Browse > Home / Archive: November 2009

| Subcribe via RSS

AFCEA Global Intelligence Update: 11/27/09

November 27th, 2009 | No Comments | Posted in Humanitarian Assistance, Security

NightWatch

For the Night of 27 November 2009

South Korea – North Korea: South Korean President Lee said he is willing to meet North Korea’s leader Kim Chong-il for an inter-Korean summit to improve relations, according to The Associated Press, 27 November.

According to South Korea’s Yonhap news agency, Lee said he has no political reason to hold a summit with Kim, but can meet him at anytime if it will help convince North Korea to give up its nuclear programs and resolve humanitarian issues. Lee stated that because the denuclearization of the Korean peninsula is such an important issue, he would plan to meet Kim anytime and anywhere if the summit objective can be achieved.

Philippines: Update. Andal Ampatuan, the mayor of Ampatuan town in Maguindanao Province on Mindanao, surrendered to the police today, he said to clear his name of suspicion in the brutish deaths of 57 people in the province.

The death toll has risen along with details of the shocking cruelty  of the killings, which appear to be the handiwork of the Ampatuan clan. The Ampatuan clan is credited for arranging President Arroyo’s electoral victory in the province in 2004 and for the victory of her party’s senatorial candidates in 2007. They just play rough.

Iran-International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA): For the record. The IAEA governors overwhelmingly voted to censure Iran for building a uranium enrichment plant in secret, Reuters reported. The resolution was the first by the 35-nation board against Iran in almost four years. It passed with rare Russian and Chinese backing by a 25-3 margin with six abstentions.

Germany: Update. The head of the German armed forces became the latest casualty of the Afghanistan conflict when he resigned today, after taking “political responsibility” for the civilian deaths in Konduz Province last month.

Honduras: Presidential elections will take place on Sunday.

Costa Rican President Oscar Arias promised to restore ties with the Honduras after it elects a new president, AP reported. Arias’ decision to acknowledge the next administration is a new setback for ousted President Zelaya who is urging the international community not to recognize the vote.

Arias, a Nobel Peace Prize winner, was a chief mediator in the unsuccessful negotiations to restore Zelaya to power. He now says the world should not punish the next Honduran government for the coup “like a second Hurricane Mitch,” by not recognizing the next government, isolating it,denying it cooperation.

Zelaya’s time has come to a close for now.

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

NightWatch 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.

Posted via web from planetrussell’s | [pre]posterous

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

Boyd, DNI and Closing the (OODA) Loop

November 20th, 2009 | 1 Comment | Posted in Entrepreneurship, Security, featured

book_john-boydI was saddened to learn that Dr. Chet Richards’ Defense and the National Interest (DNI) site is shutting down. If you’re unfamiliar with DNI, it’s been an informative and frequently provocative source of outside-the-box thinking (and a forum for diverse viewpoints) on national security topics in the post-cold war environment.

DNI has also served as the de facto repository for the wrtitings and work of the late Col. John Boyd (1927-1997), arguably one of the greatest (and certainly most influential) military strategists of the 20th century. Although not always acknowledged as such, his ideas  have also informed more than a few “A-list” business writers and world-class consulting organizations.

Boyd is best known for developing  the OODA loop (Observe, Orient, Decide, and Act) concept, originally formulated specifically for military operations.  Because of its broad applicability, however, the OODA model is also routinely applied to human behavior in a staggering variety of non-military contexts, from learning theory to business operations, including marketing as it relates to buyer behavior.

Heralding a legion of  imitators to come, Boyd was a one-of-a-kind, larger than life personality who referred to his office as the “thunder and lightning shop,” in contrast to the staid, “business as usual” that he perceived to be widespread throughout the rest of the military establishment.

Here’s Boyd on challenging assumptions and extracting what’s useful from widely different systems:

Thanks to Shlok Vaida and John Robb for the heads-up on the planned closing of the DNI site, and for the pointer to “Citizen Fouchet,” who compiled the direct links below to free, downloadable versions of Boyd’s best-known work.

A Discourse on Winning and Losing

Abstract of the Discourse and Conceptual Spiral (413KB .pdf)
Destruction and Creation
(on chetrichards.com)

Patterns of Conflict

Original format in PDF (2.9 MB)
PPT (1.5 MB)
PDF of PPT (830 KB)

The Strategic Game of ? and ?

Original format in PDF (587 KB)
PPT (319 KB)
PDF of PPT (97 KB)

Organic Design for Command and Control

Original format in PDF (409 KB)
PPT (201 KB)
PDF of PPT (90 KB)
The Essence of Winning and Losing
(on chetrichards.com)

Earlier work

Aerial Attack Study (7572KB .pdf)
Fast Transients
(1292Kb .pdf)

Source lists

Patterns of Conflict
Destruction and Creation

There’s also a lot of 4GW (Fourth Generation Warfare) material for people who swing that way, including  William S. Lind’s “On War” articles.

Finally, Mark “Zenpundit” Safranski, editor of the John Boyd Roundtable: Debating Science, Strategy and War, has written  a fitting homage to the DNI site.

So, while the future home of the this material remains uncertain, you’re encouraged to download it while you can. Whatever your field of endeavor, you’ll be challenged by Col. John Boyd’s insights.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,