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Politics : War -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Carolyn who wrote (22287)8/5/2013 3:19:35 PM
From: joseffy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 23908
 
Valerie Jarrett gave Benghazi Stand Down order
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BREAKING! Benghazi Bombshell: Valerie Jarrett, Commander in Chief

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by Chip Jones on August 5, 2013
conservativereport.org



To: Carolyn who wrote (22287)8/10/2013 6:27:00 PM
From: joseffy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 23908
 
Shelton Orders Shutdown of Space Fence (critical decades-old missile defense system axed!)
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Space News ^ | 8/6/13 | Mike Gruss





A two-mile array that makes up a part of the U.S. Air Force Space Fence. Credit:Navy photo/SpaceNews artist's concept










UPDATED 1:45 p.m. EDT

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Air Force is shutting down a key part of its network for tracking satellites and orbital debris, possibly as soon as Oct. 1, according to an Aug. 1 memo obtained by SpaceNews.

Gen. William Shelton, commander of Air Force Space Command, “has directed that the Air Force Space Surveillance System be closed and all sites vacated” effective Oct. 1, the memo said.

The letter, signed by Austin Frindt, a contracting officer with Air Force Space Command, was addressed to Five Rivers Services of Colorado Springs, Colo., operator of the current Space Fence tracking system. The Space Fence, a planned replacement for which is on hold pending a Pentagon-wide review, is a line of VHF radars stretching across the southern United States.

Deployed in the 1960s, the VHF Space Fence includes three transmitter sites and six receiving stations. It is responsible for approximately 40 percent of all observations performed by the Air Force-run Space Surveillance Network, which includes other ground-and space-based sensor assets, said Brian Weeden, technical adviser at the Secure World Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to space sustainability.

The memo explained to Five Rivers Services that the Air Force was not exercising its option for a fifth year of a contract to provide management and logistical support for the nine field stations. Lori Thomas, president of Five Rivers Services, declined to comment and referred questions to the Air Force.

‘This is your notice to begin preparing the sites for closure,” the memo said. “A specific list of action items will be provided as soon as it is finalized. A specific date to turn off the mission system has not been established yet, but will be provided to you immediately upon determination.”

Andy Roake, a spokesman for Air Force Space Command, pointed to the automatic budget cuts known as sequestration, in an email Aug. 5.

“In this tough, sequestered budget environment, we’re considering many options, but for FY14, no final decisions have been made,” he said.

Though part of a broader surveillance network, the VHF Space Fence is crucial because it can track objects up to 24,000 kilometers away.


Other sensors in the network generally track objects at altitudes lower than a few thousand kilometers, Weeden said.

“The Space Fence is very important as it gives an ‘uncued tracking’ capability,” Weeden said. “Because it’s constantly transmitting, it can detect objects without being tasked to do so. There are some other sensors in the network that can do uncued tracking to some degree, but the Space Fence is rather unique in the sheer size of the detection coverage it has.”

The Space Fence, along with operators at the Joint Space Operations Center, can observe objects down to the size of a basketball and make precise determinations of their characteristics, location and movement. Each month the system is responsible for logging more than 5 million satellite observations, according to an Air Force fact sheet.

In April, Shelton said two of the Space Fence’s receiver sites had been placed in cold storage, one in Glennville, Ga., and one in Hollandale, Miss., reducing the overall accuracy and effectiveness of the system. The change was made as part of the Air Force’s response sequestration.

In July, the Air Force released a request for proposals to operate the aging system beginning in September 2015 — one year after the Five Rivers Services’ contract was set to expire. The request said the Space Fence “has been identified as a critical defense system and, therefore, shall be manned on a 24-hour, 7-days-a-week, 365-days-a-year basis at transmitter sites and 8-hour, 7-days-a-week, 365-days-a-year basis at receiver sites.”

A full-scale development contract for an updated version of the Space Fence had been expected in 2012 or early 2013, but on July 16, Shelton said the multibillion-dollar project is being held up due to a wide-ranging Pentagon review that includes major acquisition programs. The review is examining scenarios under which the Pentagon’s budget is cut by $150 billion, $250 billion and $500 billion during the next decade.

Lockheed Martin Mission Systems and Sensors of Moorestown, N.J., and Raytheon Integrated Defense Systems of Tewksbury, Mass., have developed competing designs for the new network of ground-based radars, which would be capable of tracking greater numbers of smaller objects than the current Space Fence.

Shelton said in July that engineers at Eglin Air Force base in Florida were looking for ways to improve the current Space Fence as a contingency plan should the Pentagon elect not to go forward with the next-generation system.

In April, Shelton said one-third of the Space Fence’s receiver sites had been placed into cold storage, reducing the overall accuracy and effectiveness of the system as part of the Air Force’s response to the automatic budget cuts known as sequestration.



To: Carolyn who wrote (22287)8/20/2013 11:55:58 PM
From: joseffy  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 23908
 
From: simplicity8/20/2013 11:32:57 PM

1 Recommendation of 733848
SOMEWHAT OFF TOPIC:

My husband and I have spent the last two months going through forty-six years of accumulated ‘stuff’ in our basement. We have been selling some things on ebay and craigslist, have given some things to friends and family, and have taken several SUV-loads to Goodwill.

Among the things we uncovered during this process is my Dad’s World War II Navy footlocker. Inside were three sets of woolen blues, covered in mildew and stains, a set of whites with many rust-like stains on it, and several of his books and manuals, including his Blue Jacket’s manual with a photo of my Mom -- who is now 93, but was apparently quite a looker back then :) -- taped inside the front cover.

We also discovered a personally typed and signed letter (complete with an erasure correction) :) from James Forrestal, then Secretary of the Navy, which reads:
_________________________________

I have addressed this letter to reach you after all the formalities of your separation from active service are completed. I have done so because, without formality but as clearly as I know how to say it, I want the Navy’s pride in you, which it is my privilege to express, to reach into your civil life and to remain with you always.

You have served in the greatest Navy in the world.

It crushed two enemy fleets at once, receiving their surrenders only four months apart.

It brought our land-based air power within bombing range of the enemy, and set our ground armies on the beachheads of final victory.

It performed the multitude of tasks necessary to support these military operations.

No other Navy at any time has done so much. For your part in these achievements you deserve to be proud for as long as you live. The Nation that you served at a time of crisis will remember you with gratitude.

The best wishes of the Navy go with you into civilian life. Good luck!
_________________________________

I don’t quite understand why my Dad would have received this (he was a simple aviation Radioman First Class), yet I cannot imagine that singularly typed letters were sent to all military personnel once they were discharged. But whatever the reason for its existence, I am proud to have it in my possession.

There is just something wonderfully unique to that period embodied in this letter. The pride in our armed forces, the appreciation of their sacrifice by their leadership and their countrymen, and the personal show of gratitude by their highest leader, are aspects of being an American, during both wartime and peacetime, that have somehow found themselves eroded over each ensuing decade.

We also found a regulation letter from Harry Truman, and several other Navy documents which I have now framed.

Over the last month I have matched the paint of the footlocker exactly and given it two brand new coats of paint, while preserving the numbers stenciled on the sides. I’ve taken the uniforms to the dry cleaner and he did a miraculous job of bringing them back to almost ‘good as new’.

I decided to display some of these items in a corner of our dining room. We had a glass-enclosed case made in which to hang the uniforms, and are displaying the framed documents next to it above the refurbished footlocker.

Rediscovering all of this has brought many mixed emotions. I am very proud of my Dad in countless ways, not the least of which is his service to his country. It saddens me deeply that these items that were once so meaningful to him sat in a musty footlocker for nearly seventy years before being rediscovered. And I am deeply ashamed that I never asked him very much about his service, and his experiences during, and thoughts about, the war ... when I had the chance to do so.

I am hoping this belated recognition of his service will in some way make up for my neglect to do so when he was with us. As a result of finding and displaying these items, I have already had an opportunity to talk about him with several groups of friends who have visited … made possible by their interest in the items.