10:52
Defence Intelligence Agency
Defence Intelligence Agency
DIA provides an unprecedented level of support in: Professional Acquisitions, Intelligence Analysis, Polygraph Examinations, Security and Investigation, Science and Engineering, Human Capital Management, CounterIntelligence, Information Technology, Human Intelligence, Financial Services and Combatant Command. DIA producedes fine-grain tactical and operational intelligence for combat forces as well as strategic estimative products for policy and decisionmakers.
10:40
Yugoslavia - John Morrison, former head of Defence Intelligence Services for the UK
Yugoslavia - John Morrison, former head of Defence Intelligence Services for the UK
Interview with John Morrison, former head of Defence Intelligence Services for UK. John Noble Lennox Morrison (born 14 July 1943 in Hexham, joined the Defence Intelligence Staff (DIS) in 1967 as a desk-level intelligence analyst. During his Ministry of Defence (MoD) career he occupied a wide range of analytical and management positions in the DIS and elsewhere, including three tours in the Cabinet Office, culminating as Secretary to the Joint Intelligence Committee (JIC). Morrison ended his official career as the senior civilian intelligence professional in the Defence Intelligence Staff, serving four years as Deputy Chief of Defence Intelligence and Head of the Defence Intelligence Analysis Staff. During this period he represented the MoD and DIS as a member of the JIC, UK representative to the NATO Intelligence Board and Head of Profession for MoD Intelligence Analyst classes. He was awarded the US Defence Intelligence Agency's Director's Award in 1999. On leaving the DIS and the civil service in 1999, Morrison was selected by the parliamentary Intelligence and Security Committee (ISC) to be its first Investigator. He held this position until 2004, when his contract was prematurely terminated by the Committee for appearing on the UK BBC television programme Panorama and maintaining that Saddam Hussein was not in fact a threat to the UK. John Morrison is a joint author of "The Open Side of Secrecy: Britain's Intelligence and Security Committee", the first in-depth study <b>...</b>
24:08
US spy agencies responsible for Charles Taylor notorious leadership?-Africa Today-02-01-2012
US spy agencies responsible for Charles Taylor notorious leadership?-Africa Today-02-01-2012
presstv.ir US authorities say former Liberian leader Charles Taylor worked for its intelligence agencies, including the CIA, the Boston Globe reports. The revelation comes in response to a Freedom of Information request by the newspaper. Rumours of CIA ties were fuelled in July 2009 when Mr Taylor himself told his trial, at the UN-backed Special Court for Sierra Leone in the Hague that US agents had helped him escape from a maximum security prison in Boston in 1985. The CIA at the time denied such claims as "completely absurd". But now the Defence Intelligence Agency, the Pentagon's spy arm, has disclosed that its agents - and those of the CIA - did later use Mr Taylor as an informant, the Globe reports. In this edition of the show we ask; Charles Taylor: Were US intelligence agencies responsible for his notorious leadership?
85:28
Why did we get the collapse of the USSR so wrong?
Why did we get the collapse of the USSR so wrong?
Professor Paul Dibb gives this public lecture entitled 'Why did we get the collapse of the USSR so wrong?' on Monday 7 November 2011 at The Australian National University. It is now 20 years since the sudden and catastrophic collapse of the former Soviet Union. A huge amount of analytical effort in the West, both in academia and in the intelligence community, went into scrutinising every detail of the political, economic, military, technological, demographic and cultural progress of the USSR. And yet, when the end came it was surprisingly quick and ranks as one of the great intellectual and intelligence failures of the 20th century. This lecture examines the reasons why we failed to see the end of the military superpower that was the former USSR. It looks at such issues as preconceived views of Soviet Communism's strengths, the tendency not to see the intellectual wood for the trees, and the enormous pressures to conform with the conventional wisdom about Soviet strengths. It concludes by asking the question: can there be a recurrence of simplistic, straight-line extrapolations about another rising power, such as China? Paul Dibb is Emeritus Professor of Strategic Studies in the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre at the Australian National University. His previous positions include: Head of the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, Deputy Secretary of the Department of Defence, Director of the Defence Intelligence Organisation, and Head of the National Assessments Staff <b>...</b>
7:33
WL GI Files: Dow Chemicals Spied on Bhopal Activists
WL GI Files: Dow Chemicals Spied on Bhopal Activists
02/27/2012 US-based security think-tank Stratfor spied for the Dow Chemicals on the activists of the 1984 Bhopal gas tragedy, WikiLeaks alleged today as the whistleblower website started publishing millions of confidential emails of this prominent private intelligence analyst group. The e-mails date between July 2004 and late December 2011, WikiLeaks said. "They reveal the inner workings of a company that fronts as an intelligence publisher, but provides confidential intelligence services to large corporations, such as Bhopal's Dow Chemical Co, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon and government agencies, including the US Department of Homeland Security, the US Marines and the US Defence Intelligence Agency," WikiLeaks alleged. Stratfor was not immediately available for its reaction on the allegations by WikiLeaks. But the website of this Texas-based organisation said that it is offering all its contents for free. "I wanted to warn you that individuals continue to send out false communications that appear to be from Stratfor. These spam emails may contain malware and attachments, and may attempt to lead you to websites that look like our own. They may also attempt to convince you to provide your private information," says Stratfor CEO George Friedman on its website. The emails posted by WikiLeaks on its website, revealed that Stratfor not only provided to Dow Chemicals and Union Carbide the analysis of the daily developments on the case related to the Bhopal Gas <b>...</b>
2:41
NATO and UK intelligence emails 'hacked' 09.01.12
NATO and UK intelligence emails 'hacked' 09.01.12
It is reported that email addresses and passwords belonging to British, US and NATO officials were posted online after hackers targeted a US intelligence analysis firm over Christmas. Online "hacktivist" group Anonymous claimed via Twitter on Christmas Day that it had stolen a trove of emails and credit card information from Stratfor's member subscribers. Details of senior British intelligence officials and US defence staff were hacked, according to analysis carried out for the Guardian newspaper by John Bumgarner, an expert in cyber-security at the US Cyber Consequences Unit, a research body in Washington. In the US case, details of 173 individuals serving in Afghanistan were publicised, along with the personal details of former vice-president Dan Quayle and former secretary of state Henry Kissinger. Some 221 British military officials and 242 NATO staff were also victims along with advisers to Britain's Joint Intelligence Organisation, a body which reports sensitive information to Prime Minister David Cameron, Bumgarner found. Around 19000 email addresses belonging to US military personnel were also leaked. Stratfor, which is based in Texas, specialises in foreign affairs and security issues. The hacked spreadsheets contained email addresses and encrypted passwords of around 850000 individuals who had subscribed to the consultancy's website. Over 75000 subscribers also had their credit card numbers and addresses revealed, the Guardian reported. Experts claim that the <b>...</b>
14:15
Tutorial : CIA Archives: Intelligence Gathering - Interrogation of Enemy Airmen (2/2) (1943) Free
Tutorial : CIA Archives: Intelligence Gathering - Interrogation of Enemy Airmen (2/2) (1943) Free
Tutorial : CIA Archives: Intelligence Gathering - Interrogation of Enemy Airmen (2/2) (1943) Free online seo tools on bulkping for Website Seo Video cia, film, intelligence, gathering, agency, world, factbook, jobs, wiki, website, agent, internships, director, wtf, movies, napa, military, philosophy, analysis, space, defence, history, movie film, russia, politics, communism, warfare, commentary, religion, science, defense, educational Watch the full film: BulkPing More CIA films: BulkPing Human source screening is the logical start of collection of HUMINT. This involves selecting people who may be sources of meaningful HUMINT, possibly positively identifying them, and conducting interviews of various types. Properly recording and cross-indexing the results of interviews is essential. No intelligence collection discipline is more likely to find meaning in apparently small bits of information than is HUMINT. Especially when there is reason to have additional interviews with the same individual, the subsequent interviews need careful planning, especially when the interrogator does not speak the language of the person being interviewed. As opposed to debriefing, the subject of interrogation is not necessarily cooperating with the obtaining of information by the organization. The subject is normally in custody, although the legal circumstances may be such that an uncooperative subject may be able to leave. Examples of subjects being interrogated include POWs, individuals <b>...</b>
13:00
Follow that Car: "Car Surveillance" 1974 pt2-2 CIA Training Film
Follow that Car: "Car Surveillance" 1974 pt2-2 CIA Training Film
more at quickfound.net "National Security Council. Central Intelligence Agency... This film explores techniques used by surveillance teams, specifically the use of three cars to monitor the subject." This film was posted in the National Archives by the CIA, but appears to have been originally produced by British counterintelligence, Special Branch or MI5. Public domain film from the National Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied. The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original). Split with MKVmerge GUI (part of MKVToolNix), the same software can recombine the downloaded parts (in mp4 format): www.bunkus.org part 1: www.youtube.com en.wikipedia.org The Security Service, commonly known as MI5 (Military Intelligence, Section 5), is the United Kingdom's internal counter-intelligence and security agency and is part of its core intelligence machinery alongside the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS or MI6) focused on foreign threats, Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) and the Defence Intelligence Staff (DIS). All come under the direction of the Joint Intelligence Committee (JIC). The service has a statutory basis in the Security Service Act 1989 and the Intelligence Services Act 1994. Its remit includes the protection of British parliamentary <b>...</b>
1:59
US intelligence suggests no Iranian nukes
US intelligence suggests no Iranian nukes
US intelligence suggests that while Iran is continuing work on its uranium enrichment facilities, there are currently no indications that it has begun work on a nuclear weapon, the US defence secretary has said.
1:15
Weapons Intelligence Team
Weapons Intelligence Team
Hidden away within Multi-National Base Tarin Kot in Uruzgan province, a small team of Australian Defence Force and United States personnel are spearheading a potent new capability reducing the threat from improvised explosive devices (IEDs) for the Afghan population and Australian and Coalition troops in Afghanistan. The Weapons Intelligence Team (aka WIT or 'CSI Tarin Kot') analyses IED components to enable the ADF and its Coalition partners to determine the best methods of countering the threat. This intelligence allows Australian and Coalition forces to update their tactics, techniques and procedures to counter the threat for troops on the ground. The specialised team within WIT uses techniques akin to a police crime lab on the TV program 'CSI' to analyse recovered IED componentry to create the evident for the Afghan justice system to prosecute individuals involved in supplying, creating and laying IEDs against civilians and Coalition troops. This evidence adds to a worldwide database used by police forces, immigration and other officials to help prevent crime.
78:47
Paul Dibb: The rise of China and the inevitable decline of America
Paul Dibb: The rise of China and the inevitable decline of America
Emeritus Professor Paul Dibb gives this lecture entitled 'Two geopolitical fallacies: the rise and rise of China and the inevitable decline of America' at The Australian National University on 5 September 2011. The public debate in Australia about the rise of China and the inevitable decline of America has become increasingly polarised. In one view, there are those who believe that China's rise and rise is inevitable and that it will come to dominate Asia. In this scenario, America has to accept its inevitable decline and accommodate China. At the other extreme, there are those who believe China will become an aggressive and expansionist power and the US and its allies (including Australia) must prepare to counter it with military force, if necessary. This lecture examines the reasons for the rise and fall of great powers historically; it then looks at the strengths and weaknesses of both China and the US and how they might compete for influence in Asia. It concludes by canvassing competing theories for the future strategic order in Asia -- including the balance of power, a concert of powers, and a cooperative regional strategic organisation. Paul Dibb is Emeritus Professor of Strategic Studies in the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre at The Australian National University. His previous positions include: Head of the Strategic and Defence Studies Centre, Deputy Secretary of the Department of Defence, Director of the Defence Intelligence Organisation, and Head of the <b>...</b>
3:08
Envitia messages for Defence Geospatial Intelligence (DGI) Europe 2011
Envitia messages for Defence Geospatial Intelligence (DGI) Europe 2011
The Envitia key messages for Defence Geospatial Intelligence (DGI) Europe 2011 - With Envitia software and Open Standard web services the user can Discover data and services, Integrate and fuse information, Visualise the intelligence and Exploit by taking the decision (DIVE).
3:58
Defence Geospatial Intelligence (DGI) 2010 - Review Video
Defence Geospatial Intelligence (DGI) 2010 - Review Video
Defence Geospatial Intelligence (DGI) is Europe's largest and most international annual gathering dedicated to the high-level discussion of the importance and the major challenges of the use of geospatial intelligence in both defence and national security operations. DGI brings together 700 heads of Geospatial Intelligence, Remote Sensing, GIS Mapping, GIS Software, Satellite Imagery and Analysis within the Military, Governmental and National Security sectors. It attracts professionals who are responsible for using, and integrating, geo based capabilities in their operations and organisations. DGI provides a unique forum for defence intelligence to discuss and debate the development of geospatial intelligence capabilities across the globe in defence and security sectors. For more information, visit www.wbresearch.com
3:45
Enhancing NATO's Missile Defence
Enhancing NATO's Missile Defence
Despite being faced with defence cuts, the Netherlands is still investing in new and state-of-the-art technology for its navy. The Dutch are modernizing the radar systems of four frigates so that they can be used as an early warning system for NATO's Missile Defence.
2:05
Anonymous - Operation Defence (anti-CISPA)
Anonymous - Operation Defence (anti-CISPA)
*MIRROR* uploaded by TheAnonMessage
0:44
IDF considers scrapping UAV Spy Drones: Israeli Defence Forces reconsiders Heron TP spy drone
IDF considers scrapping UAV Spy Drones: Israeli Defence Forces reconsiders Heron TP spy drone
The Israeli Defence Forces may abandon development of high-tech unmanned aerial vehicles, or UAVs, over concerns with financing the project. According to reports in the Haaretz newspaper, high-ranking IDF commanders have argued that the spy drone project should be frozen or cancelled. Development of the surveillance drones, which would provide visual intelligence via photos and video, had been considered a high priority for artillery forces since a decision was reached to pursue the technology in 2009. The report came just days after an experimental Heron TP drone crashed in central Israel.
14:50
Follow that Car: "Car Surveillance" 1974 pt1-2 CIA Training Film
Follow that Car: "Car Surveillance" 1974 pt1-2 CIA Training Film
more at quickfound.net "National Security Council. Central Intelligence Agency... This film explores techniques used by surveillance teams, specifically the use of three cars to monitor the subject." This film was posted in the National Archives by the CIA, but appears to have been originally produced by British counterintelligence, Special Branch or MI5. Public domain film from the National Archives, slightly cropped to remove uneven edges, with the aspect ratio corrected, and mild video noise reduction applied. The soundtrack was also processed with volume normalization, noise reduction, clipping reduction, and equalization (the resulting sound, though not perfect, is far less noisy than the original). Split with MKVmerge GUI (part of MKVToolNix), the same software can recombine the downloaded parts (in mp4 format): www.bunkus.org part 2: www.youtube.com en.wikipedia.org The Security Service, commonly known as MI5 (Military Intelligence, Section 5), is the United Kingdom's internal counter-intelligence and security agency and is part of its core intelligence machinery alongside the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS or MI6) focused on foreign threats, Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) and the Defence Intelligence Staff (DIS). All come under the direction of the Joint Intelligence Committee (JIC). The service has a statutory basis in the Security Service Act 1989 and the Intelligence Services Act 1994. Its remit includes the protection of British parliamentary <b>...</b>
2:55
'Women in Defence' speak out 01.12.11
'Women in Defence' speak out 01.12.11
Trailblazing women from the Armed Forces, Government, Intelligence and Industry have convened at the Royal United Services Institute in London for the "Women in Defence Leadership Conference". Speakers represented the highest ranking women from each service of the British and American Armed Forces. A further eight countries also sent their top women in uniform.
38:02
Defence Geospatial Intelligence (DGI) 2011: Col. John D. Kedar, UK MOD - 20 years of GIS
Defence Geospatial Intelligence (DGI) 2011: Col. John D. Kedar, UK MOD - 20 years of GIS
Guest Closing Speaker at Defence Geospatial Intelligence (DGI) 2011. GIS -- Looking Back 20 Years -- Development, Strategies & Real Life: Col. John D. Kedar, Former Commander, JAGO, UK MOD. www.defencegeospatial.com Colonel John Kedar has been one of the DGI's most popular guest speakers for several years. He is preparing an overview to the key developments in the geo community, looking back at the very start of the community and projecting future growth, developments and goals. Join this closing presentation for a historic insight and a look into the future.
3:02
Kathayallithu Jeevitham - Defence Minister AK Antony
Kathayallithu Jeevitham - Defence Minister AK Antony
Mon - Fri 9.30 pm IST. kij.amritatv.com
14:18
CIA Archives: Intelligence Gathering - Interrogation of Enemy Airmen (2/2) (1943) Free online seo on
CIA Archives: Intelligence Gathering - Interrogation of Enemy Airmen (2/2) (1943) Free online seo on
CIA Archives: Intelligence Gathering - Interrogation of Enemy Airmen (2/2) (1943) Free online seo on Bulkping for Internet Search engine optimisation Movie Watch the full film: BulkPing More CIA films: BulkPing Human source screening is the logical start of collection of HUMINT. This involves selecting people who may be sources of meaningful HUMINT, possibly positively identifying them, and conducting interviews of various types. Properly recording and cross-indexing the results of interviews is essential. No intelligence collection discipline is more likely to find meaning in apparently small bits of information than is HUMINT. Especially when there is reason to have additional interviews with the same individual, the subsequent interviews need careful planning, especially when the interrogator does not speak the language of the person being interviewed. As opposed to debriefing, the subject of interrogation is not necessarily cooperating with the obtaining of information by the organization. The subject is normally in custody, although the legal circumstances may be such that an uncooperative subject may be able to leave. Examples of subjects being interrogated include POWs, individuals detained by patrol as not being from the area, and a thief arrested by the civilian police. Interrogation is a skilled technique, which often involves building rapport with the subject. In an intelligence context, interrogators should be trained specialists, although they may work with <b>...</b>
4:57
NATO Secretary General Press Conference at NATO Defence Ministers meetings 02 February 2012 (1/2)
NATO Secretary General Press Conference at NATO Defence Ministers meetings 02 February 2012 (1/2)
Press conference NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen following the Defence Ministers meeting Today, we had a discussion on our operation in Afghanistan. This is NATO's top operational priority. I intend to say much more about this tomorrow after our discussion with ISAF partners but I would like to take the opportunity now to clarify a few issues. At our Summit in Lisbon, we outlined a roadmap for a gradual transition of lead security responsibility to the Afghan security forces. That decision and that roadmap still stand. We are all committed to the principle: "in together, out together." We started transition last year. This process will continue until the end of 2014. And we expect Afghan National Security Forces to have taken full responsibility for security throughout Afghanistan by the end of 2014 -- as we agreed in Lisbon. Until we reach that point, the role of our forces will gradually change from combat to support, based on security and the realities on the ground. But let me stress: we will conduct combat operations throughout the transition period. This shift in our force presence and role during the transition period will take place in close consultation and coordination among Allies and partners within ISAF and with the Afghan authorities. And at the NATO summit in Chicago, we will take decisions on how to implement transition from that point until the end of 2014. Transition is a road that ISAF and the Afghan forces will walk together -- every step <b>...</b>










