Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Authorities See DNDO Nuke Bomb Detection Program Cuts Through Critical Eyes

by Anthony L. Kimery

'We have to be careful what we are eliminating and what works and what doesn’t'

Responding to the revelation that the White House is calling for eliminating further funding for new technologies to detect nuclear weapons and radiological materials at US borders and ports in his 2010 budget, Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Janet Napolitano stated at a press briefing last Thursday that “this simply represents that we have a significant amount of funds already appropriated for the programs, and it's not a change in direction [in policy] at this time.”

It's really more of an understanding that it would be more prudent not to ask for more funds when we have a delay in the new technology coming forward, and we really think it's just a chance to take a pause in asking for more money at this time while we get the certification complete and then start rolling out and asses our plans, then come back and see where our funding needs are after that,” Napolitano stated.

Obama budget documents state that in 2010, “unspent funds will be drawn down as DHS transitions to a different model to fund the purchases of radiation detection equipment within the department in future budgets.”

The administration has requested $366 million for the Domestic Nuclear Detection Office (DNDO), which is $148 million less than the amount DNDO received in 2009.

A DHS official told reporters the decision is not a policy shift. It’s "prudent to take a pause" to work through technical problems and redirect DNDO's work to individual agencies that use the equipment.

DHS spokesperson Amy Kudwa has told reporters that the unspent funds would be used to purchase advanced Spectroscopic Portal Monitors (ASPs) as soon as they are certified as effective, in addition to other nuclear materials detection equipment in the future.

Technical flaws and concerns over the reliability of scientific testing have delayed DHS plans to buy ASPs and automated cargo radiographic imaging systems, or CAARs, that scan vehicles, trains and cargo entering air and land ports for nuclear materials.

In response to questions raised by DHS and Congress’ own investigative branch, the Government Accountability Office (GAO), lawmakers put a halt to DNDO making any new purchases of equipment. In his 2010 budget, Obama also declined to request funds to buy any more equipment under DNDO beyond the $153 million that was appropriated last year under Bush.

GAO reported last September that “ASPs cost significantly more than current generation portal monitors, and testing of ASPs' capabilities needs to be more objective and rigorous. Due to concerns about ASPs' cost and performance, Congress has required that the Secretary of DHS certify that ASPs will provide a significant increase in operational effectiveness before obligating funds for full-scale ASP procurement.”

Continuing, GAO reported that “DNDO's cost estimate of $2.1 billion to implement its project execution plan is unreliable because it omits major project costs, such as maintenance, and relies on a flawed methodology. For example, although the normal life expectancy of the standard cargo ASP is about ten years, DNDO's estimate considers only eight years.”

“According to DNDO officials,” GAO told lawmakers, “the agency is now following a scaled-back ASP deployment strategy rather than the 2006 project execution plan, and a senior DNDO official told GAO the ASP deployment strategy could change dramatically depending on the outcome of ongoing testing.

Elsewhere, the White House also is seeking to end the $90 million Securing the Cities (STC) program that was launched last September with the awarding of $29 million in grants “to prevent a radiological/nuclear attack in the New York City metropolitan area by enhancing regional capabilities to detect and interdict illicit radioactive materials.”

This purpose of this pilot program was to test whether it is possible to secure an urban area against nuclear terrorism by encapsulating it with an integrated system of handheld, aerial, vehicle-mounted and waterborne sensors.

STC was launched by former DHS Secretary Michael Chertoff in July 2006 as way to protect a high-risk urban area from a potential radiological or nuclear attack. A previous cooperative agreement for $3.2 million was awarded to the New York Police Department in September 2007 to build a regional enterprise architecture for the NYC region that will allow real-time sharing of data from fixed, mobile, maritime, and human portable radiation detection systems,” according to DHS.

But with Obama’s 2010 DHS budget, "this is the end of the program as far as requesting new funds," the DHS official told reporters last week.

The desire to end the STC program has baffled not just a few authorities, who wondered out loud in interviews with HSToday.us whether the nuclear materials scanning technologies – many of which have been miniaturized – that are used by the nearly 35-year-old Nuclear Emergency Support Team, or NEST, have been incorporated, tested or used in the STC initiative. The miniaturization of nuclear materials detection technology has long been a priority of NEST, whose primary mission is detect and deactivate a nuclear weapon in the hands of terrorists.

HSToday.us Online Editor and Homeland Security Today Senior Reporter Anthony Kimery wrote the first in-depth report on NEST, which included the first ever on-the-record interview of a NEST director, in 1995.

Other authorities have asked “what’s up with” nuclear materials detection technologies that have been under development and study by the National Institute of Standards and Technology, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Purdue University, and foreign private sector companies like American Science & Engineering's radioactive threat detection, Germany’s Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt … and even Israeli research enterprises.

DHS officials did not respond to requests for comment.

"If there's a reason why all the technologies - and there's a lot of them, believe me - that have been in development or have already already fielded that [DHS] can't use, then they need to be explaining why, instead of offering these blanket comments that so far the technologies it's looked at or are working on just aren't workable," said a former DHS official involved in port cargo security operations. "Have they really looked at everything that's already been developed or has and is being worked on?"

Former CIA National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC) WMD terrorism chief Charles Faddis, president of Davidsonville, Maryland-based Orion Strategic Services, told HSToday.us that the DNDO cuts can be viewed either one of two ways by the Intelligence Community.

If this means that we are shutting down massive, unreasonably expensive programs that have shown little promise of producing and shifting our focus to more realistic, more practical and more effective measures, then I am all for it,” adding, “I think a lot of what has passed for homeland security has been ‘corporate pork’ anyway.”

“If, on the other hand,” Faddis said, “this means that we are now convinced that we are safe and that we can stop worrying about massive WMD attacks on our soil, then we are in real trouble. This stuff is not science fiction or fantasy. It is reality, and, unfortunately, every year we get a little closer to the day when somebody will detonate a dirty bomb or set loose a biological weapon on our soil.”

Former DHS Deputy Under Secretary for Intelligence and Analysis Jack Thomas Tomarchio, president of Wayne, Pennsylvania-based Agoge Group, LLC and a Senior Fellow at the Foreign Policy Research Institute’s Center on Terrorism, Counterterrorism, and Homeland Security, told HSToday.us that he “totally concur[s]” with Faddis, saying, “certainly wasteful and unnecessary funding of programs that do not work, is ludicrous.”

“But,” Tomarchio stressed, “we have to be careful what we are eliminating and what works and what doesn’t.”

Tomarchio said “I feel that any reduction to DNDO, or in this case, no additional funds being added to DNDO in the current budget, could be troubling. I think all of us who served in the Intelligence Community are concerned about the risks associated with nuclear proliferation.”

In a time when we are faced with an unstable Pakistan (a known nuclear state), a bellicose North Korea and an Iran seemingly intent on acquiring a nuclear weapon and the delivery devices to deploy it,Tomarchio said, “any reduction in the budget which will adversely effect our ability to detect, deter and defend against this - the ultimate threat to our national security - seems to me very potentially problematic.”

As the Washington Post reported critics as having told it about Obama’s proposed cuts in DNDO nuclear materials detection technologies, critics also complained to HSToday.us that the administration would rather invest in a “goal-line like defense against nuclear bomb-wielding terrorists” by spending money to secure nuclear materials at their source and to coordinate a government-wide counterproliferation strategy – and … to bolster preparedness capabilities to respond to an attack using a nuclear weapon or radiological dispersal device.

But critics and authorities told HSToday.us that programs since the collapse of the Soviet Union nearly 20 years ago to secure nuclear weapons and nuke weapons construction materials have failed to completely lock them all down at their sources. Meanwhile, nuclear weapons and ballistic missile delivery systems has unrelentingly continued to spread for more than 15 years despite the increase in counterproliferation activities that were launched under President Clinton and carried through under the administration of George W. Bush.

As for preparedness to deal with the mass casualties that would result from a nuclear bomb detonation, White House funding levels either aren’t enough, have been cut in crucial preparedness areas, or aren’t even on politicos’ radar screens – this as mass casualty emergency medical preparedness capabilities have continued to deteriorate for at least the last five years, as HSToday.us and Homeland Security Today have repeatedly reported.

States to feds: Stay in D.C.! $11 trillion 'micromanaging' price sparks explosion in sovereignty movement

A movement to reclaim for states all rights not specifically designated to the federal government in the U.S. Constitution is exploding across the nation, with 35 states already acting or at least considering such proposals – and one state lawmaker estimating the nation as a whole could save $11 trillion in coming years if it would succeed.....

States to feds: Stay in D.C.! $11 trillion 'micromanaging' price sparks explosion in sovereignty movement

A movement to reclaim for states all rights not specifically designated to the federal government in the U.S. Constitution is exploding across the nation, with 35 states already acting or at least considering such proposals – and one state lawmaker estimating the nation as a whole could save $11 trillion in coming years if it would succeed.....

Saudis running U.S. policy? Vexing decisions facing Obama administration

Parts of the United States' policy in the Middle East under the Obama administration may, in fact, be influenced by Saudi Arabia, which is worried over increasing overtures by the U.S. for a dialogue with Iran and may be leveraging the Pakistan situation to its advantage, according to a report from Joseph Farah's G2 Bulletin. ....

"The Saudis are supporting the Wahhabi Sunnis of Saad Hariri in Lebanon – and that's what they are, Wahabbists,” said one Middle East analyst. Indeed, Wahhabism, an extreme form of Sunni Islamic teaching, is the dominant form of Islam in Saudi Arabia. Al-Qaida represents Wahhabism in its purist form. However, Saudi Arabia has propagated the Wahhabist form of Islam by supporting its teachings through madrassas and financed these learning centers through charities located in various countries, including the United States.

In the U.S., these charities and madrassas have helped raise funds for al-Qaida and continue to provide funding for the Sunni Hamas to help finance their terrorist operations

.

5 convicted in Sears Tower jihad plot

from Jihad Watch

"Men." "Miami men." "Men mostly of Haitian descent." And then, finally, al-Qaeda is mentioned and some partial ideological context is established. An update on this story. "5 Miami men convicted of Sears Tower attack plot," by Curt Anderson for the Associated Press, May 12 (thanks to Sr. Soph):

MIAMI - It took three trials, three juries and nearly three years, but federal prosecutors finally succeeded Tuesday in convicting five Miami men of plotting to start an anti-government insurrection by destroying Chicago's Sears Tower and bombing FBI offices. One man was acquitted.
When the FBI swarmed the downtrodden Liberty City neighborhood to make the arrests in June 2006, the administration of President George W. Bush hailed the case as a prime example of the Justice Department's post-Sept. 11 policy of disrupting potential terror plots in the earliest possible stages.
Yet hours of FBI recordings of terrorist talk contrasted with little concrete evidence of an evolving plot, triggering two mistrials because juries could not agree on verdicts against ringleader Narseal Batiste or five followers. One of the original seven defendants was acquitted after the first trial.
"Any cases that involve someone's mental intent, their intention when they made certain statements, are always difficult," said Matthew Orwig, former U.S. attorney in Texas who has monitored the Miami case. "It was a must-win for the government. They needed some vindication."
Finally, this third jury found the way on its sixth day of deliberations.
It wasn't the only victory Tuesday for terrorism prosecutors. In a separate case in New York, a jury convicted a Lebanese-born Swede of trying to set up a terror training camp in Oregon in 1999. The verdict against Oussama Kassir capped a three-week trial.
In the Miami case, Batiste, 35, was the only one convicted of all four terrorism-related conspiracy counts, including plotting to provide material support to terrorists and conspiring to wage war against the U.S. Batiste, who was on the vast majority of FBI recordings, faces up to 70 years in prison.
Batiste's right-hand man, 29-year-old Patrick Abraham, was convicted on three counts and faces 50 years behind bars. Convicted on two counts and facing 30 years are 24-year-old Burson Augustin, 25-year-old Rotschild Augustine and 33-year-old Stanley Grant Phanor. Naudimar Herrera, 25, was cleared of all four charges.
U.S. District Judge Joan Lenard set sentencing for July 27 for the five convicted men, most of whom are Haitian or have Haitian ancestry.
Herrera criticized the prosecution as "bogus" and insisted the men banded together not for terrorism but to explore ways to lift up the impoverished, drug-infested area.
"It's not right," Herrera said outside the courthouse. "We were really all about helping the community."
The jury endured a two-month trial, then had to restart deliberations last week after one juror was excused for illness and a second was booted off the panel for being uncooperative. After the verdicts were read, court security officials escorted the jury -- whose names were kept secret -- out of the building before they could be interviewed.
"This was a difficult trial, and we thank all the prosecutors and agents involved, whose efforts resulted in today's successful conclusion," said Miami U.S. Attorney R. Alexander Acosta, a holdover Bush appointee.
Prosecutors Richard Gregorie and Jacqueline Arango focused on the group's intent as captured on dozens of FBI audio and video recordings. Batiste is repeatedly heard espousing violence against the U.S. government and saying the men should start a "full ground war" that would "kill all the devils."
"I want to fight some jihad," Batiste says on one tape.
A key piece of evidence is an FBI video of the entire group pledging an oath of allegiance, or "bayat," to al-Qaida and Osama bin Laden in a March 16, 2006, ceremony led by an Arabic-speaking FBI informant posing as "Brother Mohammed" from al-Qaida. Testimony also showed the men took photographs and video of possible targets in Miami, including the FBI building, a courthouse complex and a synagogue.
But Batiste, who testified in all three trials, insisted he was only going along with Mohammed so he could obtain $50,000 or more for his struggling construction business and a nascent community outreach program. Batiste was leader of a Miami chapter of a sect known as the Moorish Science Temple, which combines elements of Christianity, Judaism and Islam and does not recognize the U.S. government's full authority....

Shaky Pakistan seen as target of Al Qaeda plots Intel officials: Foreign jihadists ‘smell blood,’ seek to strengthen Islamists

WASHINGTON - As Taliban militants push deeper into Pakistan’s settled areas, foreign operatives of Al Qaeda who had focused on plotting attacks against the West are seizing on the turmoil to sow chaos in Pakistan and strengthen the hand of the militant Islamist groups there, according to American and Pakistani intelligence officials. ....

'Private health insurance would vanish' Obama plan to shift 119 million Americans to government-run care

On Monday, President Obama summoned representatives of the insurance industry, pharmaceutical companies and labor groups to the White House for what he called "a watershed event in the long and elusive quest for health care reform."

"They're not the people who are actually delivering care and researching the products and running the hospitals," according to Grace-Marie Turner, president of the Galen Institute.

"They want a seat at the table," she continued. "Nobody wants to be the turkey that gets carved up."

She spoke with Greg Corombos of Radio America/WND. The audio of the exchange can be heard by clicking on the title of this article ....

Here come the Obamamobiles … Ready to own small, plug-in electric cars?


The following report is excerpted from Jerome Corsi's Red Alert

"The small car invasion is upon us," Jerome Corsi's Red Alert reports.

U.S. consumers are about to see a new lineup of 2010 Obamamobile electric-powered and hybrid small car models.

"There is no doubt the Obama administration has bought hook, line and sinker into the global warming hysteria promoted by Al Gore and the environmentalists on the radical Left," Corsi wrote.

With the U.S. government certain to emerge from a Chrysler bankruptcy and a GM restructuring with substantial minority equity interests in both automakers, the cars of the future are likely to be designed by government bureaucrats who will remain determined to impose their ideological views on the future look of U.S. auto manufacturing, he noted.

As Red Alert reported last week, the Obama administration has forced Chrysler into the arms of Italian automaker Fiat just to get its European small-car technology, even though Fiat does not plan to put a cent into the deal.

Now, even Ford, the last remaining non-government owned of the former Big Three U.S. automakers, has announced plans to create an entirely electric Ford Focus model. The company may be confident that American car buyers will be enthusiastic about the offering, or that it has no choice but to bend to the Obama administration.

"Who knows? Ford might also end up needing a government bailout, especially if car sales in the U.S. do not pick up dramatically," Corsi wrote.

To manufacture the plug-in version of the Ford Focus, the automaker is converting a plant in Wayne, Mich., that generated up to $3.7 billion in profits for Ford by building the Expedition SUV

, according to the Wall Street Journal.

"In the United States, clearly we had been focused on our bigger trucks and SUVs and made a few small cars but without a consistency of purpose," Ford's chief executive Alan Mulally told the Wall Street Journal. "We all came to the consensus that we needed to do more work on that business case because we absolutely wanted to serve the U.S. customers for smaller vehicles."

While U.S. carmakers have earned approximately a $7,000 profit on each pickup truck or SUV sold, the profit on selling small cars has been little or nothing.

Still, Ford plans to obtain cost savings by manufacturing basically the same model of the Focus for all of Ford's markets around the world, with minor modifications to fit each market in their global strategy.

Ford is currently losing as much as $1 billion a year on the Focus, although Ford believes its current plans to market the Focus as its first all-electric passenger car will turn those losses into future profits.

"With Ford making a bet on the same type of vehicles the Obama administration wants Fiat to make with Chrysler, Ford too could be headed toward government bailouts in 2010," Corsi wrote, "unless these small electric-powered vehicles boost U.S. car sales back to the 10 or 11 million new units the U.S. auto industry needs to sell each year to be profitable."

Red Alert's author, whose books "The Obama Nation" and "Unfit for Command" have topped the New York Times best-sellers list, noted that while bureaucrats in the Obama administration are convinced the politically correct vehicles for Detroit to manufacture are small, energy-efficient electric hybrids, the American car buyer might shrug shoulders in disdain when the 2010 Obamamobiles begin showing up on car lots for sale.

Corsi received his Ph.D. from Harvard University in political science in 1972. For nearly 25 years, beginning in 1981, he worked with banks throughout the U.S. and around the world to develop financial services marketing companies to assist banks in establishing broker/dealers and insurance subsidiaries to provide financial planning products and services to their retail customers. In this career, Corsi developed three different third-party financial services marketing firms that reached gross sales levels of $1 billion in annuities and equal volume in mutual funds. In 1999, he began developing Internet-based financial marketing firms, also adapted to work in conjunction with banks.

In his 25-year financial services career, Corsi has been a noted financial services speaker and writer, publishing three books and numerous articles in professional financial services journals and magazines.

For more information on the future of Obamamobiles and for financial guidance during difficult times, read Jerome Corsi's Red Alert,....