Saturday, March 15, 2014

Sinclair court-martial to resume Monday


The sexual assault court-martial of Brig. Gen. Jeff Sinclair will resume Monday, nearly a week after the trial was postponed indefinitely because his lawyers had begun new plea-bargain negotiations.


The resumption of the trial was announced late Friday night in a Fort Bragg news release.


According to a source close to Sinclair's legal team, the trial will resume with a hearing to deal with procedural issues, including whether a new convening authority should be designated to receive a plea offer.


The source said in an email Friday night that negotiations between the two sides continue.


Sinclair, a former deputy commander of the 82nd Airborne Division, is accused of committing forcible oral sodomy on a 34-year-old Army captain near the end of his three-year adulterous affair with her. A conviction could send the 51-year-old combat veteran to life in prison.


On March 6, Sinclair pleaded guilty to three of the eight criminal charges he faces: failure to obey a lawful order or regulation; conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman; and adultery, which is a crime in the military.


A jury could sentence him on those charges to as much as 15 years in prison, dismissal from the Army and forfeiture of pay and allowances, said Col. James Pohl, the judge in the case.


Sinclair has the option to withdraw those guilty pleas, said Richard Scheff, his lead lawyer.


Sinclair, 51, has been in the Army since December 1985.


The court-martial was halted Monday. Sinclair's lawyers told the judge they received new evidence last weekend of unlawful command influence over a Fort Bragg general's decision several months ago to reject plea negotiations with Sinclair's lawyers and proceed with the court-martial.


Sinclair's lawyers argued that the unlawful influence - commentary in a letter saying that a plea bargain would hurt the Army as Congress reviews how the military handles sexual assault among the ranks - appears to have led Lt. Gen. Joe Anderson to reject an offer in December for Sinclair to plead guilty to the lesser charges he faced and have the more serious charges dismissed.


Anderson was the convening authority, a leader tasked with deciding when to court-martial soldiers under his command who are accused of wrongdoing and whether to accept offers to plead guilty.


Based on that evidence, Pohl on Monday gave Sinclair a new opportunity to negotiate a plea bargain.


The trial was postponed indefinitely Tuesday after Sinclair's lawyers began negotiations with Army prosecutors.


Scheff announced in court Tuesday morning that Sinclair would submit to prosecutors a new plea offer and said time is needed to consider it. Scheff said at the time that it could be weeks before the trial resumed.


Pohl told the jurors Tuesday that they could go home but said they may be called back to continue hearing the case.


In previous interviews, Sinclair's team said its client wouldn't budge on two issues during negotiations: He will not plead guilty to any sexual assault charge, and he won't plead guilty to a crime that would require him to register as a sex offender.


The hearing is scheduled to begin at 9 a.m. Monday at the Fort Bragg courthouse.



Focus turns to pilots as hunt for jet widens


KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Attention focused Sunday on the pilots of the missing Malaysia Airlines flight after the country's leader announced findings so far that suggest someone with intimate knowledge of the Boeing 777's cockpit seized control of the plane and sent it off-course.


Prime Minister Najib Razak gave the first detailed findings Saturday in the more than weeklong investigation into the missing plane, showing that someone severed communications with the ground and deliberately diverted Flight 370 after it departed Kuala Lumpur for Beijing on March 8 on an overnight flight with a 12-person crew and 227 passengers.


Satellite data suggest it flew for at least 7 ½ hours and that it could have reached as far northwest as Kazakhstan or deep into the southern Indian Ocean, Najib said. "Clearly the search for MH370 has entered a new phase," Najib said at a televised news conference. "It is widely understood that this has been a situation without precedent."


Experts say that whoever disabled the plane's communication systems and then flew the jet must have had a high degree of technical knowledge and flying experience. One possibility they have raised was that one of the pilots wanted to divert the plane for some reason — possibly even to commit suicide. Piracy and hijacking also have been cited as possible explanations.


Najib stressed that investigators were looking into all possibilities.


"In view of this latest development, the Malaysian authorities have refocused their investigation into the crew and passengers on board," Najib told reporters, reading from a written statement but not taking any questions.


Police on Saturday went to the Kuala Lumpur homes of both the pilot and co-pilot of the missing plane, according to a guard and several local reporters. Malaysian police have said they are looking at the psychological state, family life and connections of pilot Zaharie Ahmad Shah, 53, and co-pilot Fariq Abdul Hamid, 27. They released no details on their investigation so far.


Zaharie, who joined Malaysia Airlines in 1981 and had more than 18,000 hours of flying experience, was known as an avid aviation enthusiast who had set up an elaborate flight simulator at home.


Fariq was contemplating marriage after having just graduated to the cockpit of a Boeing 777. He has drawn scrutiny after the revelation that he and another pilot invited two female passengers to sit in the cockpit during a flight in 2011.


Two-thirds of the plane's passengers were Chinese, and China's government has been under pressure to give anxious relatives firm news of the aircraft's fate. Beijing's state media expressed irritation Saturday at what it described as Malaysia's foot-dragging in releasing information about the investigation and the search.


At a hotel near Beijing's airport, some relatives said they felt deceived at not being told earlier about the plane emitting signals for 7 ½ hours. "We are going through a roller coaster, and we feel helpless and powerless," said a woman, who declined to give her name.


Najib, at his news conference, said he understood the need for families to receive information, but that his government wanted to release only fully corroborated details.


The missing Malaysia Airlines flight departed Kuala Lumpur at 12:40 a.m. heading toward Beijing. Investigators now have a high degree of certainty that one of the plane's communications systems — the Aircraft and Communications Addressing and Reporting System (ACARS) — was partially disabled before the aircraft reached the east coast of Malaysia, Najib said. Shortly afterward, someone on board switched off the aircraft's transponder, which communicates with civilian air traffic controllers.


Najib confirmed that Malaysian air force defense radar picked up traces of the plane turning back westward, crossing over Peninsular Malaysia into the northern stretches of the Strait of Malacca. Authorities previously had said this radar data could not be verified.


"These movements are consistent with deliberate action by someone on the plane," Najib said, saying that a team of Malaysian, U.S. and British aviation investigators concurred in the findings so far.


Although the aircraft was flying virtually blind to air traffic controllers at this point, onboard equipment continued to send "pings" to satellites.


To turn off the transponder, someone in the cockpit would have to turn a knob with multiple selections to the "off" position while pressing down at the same time, said John Goglia, a former member of the U.S. National Transportation Safety Board. That's something a pilot would know, but it could also be learned by someone who researched the plane on the Internet, he said.


The ACARS system has two aspects, Goglia said. The information part of the system was shut down, but not the transmission part. In most planes, the information section can be shut down by hitting cockpit switches in sequence in order to get to a computer screen where an option must be selected using a keypad, said Goglia, an expert on aircraft maintenance.


That's also something a pilot would know how to do, but that could also be discovered through research, he said.


But to turn off the other transmission portion of the ACARS, it would be necessary to go to an electronics bay beneath the cockpit. That's something a pilot wouldn't normally know how to do, Goglia said. The Malaysia plane's ACARS transmitter continued to send out blips that were recorded by satellite after the transponder was turned off. The blips don't contain any messages or data, but the satellite can tell in a very broad way what region the blips are coming from.


Malaysia's prime minister said the last confirmed signal between the plane and a satellite came at 8:11 a.m. — 7 hours and 31 minutes after takeoff. This was more than five hours later than the previous time given by Malaysian authorities as the possible last contact.


Airline officials have said the plane had enough fuel to fly for up to about eight hours.


"The investigations team is making further calculations which will indicate how far the aircraft may have flown after this last point of contact," Najib said.


He said authorities had determined that the plane's last communication with a satellite was in one of two possible arcs, or "corridors" — a northern one from northern Thailand through to the border of the Central Asian countries Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan, and a southern one from Indonesia to the southern Indian Ocean.


The northern route might theoretically have taken the plane through China, India, Pakistan, Afghanistan — which hosts U.S. military bases — and Central Asia, but it was unclear how it could fly through the region undetected. The region is also home to extremist Islamist groups, unstable governments and remote, sparsely populated areas.


Flying south would have put the plane over the Indian Ocean, with an average depth of 3,890 meters (12,762 feet) and thousands of kilometers (miles) from the nearest land mass.


Britain-based aviation security consultant Chris Yates thought it was highly unlikely the plane would have taken the northern route across land in Asia. "In theory, any country that sees a strange blip is going to get fighter planes up to have a look," he said. "And if those fighter planes can't make head or tail of what it is, they will shoot it down."


At least 14 countries are involved in the search for the plane, using 43 ships and 58 aircraft.


Associated Press writers Chris Brummitt and Jim Gomez contributed to this report from Kuala Lumpur.



Putin may pay heavy price for Crimea moves


WASHINGTON — Supporters of Russian President Vladimir Putin expect to savor victory as residents of Crimea vote Sunday on splitting from Ukraine. But Western officials and analysts increasingly feel that in the long run, Russians will come to see their nation’s military and political move into Crimea as a mistake.


Two weeks after Russian forces entered the peninsula en masse, Russia’s stock market and economic data have started to signal trouble — the start of what could become a lasting pullback by foreign investors. That would badly hurt Russia’s efforts to modernize and diversify its economy.


At the United Nations and other international forums, the number of countries supporting Moscow’s strong-arm action has shrunk close to zero. Even China, which frequently sides with Russia on international issues, has turned sour.


Nor has Putin succeeded in splitting the Western coalition and stopping U.S.-led efforts to impose sanctions in retaliation for the seizure of Crimea. Instead, his strategy seems to have driven the alliance together while frightening countries on Russia’s borders into closer cooperation with the United States and Western Europe.


The clearest indication of how Putin’s action may be backfiring came Thursday when German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who had been the foremost advocate for a soft line, shifted position and warned Moscow of a possible new East-West division that could “massively damage Russia, economically and politically.”


Other world powers have been unpersuaded by Putin’s arguments that military action was necessary to protect the majority ethnic Russian population in Crimea from Ukraine’s interim government in Kiev. The new Ukrainian government took over from a Russian ally, President Viktor Yanukovich, last month in what the Russians call an illegal coup but which most other countries have recognized as legitimate.


“This looked like an old-fashioned land grab from the 18th century” to many governments, said Francois Heisbourg, a former French diplomat in Paris who is chairman of the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies. “He’s breaking even the rules of the Cold War with this.”


China, which usually follows the Russian lead at the United Nations, has been notably silent on the move. The Chinese dislike the precedent of letting separatist-minded regions vote for independence, something they have spent years blocking in Tibet and other areas.


Belarus, which hews closely to Russia’s line, signaled its ambivalence by recognizing the government in Kiev.


Russia’s isolation was vividly illustrated Saturday when it cast a lone vote to veto a U.S.-sponsored U.N. Security Council resolution declaring the Crimea referendum illegal. Thirteen security council members voted for the resolution, and China abstained.


Perhaps most ominous for Russia are signs of an economic pullback.


The most harmful effects “may not be from other governments’ sanctions, but from the gradual deterioration of an economic situation that is already weakening,” said Blair Ruble of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington.


Russia has long sought to diversify its economy, which now depends heavily on energy. Moscow has hoped to add new centers of technology and innovation. But the Crimea seizure “has left the impression that Russia is an unreliable partner,” Ruble said.


Since Putin sent troops into Crimea on Feb. 28, the ruble has hit record lows, the stock market has fallen about 20 percent and many economists have slashed their 2014 growth forecasts.


Many of Putin’s supporters in Russia won’t feel the stock market slide, of course. In the short term, the annexation of Crimea and threats of retaliation from the U.S. and Europe might strengthen domestic support for Putin, who already has public approval ratings around 60 percent.


Over the longer term, however, a weakened economy probably will eat into his public support, analysts say.


Moscow’s strategy since the invasion has been to try to divide the European Union’s few assertive countries from the many that didn’t want to tangle with the Russians because of concern about damaging their own fragile economies.


Russia has signaled that it could cut off gas exports on which much of Western Europe depends and retaliate against sanctions with financial punishments of its own. It has mobilized tanks and troops near Ukraine’s borders, reawakening fear of a new East-West military confrontation.


How real the Western threat of sanctions will be remains to be seen. Broader-gauge sanctions “are still in a discussion stage” within the European Union, a Western diplomat said, speaking anonymously to comment on negotiations. Merkel, despite her tough language, will remain under pressure from German business and labor groups to not inflict penalties that would harm Germany’s economic relationship with Moscow.


How far the confrontation goes will depend, in part, on whether Russia’s advance stops with Crimea. Because the region was part of Russia until 1954, when it was transferred to Ukrainian jurisdiction by the Soviet Union, other countries may eventually be willing to accept Moscow’s control of it.


But a Russian move into cities of eastern Ukraine that have large numbers of Russian speakers would seriously escalate the conflict. In recent days, Russia has conducted military maneuvers in its border regions a short distance from Ukrainian cities, including Kharkiv, the country’s second-largest urban area.


Some analysts also foresee the possibility of a sanctions escalation, perhaps driven by Congress’ bipartisan passion for such penalties. Russian officials are warning that they could retaliate by suspending their cooperation on nuclear arms control agreements.


At the same time, Russia’s aggressive moves have harmed its interests elsewhere along its borders, pushing Eastern European members of NATO, including Poland and the Baltic nations of Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia, to ask for stronger military support from the United States. Countries with large ethnic Russian minorities, including the Baltic states, are especially alarmed.


Some Republican senators are demanding that the Obama administration revive plans for a missile defense system in Poland and the Czech Republic that Russia loathed.


Adding to Moscow’s burdens, the moves on Crimea would saddle it with the cost of taking care of the peninsula, an impoverished region that depends on Kiev for water and power. And the actions have stiffened resistance among most Ukrainians to Russian domination.


As recently as this summer, a public opinion survey by Gallup showed that 17 percent of Ukrainians viewed the North Atlantic Treaty Organization as a source of protection, 29 percent saw it as a threat and 44 percent were neutral. Most analysts believe that public opinion in the country has now swung more heavily toward alliance with the West.


A change of Ukraine’s conflicted feelings about its Russian neighbor may be another long-term cost that Russia will suffer from Putin’s tactics, Ruble said.


“He may forever have a large and hostile Ukraine right on his border.”



101st Airborne vet wins silver in Paralympics




CLARKSVILLE, Tenn. — A former squad leader in the U.S. Army's 101st Airborne Division who received a Purple Heart has won a silver medal at the Paralympics in Sochi, Russia.


Heath Calhoun took second in super combined sit-skiing Friday with a total time of 2:19:09, less than a second behind gold medal winner Josh Dueck of Canada. Calhoun finished just off the podium in the slalom and super-G.


Calhoun was wounded in Iraq in 2003 and took up sit-skiing in 2006. He was the flag-bearer for Team USA at the 2010 Paralympics in Vancouver and has been featured on a cereal box and in national TV commercials.


The Bristol, Va., native lives in Clarksville, Tenn., near the 101st Airborne's base at Fort Campbell on the Kentucky line.




Navy's Blue Angels are set to soar again


48 minutes ago












U.S. Navy Flight Demonstration Squadron, the Blue Angels, pilots fly in the world-renowned Delta Formation past the New York City skyline.






The Navy’s Blue Angels are ready to perform their first air show of the season at Naval Air Facility El Centro, Calif., according to a Navy release.


The flight demonstration team is usually scheduled for 35-40 shows a year, but only flew twice last year due to sequestration. However, the Blue Angels didn’t just sit still. Instead, they refocused thier energy on community outreach, contributing more than 5,000 hours of community service at more than 500 events.


Though air show attendants will generally only see the six acrobatic pilots fly within inches of each other’s wingtips, more than 130 sailors and Marines make up the team with jobs ranging from aircraft maintenance to photography.


Cmdr. Tom Frosch, the squadron’s flight leader, hopes his team can inspire young men and women to pursue a career in naval aviation or the military and aspire to excellence in all areas of their lives.


“Our passion for naval service and naval aviation is the message we wish to convey to young men and women across our great nation and across the globe,” said Frosch in the Navy release.


This marks the Blue Angels’ 68th year performing. The Blue Angels are expected to perform for nearly 15 million spectators in 2014.


The 2014 and 2015 shows schedules are available on the Blue Angels website.


news@stripes.com




Thursday, March 13, 2014

Korean War hero Col. Ola Lee Mize dies


A Medal of Honor recipient with ties to several Fort Bragg units died Wednesday. Col. Ola Lee Mize's death was announced by the Congressional Medal of Honor Society. He was 82.


The group said Col. Mize died in Gadsden, Ala. Funeral services are pending.


Col. Mize served in the 82nd Airborne Division, 5th Special Forces Group and 7th Special Forces Group during a 31-year Army career.


He received the nation's highest military award in 1954 for actions in Korea.


Then-Master Sgt. Mize was assigned to Company K, 15th Infantry Regiment near Surang-ni, Korea, when he led his soldiers in bunker-to-bunker attacks to clear enemy forces during a defense of "Outpost Harry."


Col. Mize rescued a wounded soldier and led the defense of trenches that had been penetrated by enemy soldiers, according to his medal citation.


"During his fearless actions he was blown down by artillery and grenade blasts three times but each time he dauntlessly returned to his position, tenaciously fighting and successfully repelling hostile attacks," the citation reads.


When the onslaught stopped, Col. Mize led his small force in search of the enemy, saving one soldier's life when ambushed by an enemy, then moving man to man to distribute ammunition while shouting words of encouragement.


Col. Mize then fought his way to an overrun machine gun position, killing 10 enemies and scattering the rest. At dawn, he led a counterattack that drove the enemy from the area.


Col. Mize was a native of Alabama. He began his Army career with the 82nd Airborne Division's 325 Airborne Infantry Regiment.


In 1956, he was commissioned an officer and later completed Special Forces training at fort Bragg.


In 1962, Col. Mize was assigned to the 7th Special Forces Group and later served with the 5th Special Forces Group.


Col. Mize was deployed to Vietnam as an A-Team leader before being assigned to the Special Forces Training Group at Fort Bragg in 1965. He led the advanced training committee for SCUBA, HALO and SKY HOOK schools and, according to U.S. Army Special Operations Command, is credited with starting the present-day Combat Divers Qualification Course in Key West, Fla.


Col. Mize returned to Vietnam from 1966 to 1967 with the 5th Special Forces Group and again in 1969, when he was assigned to the 5th Special Forces Group as commander of the 3rd Mobile Force Command , serving alongside Cambodian troops.


In 1975, Col. Mize became the Special Forces School Chief for the Field Training Division and Resistance Division and Fort Bragg and later served as commander of the Special Forces School.


In 2009, Col. Mize was inducted as a Distinguished Member of the Special Forces Regiment at Fort Bragg.


His other military awards and decorations include the Silver Star, Legion of Merit (with Oak Leaf Cluster), Bronze Star (with four Oak Leaf Clusters), Ranger Tab, Master Parachutist Badge, SCUBA Badge and the Combat Infantryman's Badge (second award).



This sgt. maj. will make you sweat


Sgt. Maj. Ruby Murray, the fitness guru of Camp Arifjan, Kuwait, is no snarling drill sergeant. Upbeat, positive and entirely nonjudgmental, she pushes soldiers physically while getting them to what she calls their “happy place.”


“I love people unconditionally,” said Murray, 42. “When you come to my class, even if you’re injured, you go at your pace and how you feel good about yourself.”


“Happy place” is Murray’s key buzzword and motto, drawn from her own experience breaking personal barriers to drop weight, as she runs “4 a.m. Crew,” a CrossFit-style exercise class.


The 24-year veteran is showing the Army that physical training works better when it isn’t a punishing slog. For any soldiers who struggle with fitness, she wants the program “to reach all the warriors out there who could not do it,” she told Army Times.


Helping soldiers turn things around is her passion.


“My number one priority is helping a unit or individuals who are borderline flunking their PT test, getting them to their happy place,” she said, “and teaching them how to keep it off.”


When she’s not getting folks fit, she is the senior enlisted adviser to the commander of 1st Theater Sustainment Command, which is busy pulling troops and equipment out of Afghanistan as part of the drawdown. Under her, there are more than 7,000 soldiers.


The workouts are full of unpredictability, and no one day is like another. Water bottles stand in for weights. High intensity “suicide” sprints are a regular feature, and Murray will shout “rocket attack!” a prompt to run the cones at double time or drop down burpee style for a ground workout.


“There’s times when they have to bring a mop inside the gym because there are so many puddles [of sweat]; I’m not lying!” Murray said, laughing. “We haven’t even hit the summer months.”


But above all, she makes sure to inject her class with positivity and gratitude.


“I try to incorporate a happy place in my class where you’re so joy filled you don’t know what else to do,” she said. “If this is your last hour, it’s going to be the best hour of your life.”


One of Murray’s regulars, Army psychiatrist Lt. Col. Matthew Goodwin, said he was full of self-loathing for struggling with his weight and dodged the physical fitness test. Then one day he drifted into Murray’s class.


“It was such a positive experience,” Goodwin said in a written testimonial. “The sweat was pouring onto the floor until I was slipping and sliding. Everybody was shouting and encouraging each other. People were laughing and smiling at the same time they were crying out in physical anguish.”


Goodwin said that after absorbing the pain of service members in his job, the class is his therapy. He also lost four pounds in two weeks.


“Sgt. Maj. Murray is better than any anti-depressant I could ever prescribe,” he said.


Murray describes herself as “42 with a 22-aged body.” At 5 feet, 4 inches, she is “150 pounds solid; I don’t have no fat,” she said.


“It’s all about being a lean, mean fighting machine,” she said. “When you’re in uniform, your appearance means everything. Your appearance speaks volumes about who you are.”


But in 1998, Murray almost lost her job as a platoon sergeant because, post-pregnancy, she was 90 pounds overweight. Her company commander at Fort Bragg, N.C., warned her she would be discharged if she didn’t get in shape.


She said she got “negative vibes,” from coworkers and family over the weight gain, and she felt awful about herself. “I never had legs that rubbed before,” she said.


With the second chance from her commander, she hired a personal trainer, focused on keeping her job for the sake of her infant daughter. “I had determination, and most important motivation,” Murray said.


After getting in shape and passing her physical training test, she had a burning desire to give back. She became the instructor for Fort Bragg’s post-pregnancy physical fitness program, a job she held for several years, interrupted by an Iraq deployment.


“We were having girls going back to their unit in their best shape ever,” she said. “I was basically teaching them how to love themselves unconditionally.”


In Murray’s physical and mental approach to fitness, she helps others to replicate her weight-loss journey. She asks her classes to focus at all times on a positive, motivating part of their life, like she did with her daughter.


“Find a way to find your happy place,” she said. “When others feel you should frown, you should smile. If you learn to step out on faith, the rest will follow you. You’ve got to believe in yourself for someone else to believe in you.”


Since she first taught at Fort Bragg, she has obtained a raft of fitness certifications, and she went on to teach an exercise class at the Army Sergeant Majors Academy at Fort Bliss, Texas. Last year, after returning to Fort Bragg, she volunteered to teach another class for soldiers, civilians and spouses.


Deployed to Kuwait, she started the class on Labor Day 2013 with two people, and her 4 a.m. Crew has since grown to 50 to 75 on an average day.


“They come every Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday,” she said, “and they get up at 3 o’clock in the morning, mind you.”



VA: We budgeted before DOD; troop reductions not accounted for


Lawmakers fear that the Veterans Affairs department might not be asking for enough money to meet its needs, the National Journal reported Thursday.


The VA is seeking $163.9 billion — a 6.5 percent increase over fiscal 2014 — but face complaints of deficient veterans’ health centers, long claims backlogs, and questionable treatment for Iraq and Afghanistan vets who are readily prescribed heaps of drugs to deal with serious post-traumatic stress disorder.


At a Veterans Affairs Committee hearing Wednesday on its fiscal 2015 budget request, senators from both parties took turns raising worries that the VA is not equipped to handle the veterans’ needs back in their states, particularly when the wind-down of the Afghanistan war is sending a growing influx of servicemen and women into the VA system, the Journal wrote.


“As I understand it, the VA anticipates seeing an increase of approximately 100,000 new patients in the coming year,” said committee chairman Bernie Sanders, a Vermont independent. “But I am concerned whether the 3 percent increase in medical care that is in the budget will be sufficient to care for these new users, existing users, will span veterans services, and keep pace with all of the issues we have here. Is that enough money? It sounds to me like it’s not.”


VA Secretary Eric Shinseki, told the panel that the VA tried to ask for what it anticipates needing for 2015, but he admitted that the request was put together before the Defense Department announced its latest plans to reduce troop size.


“This budget request is prior to that plan being provided,” Shinseki said. “We believe we have, in this budget, anticipated what our needs will be in 2015, but this again will depend on what the downsizing plan entails.”


Sen. Mike Johanns, R-Neb., complained about the VA’s pace on capital improvement projects, the Journal noted. Because an Omaha project was far down on the waiting list, he said it could take years for veterans to receive the access they need.


“What I’m looking at, all these projects, a pretty rough estimate is that $23 billion is necessary to address what is on the waiting list,” Johanns said. “How can we best put a process in place to address what you are dealing with, and what we are dealing with? It’s a lot of money; it would be very hard to come up with that.”


Shinseki said that in the budget environment, the VA is trying to prioritize projects appropriately to provide for veterans’ safety and security and maintain existing facilities. The VA has requested $561.8 million for major construction in its fiscal 2015 budget.


But Johanns questioned whether spending hundreds of millions of dollars to maintain old facilities was actually counterproductive.


“All these millions we are putting into these facilities across the country,” Johanns said. “I just hope we are not chasing good money with bad money.”


news@stripes.com



Troops get onboard for 'Enlisted'


Despite early reports declaring “Enlisted” dead on arrival, the new FOX comedy series is fighting on with a surge of support from military and DVR watchers.


“For freshman shows, ratings are all that matter, and the ratings for Enlisted make it certain to be canceled,” promised entertainment website TV by the Numbers just after the show premiered in January with dismal early ratings.


With such a rough start, some industry insiders even predicted that “Enlisted” would get an early discharge, with the network pulling the plug before the show completed its initial 13-episode run.


Not so fast, FOX executive Chris Kaspers tells Military Times.


“There haven’t been any talks of ‘Enlisted’ being canceled,” Kaspers says. And despite the sluggish start, ratings are ticking up, he says. “The show has been doing well. And it sees some of the largest DVR boosts of any show each week.”


The show’s second-season fate likely will be decided in May, he says.


While the pilot episode was rife with ridiculous errors that made just about anyone with a military background cringe, producers were quick to find military advisers to help turn things around. They even embraced the suck, with a “Count the Errors” contest that awarded 1,000 of the show’s challenge coins to the first of some 2,500 entries.


Since then, military- and veteran-friendly fans have rallied around the show.


“I’m now a huge Enlisted fan,” writes Lewis Nelson, an Army veteran of Iraq and Afghanistan who is now a military blogger. Initially a hater, he says the show’s writing and growing attention to detail have turned him around.


“In a nutshell, the show is good enough to ignore any inconsistencies with military uniform standards, and definitely funny enough to not notice the moments where real soldiers know ‘that would never happen,’ ” he writes.


Of course, trading some tweets with Angelique Cabral, who plays female lead Staff Sgt. Jill Perez, helped a little, too. “While stunningly beautiful in ACUs, she’s also a very believable NCO,” he says.


“And just because you’re probably thinking it, I don’t just like the show because Angelique Cabral replied to me on Twitter,” he adds. “I noticed she replied to just about everybody! It’s the fact that the cast is engaging fans and the military, and they’re willing to discuss real military topics. It indicates this isn’t just a comedy show they’re doing, they also want to correctly represent the men and women who serve.”


In a recent post on RangerUp’s Rhino Den blog, Air Force veteran Kerry Patton writes: “As a veteran who often finds himself dealing with his own issues on occasion, I laughed during the show. Let me re-phrase that. I laughed out loud during the show and I know many fellow veterans did as well.”


The show captures that essential element that any military show will need with veterans, he says: It rings true. And, just as important, that kind of laughter makes for good medicine.


“The show made me reflect on several of my friends who easily could have played the roles of some of the cast simply because of the things they had done during their careers. I even saw myself during the show. The reflections seen throughout the show, in many regards, brought a sense of relief.”


“Enlisted” airs at 9 p.m. Fridays ET/PT.



How to disappear a jetliner


As the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 stretches on with still virtually no reliable clues to work with, what began as a bizarre incident is beginning to look even stranger still. Commercial airliners have gone missing before, but only until their wreckage was found. MH370 seems literally to have vanished into thin air. But how could that happen? And what does it mean for a plane to disappear, anyway?


The shock generated by the Boeing 777 mystery is largely a product of how much we’ve come to take for granted the modern superabundance of information. We expect to know where everything is, all the time. If you log on to a flight-tracking website, you can punch in the flight number of any commercial aircraft and see its current location and direction. Seems pretty foolproof.


And indeed, in most cases, airplanes are constantly connected into the global information network by multiple mutually redundant forms of surveillance and communication. There’s very little uncertainty — which is how air traffic controllers like it, since streams of large metal objects moving at hundreds of miles per hour don’t do well moving randomly around the sky.


For air traffic control purposes, the planet is divided into regions called “centers,” each of which is under the authority of a different set of controllers. Every plane begins its travel through the system with the filing of a flight plan, and as it proceeds on course through the air, its information moves along electronically in parallel from one center to the next.


Centers track each flight in a variety of ways. The first is with good old-fashioned radio calls. Controllers call up pilots to give them instructions, inquire about their intentions, and relay information.


Frankly, we’re not even 100 percent sure it is a crash.


The second source of information is radar, of which there are two kinds. Primary radar tells operators where a plane is located. The military uses a version that can also tell at what altitude a plane is flying, but civilian controllers don’t have access to that kind of system. Instead, they use secondary radar, which pings an electronic device called a transponder inside each aircraft, which then transmits its altitude. Controllers will then be able to see on their screen the number of each flight, its location, and its altitude, derived from secondary radar.


Radar and radio have been used since your grandparents’ day. More recently, a third system has started rolling out called ADS-B. The acronym stands for “Automatic dependent surveillance-broadcast.” Aircraft determine their position via satellite navigation, then transmit that information to a base station. They can also receive information from the base station, including weather info and the location of nearby traffic. It’s a better system than secondary radar and someday will supplant it, but for now we’re in the transitional phase, and in most cases pilots and controllers have access to both.


Together, these three systems provide a robust and interlinking network, but they all share the same limitation: They’re based on the radio waves, which are limited in range to somewhere between 100 to 200 miles, depending on atmospheric conditions. “In general, once you go far enough out over the water, if you don’t have a satellite link, there’s no way to talk to the ground,” says Rob Thomas, a program engineer with Ohio University’s Avionics Engineering Center.


In such cases, the flight remains in the system, and controllers continue to see its symbol moving across their screens, based on the information obtained from the flight plan and from the last actual contact between controllers and the plane. In a sense, then, you could say that planes disappear all the time: They’re out of contact, and their status within the system is based on assumption until they can actually get back in contact and confirm that everything’s A-OK.


In the overwhelming majority of cases, the system works just fine, and everybody turns up more or less where they’re supposed to. But sometimes it doesn’t. In the early morning hours of June 1, 2009, controllers in Senegal watched Air France Flight 447 progress across their screens for more than two hours. They hadn’t managed to communicate with the flight but assumed everything was all right. It wasn’t. The plane had actually plunged into the sea hours before. Not until an inquisitive controller in the next center over began asking questions did the authorities realize that something was amiss.


Likewise, it wasn’t the disappearance of Flight 370 per se that sparked concern, but its failure to reappear. Forty minutes into its flight, soon after it leveled off at 35,000 feet and turned to the northeast as planned, its ADS-B signal winked out. That’s not unusual. According to flight tracks available at Flightradar24.com, the plane often loses its ADS-B signal around that area. Depending on atmospheric conditions, it might lose its secondary radar coverage as well. But its virtual track within the air traffic control system continued. It wasn’t until the flight failed to establish communication with controllers in Vietnam that the red flag went up. Not only had Flight 370 disappeared, it had vanished.


There’s a fourth source of information about airliners that’s a bit more obscure, because it isn’t visible to air traffic controllers. ACARS stands for Aircraft Communications Addressing and Reporting System. It’s a way that aircraft can communicate automatically via telex-style messages with an airline’s dispatch and maintenance offices. Depending on the service, a plane’s computer can transmit anywhere from once a minute to every half-hour, and because satellite communications are used, the messages can be sent from anywhere in the world. After the authorities realized that Air France Flight 447 had disappeared, they went back and retrieved the plane’s final ACARS transmissions, which revealed that the plane had experienced a cascading series of problems just before it was lost. ACARS provided the first clues that eventually led to the unraveling of the whole mystery.


In the case of Flight 370, however, the airline has stated that the ACARS reported nothing unusual. They haven’t been any more forthcoming than that, however; it’s not even clear how often they were receiving messages, or even if it was turned on.


So no ACARS, no secondary radar, no radio calls, no ADS-B. Only two causes could result in a flight losing communications so completely. “You can turn it off,” says Sid McGuirk, professor of air traffic management at Embry-Riddle University, “or you can have an electronics failure.”


At this point, either remains a possibility, given the scarcity of clues. Past air crashes have always turned up some definitive evidence by this stage of the proceedings. This incident (frankly, we’re not even 100 percent sure it is a crash) is different. So far, no debris field has been found, the Pentagon reports that it detected no midair explosions in the area, and Malaysian authorities have issued contradictory statements about what primary-radar tracks they may or may not have observed. Based on the vast search area, it appears that authorities believe that the plane may have been deliberately flown far from its original heading. If that’s the case, then whoever redirected the plane might well have timed its abduction to coincide with the period when it would have slipped out of sight of the air traffic control system anyway — presumed to be operating normally, but actually veiled in the fog of unknowability.


That would take a savvy operator, to put it mildly. So was it an inside job? That seems like a far-out conjecture, but then again, the one thing that seems clear is that Flight 370’s circumstances are unlike anything we’ve known before. In one of Arthur Conan Doyle’s most famous lines, he has Sherlock Holmes observe: “Once you've ruled out the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be true.” What this dictum fails to take into account is that the world includes many eventualities that our imaginations have so far failed to register.


This article is part of Future Tense, a collaboration among Arizona State University, the New America Foundation, and Slate. Future Tense explores the ways emerging technologies affect society, policy and culture. To read more, visit the Future Tense home page.



Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Pentagon officials: We need more base closures


Each military branch has excess capacity and needs another round of base realignment and closure, defense officials told a House panel Wednesday.


Appearing before the House Appropriations Committee’s Military Construction, Veterans Affairs and Related Agencies Subcommittee, officials noted varying amounts of excess capacity on U.S. bases, and sought help.


“The bottom line is: We need another round of BRAC,” said Kathleen Ferguson, acting assistant secretary of the Air Force for installations, environment and logistics.


John Conger, acting deputy undersecretary of defense for installations and environment, said he knows the last round of BRAC, in 2005, left “a bad taste” in the mouths of many in Congress, but that this would be different. The key reason that one cost so much was that “we were willing to accept recommendations that did not save money,” he said.


The 2005 round of BRAC was actually more like two concurrent rounds — one for transformation and one for efficiency, Conger said.


Altogether, the BRAC cost about $35 billion, and $29 billion of that was for the transformation piece, which only resulted in about $1 billion in yearly savings, Conger said. The efficiency piece cost $6 billion and resulted in recurring savings of $3 billion each year, he said.


Now, the military is requesting just the “efficiency” piece, Conger said.


“We don’t want to be wasting money on unneeded facilities,” he said.


The Army has an average of 18 percent excess capacity at U.S. bases, according to a recent facility capacity analysis, and end-strength reductions will increase that excess capacity even more, said Katherine Hammack, assistant secretary of the Army for installations, energy and environment.


The Air Force does not have a recent capacity analysis, but had 24 percent excess capacity in 2004, Ferguson said. The last round of BRAC only helped with a very small portion of that extra space, and the Air Force has reduced active-duty end strength by nearly 8 percent since then, she said, so officials know there is plenty of excess that could be closed.


The Navy also doesn’t have a recent analysis, but does know they have some excess capacity and supports a new round of BRAC, said Dennis McGinn, assistant secretary of the Navy for energy, installations and environment.


Still, members of the committee noted their displeasure with the 2005 BRAC process, and worried that the Pentagon is not budgeting enough for military construction in fiscal 2015.


The military construction request for fiscal 2015 is $6.6 billion, about 40 percent lower than the request for fiscal 2014.


“I haven’t seen requests this low for a long, long time,” said Rep. Sanford Bishop, D-Ga., the ranking member of the committee.


Conger, Ferguson, Hammack and McGinn said the smaller request is the result of efforts to meet the requirements of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2013; they said the services are willing to take a risk in cutting facilities maintenance so they can use more funding to support warfighters.


But Rep. John Culberson, the Texas Republican who serves as the subcommittee’s chairman, called the low number “shocking,” and said he does not want troops and their families to be neglected.


“We love you and we want to help,” he said, adding that the committee would try to find a way to fund maintenance and construction programs.


hlad.jennifer@stripes.com

Twitter: @jhlad



5th Fleet commander Adm. Miller nominated deputy CNO




MANAMA, Bahrain — The commander of U.S. 5th Fleet, Vice Adm. John W. Miller, has been nominated to deputy chief of naval operations at the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel announced Tuesday.


Miller has served as commander of U.S. Naval Forces Central Commnad and 5th fleet since May 2012. A replacement has not yet been named.


If confirmed by the Senate, Miller would be responsible for operations, plans, and strategy at the office of the Chief of Naval Operations, according to a Pentagon announcement.


Since May 2012, Miller has been serving as the commander of U.S. Naval Forces Central Command and 5th Fleet, which encompasses about 2.5 million square miles of water area around the volatile Middle East region, including the Persian Gulf, Gulf of Oman, Gulf of Aden and Red Sea.


news@stripes.com




Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Navy: Pilot error caused Prowler jet crash that killed 3


U.S. Navy officials on Tuesday said pilot error caused a training jet to crash into a farm field a year ago several miles west of Harrington, Wash.


A detailed review of the accident, released by the Navy’s Pacific Fleet headquarters in San Diego, found mechanical failure did not cause the crash last March 11 of the Navy EA-6B Prowler, based at Whidbey Island Naval Air Station.


The crash, which occurred just before 9 a.m., killed pilot Lt. Valerie Cappelaere Delaney, 26, from Ellicott City, Md.; flight officer Lt. William Brown McIlvaine III, 24, of El Paso, Texas; and flight officer Lt. Cmdr. Alan A. Patterson, 34, from Tullahoma, Tenn.


Whidbey Island is home to the U.S. Navy’s tactical electronic warfare squadrons.


The plane was on a routine training flight. Whidbey Island-based Navy and Marine crews typically fly at low altitudes over portions of Eastern Washington.


Area residents reported hearing a loud boom followed by a thick black cloud from the area of the crash.


Navy officials spent the past year reviewing training records along with reports from the crew of a Navy spotter jet that accompanied the Prowler.


Among several findings, the Naval review concluded the flight’s instructor, Lt. Patterson, had been placed into accelerated training, and that the other two flight officers were not fully prepared for the challenging mission they were flying.


The report reads, “The normally sufficient risk controls that did exist for this flight were undermined in three specific circumstances:


The unnecessarily accelerated training of Lt. Patterson and his assignment as an instructor in this event.


The failure to recognize and/or act on the marginal capability demonstrated by Lt. Delaney in the low attitude environment.


As stated in the investigation, all three aviators were technically qualified for the event. However when this crew was placed together in the low-altitude regime, their combined proficiency left them little margin for error.”


The Navy summary noted that the Whidbey Island training program had not had a fatal crash in the previous 40 years.


It added, however, that “low altitude formation flying is a hazardous mission and is among the higher risk events” Prowler crews encounter.


The full report on the crash and the Navy’s suggested response runs 391 pages.


Among the recommendations is for Whidbey Island commanders to strengthen reviews to minimize the training risks of such missions.


The full report detailing the crash and the Navy’s suggested response covers 391 pages.



Man testifies of poisoning dogs, shoe bombs at trial of bin Laden son-in-law


NEW YORK — Saajid Badat had been through all the training, from firing weapons while riding a motorcycle to watching dogs and rabbits, trapped under glass, die slow, agonizing deaths as he learned poisoning techniques.


He had laughed with other al-Qaida members as the self-confessed mastermind of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, scanned a list of tall buildings and crossed out the World Trade Center towers weeks after hijackers had destroyed them.


Now, Badat was ready to carry out al-Qaida’s next big mission, a plan to down two U.S. jetliners using bombs hidden in shoes. He even had his shoe bombs, one for each foot. But the plan fell apart after he visited his mother and father in England.


“My mother and father sat me down. My father said, ‘You better not be one of those sleepers,’” a reference to terrorist sleeper cells, Badat said Tuesday during several hours of testimony in a federal terrorism trial. His mother also registered her disapproval of terrorists, not knowing that her son had spent more than three years training to become a suicide bomber.


“It was then I decided to back out of the mission,” said Badat, 34, who was testifying in the trial of Sulaiman abu Ghaith, described by U.S. officials as the highest-ranking al-Qaida leader to face trial in the United States on terrorism charges.


Prosecutors allege abu Ghaith was al-Qaida’s chief propagandist and knew of plans to target the United States. On Monday, they showed portions of videos that abu Ghaith made after Sept. 11 warning of more attacks, including a “storm of airplanes.”


Badat testified that he never saw abu Ghaith during his years in Afghanistan, from January 1999 to 2002, even as he attended events and meetings with high-ranking al-Qaida chiefs, including Osama bin Laden. Even so, prosecutors say the fact that the shoe-bomb plot was being hatched at the same time abu Ghaith was warning of future attacks shows that abu Ghaith was part of a conspiracy to kill Americans.


Badat testified via video from an undisclosed location in Britain, where he grew up and where he spent 6 1/2 years in prison after his arrest in November 2003 on charges of conspiracy to harm an aircraft. He could not come to New York to testify because he is under indictment here.


Badat’s saucer-like eyes, formal elocution and almost prim demeanor made the tale of his path toward violent jihad all the more remarkable as he described a radicalization that began in 1997 after he had moved from Gloucester, England, to London. There, he fell in with radical Muslims who introduced him to the idea of jihad, and in early 1999 he made his first trip to Afghanistan to begin learning about weapons, explosives and lethal skills.


His most intense training came in early 2001, as he crossed paths with at least one of the future Sept. 11 hijackers in courses that included “security and intelligence,” which Badat described as a “prerequisite” for the more intense course in urban warfare and training.


In that course, he said, recruits were schooled in the art of carrying out operations in urban settings, such as riding on motorcycles while firing small arms. Some targets were named after world leaders at the time such as George W. Bush, British Prime Minister Tony Blair and Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon.


As Badat worked his way up the ranks, he was given assignments, including researching potential Jewish targets in South Africa. None of the missions compared with the one he was offered shortly after Sept. 11, 2001, when an al-Qaida leader asked whether he would be willing to blow up a U.S. jetliner.


“I decided yes, I would be willing to do this,” said Badat, who met with bin Laden after agreeing to the mission. Bin Laden told him to recite a Quranic verse if he became nervous.


The shoe-bomb plot involved Badat and another British citizen, Richard Reid. The two were each given a pair of shoes with bombs hidden in the soles in Kandahar, Afghanistan, in November 2001. From there, they headed to Britain with their deadly shoes in hope of making their way to the United States and each blowing up a U.S. airliner.


Asked by defense attorney Stanley Cohen how he traveled with the shoe bombs, Badat replied that he simply wore them. On his way back to London from Afghanistan, Badat said he gave one of his shoes to a Malaysian terrorist cell plotting its own airline attack.


It was unclear whether that group, which Badat said included a pilot, ever attempted to bring down a jet using the device.


After speaking with his parents, Badat said, he took apart the remaining shoe bomb and stashed its components in his home. He then called his al-Qaida handler and asked him to pass a message to Reid: “Tell Van Damme he’ll be on his own.”


Reid, he explained, was given the moniker of the action film star Jean-Claude Van Damme.


In his cross-examination, Cohen attempted to discredit Badat by casting him as a “mass murderer” in training who lacked empathy for his potential victims, whether passengers on a jetliner or small animals. In an especially tense moment, Cohen, sitting across a table from Badat in London, described the screams of a dog and a rabbit that were put under glass and poisoned by an al-Qaida trainer as recruits, including Badat, watched.


“It was an experiment,” Badat said of the killing of the animals, which represented targets of al-Qaida. “The instructor would shout out, ‘This is Clinton, this is Bush, this is Sharon.’”


At times, Badat’s voice dropped to an inaudible whisper and his eyes were downcast as Cohen asked him about his attitude toward the Sept. 11 attacks.


Badat admitted that upon learning what occurred, he had bowed in prayer to show his joy and had secretly wished he could have been part of the mission.


“I suppose you have an envy … and think, ‘I wish that was me,’” Badat said, adding that he now was ashamed of welcoming the deaths of more than 2,800 people.


Badat was arrested in November 2003 and released from a British prison in 2005 after agreeing to cooperate with authorities in exchange for a reduced sentence.


Prosecutors consider him key to their case against abu Ghaith, who faces life in prison if convicted on three charges: conspiring to kill Americans, conspiring to provide material support and resources to al-Qaida, and providing material support and resources to al-Qaida.



Army Reserve officer to plead guilty to giving secrets to Chinese girlfriend


HONOLULU — A civilian defense contractor accused of giving military secrets to a Chinese girlfriend half his age will be entering a guilty plea, his attorney said Tuesday.


Benjamin Bishop was expected to plead guilty in federal court on Thursday to one count of transmitting national defense information to a person not entitled to receive it and one count of unlawfully retaining national defense documents and plans.


Bishop, 60, was arrested last March at the headquarters for the U.S. Pacific Command, where he worked.


A document for the plea agreement filed Tuesday said Bishop emailed his girlfriend classified information on joint training and planning sessions between the U.S. and South Korea.


It said Bishop had classified documents at his Hawaii home, including one titled "U.S. Department of Defense China Strategy," another on U.S. force posture in Asia and the Pacific and a U.S. Pacific Command joint intelligence operations center special report.


An FBI affidavit last year alleged the then-59-year-old gave his 27-year-old girlfriend classified information about war plans, nuclear weapons, missile defenses and other topics.


Bervar has said the two were in love and that the case was about love, not espionage.


Bishop has been in federal detention in Honolulu for the majority of time since his March 2013 arrest.


U.S. District Court Judge Leslie Kobayashi allowed him to move to a halfway house last June. But a magistrate judge ordered him back to jail in December after he violated the terms of his release by emailing his girlfriend and writing her a letter.


The FBI alleged Bishop and the woman, now 28, started an intimate, romantic relationship in June 2011. The prosecution said she was a graduate student and she and Bishop were having an extramarital affair.


Utah state records show Bishop was married until 2012.


The FBI's affidavit alleged the woman may have attended an international defense conference in Hawaii, where she initially met Bishop, specifically to target people like Bishop who have access to classified information.


Authorities haven't released her identity or whereabouts. They also haven't said publicly whether they believe she was working for the Chinese government.


She was living in the United States as a student on a J-1 visa, according to the FBI.


Defendants must normally be indicted within a month of their arrest, but Bishop's defense team waived the deadline in exchange for an opportunity to view the prosecution's evidence, much of which is classified.


Bishop, who is a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army Reserve, worked in the field of cyber defense at Pacific Command from May 2011 until his arrest. Prior to that, he helped develop Pacific Command strategy and policy.


Bishop was familiar with the Pacific Command's highest priority capability gaps, the command's chief of staff, Maj. Gen. Anthony Crutchfield, said in a declaration filed in support of the prosecution's motion to have him detained without bail.


From 2010 to 2012, Bishop had access to "top secret" information on efforts to defend against a ballistic missile attack from North Korea, Crutchfield said.



Senator: CIA may have broken law, violated Constitution


WASHINGTON — The chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee charged Tuesday that the CIA may have broken the law and violated the Constitution by secretly infiltrating computers used by her staff to assemble a scathing report on the spy agency’s now-defunct detention and interrogation program.


“The CIA just went and searched the committee’s computers,” said Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif.


Feinstein unleashed her stunning charges in an address on the Senate floor that lifted the veil on an extraordinary power struggle over the release of the report that has been raging behind the scenes for months between the CIA and the panel, created in 1976 to oversee U.S. intelligence organizations after a series of domestic spying scandals.


“The CIA’s search may well have violated the separation of powers principles embodied in the United States Constitution,” Feinstein said. “It may have undermined the constitutional framework essential to effective congressional oversight of intelligence activities.”


In addition, she said CIA intrusions into her staff’s computers also may have breached the Fourth Amendment’s bar on illegal searches, a law prohibiting computer fraud and a 1981 presidential order that greatly restricts the agency’s authority to spy on American citizens.


CIA Director John Brennan denied Feinstein’s allegations after a speech to the Council on Foreign Relations marking his first year at the helm of the spy agency.


“Nothing could be further from the truth. I mean, we wouldn’t do that,” Brennan said. “That’s just beyond … the scope of reason in terms of what we’d do.”


Denouncing the CIA’s use of waterboarding and other harsh interrogation techniques as an “un-American, brutal program,” Feinstein said the resolution of the battle would determine the ability of her committee to be an effective watchdog over the CIA and other U.S. intelligence agencies.


“The recent actions that I have just laid out make this a defining moment for the oversight (powers) of our Intelligence Committee,” Feinstein said. “How this will be resolved will show whether the Intelligence Committee will be effective in monitoring and investigating our nation’s intelligence activities.”


Many experts, including former U.S. military commanders and officials, have condemned as torture the use of the harsh techniques in the interrogations of suspected terrorists in secret CIA “black site” prisons overseas. The George W. Bush administration and the agency contend the methods were legal, although it has emerged that the CIA used some techniques before the program underwent a Justice Department legal review.


Brennan denied that the CIA was trying to impede the release of the committee study, contending that 15 months after the panel approved the report, it still hasn’t been given to the agency to vet before a public release.


“We are not in any way, shape or form trying to thwart this report’s … release,” he said.


U.S. officials have said that the CIA didn’t actively monitor the computers, but instead it went back and scoured three years’ worth of logs in determining what they claimed was the unauthorized removal of highly classified materials from a secret CIA electronic reading room by the committee staff.


White House spokesman Jay Carney declined to discuss the dispute in any detail.


“What I can say is that you saw the CIA director say today that if there was any inappropriate activity by CIA, he would, of course, want to get to the bottom of it, and certainly the president would agree with that,” Carney said.


In her speech, Feinstein revealed that at one point in 2010, CIA officials misled the committee in claiming that the White House had ordered them to block her staff’s access to top-secret documents that they had been given permission to review.


“When the committee approached the White House, the White House denied giving the CIA any such order,” she said.


Feinstein leveled her charges a week after McClatchy first reported the allegations that the CIA secretly monitored computers used in researching and compiling the committee’s 6,300-page study of the agency’s detention and interrogation program at a secret CIA-leased facility in Northern Virginia.


In a separate report also confirmed by Feinstein, McClatchy disclosed that Democratic staffers printed out and took back to their secure space on Capitol Hill a copy of an internal CIA review. She and other Democratic senators assert the internal review proves that the CIA misled the committee in disputing key findings of the study.


“To say the least, this is puzzling,” said Feinstein. “How can the CIA’s official response to our study stand factually in conflict with its own internal review?”


Feinstein said that CIA Inspector General David Buckley had referred the CIA’s computer searches to the Justice Department “given the possibility of a criminal violation by CIA personnel.”


Shortly after the referral was made, she said, the acting CIA general counsel filed a “crime report” with the Justice Department “concerning the committee’s staff’s actions,” which she decried as a “potential effort” at intimidation.


She went on to point out that from mid-2004 until President George W. Bush halted the interrogation program in 2009, the same CIA lawyer was the main legal counsel to the agency unit that oversaw the program.


Feinstein apparently was referring to the agency’s senior deputy general counsel, Robert Eatinger. The CIA declined to confirm the identity of the individual to whom Feinstein was referring.


The CIA lawyer “is mentioned by name more than 1,600 times in our study, and now this individual is sending a crimes report to the Department of Justice,” she said. “The acting general counsel himself provided inaccurate information to the Department of Justice about the program.”


Feinstein defended her staff, saying they had broken no laws in printing out and taking the internal CIA review out of the CIA facility and placing it in a safe in their high-security office in at the Senate.


“The staff members who have been working on this study … have devoted years of their lives to it, wading through the horrible details of the CIA program that never, never, never should have existed,” she said.


The study — which cost $40 million, took four years to complete and entailed a review of 6.2 million pages of top-secret CIA operational cables, reports and other documents — concluded that the agency’s use of harsh interrogation techniques produced very little intelligence of any value, according to lawmakers who have read it.


The program didn’t reveal the information that enabled the CIA to pinpoint Osama bin Laden’s suspected hideout in Pakistan at which the al-Qaida leader was killed by Navy SEALs in May 2011, they’ve said.


Moreover, the study found that the agency misled Congress, the Bush administration and the public about the usefulness of the interrogation techniques, they’ve said.


Under an arrangement with the CIA, the committee staff was provided with “a stand-alone computer system” to review CIA-approved documents to which only agency technicians would have access. The technicians were barred from sharing any information from the network with other CIA officials without the committee’s permission, she said.


The blocking of the staff’s access in 2010 to documents to which they had already been given access constituted the first of what Feinstein said were two secret searches of their computers by the CIA.


The matter was settled when the committee received assurances from the CIA and the White House that “there would be no further unauthorized access to the committee’s network or removal of access to CIA documents already provided to the committee,” she said.


Later in 2010, the staff found a draft summary of the internal review, which had been ordered by then-CIA Director Leon Panetta, using a search engine provided by the CIA to scour a database into which contractors dumped millions of top-secret documents after reviewing them numerous times to ensure that they were related to the study and weren’t covered by executive privilege, she said.


How the draft summary of the review got into the database remains unknown, although Feinstein suggested it may have been put there by a whistleblower.


She denied news reports in some publications that quoted unidentified U.S. officials who suggested that committee staffers “hacked” through a firewall into a CIA network to obtain the draft Panetta review. She also rejected contentions that the committee wasn’t entitled to some parts of the draft even though they were marked “privileged” and “deliberative.”


The Senate’s top legal adviser determined that “Congress does not recognize these claims of privilege when it comes to documents provided to Congress for our oversight duties,” she said. “So we believe we had every right to review and keep the documents.”


The Panetta review consisted of summaries of the documents provided to the committee compiled by a separate team of CIA officials, some of whom also included their own analysis of the contents of the materials.


“What was unique and interesting about the internal documents was not their classification level but rather their analysis and acknowledgment of significant CIA wrongdoing,” Feinstein said.


Panetta ordered the review after determining that no records were being kept of the contents of the documents, U.S. officials have said. They’ve denied that the review represented a formal examination of the interrogation program, downplayed its importance, and said that the reviewers’ analyses were personal observations that weren’t subjected to the agency’s formal evaluation procedures.


The staff decided to print out the draft Panetta review and take it to Capitol Hill because the CIA had “previously withheld and destroyed information about its detention and interrogation program,” Feinstein said, referring to the agency’s destruction over the objections of the Bush administration of videotapes of interrogation sessions.


“There was a need to preserve and protect the Panetta review in the committee’s own secure spaces,” she said. “The relocation of the internal Panetta review was lawful.”


On Jan. 15, she said, Brennan requested an emergency meeting with her and Sen. Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., the committee vice chairman, to inform them that “without prior notification or approval, CIA personnel had conducted a search — that was John Brennan’s word — of the committee’s computers.”


Feinstein was roundly praised by Democratic senators and prominent human rights and civil liberties groups for her speech. It was a marked contrast to criticism of her defense of the National Security Agency’s bulk collection of Americans’ communications data.


“I commend Chairman Feinstein for speaking so forcefully in defense of the indispensable role that Congress plays under our Constitution in overseeing the executive branch and in particular the intelligence community,” said Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. “Chairman Feinstein described a troubling pattern of interference and intimidation by the CIA that raises serious questions about possible violations of the Constitution and our criminal laws.”



Air Force to eliminate nearly 500 aircraft in 25 states, D.C. and overseas


WASHINGTON — The Air Force plans to cut nearly 500 planes from its inventory over the next five years if the Defense Department’s Fiscal 2015 budget request is approved by Congress, the service announced Monday.


The reductions — which would affect the active duty, Guard and Reserve — would be implemented in 25 states and the District of Columbia, according to a diagram provided by the Air Force. Only 47 planes would be eliminated overseas at a time when officials are emphasizing the importance of maintaining a strong forward presence to deter adversaries and respond quickly to crises.


The drawdown was necessitated by budget constraints imposed by Congress. The Air Force’s proposed base budget is $109.3 billion, down from the $114.1 billion originally proposed for this year, but slightly higher than the $108.8 billion actually enacted by Congress. If sequestration goes back into effect in fiscal 2016, the service’s budget would take further hits.


“Our challenge in a constrained funding environment is to maintain the balance between having a ready force today, and a modern force tomorrow,” Air Force budget director Maj. Gen. Joe Martin told reporters at the Pentagon last week.


The cuts would entail the elimination of the entire A-10 and U-2 fleets, as well as significant reductions in the number of F-15s and MQ-1s.


“In addition to fleet divestment, we made the tough choice to reduce a number of tactical fighters, command and control, electronic attack and intra-theater airlift assets so we could rebalance the Air Force at a size that can be supported by expected funding levels. Without those cuts, we will not be able to start recovering to required readiness levels,” Air Force Chief of Staff Gen. Mark A. Welsh III said in a news release.


The Air Force’s top budget priorities are the F-35 tactical fighter, the KC-46 tanker and the new long-range bomber, and the Pentagon is trying to protect those programs from the budget axe, officials said.


The procurement budget for the F-35, which has been plagued by cost overruns, technical problems and schedule delays, would rise to about $4.3 billion from $3.3 billion this year, funding the purchase of 26 planes. The Air Force would buy seven new tankers at a cost of $1.6 billion. Money for research, development and testing for the new bomber would more than double from $359 million this year to $914 million, Martin said.


As the war in Afghanistan draws down and China continues to rise militarily, the U.S. military is trying to move assets to the Asia-Pacific region and prioritize high-end platforms over personnel.


“The FY15 [budget proposal] request favors a smaller and more capable force — putting a premium on rapidly deployable, self-sustaining platforms that can defeat more technologically advanced adversaries,” Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said last month.


To maintain capability at lower cost, some assets will be moved from the active duty force to the Reserve. The size of the Reserve fleet will only decrease by 17 aircraft, according to the diagram.


“Wherever possible the Air Force leveraged opportunities to rebalance personnel and force structure into the Reserve component,” Air Force Secretary Deborah James said in the news release. “For that reason, at most Air Reserve component locations where we divested aircraft, we replaced the existing flying missions with a new mission and preserved the majority of the manpower to ease the transition.”


In addition to getting rid of aircraft, the service also plans to slash personnel. The Air Force would reduce its end strength from 503,000 airmen to 483,000 in fiscal 2015. The removal of 17,000 active duty airmen and 3,000 Air Reserve members would be accomplished through the elimination of weapons systems, reductions in headquarters staffing and paring back aircrew-to-cockpit ratios as combat in Afghanistan winds down, officials said last week.


The Air Force plans to use voluntary force reduction measures to thin out the ranks, as well as involuntary programs if necessary, Martin said.


At this point, these Air Force plans are just proposals because Congress has yet to approve them. Certain measures, such as the elimination of the A-10, will be strongly opposed by some lawmakers.


At a budget hearing last week, Sen. Carl Levin D-Mich., the chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said some of the proposed force structure reductions would be “difficult for many to support.”


Senators Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H., John McCain, R-Ariz. and Saxby Chambliss, R-Ga., have all come out against the elimination of the A-10. Ayotte’s husband is a former A-10 pilot. McCain and Chambliss each represent states where dozens of the aircraft are based.


harper.jon@stripes.com

Twitter: @JHarperStripes



Monday, March 10, 2014

Restriction of 'good soldier' defense at center of Senate bill


SAN DIEGO — The U.S. Senate is poised to approve an amendment Monday that will severely restrict the use of the “good soldier” defense and, supporters say, strengthen reforms to the Uniform Code of Military Justice to protect and empower victims of sexual assault.


Critics say the move does not go far enough.


Under the amendment, sponsored by Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., defendants could no longer use their good military character as a defense unless it directly related to an element of the crime with which they are charged. Critics contend that the “good soldier” defense is inherently biased in favor of long-serving, senior personnel. The bill also requires military attorneys assigned to victims of sexual assault to discuss the merits of having their case heard in the military or civilian justice system; allows victims to say where they would like the case to be heard; and sets up a confidential process that allows victims of sexual assault to challenge the terms or characterization of their discharge.


The amendment also requires that the civilian service secretary review any case in which the prosecutor recommends moving forward and the commander disagrees; changes passed in the National Defense Authorization Act in December call for review only if the commander disagrees with his or her legal counsel about moving forward. Additionally, the amendment clarifies that the sexual assault prevention-related changes that passed in the NDAA pertain to military service academies.


“This debate has been about one thing: getting the policy right to best protect and empower victims, and boost prosecutions of predators,” McCaskill said Thursday afternoon. “I believe we’re on the cusp of achieving that goal.”


Congress approved a raft of reforms in December as part of the 2014 defense bill. But even as military and congressional leaders address the crimes, the number of reports continues to grow. Preliminary data released last month showed about 5,400 instances of sexual assault and unwanted sexual contact were reported in fiscal 2013, up 60 percent from 2012.


The final vote on McCaskill’s amendment, scheduled for Monday evening, follows a week of developments in several military sexual assault cases:



  • On Friday, a Fort Hood soldier was charged with 21 counts of pandering, conspiracy, abusive sexual contact and other crimes. He had been the coordinator of the post’s sexual assault harassment prevention program before he was accused of setting up a prostitution ring.

  • Also Friday, an Army captain testified that Brig. Gen. Jeffrey Sinclair twice forced her to perform oral sex while the pair were serving in Afghanistan. Sinclair has pleaded guilty to adultery, improper relationships with three other women, impeding an investigation and viewing pornography in a war zone, but he denies the assaults.

  • On Wednesday, sources confirmed that the top Army prosecutor for sexual assault cases is under investigation for allegedly groping and trying to kiss a fellow Army lawyer at a sexual assault legal conference; he has been suspended from his duties.


The vote also comes just days after another bill aimed at combating sexual assault in the ranks fell to a filibuster. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand’s bill, the Military Justice Improvement Act, would have removed prosecution authority from the victim and accused’s chain of command in the most serious offenses, including sexual assaults.


Gillibrand had been rallying bipartisan support for the measure for months, but the bill came in five votes shy of breaking the 60-vote threshold it needed to survive a filibuster.


Eugene Fidell, who teaches military justice at Yale Law School and supports Gillibrand’s proposal, said removing the good soldier defense is a good idea because it tends to give greater advantage to men and senior personnel to the detriment of women and lower-ranking troops.


“It represents putting your hand on one side of the scale,” he said.


Fidell said McCaskill’s amendment is nothing more than window dressing.


“This is taking a structure from 1774 and turning it into a structure from 1784,” he said. “This should be called the military deck chairs amendment of 2014.”


He is still hopeful that some version of Gillibrand’s bill will pass.


“I think the fact that the forces of reaction having done their damnedest were unable to get more than 45 votes is tremendously telling,” Fidell said. “I’m hoping that she will take advantage of this sort of timeout to critically review the bill, think of ways to make it even better, simpler, shorter, clearer … and when she comes out of the starting gate next time, I don’t see any erosion in her 55 votes.”


But Tim MacArthur, an attorney with Tully Rinckey who serves in the Army reserve and worked as a prosecutor and defense counsel while on active duty, said he does not anticipate that command authority will be taken out of the military justice decision-making process. Plus, he said, the system as it stands allows prosecutors who disagree with a commander on charging decisions to go to a different commander.


“At the end of the day, I think it’s a pretty fair system,” he said.


Gillibrand on Thursday praised the reforms that have already passed but said Congress has not gone far enough.


“We owe so much to those who bravely serve our country, and I will never quit on them,” Gillibrand said. “We will continue the fight for justice and accountability.”


Advocacy groups for victims of sexual assault in the military also vowed to keep fighting.


“Today’s disappointment is merely a detour in our march to justice,” said Lory Manning, a retired captain and senior policy fellow for the Service Women’s Action Network.


hlad.jennifer@stripes.com

Twitter: @jhlad



Man learning to dive to find remains of wife lost in tsunami


TAKENOURA, Japan — On a chilly morning in March, a 57-year-old Japanese man adjusted his diving mask before heading out to sea from the tsunami-hit northeast coast.


Yasuo Takamatsu is learning to scuba dive in hopes of finding the remains of his wife.


As Japan marks the third anniversary of the 2011 tsunami Tuesday, 2,636 people remain missing, their bodies presumably swept out to sea. Another 15,884 have been confirmed dead.


Takamatsu's wife, Yuko, was at her office when the magnitude 9.0 earthquake that spawned the tsunami struck offshore at 2:46 p.m. At 3:21 p.m., she sent him an email: "Are you OK? I want to go home." That was the last time he heard from her. She was 47 when she died.


Of 13 people who sought refuge on the roof of the two-story bank building, only one survived. Four bodies were found, while the other eight remain missing.


"She wrote, 'I want to go home,' " Takamatsu said. "Because I know that, that she feels that way, I want to look for her myself rather than depend on others to do it."


One recent Sunday, he and his instructor dived to a depth of almost 7 meters (23 feet), spending a little more than one hour underwater during the course of two dives.


It will take many more dives before Takamatsu, who retired from working as an aircraft mechanic with the Japanese military and is now a bus driver, will be experienced enough to take part in underwater searches.


"I haven't quite been able to get used to the buoyancy while diving," he said. "I need to get better, to find my wife."


His diving instructor, Masayoshi Takahashi, conducts searches underwater with other volunteers at least twice a month. They still find belongings, and on occasion bones.


Takamatsu is not asking for much, just something that would bring her home.


"Of course, I hope her body would show up," he said. "I suppose it would be her remains by now. I hope I could find something."



US soldiers in Korea get 15 minutes of foreign fame on reality TV show


SEOUL — Storming buildings during a mock assault, swapping items in Meals, Ready to Eat, and sleeping in unheated tents in the dead of winter may all be part of a U.S. soldier’s normal life during an exercise.


But rocking out at a pop concert, or having television cameras record your every move? Not so much.


A handful of 2nd Infantry Division soldiers recently became mini-celebrities in South Korea after appearing on “Real Men,” a popular reality television show about the Korean military. Each episode features Korean celebrities — singers, actors, comedians and TV personalities — experiencing some aspect of military life while being embedded with the South Korean armed forces.


The show has catapulted some of the American soldiers to their 15 minutes of foreign fame, at least when they leave Camp Casey, where all are stationed.


“People will ask me about it and want to take pictures with me; everyone from little kids to grown men and women,” said Staff Sgt. Jesse Kennedy, 27, one of three soldiers who was featured prominently in the episode. “Before, nobody knew who I was, and now everybody knows who I am.”


Nearly three dozen 2ID soldiers appeared on the episode, which was taped in January and aired several times last month. The soldiers, all with the 2nd Battalion, 9th Infantry (Mechanized), 1st Armored Brigade Combat Team, lived and trained alongside their South Korean counterparts at a 17th Infantry Division base for two days, with the experience culminating in a raid on a mock village. The exercise was scheduled before the filming proposal was submitted, 2ID said.


The 90-minute episode included often-mundane interactions between the men. When soldiers from the two countries first meet, they compare ranks, and the Americans answer questions about their ages, favorite Korean foods, and show off their 2ID Indianhead patch.


The show is heavy on the laugh track and corny music, and is as much a comedy as a reality show. One scene pokes fun at a Korean soldier who scrunches his eyes shut while riding in a wind-rocked Black Hawk, declaring that he will never fly in a helicopter again.


In another scene, South Korean soldier-celebrity Sohn Jin-young, a runner-up in a Korean singing competition similar to “American Idol,” tells the 2ID soldiers, in English, “I am locker” — presumably meaning to explain that he is a rock musician — before pulling out his guitar and singing “Knocking on Heaven’s Door.”


Munhwa Broadcasting Corp., the South Korean network that produced the show, declined to speak with Stars and Stripes.


A proposal submitted by the network to the U.S. military’s Office of the Chief of Public Affairs in Los Angeles, which coordinates military involvement with the entertainment industry, described the show’s purpose: “Through Korea’s top celebrities’ first-hand army experience, the show portrays not only the rigorous training exercises that soldiers go through, but also the fun that they have despite the tough training. Furthermore through these portrayals, the show reveals the comradeship in the army and emphasizes the essential role that the military plays for the security of the nation.”


A production agreement with the Department of Defense allowed 2ID to participate in the program.


“With the exception of any content considered operationally sensitive, the production company received a general release to use the footage they filmed,” 2ID officials said.


The soldiers were not paid to appear in the show.


“Real Men,” which began airing in April 2013, has resonated with the public in South Korea, where all able-bodied males are required to complete two years of military service. Most serve during their late teens or early 20s, sometimes interrupting their college careers to do so.


Previous episodes have included training in martial arts, scaling buildings, hostage rescue, tank maneuvering and meal preparation. The show featuring the 2ID troops also reflects country’s interest in both American culture and the U.S. military, which is often perceived as being inaccessible behind the walls of the many installations across the country, sometimes in the middle of major cities, including Seoul.


Many South Koreans have little one-on-one interaction with the 28,500 U.S. troops regularly stationed in the country.


In this episode, the U.S. troops not only ate in the Korean base cafeteria, but they also conducted a joint air assault, flying in on Black Hawks and clearing two buildings of a fake bomb.


“From the U.S. side, we were treating this as a training event, and if there were cameras there, so be it,” said platoon leader 2nd Lt. Nicholas Kardong, 23.


During training, the 2ID soldiers coached their South Korean counterparts on U.S. methods for conducting raids, such as approaching and clearing rooms.


“I was surprised at how seriously they took the training,” Kardong said. After the air assault mission, the soldiers watched a presentation that showed key moments of the mission, including when participants were “killed” and removed from the game.


“They took their removal very seriously,” he said. “They were clearly disappointed.”


At the start of the two-day filming process, camera crews selected a handful of soldiers who would be featured in the program, basing their decision on who was most outgoing and animated.


“At night it would kind of get annoying, because you just wanted to go to sleep and they kept wanting to film, but other than that, it was just another exercise,” said Pfc. Brandon Fleck, 20, who, along with Kennedy and Pfc. Joshua Lovelace, were spotlighted in the program.


He said he was surprised by the attention the soldiers have received since the show aired.


“I didn’t expect it to be that big,” he said. “I thought it was a little tiny show they were doing it for.”


Not so much. Six Korean celebrities — five of whom have completed their military service — took part in the filming.


“All the Koreans got nervous around them, but we didn’t know who they were so I didn’t get nervous at all,” said Lovelace, 22.


In one scene, Kennedy got a round of applause when he arrived at the group’s tent with a box of soft drinks and a plastic grocery bag filled with snacks.


“What is this?” a puzzled Korean soldier asked as he unrolled one of the offerings — a fruit roll-up that appeared to be several feet long. Two soldiers were shown nibbling opposite ends of the same snack before the screen flashed to an image of a man and woman eating a strand of spaghetti, Lady and the Tramp-style. Another soldier looped a length of his fruit roll-up around his neck.


The South Korean version of MREs, which included fried rice, kimchi and almond cake, got positive reviews from the Americans.


“It was a little better than ours,” Kennedy said. “After a while, you just get tired of eating the same things over and over again, you know.”


Stars and Stripes’ Yoo Kyong Chang contributed to this report.


rowland.ashley@stripes.com

Twitter: @Rowland_Stripes