car that can’t easily fit Al Gore’s BS in the trunk. In general, is it wise, given the apparent fact that an increasingly hotter planet is destined to bury everyone in several feet of snow , to be making people drive smaller cars? It’s a good thing Noah wasn’t a Gorebot, or he’d have told everybody ride out the flood in something the size of a gravy boat — and kept the Ark for himself, of course. The Queensland SWAT team, above, arrives on the scene of a hostage situation in their new “green” vehicles (h/t David Burge ) **Written by Doug Powers Twitter @ThePowersThatBe

Follow this link:
‘Green’ Fail in the Outback: Police Can’t Fit Gear in Hybrids They’re Required to Drive

That Stimulating Stimulus Paid for Homemade Porno?

On August 28, 2010, in Uncategorized, by If Bush Did It

-By Warner Todd Huston Well if this isn’t a fitting addition to the story of the stimulus what is? The University of Notre Dame in Indiana recently fired an electrical engineering professor over allegations that the prof used $190,000 in federal grant money and matching university funds to buy cameras and other equipment to make homemade

Excerpt from:
That Stimulating Stimulus Paid for Homemade Porno?