Anything with the word "JOINT" in it is Globalist, not American.

Sean McBride wrote:
> [The neoconservatives are still engaged in massive global 
> empire-building, using the DoD as a base of operations.  Nothing has 
> changed.  William Boykin, mentioned below, is apparently a militant 
> Christian Zionist and one of many neocon tools in the Bush 
> administration.]
>  
> [The neocons don't care how low Bush sinks in the public opinion polls 
> -- they hold the democratic process in total contempt, even while 
> falsely claiming to be acting in the name of democracy.  If the 
> Democrats come back into power, the neoconservatives will simply be 
> replaced by neoliberals -- same thing.  Most of the key neocon plans 
> are still on track.]
>  
> [Still waiting in the wings: 9/11 Part II.]
>  
> [The current revolt against Rumsfeld in the military establishment 
> will not be nearly enough to derail this juggernaut.]
>  
> http://www.lincolntribune.com/modules/news/print.php?storyid=4257
>  
>
>
>       DoD to Set Up Joint Intelligence Operations Centers Worldwide
>
> *Date* 2006/4/13 11:14:14 | *Topic:* Military
>
> By Gerry J. Gilmore
>
> *WASHINGTON* ? The Defense Department is moving to establish a 
> worldwide group of joint intelligence organizations designed to 
> rapidly gather, interpret and act on information to better meet 
> 21st-century military needs, senior military officials said here today.
>
> On April 3, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld issued a directive to 
> establish a Joint Intelligence Operations Center at DoD's Defense 
> Intelligence Agency, at each unified combatant command and at U.S. 
> Forces Korea, Army Lt. Gen. William G. Boykin, deputy undersecretary 
> of defense for intelligence and warfighting support, told reporters at 
> a news briefing.
>
> "What we're trying to do is move towards 'operationalizing' 
> intelligence," Boykin explained. This entails transforming military 
> intelligence from being a staff function into "both a staff function, 
> when appropriate, and an operational concept," he said.
> Findings of Capitol Hill and DoD commissions and studies, including 
> the latest Quadrennial Defense Review, conducted since the Sept. 11, 
> 2001, attacks on the United States recommended the department 
> integrate and improve the processes it uses to more rapidly gather, 
> analyze and act on intelligence information, Boykin said.
>
> One of the first changes DoD made to improve its intelligence 
> structure, Boykin said, was to establish the Office of the 
> Undersecretary of Defense for Intelligence in 2003, headed by Stephen 
> A. Cambone.
>
> Cambone then directed a study titled "Taking Stock of Defense 
> Intelligence," which sought present and future warfighting 
> requirements feedback from combatant commanders and DoD's global 
> intelligence community, Boykin said.
>
> DoD also conducted a "Reform of Human Intelligence" study at about the 
> same time, Boykin said.
>
> The two studies were combined into a single program in January 2004, 
> called "Remodeling Defense Intelligence." The JIOC concept came out of 
> the RDI initiative, Boykin said.
>
> A JIOC that's now operational in Baghdad will serve as a template for 
> the other new centers, Boykin said.
>
> "We're getting nothing but positive feedback from Iraq," Boykin said. 
> That center uses a single-source analytical database system, he said, 
> which saves time during intelligence operations.
>
> Analysts at the Iraq JIOC now accomplish tasks in minutes that would 
> routinely take hours to do at an old-style center, Boykin said.
>
> Boykin said the JIOC system is structured to eliminate traditional 
> chain-of-command logjams to facilitate rapid cross-communications 
> between analysts and intelligence gatherers in the field, known as 
> collectors.
>
> "What we're trying to do is create a situation where the analyst is 
> talking to the collector, and there's no filter in the middle," Boykin 
> said.
>
> Collection managers work with analysts and collectors to maintain 
> information flows, set priorities and allocate resources, Boykin said.
>
> Initiatives like JIOC are part of U.S. efforts "to continuously strive 
> to improve our intelligence system, whether that be in support of the 
> president of the United States, in support of our troops deployed 
> around the world, or those working here to protect the homeland," said 
> Army Lt. Gen. Ronald L. Burgess Jr., deputy director of national 
> intelligence for customer outcomes at the National Intelligence 
> Directorate.
>
> The key goal is to achieve more integrated and better-focused 
> intelligence activities that are closely linked with actual 
> operations, Burgess said.
>
> "The JIOC concept gets us to that linkage that we need to see," the 
> general said.
>
> Modern battlefields like Afghanistan and Iraq have highlighted the 
> need for decentralized intelligence activities that can rapidly assess 
> information and then "react to the fleeting opportunities that we have 
> to get a target that is presented to us," Burgess said.
>
>
>
> This article comes from Lincoln Tribune
> http://www.lincolntribune.com <http://www.lincolntribune.com/>
>
> The URL for this story is:
> http://www.lincolntribune.com/modules/news/article.php?storyid=4257
>





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