Wednesday, August 31, 2005
CHINFO/FHTNC/USAFNS Debacle - #3 - The First Reasonable Request by FHTNC
A few weeks after the "order" to stop using the official US Navy seal on my website, I got a telephone call from Fleet Home Town News Center (FHTNC) Media Representative. I was asked if I could remove the house numbers from the addresses of the Navy/Marine Corps/Coast Guard releases. I told them that it was possible, but it would take me a week or two to develop, test and debug software to accomplish the task. Then, I was asked to delete all of the FHTNC releases on my website.
Before I could even ask "Why?", I was told that there were security concerns with publishing the house numbers of servicemembers next of kin (NOK) in the releases. I told them that I agreed to remove them, and I told them that I would wait until the traffic on the internet slowed down a little, and I would to so. That promise was made mid-afternoon, and by 9PM (2100 for military types) they were all gone - including the Army & Air Force Hometown News Service Releases (notice that FHTNC and AFHNS can't even agree on the spelling of Home Town. or is it Hometown?).
I had decided to remove all of the releases, as they all had house numbers of NOK. The next day, I advised the AFHNS media representative that I had done so, and why. I don't know which came first, but, AFHNS also removed the house numbers from their addresses at about the same time. Because of that, I felt that someone in the Department of Defense had raised the issue, and had enough power to make it so.
The next day, both FHTNC and AFHNS resumed the production of the releases without house numbers as if nothing had happened, and USAFNS.com went on getting the releases .. for a while.
There is one thing that I would like to say in defense of RAdm McCreary. He inherited this situation from his predecessor very shortly after the decision was made to order FHTNC to cease sending their releases to USAFNS.com. The man who held CHINFO billet when the decision was made is RAdm Pietropaoli. However, military tradition and military regulations make the person "on watch" fully responsible for anything that happens. I don't know the exact date of his retirement, but sometime between 12 June 2003 and 1 August 2003, Pietropaoli retired from the US Navy.
Guess where Pietropaoli went from CHINFO? You couldn't have guessed it! On 1 August of 2003, he replaced Charlie Robinson as the Executive Director of the Navy League of the United States. Earlier that year, Sheila McNeil was elected President of the Navy League. I believe that Pietropaoli had already accepted the Navy League Directorship when he made the decision involving the sending the releases to USAFNS. You might remember that I originally started out developing the website with the releases for the express purpose of giving (yes giving - no charge, nada, zilch) it to Navy League. It is very doubtful that they will ever have anything to do with it now.
In my next segment, I will disclose the name of the mid-level CHINFO staffer that started this mess with the request to remove the Navy seal from my website. Actually, I won't name him, but simply publish his second email to me. The first one being the request to remove the seal.
You can't make this stuff up!
~G - More to come!
Tuesday, August 30, 2005
Gunner's Project to Bring Free Telephone Service to Our Troops
I interrupt the CHINFO/FHTNC/USAFNS debacle installments to announce the beginning of a pilot project to bring "Free Telephone Service to Our Troops." The system will allow our deployed troops to use an internet telephone, to dial a six digit number, and get a second dial tone on a local telephone line in my house located in New Bern, NC. After they get the second dial tone, they can dial local numbers free of charge, or, use domestic calling cards to call their families. Once operational, the hardware in my home can be moved to a Family Support Unit at a nearby military base. Hopefully, that will be MCAS Cherry Point, NC.
Almost a year ago, I embarked on a project to setup a free telephone service for our troops. I learned of the Voice over IP (
Voice over Internet Protocol - See
http://www.webopedia.com/TERM/V/VoIP.html for a complete definition), and immediately realized that this could potentially be a great thing for our troops deployed at far flung posts all over the globe. I studied the state of the art, and ordered one of the phones through Free World Dialup (FWD - Owned by the founder of Vonage). The phone arrived, and I set it up, and called a special FWD (
http://www.freeworldialup.com) number that is manned by volunteers all over the earth. To my utter amazement, I found myself talking to a man in Argentina. We had a little difficulty communicating due to my inability to speak anything but Americanized English and my contact being able to speak very little English. I did learn that he was in Argentina, and that he used the VoIP phone frequently.
The clarity was remarkable. It sounded as if he was in the room with me. As a matter of fact, I turned on one of the features that creates a "background noise" that simulates the standard telephone background sounds. The clarity is absolutely astonishing.
I then went to work locating a device that could automatically answer a VOIP telephone, and connect to a standard PTSN (Public Switched Telephone Network ) telephone line - also referred to as POTS (Plain Old Telephone Service). I had a false start, bought some equipment that I couldn't use, but then I found another device, ordered it, and in about three sleepless days and nights, I found out how to set it up. I could dial a FWD number, and automatically get a dial tone on my home telephone line. I tested it by calling my wife's cell phone number - AND IT WORKED!
I was ready except for one small problem. My cable modem service wasn't reliable enough to support the service. I contacted our local telephone company (Sprint), and they told me that I couldn't have a DSL line for at least three months. I was told that they were in the process of installing equipment to support DSL for my area. Well, 7 months later, I finally got DSL service August 11. On August 12, I packaged up the VoIP phone, and shipped it to a friend that is deployed to Iraq, a Major, USMC.
The Major received the package on Sunday 21 August. He turned it over to a MSgt, USMC and he has been trying to get the phone to connect properly - without success to this date. As time permits, MSgt has been working on setting up the phone. As of this writing, he hasn't been successful, but, I know that it can and will work.
I will make postings as the project progresses, and when it works, I will place that report in a posting using the largest font available.
~G - More to come on the Telephone Project!
Monday, August 29, 2005
There have been several blogs and websites that have given the CHINFO/FHTNC/USAFNS debacle a link, or a few kind words, but none as many and as strong as Peter Stinson's Tidewater Musings and articles named:
August 12 - More-on-milbloggers
August 24 - And we thought the McCarthy era was bad
August 26 - Hey, Admiral, you've been blogged
August 26 - So what, exactly, does the Chief of Information do?
August 26 - Here's the unofficial Navy emblem
August 27 - Okay, Stinson, just what's your deal with the Navy and their
Chief of Information? .
Among other things, Mr. Stinson displays the forbidden Official U.S.Navy Seal, and warns everyone not to use it. I never thought of displaying it with a warning for the public good as he has done. He has been quiet since my posting of the availability of $39 each for color and B&W Official Navy Seals, or $78 for both from a commercial website. I can't wait to see what he thinks about that. I suspect that he is at a "loss for words" on that one.
In Mr. Stinson's August 24 posting, he writes:
I'm thinking it might be time for a slew of us to exercise our rights and submit Freedom of Information Requests for all written and electronic documentation pertaining to non-DOD Internet websites which publish information about the Navy, the Department of Defense, or other United States government agencies the Navy and/or the Office of Naval Information monitors and/or seeks to limit or cease publication.Perhaps if the blogosphere starts chattering, someone will listen.
I agree with him, and will write one today, please join us, and make sure to ask for a waiver on the fees. I plan to use the electronic filing pages, instead of writing a letter. Here are the links:
Department of Defense
Department of the Navy
DOD Freedom of information Handbook
In my next segment, I may identify the midlevel CHINFO Staffer that started this debacle. I have to wait until I can talk with my attorney, to find out if the "Webmaster of the Navy" could be considered a "public figure".
~G - More to come
Sunday, August 28, 2005
CHINFO/FHTNC/USAFNS Debacle - #2A - Speaking of the "Official" U.S. Navy Seal
Last night my daughter, who is an ardent web surfer, sent me a link to a website named Fotosearch that has a large collection of images for sale. If you enter "naval insignia" in Fotosearch's search field, you find that they have 1,356 Naval insignia images for sale. Some are royalty free (read public domain material developed by our tax dollars), but they charge for them. I browsed through the pages of images, and "lo and behold", guess what I found? I found that the firm is selling the very same image that the CHINFO staffer wanted me to remove from USAFNS.com. Not only do they have the official seal for sale, they have it in Black & White, as well as color. And, for only $39, you too can download either image, or $78 for both, or if you want many Navy images, you can order a disc with 678 images from One Mile Up, Inc. for only $335.95. Don't believe me, check it out for yourself:
$39 for a download! That price is excessive and is about thrice the price for reasonable reproduction costs if they were selling it on a CD or floppy. I could rant on about the CHINFO staffer that claims to be the "Webmaster of the Navy." But I won't, because I would probably make myself vulnerable to a libel lawsuit, and the facts speak for themselves, VERY LOUDLY!
~G - In my next installment, I may name the Webmaster of the Navy.
Friday, August 26, 2005
CHINFO/FHTNC/USAFNS Debacle - #2 - The First Unreasonable Request by CHINFO
In my first installment, I left off where I had become a member of the Navy League of the United States Information and Technology (IT) Committee. Through that group of IT savvy individuals, I soon had requests from three NLUS councils. One each in Washington State, Pennsylvania, and South Carolina. I complied with the requests, and asked the Fleet Home Town News Center (FHTNC) Media Liaison to start sending me releases for the three additional states. I researched and compiled a list all of the ZIP codes for those states. I forwarded the list, and shortly, I started receiving the releases for those states. Fantastic, I started to get emails from proud parents, parents requesting corrections, etc. The three NLUS councils were satisfied with the results, and added links to USAFNS.com from their websites. There was genuine excitement generated within the IT group, and within some NLUS staffers. As a result of the success of the pilot project, I was asked to make a presentation to NLUS members at an annual meeting in Northern Virginia. The presentation was well received.
I went on to request FHTNC releases for all 50 states, and 9 US territories and possessions. The request was favorably received by FHTNC personnel,and in short order, I was posting all of the US Navy, US Marine Corps, and US Coast Guard releases. I contacted the Army and Air Force Hometown News Center in San Antonio, TX, and they commenced sending me all of their releases for the US Army and the US Air Force. Things were going great, the emails were pouring in, and there were very few complaints.
Then, in the Spring of 2003, I got an email from a Chief of Naval Information (CHINFO) staffer that identified himself as the "Webmaster of the Navy". He made a rather strange request. He stated that I was using the official US Navy seal and I was in violation of a US Navy instruction (read directive with a capital 'D'). A reference was provided, and I looked the instruction up on the internet, and sure enough, there was a prohibition against using it on any other thing except for Official US Navy websites and documents.
So, I then looked up another US Navy logo on a US Navy website, and copied it, resized it, and used it. It is still currently in use on about half of my WebPages. It is all blue, with a white background - look at a few pages and you should see it. I couldn't make this stuff up. I politely apologized, and stated that I certainly did not wish to infract a Navy instruction, and went on about developing USAFNS.com.
I didn't complain that there were literally thousands of websites using the seal, nor did I complain that thousands of manufacturers are producing flags, belt buckles, lighters, etc. All using a seal that was developed with our tax dollars. I was of the opinion (and still am) that of all of the things that the "Webmaster of the Navy" might constructively spend their time doing, this took the cake. And it wasn't worth the expenditure of any effort on my part to fight it. When one really stops and thinks about a mid-level manager within the Department of the Navy spending (read wasting) time on something of this sort, it is plainly ridiculous. Here the nation is at war with terrorists, and someone has the time to spend on such a trivial matter, and trying to enforce a Navy directive that is plainly un-enforceable. Plainly Ridiculous! Please note the capital "R."
I think that my being co-operative and not balking was a mistake. If I had it to do over again, I would balk, and tell the CHINFO staffer that I would remove the seal from USAFNS.com when I read in the papers that the US Navy was making a push to have "Unauthorized" reproductions of the US Navy seal stopped.
Then, I got a request to delete all of the US Navy FHTNC releases. And, I did it, willingly, for a good reason.
~G - More to come!
Wednesday, August 24, 2005
CHINFO/FHTNC/USAFNS Debacle - #1 - The Beginning
I have pondered over where I should start recounting the CHINFO/FHTNC/USAFNS debacle, and as always the best place to start is at the beginning. As I recalled the intervening events, I realized that I would have to recount things in installments.
It all started when I developed a website for the Coastal Carolina Council of the Navy League of the United States (NLUS) of New Bern, NC. As with most organizations where the membership is "long of tooth", the organization had long since become primarily a social organization, and no longer actively supporting the mission of NLUS with very much passion. So, as I developed the website, I learned that the membership was, for all practical purposes, computer phobes, or not on a par with their 3rd or 4th grade grandchildren when it came to PC literacy. There were a few bright spots, but, the traffic was not sufficient to cost justify the site - even if the cost was only $30 per year.
So, upon that discovery, I put my thinking cap on, and tried to find some means of increasing the website traffic, and attract a younger audience. If successful, the average age of the membership would hopefully drop down from the mid to late 60's. I came upon the idea of publishing the Fleet Home Town News Center (FHTNC) releases for Eastern North Carolina. I had completed the release forms for several years when I was enlisted in the US Navy.
It seemed like a natural. It would cost nothing - I would write some software to automatically process the emails that contained the releases, and then sit back, and wait for the website to catch on. Well, it did. Soon, I was publishing the releases for the states of North Carolina, South Carolina, Pennsylvania and Washington. As those states were added, the requesting Navy League councils linked to USAFNS.com so that their visitors could view the releases for their state.
I guess that I should define a FHTNC news release. The members of the US Navy, US Marine Corps and the US Coast Guard are serviced by the FHTNC of Norfolk, VA. Here is an example of how it works: Say that a young man or woman graduates from basic training along with 75 or 80 other recruits. Shortly before graduation, each complete "biographical" information on one of the FHTNC release forms. The release forms have blocks for the graduate, their mothers, fathers (yes two blocks because a lot of the parents are divorced), employers, schools, etc. Each category has a block for a ZIP code. The command Public Affairs Officer then writes one release - all of them graduated from basic training, and were trained in the same skills, etc. Then the 80 or so biographical sheets are then attached to one standard release.
The package with the 80 biographical sheets, and the one covering release is sent to the FHTNC. They then prepare 80 individual releases that are then emailed to the newspapers that serve the zip codes that are identified on each graduates form. I would guess, because of the geographical distances between family members, on average, each release is sent to newspapers in 4 or 5 different zipcodes. And, usually about three states. The sailors, Marines and Coast Guardsmen would get the morale boost that accompanies seeing their name in print. The proud mothers, fathers, aunts, uncles, cousins, brother and sisters; would print the articles, and stick them on the side of their refigerators. Everybody would win - the servicemembers, the relatives of the servicemembers and the Navy League would enjoy very favorable exposure by having the releases on their website.
Soon, I was invited to become a member of the NLUS IT (Information and Technology) committee. I thought that things were looking up, and they were ....but just wait until you hear what happens in my next installment.
~G - More to Come!
An Open Letter to Cindy Sheehan from S.M.
An Open Letter to Cindy Sheehan
Dear Mrs. Sheehan,
You are in a firestorm of grief and what must be a disorienting swirl of world attention. For that reason, I will be as brief in my remarks as I hope to be compassionate.
I will not insult you by presuming to know your sorrow. The loss of a son in armed conflict abroad must be among the most soul-wrenching experiences possible. You are surely right to rage against the horrors of war, right to demand answers and right to reach for those of like mind.
I fear, though, that what began as a mourning mother's righteous cry for meaning is becoming something that threatens to dishonor Casey's heroism. Though I mean no disrespect, it is clear you are becoming swept up in a cynical drama that is far a field from the meaning of the war and your son's sacrifice. From your blogging on Michael Moore's web site to the pronouncements you feel obligated to make on the cause of Palestine, you have abandoned the moral high ground of a grieving mother and are in danger of becoming just another fleeting voice on the American pop culture landscape.
The central issue here is not whether George W. Bush meets with you again or whether your self-styled "peaceful occupation" of Crawford, Texas, ever wins you the explanation for "why our sons are dead" you say you want. The central issue is that when your son volunteered for military service, he placed himself upon an altar of sacrifice. Sadly, the ultimate sacrifice was indeed required. Yet he gave himself willingly, as all our soldiers do in this generation, and his death is therefore the noble death of a hero and not the needlessly tragic death of one accidentally or foolishly taken
What we must understand is that a pledge to military service is a surrender of rights, a surrender of comforts and, potentially, a surrender of life if the nation calls. What leaves us so stunned at the death of a soldier, beyond our grief for a life snuffed out and our personal loss, is often our failure to understand the noble calling of the profession of arms and the warrior code that gives this calling meaning. When your son, and the thousands like him serving today, pledged himself to military service, he did not just "join the army." He offered himself to his God and his nation in an act of devotion that has been repeated for centuries. He entered the fellowship of those who offer their lives willingly in service to others. His death, though a horror, was a horror with meaning, willingly engaged.
I cannot know your sorrow. I can urge you, though, not to allow your son's offering on what Lincoln called "the altar of freedom" to be tained by the passing parade of trendy causes. I can also urge you to live now in the knowledge that your son's passing ennobles our nation, just as I trust it will now ennoble you.
With deepest sympathies for your loss,
S.M.
~G - I would give my last breath to defend Ms. Sheehan's right to vent her opinion on any matter. On the other hand, certainly agree with S.M.'s letter. I am of the opinion that she is unwittingly being victimized by those that wish to make political hay out from the situation, and she is "more to be pitied than censured." I can only hope that she comes out of this firestorm without any deeper emotional pain and suffering than she has already suffered. Unfortunately, that possibility seems pretty remote.
Tuesday, August 23, 2005
Today, I Changed my Avatar to a More Hawkish One!
Today, I changed my avatar. The customary use of an avatar is to represent a player in a game. I have been using a cartoon character with a hammer about to strike a monitor. I changed it to a cartoon eagle. I also changed the description of Gunner's Blog. Taking a new tack so to speak. I suppose that I feel a little hawkish.
In my opinion, CHINFO's (Chief of Naval Information) lingering position regarding distributing FHTNC (Fleet Home Town News Center) releases to USAFNS.com is no longer understandable, nor excusable. Every day that passes, our Sailors, Marines, Coast Guardsmen and their families are being deprived of the morale boost that comes with seeing ones "name in print."
After the Virginian-Pilot published an article about my situation on August 8, 2005; I got an anonymous email from someone that I have come to think of as Deep Throat II (pronounced "deep throat aye, aye" as in navy lingo.) I believe from the information that he (I don't know that it is in fact a he, but I will use "he") has provided is within the the Public Affairs career field, and knows all of the key players in CHINFO. He says that he isn't in CHINFO's office, but I wonder...
One of the most disturbing things that D.T. II revealed is that within CHINFO's empire, there is a list of websites to be shut down. I find that thought very chilling, and it sounds a lot like McCarthyism. A "lot like" hell, it is McCarthyism. I am of the opinion that my website is on that list. Logic supports that belief.
I always thought that DoD and our armed forces upheld our laws, and things like shutting down civilian enterprises is the job of our Federal, State, County and Local Law Enforcement Agencies.
More to come. . . . . . . ~G
Situation Favorably Resolved - Texas Marine Corporal Carl Basham, Gets Tuition Break
Marine Corporal Carl Basham has been accepted at Austin (Texas) Community College as a resident and pays tuition of $500 instead of non-resident $2500. He had been out of state on active duty with the USMC at Camp Pendleton,CA and in the mid-east. What on earth were the admissions people thinking?
I would like to think that I did something to help in this matter by posting CAM's email, but I doubt it.
~G
Saturday, August 20, 2005
This is happening in our Commander in Chief's "Home state". This is ridiculous; he can vote there; drive there, but isn't a resident for school purposes? Isn't he protected by the Serviceman's Readjustment Act on this one?
Please pass on to all organizations that can help this brave Marine whom served his time and only wants his education in his home state.
C.A.M.
Sgt/USMC/1991-1998
PS: I would be curious to know if he pays state taxes in Texas as well as his vehicle registration...the school claims he does not meet State residency requirements.
I got the above in a series of three emails, and I pieced them to gether for posting. I cannot include the article that is being referred to, as it is copyrighted.
If my memory serves me correctly, in most states, a servicemember has to pay state taxes in his "DECLARED" home of record. And, he must also file in the state that he is currently residing as a result of military orders. If the taxes of his current residence is more than that paid to his home of record, he must pay the difference. I am a layman, and did not serve in Texas or many other states so please ask a CPA practicing in the state of Texas this question.
~G
Friday, August 19, 2005
Sadaam Photos You Haven't Seen
Thursday, August 18, 2005
"You Don't Speak For Me, Cindy!" Caravan
Supporters of U.S. Troops and their Mission in Iraq Plan Caravans to Texas.
Move America Forward will be conducting the You Dont Speak for Me, Cindy caravan beginning next week. It will feature military family members who have loved ones serving in the war against terrorism in Iraq or Afghanistan. The delegation will be led by Deborah Johns of Marine Moms. (Her son has served in Operation Iraqi Freedom).
Main caravan leaves from San Francisco, California on Monday, August 22nd. Other caravans will depart from around the country. If you want to be part of a caravan, email us with your name and location you will depart from and we will include in our caravan coverage so people in your area can depart with you.
Everyone arrives in Crawford, Texas for a giant We Support Our Troops AND Their Mission Rally on Saturday, August 27, 2005.
If you have a loved one serving in Iraq or Afghanistan and would like to join the caravan please contact Move America Forwards Robert Dixon: Robert@MoveAmericaForward.org
This message brought to you by http://TroopsSupport.com
Monday, August 15, 2005
Local Citizen Outraged When Flags Stolen in Small Pennsylvania Town
Local Citizen Outraged When Flags Stolen in Small Pennsylvania Town
I am an American citizen and darn proud of that fact. What I am not proud of are the worthless cowards people in our country who think it is OK to steal flags. No, not the American good old red white and blue, which is a federal crime but POW_MIA. Four flags were stolen from Mountain Laurel Campground in Albrightsville. Flags were stolen from Bergers in Albrightsville. The flags stolen from the campground were given with love and caring as gifts. They were flown proudly. Truly these people are sad individuals with no sense of honor or consonant what so ever. These flags were symbols of our serve person, wars gone by, peace and pride. The flags consisted of a POW-MIA, Proud to be an American, and a Peace Sign muti-colored.
You really have to be low to steal a POW-MIA flag. You are dirt. That is about as discussing as navel lint. No, I don't even want to insult the navel lint. It does not have a brain that you were given. People fight in wars, lose their lives, get captured, and some times never come back home.
As an individual I personally have never served. That does not mean I did not try or are not proud of the people who have and are now serving. I have a son, family and friends in the serve. Each one of the whole heartily deserve to be respected weather you know them or not. They put their butts and lives on the line for you. A worthless coward piece of what. Are you the pride and joy of your parents? I surely hope not! Wow how sad to even think that. Or are you a parent? Is this what you teach your children? Do you have friends? Can they trust you not to steal from them?
These flags flew proudly. Like the individuals they stand for and represent. Other people have given me flags. I'll be sad to tell them I may not be able to trust to fly them. Gee isn't that what this country is all about? Have you forgotten 911 or the pledge to the flag and our country? What is wrong with you and the people who think like this? Are you what our serve people are fighting about? How rottenly sad.
Are you one of those people who complain about all the unjust in the world. Maybe the people in the serve should be in your living room eating chips and watching the boob tube while you are out there getting you BUTT SHOOT AT! Then you can really show the world how much of a coward you are. When you crawl for the protection of our country.
Boy, you are a proud coward. Guess that is all you have in your live. Lives, honor, respect, and pride you stole from other people. No Wrong. You cannot steal something you will never have for yourself. Even stealing those flags will not take away the pride and honor they have for themselves and their country. The good old United States of America, Yes, God we trust.
The police were sad to hear that someone could be so low and rotten. A small town usually have people with more respect. Guess where ever you crawled out from under has nothing to represent your type. Do they make a flag for Useless Nothings?
If the coward or cowards give the flags back, no charges will be pressed. The only pressing that you will have is the pounding in your heart from the maker who gave you it. The one who created you. What our country trusts in.
Just put them on the pole. From someone who stills cares, enough about you, even if you don't care for yourself.
signed R.E.
Note: Above received by email, and posted as received with one small politically incorrect phrase removed. I called the local police department who verified that the flags were stolen. I think that R.E. is outraged about this incident. I hope that more people get mad about the injustices that we find all around us. ~G
A rush to make room for returning troops | csmonitor.com "As the military moves forward on historic plans to return to American soil some 50,000 troops stationed in Europe and the Far East, a panel of experts convened to monitor the process will Monday tell Congress that perhaps the Pentagon is moving too quickly - to the detriment of the soldiers that are coming home..."
Sunday, August 14, 2005
Chiefs Run the Navy, CNO Tells Senior Enlisted Academy "...In a July visit to the Senior Enlisted Academy in Newport, R.I., Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) Adm. Mike Mullen made it clear who he believes really runs the Navy - chief petty officers..."
You better believe it. ~G
Saturday, August 13, 2005
U.S. COAST GUARD PREPS JOINT MARITIME FORCE IN BOARDING PROCEDURES
U.S. COAST GUARD PREPS JOINT MARITIME FORCE IN BOARDING PROCEDURES
by JO2 Matt Grills
PANAMA CITY, Panama -- The U.S. Coast Guard is helping ready its counterparts from nine nations in preparation for FUERZAS ALIADAS PANAMAX 2005, the largest multinational exercise in defense of the Panama Canal, running Aug. 4-18 in Panama.
The scenario: a noncompliant vessel threatens the safety and stability of the canal - the Western Hemisphere's most important waterway and vital to free trade - necessitating a boarding party and possibly the ship's seizure. But what's the safest way to do it?
Instructors from the Coast Guard's international training division explored the question in a series of demonstrations involving participating nations. Sailors from Argentina, Chile, Colombia, the Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Honduras, Panama and Peru tutored one another in their own techniques, with Coast Guard personnel acting as facilitators.
"It's a good exchange of information. Everyone's learning something new every day to take back to their countries," said Boatswain's Mate 1st Class Jaime Simko, one of six Coast Guard instructors at PANAMAX. Fluent in Spanish,
Simko helped conduct classes in U.S. boarding preps and procedures before students put them into practice aboard Panama's SMN Lina Maria, pierside.
The Coast Guard's ITD staff provides training worldwide in maritime law enforcement, marine safety and environmental protection, small-boat operation and maintenance, search and rescue, port security and infrastructure development for countries with waterway law-enforcement programs. In 2004, ITD conducted 133 deployments in 61 countries, giving instruction to nearly 1,600 students.
At PANAMAX, Simko and his colleagues cover pre-boarding procedures, observation, boarding tools, hidden compartments and occupational hazards. The emphasis is on safety and awareness.
"We want to make the boarding team and the operation as safe as possible," he said. "It's important to determine risk. We also cover the use of force when appropriate, when you can and can't use deadly force. Every country's policy is different. We don't try to change the way they operate. We demonstrate and hope they learn something new. They tell us if they think we're doing something off the wall. It's good for us and for them."
On the final morning of training, Chileans staged a boarding demonstration aboard the Lina Maria using their own nation's method of search and seizure, with Panamanians role-playing as ship's crew. A special-forces team performed a rapid attack and gained control of the boat by securing the bridge, engine room and steering boat. A second team, comprised of Chile's maritime police and armed with legal boarding authority, then conducted a full sweep of the vessel.
Boatswain's Mate Chief Scott Partington looked on, impressed by the teams' proficiency. "The Chileans are advanced," he said. "Actually, their boarding resembles the way we do it. The difference is that they have two teams. We have one team that pretty much does it all."
Lt. Cmdr. Rodolfo Gárate Bernal of the Chilean coast guard, who oversaw the demonstration, seemed pleased with the results. "I think there's always something to improve," he said, "but at this moment, we are good."
Working with the coastal forces of other countries at PANAMAX 05 has been a highlight for Bernal, who said such joint training and exercises lay the groundwork for a partnership of layered defense that will prove crucial if the Panama Canal is ever threatened.
Petty Officer 2nd Class Argel Alveo of Panama's National Maritime Service has worked 12 years as a boarding officer, on many occasions alongside the U.S. Coast Guard. This time he brought the crew of his patrol boat to help them acquire and develop new skills. In particular, said Alveo, they found the Chileans' apprehension methods helpful.
Last year, Alveo saw firsthand this kind of training's value. While aboard a U.S. Coast Guard cutter, he and the crew encountered a go-fast vessel on a drug run. They weren't able to intercept it, convincing Alveo that increased capabilities and multinational cooperation will make the next time different.
Hector Ordinola, a petty officer 2nd class with the Peruvian Special Forces, also praises PANAMAX's opportunity for joint training. "I foresee us working with other nations more and more in the future."
And has he learned from them as well? "Absolutely. I now have a wide view of different techniques they use, of how well prepared they are."
Lt. Jose Diaz of the ITD said people are often surprised when they hear the U.S. Coast Guard "takes its show on the road" by educating other nations' coast guards. In fact, said Diaz, maritime interdiction operations are the Coast Guard's "bread and butter" both in the United States and South America.
With its twofold objective of supporting free navigation through the
Panama Canal and building better cooperation between nations with critical interest in the canal, PANAMAX is fertile ground for the Coast Guard's globe-encompassing training programs.
"The main goal here is to shake hands and get to know each other, so that when we work together in the future a relationship already exists," Diaz said.
Friday, August 12, 2005
New York Daily News - World & National Report - Pentagon to host 9/11 march, show: "WASHINGTON - The Pentagon will hold a massive march and country music concert to mark the fourth anniversary of 9/11, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld said in an unusual announcement tucked into an Iraq war briefing yesterday."
PortAl Iraq - Iraqi Dinar, Iraq Business News, and Iraq Jobs Opportunities: "Welcome to PortAl Iraq, your Iraq business portal. Our portal is here to help you get more Iraqi business news and help Iraqis and foreign business people make contact. If you are looking for business partners, whether you are Iraqi or not, please browse through our Iraq Business Directory and contact as many businesses as you wish. If you are a job seeker, you will find our Iraq jobs seeker directory helpful as a mean to advertise yourself. "
This is a font of news that is reporting progress in Iraq. See the
News Archive for articles from June 2003 to present.
Monday, August 08, 2005
Navy fears too much of a good thing (HamptonRoads.com/Pilot Online): "When Navy leaders at the Pentagon heard about it, they raised flags about security for sailors and their families. They stopped sending him news releases. As it turned out, too much good news was bad news for Mitchell."
HELP Save the ex-USS Adams (DDG-2)
I got the message below from Ed O'Grady, a member of USS Barney DDG-6 Association. They are a group that is valiantly trying to save just one ship from an entire class. I can certainly sympathize with them. The last ship that I served on has been sent to the bottom. Recently the ex-USS America (CVA-66) was sunk 200 miles off the East Coast as part of a test to see how much damage she could take before sinking. My first ship ex-USS Fessenden (DER-142) was sunk in December of 1967, about 25 miles off Pearl Harbor, HI after being used for target practice. I had the distinct displeasure of firing a couple of 8" salvoes into her. I was a boot W-1 Gunner, and my men didn't believe that tears as big a horse t##ds were running down my face when she sank. Those rounds were fired from the USS Newport News (CA-148) that was sold for scrap in 1994. All of my ships are gone now. And, the thought makes me very sad.
I am posting this urgent plea for assistance below, because the act of sinking or scrapping a naval ship cannot be undone. In recent years, many groups have tried valiantly to save "their" ship. Unfortunately, due to the high cost of towing, restoring and berthing makes it extremely difficult, and very few groups have been able to save their ship.
These sailors are operating as a group to save just one of the class of their ship(s), and they are running out of time. My hat is off to them, wish them them good luck and I hope that everyone reading this will find a way to help these sailors save their ship.
Sincerely, ~G
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
From: Tom Crosser, President, Adams Class Veterans Association
To: SAVE THE BARNEY Group
Date: Sun, 7 Aug 2005 16:00:41 EDT
Subject: Status of ACVA and Saving USS Adams (DDG-2)
I had a nice long talk with John Van Dusen on Friday. I came away with the feeling that we are still after the same goal. That goal is an Adams Class Ship up and running as a Memorial and Museum. My ship was sunk in 2000 so the Adams is the only ship left for me to direct my efforts toward. Twenty one of the Adams Class were sold, sunk or scrapped. It is sad the Barney will soon join them. I am doing what I can to save Adams because she was the first and now she is the last.
We may not be successful but it won't be for not trying. I will be the first to admit we have made mistakes along the way. We are incorporated in CA but still do not have our IRS 501 status. If anyone cares to help on this, please drop me an email. We could also use someone to look over our By Laws. (No sea Lawyers please) We have a new PR person coming aboard soon but still need a Director of Fundraising. We are about to issue a Press Release and a Newsletter.
The following is an article I was asked to write for our Buchanan Association newsletter. Following that is the Proposal given us by the Marine Surveyor Joe Lombardi, our 60 Day Plan of Attack taking us up to September 30 and a list of questions given us by the Florida school we are dealing with for pier space.
NEWSLETTER ARTICLE
Just about 3 1/2 years ago I first heard about efforts to save the USS ADAMS DDG-2 while at out Buchanan Reunion in San Diego. If memory serves me correctly, I think we voted to send them $250 in support of that effort. The group at that time was the Saginaw Valley Naval Ship Museum of Bay City, MI. That group threw in the towel on the Adams back in October of 2003. They are now directing their efforts to getting the USS EDSON DD-946 which was returned to NAVSEA by the Intrepid Museum in New York City. In January of 2004 the Adams Class Veterans Association Inc. was formed to pick up where SVNSM left off. There was a second group, the Barney Association trying to save the USS BARNEY DDG-6. This group wanted to place Barney in Miami, Fl. at a yet to be built museum. Now we have just heard the Barney has been moved the scrappers pier.
Recently NAVSEA inform the ACVA that we had two months (until October 1, 2005) to submit a letter detailing our plans and progress on finding a home for Adams. The following is an up date of where we stand on August 1,
2005, with only 60 days before that deadline.
The ACVA has two men in the Tampa Bay/St. Petersburg area of Florida. One is Jim Aldrich a former Adams Class Officer. The second is a retired sub Admiral named Leroy Collins. Both are working to gain support in that area from groups like the Navy League, Propeller Club (Coast Guard), Naval Academy Alumni, Port Authority, Office of the Mayor and others. About two months ago contact was made with a college whose primary focus is marine science. That college has a seawall that would hold Adams very nicely. Talks are underway on using space aboard Adams for some grant work related to homeland security. If the required amount of space can be authorized by NAVSEA and we can still have most of the ship open for visitors it looks very promising at this point in time.
Once space for the college is set aside, we plan to have as much of the ship open to visitors as time and funds allow for restoration and preservation. Along this line, we may ask each Adams Class ship to adopt a space and bring volunteer work crews aboard to help. Who better knows, what color the tile was, what color the bulkheads were, what was painted on top of the Asroc Launcher or the side of Mt. 51 than we Adams Class Sailors?
Why are we doing this? Ask anyone who served on one of the 23 ships in our class? Do you look twice at the guy in WalMart who has a Navy ball cap on? Do you think it might be an old shipmate you served with? Many of us are years past the recall age but I am sure many of you would like to take your children or grandchildren and show them where Dad or Granddad help won the Cold War. There is also the fact the Adams was the lead ship of her class. A new class of Destroyer designed from the beginning to bring the US Navy into the Missile Age. Think about it, we were a "can do" bunch of ships. The Adams Class could take on subs, aircraft, shore targets, and duke it out with the best any other navy had to offer. Now they are all gone, except Adams and Barney. Barney will go next and may already be signed over to a scrapper or slated for sinking as a target. This is why time and money are so important. If we can get an OK on sharing space with the college and get the necessary letter of agreement submitted to NAVSEA then we will have time to actually start a campaign to raise the funds needed for cleanup, towing, and preparing Adams to receive her visitors.
The first step along this route is to bring in a Marine Surveyor to conduct a site survey of the proposed berthing area for water depth and shore facilities like power, water, steam and sewage hook ups. We have this person ready and willing to do the job but it is not something he does for free. If you are asking, the price is in the neighborhood of $5,200. The second step would be a guided tour of the Adams for the college personnel given by our Marine Surveyor. Again if you are asking, the cost is in the neighborhood of $2,500. The third step is the actual preparing of the formal "Ship Donation Application" and the submitting of this application to NAVSEA. Again if you are asking, this cost is in the neighborhood of $68,500 (not including expenses). In this area we are in luck because this same Marine Surveyor has a copy of the application submitted by SVNSM back in 2003. The application needs reworking to change the final berthing location, new towing route, new weather conditions in FL. vs. MI, etc. The good thing is that reworking is better than starting from scratch. The real money for prepping the Adams for towing, berthing and setting up for visitors will come from the ACVA and the college applying for grants on the state and federal level and donations from interested local businesses and the local public. At some point in the process, a new group may need to be formed to manage the actual day to day operations of the Adams as a Memorial and Museum Ship.
What the ACVA needs now is support from those who served on the Buchanan and all other Adams Class Ships. Time is short and getting shorter. Anyone wishing to help can send donations to our secretary at the address below. We are incorporated in the state of California where our treasurer lives but we are still in the process of obtaining our nonprofit status with the IRS. Anyone wishing to join the ACVA can contact the same person and he will send you an application.
ACVA Executive Secretary
c/o Dave Myerly
5 Bush Road
Denville, New Jersey, 07834-2906
Other things planned for the Adams include but are not limited to: A platform for use by Sea Scouts, Sea Cadets, NJROTC, NROTC, Primary and Secondary Educational Visits, A Filming Location for Movies and TV, Youth Sleepover Programs.
Anyone having questions, comments, concerns, or wishing to help with fundraising, legal advice, or public relations can contact me at the address, numbers and email address below.
Tom Crosser (EM2, R-Div, USS BUCHANAN DDG-14, 1966-1968)
President, Adams Class Veterans Association
8520 West Clarendon
Phoenix, Arizona, 85037-2723
Home..623-849-9526 (please try home # first)
Cell.....623-215-5951
tecrosserbsausnr@aol.com
____________________________________________________________
I received the above e-mail from Tom Crosser today. Tom is President of Adams Class Veterans Association. He and I had a long and very positive conversation this weekend. ACVA is in favor of giving us a space to "build" and exclusively Barney memorial. They are also hoping to have the support of our members to help make saving an Adams class DDG a reality.
Ed O'Grady, Member USS Barney DDG-6 Association
Saturday, August 06, 2005
Military machine: Defense robot developed at CMU makes its debut: "Known as the Gladiator Tactical Unmanned Ground Vehicle (TUGV), the six-wheeled combat robot spun around in circles displaying its strength and durability at what could have been its coming-out party-- the first public demonstration of the prototype designed and developed at Carnegie Mellon University and set to be..."
Friday, August 05, 2005
Bush orders new review of pay and benefits (Navy Times): "In an Aug. 2 memo to Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, the Bush administration asked that the review look at maintaining quality of life and experienced personnel while also considering ways to simplify and make more flexible today’s complex pay structure. The White House also requested that the review address possible changes to the military retirement system. ..."
Thursday, August 04, 2005
Coast Guard celebrates 215 years of service to U.S. (HamptonRoads.com/Pilot Online): "The Coast Guard's service began Aug. 4, 1790, when the Revenue Cutter Service was established by Congress to enforce tariff and trade laws, " ...
U.S. Laying Groundwork for Iraq Pullout: "The Pentagon is laying the groundwork for beginning a withdrawal from Iraq, even as it is weighing the risk of moving so quickly that Iraqi security forces collapse without U.S. support."
Wednesday, August 03, 2005
Wrestler a legend among hurt troops - Nation/Politics - The Washington Times, America's Newspaper: " In the corridors of Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington and the National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, though, Foley is better known for a hard-core commitment to wounded veterans"
Chiefs Run the Navy, CNO Tells Senior Enlisted Academy: "Chief of Naval Operations (CNO) Adm. Mike Mullen made it clear who he believes really runs the Navy - chief petty officers. "
Who links to me?

Prev
|
List
|
Random
|
Next
Join -
Powered by RingSurf!
© 2004-2005 Web Independent News Service, L.L.C. All Rights Reserved.