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AFCEA Global Intelligence Update: 8/31/09

August 31st, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in International, Security

About this post: The post below is my edited summary of John McCreary’s informative, unclassified/open source NightWatch Global Intelligence Update.

afcea_logo_smNightWatch is published by AFCEA, the Armed Forces Communications & Electronics Assn. of which I am a member. Past editions of NightWatch are archived here in their entirety on AFCEA’s site.

UPDATES BY COUNTRY:

Japan: The Defense Ministry announced a 176.1 billion-yen ($1.88 billion) request of 4,846 billion yen ($51.7 billion) to build a ballistic missile shield, the Ministry announced 31 August, according to Kyodo News. The request is a reaction to the North Korean rocket launches earlier in 2009. The overall proposal, for fiscal year 2010, is a 3 percent increase over the initial budget. The Ministry also wants to build a helicopter-carrying destroyer and to buy 58 tanks to replace vehicles deployed more than 30 years ago.

The Defense Ministry apparently wants to register its requirements before domestic issues can bog down the new Democratic Party administration.

The Foreign Ministry announced it will investigate a Japan – U.S. secret accord on allowing nuclear weapons into Japanese territory after Yukio Hatoyama is inaugurated as prime minister, Vice Foreign Minister Mitoji Yabunaka told a news conference today, also reported by Kyodo News. The remark is a shift from the government’s longstanding position of denying the existence of such a pact. The covert pact allegedly allows nuclear-armed U.S. ships and planes to make port calls or fly over in Japan.

The national security bureaucracy is weighing in early, before the new administration is inaugurated. Expect the new administration to make changes cautiously, but it needs early results that distinguish it from the Liberal Democratic Party government, turned out after 54 years.

India-China: China violated Indian airspace 21 June when two helicopters dropped canned food in a barren region at Chumar, northeast of Leh, along the border, Indian Express reported 31 August, citing an Indian Army spokesperson. “It has happened. This is confirmed. But there is nothing alarming in it,” said Col. Kachari of the army’s Northern Command.

Perhaps more alarming is a development at the eastern end of the Himalayas. In August, a weekly Chinese publication devoted to international affairs stated Chinese claims to “southern Tibet”, which is now part of Indian national territory. The journal article rejected Indian claims that the McMahon Line is now demarcated, instead of the disputed boundary trace between China and India, among other assertions.

For reasons that are not yet clear, the Chinese appear to be putting pressure on India along the two disputed regions of the Himalayas – in the Aksai Chin area in far northeastern Kashmir and north of Assam in eastern India. Chinese pressure in these disputed regions is always a reminder to India to not press Pakistan too hard on security issues. Pakistan is China’s primary proxy in South Asia.

Turkey: Preparations at Incirlik Air Base are under way for the U.S. withdrawal from Iraq, DPA reported 31 August, citing Turkish newspaper Aksam. Approximately 100,000 of 140,000 U.S. troops in Iraq will return to the United States. U.S. forces are preparing prefabricated housing for the withdrawal that will begin in December.

For those who thought the US was staying for a long time, the Turks don’t [seem to] agree.

Gabon: Defense Minister and presidential candidate Ali-ben Bongo Ondimba declared victory 31 August in the 30 August presidential election, Bloomberg reported. Bongo, whose father, Omar Bongo, ruled Gabon for more than 40 years, claimed to have received results from nine regions in Gabon indicating he won the election, though official results are not set to be released until 2 September.

The younger Bongo had no serious opposition. Democracy in Gabon has created another dynasty.

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Rural Telehealth and Advanced Technologies Conference

August 29th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Healthcare, Technology

As the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania heads into the 60th day of its marathon state budget impasse, that’s no deterrent to some of the best and brightest minds in healthcare technology, military medicine, rural development and public policy.

Rural Telehealth and Advanced Technologies Conference - Loretto, PAThey’ll be converging on St. Francis University’s Center of  Excellence for Remote and Medically Underserved Areas (CERMUSA) in Loretto, PA next week for the inaugural  Rural Telehealth and Advanced Technologies Conference.

I plan to attend the conference, and to live-blog and/or live-tweet the proceedings, circumstances permitting, on Friday, September 4th. (More information to come.)

From the official conference website:

The focus of this inaugural conference will be Chronic Care: Model, Solutions, and Technology Applications. With the ever-increasing need to provide efficient, effective chronic care for afflicted individuals, especially in rural and underserved areas, this event will spotlight the Chronic Care Model and the escalating presence of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and Traumatic Brain Injury (TBI), as well as the causes treatments, and technological advances that encompass healthcare, both in the military and civilian populations.

• Conference Agenda is here.
• Speaker Bios are here.
• Registration info is here.

Continuing Education Opportunities

If you’re a qualifying healthcare professional, you can earn up to 6 hours of continuing education credit/hours, based on your  participation and credentials.  Read more…

Conference Sponsors:

TATRC DVBIC Highmark Blue Cross Blue Shield
St Joseph's Healthcare System

Healthcare: A Blueprint for Transformational Change

While not directly conference related, I’m particularly proud of the video below of my friend and colleague Nick Jacobs, FACHE delivering the Graduate School address at the conference venue, St. Francis University’s 2009 commencement ceremonies.

He’s introduced here by Fr. Gabriel Zeis, OFM, President of St. Francis University, who will be hosting the Rural Telehealth and Advanced Technologies Conference.

Nick’s a singularly unique, outside-the-box kind of guy when it comes to innovative healthcare thinking.  As a hospital CEO,  he was identified as the first ever to have his own blog years ago (I helped just a bit) by the Wall Street Journal and Fortune.

Nick also brought 24-hour visitation, fountains, home-baked bread and strolling violin players into his hospital, flying in the face of all “conventional wisdom.” The result? One of the lowest infection rates of any hospital in the region, among other outstanding health outcomes. I encourage you to listen to what he  has to say. (Full disclosure: I edited the video.)

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