Tuesday, August 26, 2014

EM Launches Forum on Business Opportunities


WASHINGTON, D.C. – EM will host its first quarterly public forum to discuss upcoming business opportunities in the legacy nuclear cleanup program with contractors. 

   The Business Opportunity Forum will take place 1 to 3 p.m. Sept. 4 in the Small Auditorium, Room GJ-015 of the Forrestal Building at 1000 Independence Ave, SW, Washington, D.C., 20585.

   Organized by EM's Office of Acquisition and Project Management, the outreach event gives companies the chance to learn the latest news on doing business with EM and participate in dialogue about the program's business opportunities.

   There is no charge to attend. Pre-registration is required by providing your name, title, company name, and citizenship to EM's Carol Ward via e-mail at carol.ward@em.doe.govby Sept. 2, 2014.

   The forum is limited to 50 participants, with only one representative per business. Send questions to EM's John Evett at john.evett@em.doe.gov.

   EM plans to host the forum approximately each quarter. Topics will focus on how DOE is improving its acquisition and contract management and the status of ongoing and upcoming procurement opportunities. 


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Why Your Kid Shouldn’t Be Guzzling ‘Energy’ Drinks


Vitamins & Minerals are Safer and More Effective than 
Artificial Stimulants, Says Food Science Expert

Anxiety, hypertension, elevated heart rates, interrupted sleep patterns and headaches are just some of the side effects commonly associated with energy drinks, and those problems are more pronounced in children, according to a recent University of Miami study.

But that's just the tip of the iceberg. These drinks have also been linked to heart palpitations, strokes and sudden death.

The term "energy" drink is an unfortunate misnomer, says food science expert Budge Collinson. They don't give your body energy; they stimulate you with brief jolts of caffeine and unregulated herbal stimulants, he says.

"Soccer moms and dads buy these 'stimulant' drinks for their kids before matches because both kids and parents want that competitive advantage," says Collinson, founder of Infusion Sciences and creator Youth Infusion, (www.drinkyouthinfusion.com), an effervescent, natural multivitamin beverage that helps people maintain consistent and healthy higher energy levels. 

"For a few moments, you'll get that spike, but it's a short-term experience with a heavy long-term toll."

So, what are some ways kids can get a healthy energy boost? Collinson offers the following tips.

•  Go for a speedy bike ride together, take a brisk walk or hold foot-races in the yard.Numerous studies demonstrate the power of vigorous exercise in boosting energy. Exercise pumps more oxygen – pure, healthy fuel -- into the bloodstream and to the brain and muscles for a short-term energy boost. Exercising regularly will increase lung capacity, so the body will gets more oxygen on a sustained level for the long term. Exercise also releases endorphins, the body's natural feel-good chemical, which makes us feel happy. And happy people are energized people.

•  Seek nutrition from a variety of sources. As humans, we need more than 40 different vitamins and minerals to keep our bodies functioning optimally. Since there is no single food that contains them all, it is important for children and adults to eat a variety, including as many different vegetables and fruits as possible. Adding a daily multivitamin supplement with essentials such as CoQ10, arginine, theanine, resveratrol and magnesium can help ensure bodies young and old are running at top speed.

•  Drink plenty of water – the natural energy drink. Even mild dehydration can leave children (and adults) feeling listless, so encourage children to make a habit of drinking plenty of water. Kids need more water than adults because they expend more energy, and they may not recognize when they're slightly thirsty. Parents, too, often don't recognize the signs of dehydration; a national survey of more than 800 parents of kids ages of one month to 10 years found that more than half feel they don't know enough about dehydration. A quick, light pinch of the skin on the child's hand or arm is an easy check. If the skin is slow to resume a smooth appearance, the child is likely at least mildly dehydrated.

About Budge Collinson

Budge Collinson was the beneficiary of his mother's natural health formula as a sick baby, which led to a deep interest in health and wellness at a young age. After years of research and seeing the growing demand for natural products with clinical support, he founded Infusion Sciences,www.infusionsciences.com. Collinson earned a bachelor's degree in food and resource economics from the University of Florida and certification from the National Academy of Sports Medicine. Recently, he became a member of the American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine and consistently attends the Natural Products Expo, where he learns the latest science and news about nutritious ingredients. Collinson is also a go-to source for media outlets across the country for healthy lifestyle and food source discussions.


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“Meet” Martha Rountree



The following is a guest post by Cary O'Dell, Assistant to the National Recording Preservation Board.

You might never have heard of her, but Martha Rountree is one of the most important women in the history of American broadcasting. The longevity of her "product" rivals Lucille Ball's. Her importance and influence is as esteemed as Joan Ganz Cooney, who created Sesame Street. Rountree was the co-creator and original host of the program now acknowledged to be the longest running in television history–Meet the Press.

Martha Rountree

It began on TV in November 1947 and is still on the air today. Thanks to a 1986 donation from NBC, the Library of Congress today houses thousands of hours–both film and audio–ofMeet the Pressepisodes. Out of that collection, over 526 episodes date from the Rountree era (1945-1953) when the program was airing concurrently over both TV and radio–two different shows a week, one for each medium.

Rountree, along with being the program's co-creator, producer and chief "booker," also acted as the show's sole host/moderator. These "Meet the Press" episodes, which featured the likes of John Foster Dulles, Cornelius Vanderbilt, John F. Kennedy, Joseph McCarthy and Estes Kefauver in the "hot seat," are familiar to many viewers today; clips from them are sometimes used on the present-day incarnation of Meet the Press where they serve as segues to the show's commercial breaks. The Library, of course, archives the complete program just as they aired over a half century ago.

Rountree was born in 1911 in Gainesville, Florida, and like most early television journalists, began in print and radio before coming to the new world of the small screen. After high school and a few journalism courses at the University of South Carolina, she worked at newspapers such as theColumbia (S.C.) Record and the Tampa Tribunebefore moving to New York City where she and her sister briefly operated their own radio production company. In 1945 she created her first original program, Leave It to the Girls, for the Mutual Broadcasting System.

Originally hosted by Paula Stone, Leave It to theGirls was The View of its day as each week a cross-section of notable female personalities gathered to discuss any number of timely and politically issues. Regular panelists included Ilka Chase, Jinx Falkenberg and, occasionally, actresses like Sylvia Sidney and Lucille Ball. With time Leave It to the Girls became–like The View–more focused on issues of romance, marriage and other gender quandaries, frequently adding one male panelist for alternative viewpoints. Though the show eventually deviated from Rountree's original intent, it proved popular and ran for two years, eventually even migrating to Mutual television where it ran another five.

Rountree would have much greater and long-lasting success with her next media endeavor. Joining forces with Lawrence Spivak, then the publisher and editor of The American Mercurymagazine, Rountree created Meet the Press, a roundtable-type show where four of America's top newspaper reporters would grill a prominent news figure. She said at the time, "I think it is important that the public should hear its elected officers speak out and take their stand in answer to direct questions without preparation or oratory. There is nothing so refreshing as unadorned conviction."

Eleanor Roosevelt on Meet the Press radio program; Martha Rountree on far left. Prints & Photographs Division. http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cph.3b36700.

Meet the Pressbegan on Mutual Radio on October 5, 1945. From the onset, Rountree assumed the role of moderator, while Spivak served as the show's producer. At the time of her debut, Rountree was one of only two women in the nation then hosting their own public affairs program, the other being Eleanor Roosevelt. From the start the show generated almost as much news as it discussed. On one early broadcast, Senator Theodore Bilbo admitted to once having been a member of the KKK. On another, the head of the United Mineworkers Union announced a strike before he informed his own membership.

Just two years after its arrival on the radio airwaves–and after garnering a Peabody Award for broadcast excellence–Meet the Press debuted on television. Its first episode appeared on November 6, 1947, over NBC. Once again, Rountree was in the moderator's seat. Now a Sunday morning staple, for its first 18 years Meet the Press aired in primetime and continued to make news just as it did on radio. Though only 5'6″, blond, disarmingly pretty, and possessed of a voice that still maintained a slight hint of Southern gentility, Rountree nevertheless cut an authoritative figure and wasn't afraid to interrupt even the most forceful speaker. She was described in one magazine profile as a "diesel engine under a lace handkerchief."

As unusual as it was to see a woman like Rountree in such a prominent journalistic role during this period, she wasn't completely alone. By the late 1940s, newswoman Pauline Frederick was hosting her own weekly newscast over ABC and radio legend Mary Margaret McBride would bring her folksy interview style to primetime network TV beginning in 1948. Rountree would remain at the helm of Meet the Press until 1953 when disagreements between her and Spivak became insurmountable.

Martha Rountree moderates the 17 May 1953 broadcast of Meet the Press. Prints and Photographs Division. http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cph.3c18306 .

By 1956, Rountree was back on the air in another TV program of her own creation,Press Conference. Later, she returned to radio to create the daily syndicated program Capitol Close-Up. Debuting in 1957,Close-Up was on the air until the mid-1960s. Later, with her husband Oliver M. Presbrey, she launched a Warrenton, Virginia, radio station, WKTF (its call letters stood for "Know The Facts") and founded the DC-based Leadership Foundation, an organization created to "establish and maintain a world information center in the nation's capital." Rountree would serve as the Foundation's head until 1988, passing away 10 years later from complications from Alzheimer's disease.

In 1997, Meet the Press celebrated its 50th year on the air. Along with on-air retrospectives, and a commemorative book, the show also threw a gala party. The guest of honor was the show's co-creator, original host, and after nearly 70 years on the air, still its only female moderator: Martha Rountree.

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Breakthrough Antibacterial Approach Could Resolve Serious Skin Infections

Los Alamos and partners test ionic liquids to break bacterial biofilm layer and save lives

LOS ALAMOS, N.M., August 26, 2014—Like a protective tent over a colony of harmful bacteria, biofilms make the treatment of skin infections especially difficult. Microorganisms protected in a biofilm pose a significant health risk due to their antibiotic resistance and recalcitrance to treatment, and biofilm-protected bacteria account for some 80 percent of total bacterial infections in humans and are 50 to 1,000 times more resistant to antibiotics than simpler bacterial infections.

"In essence, we may have stumbled onto a magic bullet," said David Fox, a Los Alamos National Laboratory researcher on the project. "Through a robust screening strategy, our research team has identified a unique class of materials, known as ionic liquids, which both neutralize biofilm-forming pathogens and deliver drugs through the skin," he said.

"We extended our current capability in antimicrobial platforms with ionic liquids to new heights by partnering with Dr. Mitragotri at UCSB, who is an expert in transdermal drug delivery platforms. The merger made perfect sense," stated Fox.

"In several cases, we found the ionic liquid was more efficacious on a biofilm than a standard bleach treatment and exhibited minimal cytotoxicity effects on human cell lines (unlike bleach). This has excellent prospects for aiding antibiotic delivery to the pathogen through biofilm disruption but, most interestingly, the ionic liquids themselves are quite effective for pathogen neutralization," Fox said.

This work could have especially useful applications for military medical treatments, he noted, where soldiers in the field can be exposed to bacterial infections that are particularly difficult to treat.

Biofilms often persist in the periphery of an actual wound, beneath an intact, healthy skin layer and the difficulty of their treatment is largely due to the outermost layer of the skin, the stratum corneum, being a natural barrier for drug delivery.

"If the bacterial biofilm can be disrupted, delivery of antibiotics is greatly enhanced, and any dispersed pathogens are generally restored to normal antibiotic susceptibility," said Fox. "Further, many bacterial infestations in wounds penetrate under the outer skin layer, the stratum corneum, and deep into the tissue (epidermis and dermis). These materials are able to penetrate through the skin and effectively carry antibiotics to the deepest layers."

"Clearly, the ionic liquids would be of special benefit to our warfighters where exposure to biological agents in hostile environments is likely. Topical application as a prophylaxis or direct treatment to an open wound could buy enough time to reach the proper medical facilities when in an austere environment," he said. Importantly, ionic liquids can be derived from very cheap starting materials that are FDA approved and are extremely stable to high temperatures and pressures, which are necessary traits for commercialization in real-world applications.

In a groundbreaking manuscript appearing this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science, as part of a multi-institutional effort between Los Alamos, University of California Santa Barbara, Dixie State University and Northern Arizona University, researchers explored exploiting ionic liquids both in a concerted effort to combat antibiotic-resistant bacterial biofilms in skin, as well as for topical transdermal drug delivery. The comprehensive strategy resulted in the identification of ionic liquids that are effective at disrupting biofilms, neutralizing pathogens, and enhancing delivery of antibiotic into skin.

Biofilms are a major cause of chronic wounds and wound degeneration. Wounds from infected surgical incisions result in 1 million additional hospital days. Additional causes of bacterial infected wounds include traumatic injuries, as well as diabetic foot ulcers, venous leg ulcers, and pressure ulcers.

The total economic burden of skin disease was estimated to be approximately $96 billion in 2004, and the prevalence and healthcare costs for skin disease have been increasing over the last three decades.

Bacterial infections in the skin are among the most common diagnoses in hospital patients, accounting for some 10% of all hospital visits. Staphylococcus aureus infections acquired in hospitals, which account for only 16% of nosocomial infections, are estimated to result in $9.5 billion in extra patient costs and 12,000 deaths annually.

The comprehensive approach is unique in that the team examined a panel of in-house synthesized ionic liquids and enabled the discovery of one ionic liquid, choline-geranate, which showed excellent antimicrobial activity, minimal toxicity to epithelial cells as well as skin, and effective permeation enhancement for drug delivery. Specifically, choline-geranate was comparable with, or more effective than, bleach treatment against established biofilms of Salmonella enterica and Pseudomonas aeruginosa, respectively. In addition, choline-geranate increased delivery of cefadroxil, an antibiotic, by >16-fold into the deep tissue layers of the skin without inducing skin irritation.

The paper: Ionic liquids as a class of materials for transdermal delivery and pathogen neutralization, PNAS link here http://www.pnas.org/gca?submit=Get+All+Checked+Abstracts&gca=pnas%3B1403995111v1

Authors: Michael Zakrewsky, Vivian Le, Samir Mitragotri (University of California, Santa Barbara), Katherine S. Lovejoy, Theresa L. Kern, Tarryn E. Miller, Amber Nagy, Andrew M. Goumas, Rashi S. Iyer, David T. Fox (Los Alamos National Laboratory), Rico E. Del Sesto (Dixie State University, St. George, UT), and Andrew T. Koppisch (Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ).

Funding: This research was funded by University of California, Office of the President Grant 12-LR-237080. FTIR was performed in the Materials Research Laboratory (MRL) Shared Experimental Facilities, supported by the Materials Research Science and Engineering Centers Program of the National Science Foundation (NSF) under Award DMR 1121053. A patent application has been filed on the syntheses and biological applications of the ionic liquids.

Image caption: Artist's rendition of a cross section of skin layers (stratum corneum, epidermis and dermis) showing topical application of an ionic liquid for combating a skin-borne bacterial infection. The ionic liquid can be formulated with antibiotics for transdermal drug delivery or it can directly kill the bacteria infesting the skin surface. (Credit: Peter Allen, UCSB)


About Los Alamos National Laboratory

Los Alamos National Laboratory, a multidisciplinary research institution engaged in strategic science on behalf of national security, is operated by Los Alamos National Security, LLC, a team composed of Bechtel National, the University of California, The Babcock & Wilcox Company, and URS Corporation for the Department of Energy's National Nuclear Security Administration.

Los Alamos enhances national security by ensuring the safety and reliability of the U.S. nuclear stockpile, developing technologies to reduce threats from weapons of mass destruction, and solving problems related to energy, environment, infrastructure, health, and global security concerns.

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DARPA’s New Ground-X Vehicle

For the past 100 years of mechanized warfare, protection for ground-based armored fighting vehicles and their occupants has boiled down almost exclusively to a simple equation: More armor equals more protection.

DARPA's Ground X-Vehicle Technology (GXV-T) program seeks to develop revolutionary technologies to enable a layered approach to protection that would use less armor more strategically and improve vehicles' ability to avoid detection, engagement and hits by adversaries. (Graphic illustration provided by DARPA/Released)

DARPA's Ground X-Vehicle Technology (GXV-T) program seeks to develop revolutionary technologies to enable a layered approach to protection that would use less armor more strategically and improve vehicles' ability to avoid detection, engagement and hits by adversaries. (Graphic illustration provided by DARPA/Released)

Weapons' ability to penetrate armor, however, has advanced faster than armor's ability to withstand penetration. As a result, achieving even incremental improvements in crew survivability has required significant increases in vehicle mass and cost.

The trend of increasingly heavy, less mobile and more expensive combat platforms has limited service members in their ability to rapidly deploy and maneuver in theater and accomplish their missions in varied and evolving threat environments.Moreover, larger vehicles are limited to roads, require more logistical support and are more expensive to design, develop, field and replace.

(Artist's concept provided by DARPA/Released)

(Artist's concept of the Ground X-Vehicle provided by DARPA/Released)

The U.S. military is now at a point where — considering tactical mobility, strategic mobility, survivability and cost — innovative and disruptive solutions are necessary to ensure the operational viability of the next generation of armored fighting vehicles.

DARPA has created the Ground X-Vehicle Technology(GXV-T) program to help overcome these challenges and disrupt the current trends in mechanized warfare. GXV-T seeks to investigate revolutionary ground-vehicle technologies that would simultaneously improve the mobility and survivability of vehicles through means other than adding more armor, including avoiding detection, engagement and hits by adversaries.

This improved mobility and warfighting capability would enable future U.S. ground forces to more efficiently and cost-effectively tackle varied and unpredictable combat situations.

"GXV-T's goal is not just to improve or replace one particular vehicle—it's about breaking the 'more armor' paradigm and revolutionizing protection for all armored fighting vehicles," said Kevin Massey, DARPA program manager.

"Inspired by how X-plane programs have improved aircraft capabilities over the past 60 years, we plan to pursue groundbreaking fundamental research and development to help make future armored fighting vehicles significantly more mobile, effective, safe and affordable."

GXV-T's technical goals include the following improvements relative to today's armored fighting vehicles:

  • Reduce vehicle size and weight by 50 percent
  • Reduce onboard crew needed to operate vehicle by 50 percent
  • Increase vehicle speed by 100 percent
  • Access 95 percent of terrain
  • Reduce signatures that enable adversaries to detect and engage vehicles

The GXV-T program provides the following four technical areas as examples where advanced technologies could be developed that would meet the program's objectives:

  • Radically Enhanced Mobility – Ability to traverse diverse off-road terrain, including slopes and various elevations; advanced suspensions and novel track/wheel configurations; extreme speed; rapid omnidirectional movement changes in three dimensions
  • Survivability through Agility – Autonomously avoid incoming threats without harming occupants through technologies such as agile motion (dodging) and active repositioning of armor
  • Crew Augmentation – Improved physical and electronically assisted situational awareness for crew and passengers; semi-autonomous driver assistance and automation of key crew functions similar to capabilities found in modern commercial airplane cockpits
  • Signature Management – Reduction of detectable signatures, including visible, infrared (IR), acoustic and electromagnetic (EM) Technology development beyond these four examples is desired so long as it supports the program's goals
(Artist's concept of the Ground X-Vehicle provided by DARPA/Released)

(Artist's concept of the Ground X-Vehicle provided by DARPA/Released)

DARPA is particularly interested in engaging nontraditional contributors to help develop leap-ahead technologies in the focus areas above, as well as other technologies that could potentially improve both the survivability and mobility of future armored fighting vehicles.

DARPA aims to develop GXV-T technologies over 24 months after initial contract awards, which are currently planned on or before April 2015. The GXV-T program plans to pursue research, development, design and testing and evaluation of major subsystem capabilities in multiple technology areas with the goal of integrating these capabilities into future ground X-vehicle demonstrators.

Story and information provided by DARPA


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DoD: Russian Movements Further Increasing Tensions



By Army Sgt. 1st Class Tyrone C. Marshall Jr.
DoD News, Defense Media Activity

WASHINGTON, Aug. 25, 2014 - Despite Russian claims of de-escalating tensions with Ukraine, their actions, including movement of heavy equipment across the border continues to increase tension, Defense Department spokesman Army Col. Steven Warren told Pentagon reporters today.

"We've seen columns of Russian heavy equipment flow from Russia into Ukraine for the last several weeks," he said. "I can confirm that there have been numerous columns of Russian heavy equipment including tanks, armored personnel carriers, rocket launchers, air defense equipment and other heavy weapons.

"It's very concerning," Warren continued, "and again, we continue to call on the Russians to immediately stop supporting the Ukrainian separatists and begin working towards peaceful resolution."

The colonel noted the largest column seen entering Ukraine "about two weeks ago" consisted of over 100 pieces of rolling stock which included tanks.

"I don't have [an] exact breakdown of how many tanks, how many APCs, how many rocket launchers, but again, this is something that we've seen now for several weeks," Warren said.

"[It] is an indication that the Russians are deeply involved in this separatist movement in Ukraine," he added, "and that they are doing the exact opposite of what they claim they want which is to de-escalate the situation."

In fact, Warren said, defense officials believe that the Russians' efforts are increasing the tensions and escalating the situation.

"We've already reported that Russian artillery and rockets have fired from Russia into Ukraine in a clear violation of Ukraine sovereignty and a clear escalation of tensions there," he said.

There have been weapon systems, he said, such as SA-11 missile, flowing into Ukraine as a part of the columns of military equipment.

"We first started seeing those SA-11s, I believe, [at] the beginning of last week," Warren said.

The colonel noted the department generally believes these pieces of equipment are operated by Russian-backed Ukrainian separatists, although it's not entirely clear.

"So, again," he said, "another indication of the Russians' desire to escalate the situation to increase tensions and continue their support for the separatist movement in Ukraine."

(Follow Sgt. 1st Class Tyrone Marshall on Twitter: @MarshallDoDNews)

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Iraq and Syria Follow Lebanon's Precedent




By George Friedman 

Lebanon was created out of the Sykes-Picot Agreement. This agreement between Britain and France reshaped the collapsed Ottoman Empire south of Turkey into the states we know today -- Lebanon, Syria and Iraq, and to some extent the Arabian Peninsula as well. For nearly 100 years, Sykes-Picot defined the region. A strong case can be made that the nation-states Sykes-Picot created are now defunct, and that what is occurring in Syria and Iraq represents the emergence of post-British/French maps that will replace those the United States has been trying to maintain since the collapse of Franco-British power.

The Invention of Middle East Nation-States

Sykes-Picot, named for French diplomat Francois Georges-Picot and his British counterpart, Sir Mark Sykes, did two things. First, it created a British-dominated Iraq. Second, it divided the Ottoman province of Syria on a line from the Mediterranean Sea east through Mount Hermon. Everything north of this line was French. Everything south of this line was British. The French, who had been involved in the Levant since the 19th century, had allies among the region's Christians. They carved out part of Syria and created a country for them. Lacking a better name, they called it Lebanon, after the nearby mountain of the same name.

The British named the area to the west of the Jordan River after the Ottoman administrative district of Filistina, which turned into Palestine on the English tongue. However, the British had a problem. During World War I, while the British were fighting the Ottoman Turks, they had allied with a number of Arabian tribes seeking to expel the Turks. Two major tribes, hostile to each other, were the major British allies. The British had promised postwar power to both. It gave the victorious Sauds the right to rule Arabia -- hence Saudi Arabia. The other tribe, the Hashemites, had already been given the newly invented Iraqi monarchy and, outside of Arabia, a narrow strip of arable ground to the east of the Jordan River. For lack of a better name, it was called Trans-Jordan, or the other side of the Jordan. In due course the "trans" was dropped and it became Jordan.

And thus, along with Syria, five entities were created between the Mediterranean and Tigris, and between Turkey and the new nation of Saudi Arabia. This five became six after the United Nations voted to create Israel in 1947. The Sykes-Picot agreement suited European models and gave the Europeans a framework for managing the region that conformed to European administrative principles. The most important interest, the oil in Iraq and the Arabian Peninsula, was protected from the upheaval in their periphery as Turkey and Persia were undergoing upheaval. This gave the Europeans what they wanted.

What it did not do was create a framework that made a great deal of sense of the Arabs living in this region. The European model of individual rights expressed to the nation-states did not fit their cultural model. For the Arabs, the family -- not the individual -- was the fundamental unit of society. Families belonged to clans and clans to tribes, not nations. The Europeans used the concept of the nation-state to express divisions between "us" and "them." To the Arabs, this was an alien framework, which to this day still competes with religious and tribal identities.

The states the Europeans created were arbitrary, the inhabitants did not give their primary loyalty to them, and the tensions within states always went over the border to neighboring states. The British and French imposed ruling structures before the war, and then a wave of coups overthrew them after World War II. Syria and Iraq became pro-Soviet states while Israel, Jordan and the Arabians became pro-American, and monarchies and dictatorships ruled over most of the Arab countries. These authoritarian regimes held the countries together.

Reality Overcomes Cartography

It was Lebanon that came apart first. Lebanon was a pure invention carved out of Syria. As long as the Christians for whom Paris created Lebanon remained the dominant group, it worked, although the Christians themselves were divided into warring clans. But after World War II, the demographics changed, and the Shiite population increased. Compounding this was the movement of Palestinians into Lebanon in 1948. Lebanon thus became a container for competing clans. Although the clans were of different religions, this did not define the situation. Multiple clans in many of these religious groupings fought each other and allied with other religions.

Moreover, Lebanon's issues were not confined to Lebanon. The line dividing Lebanon from Syria was an arbitrary boundary drawn by the French. Syria and Lebanon were not one country, but the newly created Lebanon was not one country, either. In 1976 Syria -- or more precisely, the Alawite dictatorship in Damascus -- invaded Lebanon. Its intent was to destroy the Palestinians, and their main ally was a Christian clan. The Syrian invasion set off a civil war that was already flaring up and that lasted until 1990.

Lebanon was divided into various areas controlled by various clans. The clans evolved. The dominant Shiite clan was built around Nabi Berri. Later, Iran sponsored another faction, Hezbollah. Each religious faction had multiple clans, and within the clans there were multiple competitors for power. From the outside it appeared to be strictly a religious war, but that was an incomplete view. It was a competition among clans for money, security, revenge and power. And religion played a role, but alliances crossed religious lines frequently.

The state became far less powerful than the clans. Beirut, the capital, became a battleground for the clans. The Israelis invaded in order to crush the Palestinian Liberation Organization, with Syria's blessing, and at one point the United States intervened, partly to block the Israelis. When Hezbollah blew up the Marine barracks in Beirut in 1983, killing hundreds of Marines, U.S. President Ronald Reagan, realizing the amount of power it would take to even try to stabilize Lebanon, withdrew all troops. He determined that the fate of Lebanon was not a fundamental U.S. interest, even if there was a Cold War underway.

The complexity of Lebanon goes far beyond this description, and the external meddling from Israel, Syria, Iran and the United States is even more complicated. The point is that the clans became the reality of Lebanon, and the Lebanese government became irrelevant. An agreement was reached between the factions and their patrons in 1989 that ended the internal fighting -- for the most part -- and strengthened the state. But in the end, the state existed at the forbearance of the clans. The map may show a nation, but it is really a country of microscopic clans engaged in a microscopic geopolitical struggle for security and power. Lebanon remains a country in which the warlords have become national politicians, but there is little doubt that their power comes from being warlords and that, under pressure, the clans will reassert themselves.


Syria's Geographic Challenge
Repeats in Syria and Iraq

A similar process has taken place in Syria. The arbitrary nation-state has become a region of competing clans. The Alawite clan, led by Bashar al Assad (who has played the roles of warlord and president), had ruled the country. An uprising supported by various countries threw the Alawites into retreat. The insurgents were also divided along multiple lines. Now, Syria resembles Lebanon. There is one large clan, but it cannot destroy the smaller ones, and the smaller ones cannot destroy the large clan. There is a permanent stalemate, and even if the Alawites are destroyed, their enemies are so divided that it is difficult to see how Syria can go back to being a country, except as a historical curiosity. Countries like Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Israel and the United States might support various clans, but in the end, the clans survive.

Something very similar happened in Iraq. As the Americans departed, the government that was created was dominated by Shia, who were fragmented. To a great degree, the government excluded the Sunnis, who saw themselves in danger of marginalization. The Sunnis consisted of various tribes and clans (some containing Shiites) and politico-religious movements like the Islamic State. They rose up in alliance and have now left Baghdad floundering, the Iraqi army seeking balance and the Kurds scrambling to secure their territory.

It is a three-way war, but in some ways it is a three-way war with more than 20 clans involved in temporary alliances. No one group is strong enough to destroy the others on the broader level. Sunni, Shiite and Kurd have their own territories. On the level of the tribes and clans, some could be destroyed, but the most likely outcome is what happened in Lebanon: the permanent power of the sub-national groups, with perhaps some agreement later on that creates a state in which power stays with the smaller groups, because that is where loyalty lies.

The boundary between Lebanon and Syria was always uncertain. The border between Syria and Iraq is now equally uncertain. But then these borders were never native to the region. The Europeans imposed them for European reasons. Therefore, the idea of maintaining a united Iraq misses the point. There was never a united Iraq -- only the illusion of one created by invented kings and self-appointed dictators. The war does not have to continue, but as in Lebanon, it will take the exhaustion of the clans and factions to negotiate an end.

The idea that Shia, Sunnis and Kurds can live together is not a fantasy. The fantasy is that the United States has the power or interest to re-create a Franco-British invention crafted out of the debris of the Ottoman Empire. Moreover, even if it had an interest, it is doubtful that the United States has the power to pacify Iraq and Syria. It could not impose calm in Lebanon. The triumph of the Islamic State would represent a serious problem for the United States, but no more than it would for the Shia, Kurds and other Sunnis. As in Lebanon, the multiplicity of factions creates a countervailing force that cripples those who reach too far.

There are two issues here. The first is how far the disintegration of nation-states will go in the Arab world. It seems to be underway in Libya, but it has not yet taken root elsewhere. It may be a political formation in the Sykes-Picot areas. Watching the Saudi peninsula will be most interesting. But the second issue is what regional powers will do about this process. Turkey, Iran, Israel and the Saudis cannot be comfortable with either this degree of fragmentation or the spread of more exotic groups. The rise of a Kurdish clan in Iraq would send tremors to the Turks and Iranians.

The historical precedent, of course, would be the rise of a new Ottoman attitude in Turkey that would inspire the Turks to move south and impose an acceptable order on the region. It is hard to see how Turkey would have the power to do this, plus if it created unity among the Arabs it would likely be because the memories of Turkish occupation still sting the Arab mind.

All of this aside, the point is that it is time to stop thinking about stabilizing Syria and Iraq and start thinking of a new dynamic outside of the artificial states that no longer function. To do this, we need to go back to Lebanon, the first state that disintegrated and the first place where clans took control of their own destiny because they had to. We are seeing the Lebanese model spread eastward. It will be interesting to see where else its spreads.



Read more: Iraq and Syria Follow Lebanon's Precedent | Stratfor 
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Monday, August 25, 2014

Sixteen Former Puerto Rico Police Officers Plead Guilty to Running Criminal Organization from the Police Department




Former Officers Convicted of Racketeering, Robbery, Extortion, and Firearms Charges

           Sixteen former Puerto Rico police officers have pleaded guilty for their roles in a criminal organization run out of the police department.   The officers used their affiliation with law enforcement to commit robbery and extortion, to manipulate court records in exchange for bribes, and to sell illegal narcotics.



Assistant Attorney General Leslie R. Caldwell of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, U.S. Attorney Rosa Emilia Rodríguez-Vélez of the District of Puerto Rico and Special Agent in Charge Carlos Cases of the FBI’s San Juan Division made the announcement.


           “These 16 police officers were charged with fighting crime, protecting lives and property, and improving the quality of life in Puerto Rico,” said Assistant Attorney General Caldwell.   “Instead, they used their badges and guns to do the opposite, committing crimes, endangering lives, and stealing property under the veil of police authority.  This prosecution demonstrates the Justice Department’s commitment to holding all criminals accountable – including those who wear a badge.  We will use every tool at our disposal, including the RICO laws, to rid our communities of corruption.”



The following 13 defendants pleaded guilty to conspiracy to violate the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act:  Osvaldo Vazquez-Ruiz, 38; Orlando Sierra-Pereira, 37; Danny Nieves-Rivera, 35; Roberto Ortiz-Cintron, 35; Yovanny Crespo-Candelaria, 34; Jose Sanchez-Santiago, 32; Miguel Perez-Rivera, 35; Nadab Arroyo-Rosa, 33; Jose Flores-Villalongo, 52; Luis Suarez-Sanchez, 36; Eduardo Montañez-Perez, 29; Carlos Laureano-Cruz, 40; and Carlos Candelario-Santiago, 47.   Three defendants, Ruben Casiano-Pietri, 36, Christian Valles-Collazo, 28, and Ricardo Rivera Rodriguez, 39, pleaded guilty to robbery and extortion charges.   Several of the defendants also pleaded guilty to firearms charges in connection with the use of their police-issued firearms in furtherance of their crimes.   At the time of their criminal conduct, Flores-Villalongo and Candelario-Santiago were sergeants with the Police of Puerto Rico (POPR), and the other defendants were police officers.  Sentencing hearings are scheduled for December 2014.



According to court documents, over the course of the conspiracy, the officers worked together to conduct traffic stops and enter the homes of suspected criminals to steal money, property and drugs for their own personal enrichment.   They planted evidence to make false arrests, and then extorted money from their victims in exchange for their release from custody.   Additionally, in exchange for bribe payments, the officers gave false testimony, manipulated court records and failed to appear in court when required so that criminal cases would be wrongfully dismissed.   The officers also sold and distributed wholesale quantities of narcotics.



As just a few examples of their criminal conduct, in April 2012, defendants Vazquez-Ruiz and Sierra-Pereira conducted a traffic stop in their capacity as police officers and stole approximately $22,000 they believed to be illegal drug proceeds.   Vazquez-Ruiz later attempted to extort approximately $8,000 from an individual believed to be a drug dealer’s accomplice in exchange for promising to release a prisoner.



Further, in November 2012, defendants Sierra-Pereira, Nieves-Rivera, Ortiz-Cintron and Valles-Collazo illegally entered an apartment and stole approximately $30,000, which they believed were illegal lottery proceeds.



The defendants frequently shared with one another the proceeds they illegally obtained, and used their power, authority and official positions as police officers to promote and protect their illegal activity.   Among other things, the defendants used POPR firearms, badges, patrol cars, tools, uniforms and other equipment to commit the crimes, and then concealed their illegal activity with fraudulently obtained court documents and falsified POPR paperwork that made it appear they were engaged in legitimate police work.



The case was investigated by the FBI’s San Juan Division, and prosecuted by Trial Attorneys Brian K. Kidd, Emily Rae Woods and Menaka Kalaskar of the Criminal Division’s Public Integrity Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney Mariana E. Bauzá of the District of Puerto Rico.

Marysville metal caster invests $230,000 in hazardous waste reduction as part of EPA settlement

  

Agreement also includes $18,000 civil penalty for improper storage, handling and record-keeping

Contact: Hanady Kader, EPA Public Affairs, 206-553-0454kader.hanady@epa.gov

(Seattle–Aug. 25, 2014)  SeaCast, Inc., a metal casting facility in Marysville, Washington, has agreed to pay The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency a penalty of $18,000 to settle alleged hazardous waste violations at the company, which is located within the boundaries of the Tulalip Indian reservation.

As part of the EPA settlement, SeaCast will invest at least $230,000 to install and operate a production process "water blast" system that is expected to reduce in the amount of hazardous waste generated at the facility by 40 percent. SeaCast also agreed to implement procedures to prevent future violations of hazardous waste management requirements. 

According to Scott Downey, Manager of EPA's hazardous waste inspection unit in Seattle, strict compliance with federal hazardous waste storage and management requirements protects people and the environment.

"SeaCast has found a way to modify its production process and reduce its reliance on caustic cleaning solutions as a part of this settlement," said Downey. "One of the central goals of the EPA's hazardous waste program is to conserve resources and minimize the generation of hazardous wastes, so this project fits nicely."

EPA alleged that SeaCast:

  • Failed to maintain records of its hazardous waste determinations.
  • Stored hazardous wastes at the facility without obtaining a permit or complying with conditions applicable to hazardous waste generators. 
  • Stored hazardous waste on site for longer than 90 days, failed to maintain adequate aisle space between containers of hazardous waste, and failed to conduct required weekly inspections of hazardous waste storage areas. The company also failed to properly manage its universal waste lamps.

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Officials Expand Space-tracking Website


By Amaani Lyle
DoD News, Defense Media Activity

WASHINGTON, Aug. 25, 2014 - Defense Department officials announced additions to its space situational awareness program'sSpace-Track.org website.

In a recent telephone interview with DoD News, Air Force Maj. Gen. David D. Thompson, U.S. Strategic Command's director of plans and policy at Offutt Air Force Base, Nebraska, said the release of new high-quality positional information on space debris of an unknown origin will help owner-operators better protect their satellites from these objects and ultimately create less space debris.

"We run a predictive program that shows where the objects are, where they will be in the future, and the potential for these objects to run into each other," Thompson said.

Thompson explained that most of the debris that is considered "objects of unknown origin" resulted from launches or space collisions, but has not been definitively identified by source.

Thousands of space objects

The Joint Functional Component Command for Space at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California currently tracks more than 17,000 objects in space on a continuous basis, Thompson said. Among those objects, he said, about 1,100 are active satellites currently conducting operations.

The average person has a lot more invested in space than he or she may realize, Thompson said.

"We have more than 30 GPS satellites on orbit today providing global navigation and positioning for the world," the general said.

With modern smart phones offering so many diverse functions, the loss of connectivity and functionality could cripple a fair amount of consumers in the United States and abroad.

"Networks that run those and the timing required to keep them all in sync is enabled through the global positioning system that every U.S. citizen and just about every advanced global citizen depends on," Thompson said.

Yet it is the other approximately 16,000 objects -- the ones not active and/or of unknown origin in space -- that JFCC Space and Stratcom are most concerned with.

Objects present collision threat

Many objects, ranging from at least the size of the human fist to as large as the international space station, which is slightly larger than a full-sized soccer field, continue to pose a collision threat in space, Thompson said.

"There is also a high volume of debris smaller than the average fist that [JFCC Space] cannot track that are also on orbit today," he said.

With old satellites and debris orbiting at thousands of miles per hour, the probability of a collision poses a threat to the continuing mission of operational satellites.

Exchange of space information

While some active satellites are not maneuverable, JFCC Space officials said they try to inform the owners of all satellites that they may want to take action to reduce the likelihood of collision.

"Exchanging information allows spacefaring organizations to take action to reduce the risk of a collision that could generate hundreds of thousands of pieces of additional space debris," said Lt. Gen. John W. Raymond, JFCC Space commander. "JFCC Space shares information globally because it is in everyone's best interest to ensure the safety of the space domain."

An example of space cluttering occurred in 2007, Thompson said, when the Chinese conducted an anti-satellite weapons test and almost immediately created 1,500 new objects that pose a risk to satellites in orbit.

Stratcom tracks space objects

And after the collision of an inoperable spacecraft with a commercial communications satellite in 2009, Stratcom took on the role for the world in keeping track of such objects and providing that warning to others to prevent the situation from worsening, Thompson said.

"We have the assigned responsibility for planning and conducting space operations," said Navy Adm. Cecil D. Haney, Stratcom's commander.

"By sharing previously unavailable information on space objects, we're helping nations that operate in space to do so safely and effectively," Haney added. "It is one way we fulfill our assigned space mission for the U.S. and its allies, while also protecting capabilities important to citizens around the world."

Yet it is a mission that extends beyond the average civilian.

Warfighters depend on satellites

Joint warfighters depend on advanced warning such as missile launch or intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance from satellite systems, Thompson said.

"It's understanding what's there [in space], what [the object] is doing, and how it poses a threat to our military mission, to our ability to support joint forces and contribute to the global good," the general said. "While space is a very big place, there are a lot of things up there."

As such, for several years, JFCC Space has been responsible for monitoring, coordinating and synchronizing space operations for the Department of Defense.

"We are the single point of contact for U.S. military space operational matters," Raymond said. "We are not, however, the only ones who operate in that environment."

Many organizations in space

Many public, private, commercial and other governmental organizations conduct space operations.

"Space is not owned by anyone, it is used by all and we strongly support responsible and safe use of space and transparency of operations that go on in space," Thompson said.

Reversing congestion and pollution in space, he said, is a complex task.

"We are talking decades or centuries before the environment will clean itself naturally so we have to share and act responsibly with this precious resource because it's important to all of us," Thompson said.



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