Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Md Troopers Assoc #20 & Westminster Md Fire Dept Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Showing posts with label Military. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Military. Show all posts

Sunday, March 16, 2014

New York Times Breaking News: General Accused of Sexual Assault Pleads Guilty to Lesser Charge

BREAKING NEWS Sunday, March 16, 2014 3:02 PM EDT

General Accused of Sexual Assault Pleads Guilty to Lesser Charges

Brig. Gen. Jeffrey A. Sinclair, the Army general prosecuted in the military’s most significant sexual assault case, has agreed to plead guilty to lesser charges in exchange for the dismissal of accusations that he twice forced his longtime mistress into oral sex, threatened to kill her and her family, and performed consensual sexual acts with her in a parked car in Germany and on a hotel balcony in Tucson.

The new guilty pleas, outlined in a document obtained by The New York Times, are expected to be entered by General Sinclair in military court at Fort Bragg, N.C., as soon as Monday morning.

The pleas would end a two-year-old case against one of the military’s rising stars that was derailed after setbacks, including a judge’s ruling last week that cleared the way for a plea deal.

The general’s punishment will not be determined until a judge finishes holding a sentencing hearing; prosecutors are expected to argue for prison time, while defense lawyers will contend that officers in similar cases have not faced jail time and have been allowed to retire at reduced rank.

READ MORE: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/17/us/army-general-in-sexual-assault-case-to-plead-guilty-to-lesser-charges.html?emc=edit_na_20140316

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Monday, January 06, 2014

Cheerleader-to-soldier: Philly Eagles girl turns in pom-poms for rifle - Washington Times

Cheerleader-to-soldier: Philly Eagles girl turns in pom-poms for rifle - Washington Times


-
The Washington Times
Friday, December 20, 2013







Rachel Washburn, 25, was a cheerleader with the Philadelphia Eagles when she decided a career shift was in order. So she traded in her pom-poms and signed on the dotted Army contract line — and she’s since been serving as an intelligence officer with a special ops combat unit in Afghanistan.

She just returned from her second tour, and is set to receive a “Hometown Hero” honor ceremony at Sunday’s Eagles game at home against the Chicago Bears. Part of her overseas strengths comes from the fact she’s able to interact with village women at a different level than her male soldier counterparts — even helping one deliver a baby during a massive snowstorm, USA Today reported.


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Tuesday, November 26, 2013

New York Times: U.S. Flies B-52s Through China’s Expanded Air Defense Zone


BREAKING NEWS Tuesday, November 26, 2013 12:47 PM EST


Two long-range American bombers have conducted what Pentagon officials described Tuesday as a routine training mission through international air space recently claimed by China as its “air defense identification zone.”

The Chinese government said Saturday that it has the right to identify, monitor and possibly take military action against aircraft that enter the area, which includes sea and islands also claimed by Japan. The claim threatens to escalate an already tense dispute over some of the maritime territory.

American officials said the pair of B-52s carried out a mission that had been planned long in advance of the Chinese announcement this past weekend, and that the United States military would continue to assert its right to fly through what it regards as international air space.


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Friday, September 27, 2013

Carroll County NAACP to hold Annual Freedom Fund Banquet on Friday, October 11th

Carroll County NAACP to hold Annual Freedom Fund Banquet on Friday, October 11th

This year’s Carroll County NAACP Branch 7014 2013 Annual Freedom Fund Banquet will be held on Friday, October 11th, 2013 at Martin's of Westminster at 6:30pm.

This year's guest speaker is the 1st Woman & African-American Commander for the Maryland Army National Guard Brigadier General Linda Singh and U.S. Congressman Elijah E. Cummings

Adult Tickets $50, Children Tickets $20

For tickets contact: Bernard (410) 876-2358 or Jean (410) 861-6872

Make checks payable to: Carroll County NAACP Branch 7014, 255 Clifton Blvd Suite 310, Westminster, MD 21157


Contributions or gifts to this NAACP unit are generally not deductible as charitable contributions for federal income tax purposes.





Diversity, NAACP, Carroll County, Maryland, Westminster, Maryland Army National Guard, civil rights




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Kevin Dayhoff is an artist - and a columnist for:

Twitter: https://twitter.com/kevindayhoffTwitpic: http://twitpic.com/photos/kevindayhoff
Kevin Dayhoff's The New Bedford Herald: http://kbetrue.livejournal.com/ = www.newbedfordherald.net

Tumblr: Kevin Dayhoff Banana Stems www.kevindayhoff.tumblr.com/
Smurfs: http://babylonfluckjudd.blogspot.com/
Google profile: https://profiles.google.com/kevindayhoff/

E-mail: kevindayhoff(at)gmail.com
My http://www.explorecarroll.com/ columns appear in the copy of the Baltimore Sunday Sun that is distributed in Carroll County: https://subscribe.baltsun.com/Circulation/
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Monday, August 05, 2013

Stars and Stripes Daily Headlines for August 4, 2013

Stars and Stripes Daily Headlines for August 4, 2013

[img]USS Ponce stays afloat in unique role as forward staging base
When the USS Ponce returned to Norfolk in December 2011 with its 360 crewmembers and thousands of additional shipmates — roaches that had inhabited the vessel — it was supposed to be its final deployment. 

 
[img]30 years later, families unite to honor fallen Marine
Phillip Herrera Jr. was married just five days before he was deployed, and his bride buried him almost a year later, in 1966. On her deathbed, she entrusted boxes of Herrera's belongings to her son, and implored him to find the Herrera family and return the boxes. 

 
[img]$100M museum proposed at Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst
"People enjoy looking at artifacts, but the centerpiece of the museum will be the strong, compelling human stories connected to them," said Nino De Pasquale, president of the nonprofit museum organization. 

 
[img]Future uncertain for family of Marine accused of killing Iraqi
While her Marine husband was in prison at Fort Leavenworth for killing an unarmed Iraqi, Reyna Hutchins got a call from the FBI: her name was on a "hit list" of a suspected American terrorist, an Al Qaeda sympathizer. 

 
[img]US posts in Muslim world will remain closed 
U.S. diplomatic posts in 19 cities in the Muslim world will be closed at least through the end of this week, the State Department said Sunday, citing "an abundance of caution." 

 
[img]States consider regulation of drones in US skies 
Thousands of civilian drones are expected in U.S. skies within a few years and concerns they could be used to spy on Americans are fueling legislative efforts in several states to regulate the unmanned aircraft. 

 
[img]Families of helicopter attack find strength in each other
Memorial by memorial, the magnitude of the tragedy became real: 30 Americans, 22 of them in naval special operations, all lost together on Aug. 6, 2011 - the single deadliest day for Americans in the Afghanistan war. 

 
[img]Fort Hood and the rarity of military executions 
Hundreds of unarmed soldiers, some about to deploy to Afghanistan, were waiting inside a building for vaccines and routine checkups when a fellow soldier walked in with two handguns and enough ammunition to commit one of the worst mass shootings in American history. 

 
[img]New Navy ship to carry USS Indianapolis name
The U.S. Navy intends to name a new combat ship the USS Indianapolis, honoring the crew of the cruiser of the same name whose sinking in the final weeks or World War II was the military branch's worst single loss of life at sea. 

 


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Sunday, November 25, 2012

“Where the hell is Olivia Pope when you really need her?” Jamaica Observer Style Observer By Sharon Leach


“Where the hell is Olivia Pope when you really need her?” Jamaica Observer Style Observer By Sharon Leach Sunday, November 18, 2012 http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/lifestyle/Where-the-hell-is-Olivia-Pope-when-you-really-need-her_13007341

“E-mails are the spawn of Satan.”

“Similarly, the more important a position or office a man holds, the more likely he is to do some dumb shit.”

“I think what happens in a public figure's personal life should be just that: personal. Not in the public arena. I don't care what anyone wants to say: … What good purpose, other than the cruel sport of ho-shaming, can the public picking apart of these people serve for the figures, their families?

This and much more from: “Where the hell is Olivia Pope when you really need her?” Jamaica Observer Style Observer By Sharon Leach Sunday, November 18, 2012 http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/lifestyle/Where-the-hell-is-Olivia-Pope-when-you-really-need-her_13007341

See also: Kevin Dayhoff The Tentacle General (Petraeus) Chaos http://tinyurl.com/abc78l8


“General Chaos” by Kevin E. Dayhoff November 21, 2012 http://www.thetentacle.com/author.cfm?MyAuthor=41

On Monday, Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, issued a statement in which he said that the “recent allegations” swirling-around high-ranking military officers are “not a distraction.”

[…]

It was just days after the election when it was publically revealed that CIA Director David Petraeus was resigning his post because he had conducted an extra-marital affair with Lt. Col. Paula Broadwell, his biographer, from late 2011 until last summer… http://www.thetentacle.com/ShowArticle.cfm?mydocid=5475



Kevin Dayhoff The Tentacle General (Petraeus) Chaos http://tinyurl.com/abc78l8
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Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Who is Holly Petraeus? by Adriana Velez at CaféMom.com


Who Is Holly Petraeus? The Scorned General's Wife Isn't All She Seems


As the Petraeus sex scandal continues to spiral, there's one person I keep wondering about: David's wife of 37 years, Holly Petraeus. How is she taking this scandal? Is she furious, heartbroken -- is she surprised? Did she ever suspect her husband was fooling around?

You've seen the photos of Holly: A grandmotherly woman with a gray bob and swept bangs, almost always smiling, glasses perched on her nose. She reminds me of oatmeal cookies -- sweet, wholesome, and a little old-fashioned. But dainty? Forget it. Behind that kind smile is a woman made of iron. She's an Army wife. Not just an Army wife, but a four-star General's wife who's managed to forge her own path and identity.

Holly is what they call military royalty. Her father is retired four-star General William Knowlton, formerly the superintendent of the United States Military Academy when Petraeus was a cadet there. He also served as a NATO commander. Holly's ancestors fought in the Civil War, Spanish American War, and the Indian Wars.

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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Time to rethink Afghanistan September 25, 2012 by Kevin E. Dayhoff


In light of a recent dispatch from Michael Yon, “Stuck in the Mud,” 24September 2012, http://www.michaelyon-online.com/stuck-in-the-mud.htm, I am reminded of what I wrote back in March, 2012:

“Time to Rethink Afghanistan” by Kevin E. Dayhoff March 28, 2012






So far, 2012 has not been a good year for the war in Afghanistan. Just last Monday a New York Times/CBS poll quantified what most Americans already know in their gut: support for the war is dropping sharply among both Democrats and Republicans.

According to the Times’ article, “Support in U.S. for Afghan War Drops Sharply, Poll Finds,” “the survey (a copy of which may be accessed here,) found that more than two-thirds of those polled — 69 percent — thought that the United States should not be at war in Afghanistan. Just four months ago, 53 percent said that Americans should no longer be fighting in the conflict, more than a decade old.”

Inadvertently, the Times article explained part of the problem when it quoted “Michael E. O’Hanlon, a military expert at the Brookings Institution, who is close to American commanders in Afghanistan, said that the opinion polls reflected a lack of awareness of the current policy…”

Yes, Mr. Hanlon, you are correct. Ten years of war and at this point in time, most Americans cannot tell you why we are still risking the lives of our young men and women.

The rest of the quote from Mr. Hanlon reads: “…the current policy, which calls for slowly turning over portions of the country to Afghan security forces, like the southern provinces, where American troops have tamped down the violence.

“I honestly believe,” said Mr. Hanlon, “if more people understood that there is a strategy and intended sequence of events with an end in sight, they would be tolerant…”

Here’s the takeaway: “The overall image of this war is of U.S. troops mired in quicksand and getting blown up and arbitrarily waiting until 2014 to come home. Of course, you’d be against it,” said Mr. Hanlon.

Bingo. Increasingly the overall image of this war has become the feckless foreign policy of sending young men and women into quicksand to get blown-up arbitrarily.

The additional context of the troubled mission-drift approach to the war may be found in a recent telling interview with the top commander in Afghanistan, detailed by Jennifer Hlad and Chris Carroll in Stars and Stripes.

U.S. Marine Gen. John Allen was quoted as saying that “he believes the majority of non-commissioned officers; staff NCOs and young officers are ‘extraordinarily well-trained.’

“Repeated tours in Afghanistan, and prior to that, in Iraq, don’t inherently reduce the effectiveness of the force or reduce the effectiveness of small-unit leadership… I’m confident the institution is solid,” said General Allen in the article, “Allen: Investigation of Afghan killings to look at leadership climate.”

Anecdotally and unscientifically, all intuition and instincts indicate that General Allen has unwittingly responded to what has been, heretofore, only whispers in the hallway… http://www.thetentacle.com/ShowArticle.cfm?mydocid=5001



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Saturday, August 18, 2012

Dishonorable Disclosures - You Tube: Intelligence and Spec Ops forces are furious at how Obama has exploited their service for political advantage




You Tube: Intelligence and Spec Ops forces are furious at how Obama has exploited their service for political advantage


About Dishonorable Disclosure


Published on Aug 15, 2012 by 
Intelligence and Special Operations forces are furious and frustrated at how President Obama and those in positions of authority have exploited their service for political advantage. Countless leaks, interviews and decisions by the Obama Administration and other government officials have undermined the success of our Intelligence and Special Operations forces and put future missions and personnel at risk.

The unwarranted and dangerous public disclosure of Special Forces Operations is so serious -- that for the first time ever -- former operators have agreed to risk their reputations and go 'on the record' in a special documentary titled "Dishonorable Disclosures." Its goal is to educate America about serious breaches of security and prevent them from ever happening again.

Use of military ranks, titles & photographs in uniform does not imply endorsement of the Dept of the Army or the Department of Defense. All individuals are no longer in active service with any federal agency or military service.


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Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Statement by the Press Secretary on the Los Angeles Times Story


04/18/2012 08:05 AM CDT

IMMEDIATE RELEASE No. 284-12 April 18, 2012

Statement by the Press Secretary on the Los Angeles Times Story

Acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs George Little provided the following statement:

"Secretary Panetta strongly rejects the conduct depicted in these two-year old photographs. These images by no means represent the values or professionalism of the vast majority of U.S. troops serving in Afghanistan today.

"An investigation that could lead to disciplinary measures is underway. Anyone found responsible for this inhuman conduct will be held accountable in accordance with our military justice system.

"The secretary is also disappointed that despite our request not to publish these photographs, the Los Angeles Times went ahead. The danger is that this material could be used by the enemy to incite violence against U.S. and Afghan service members in Afghanistan. U.S. forces in the country are taking security measures to guard against it."

[20120418 st by Press Secy on LAT Story]
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Monday, April 02, 2012

CBC Television Interview with Secretary Panetta



Presenter: Secretary of Defense Leon E. Panetta and Peter Mansbridge, CBC TelevisionApril 02, 2012

CBC Television Interview with Secretary Panetta

                 PETER MANSBRIDGE:  Mr. Secretary, have we – and I use the kind of collective we, the NATO we – have we outlived our welcome in Afghanistan? 
                SECRETARY OF DEFENSE LEON PANETTA:  No, I really believe that the Afghan people for the first time are seeing the real possibility that they can govern and secure that country themselves, and they want to move towards that goal, and so do we.  That's the whole point here.  This was about being able to ensure that Afghanistan would never again become a safe haven for al-Qaida and for their terrorist allies to be able to plan any kind of attack on the United States, or any place else in the world for that matter. 
                But to get that, you've got to have an Afghanistan that can secure and control and govern itself.  Now we're making good progress there.  We really are.  
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  That seems so hard after these – especially the recent situations.  
                SEC. PANETTA:  Oh, sure.               
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  We have the president of Afghanistan wanting NATO troops to withdraw from certain areas.  You've got these incredible incidents that have taken place, including the – you call it the green on blue, the insider killings.  In other words, the people – the NATO troops have trained Afghan security forces, turning against NATO troops. 
                You see that kind of thing and you see the level of unrest on the people who want to be left alone.  They want foreign troops out.  And that leads to that question, have we over-stayed our welcome? 
                SEC. PANETTA:  Yeah, but they also want to be secure.  You know, war is hell.  War is not going to be a, you know, bowl of cherries every day.  It's hell and it involves fighting an enemy that has been committed to trying to control that country.  We've actually – we have made a turning point.  I mean, in comparison to what we've seen over the last few weeks there the level of violence is down.  We have been able to weaken al-Qaida, al-Qaida and the Taliban significantly.  As a matter of fact, the Taliban have not been able to conduct one organized attack to regain any territory that they've lost.  They've lost that ability to do that.  
                Thirdly, the Afghan army is much more effective operationally.  And lastly, the areas we've transitioned – and we've now transitioned over half of the Afghan population has been transitioned to their control and their security, and we're going to continue that effort.  So the whole goal here is in line with what the Afghans want.  It's in line with what President Karzai wants, which is a country that they secure and govern themselves.               
                That can't happen overnight.  We can't just pick up and get the hell out of there.  We've got to be able to do this in a way that guarantees that that country is going to be able to control and secure itself.  And I think General Allen has laid out a strategy that will get us there and we've got to stick to that. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  What about the American people, the Canadian people, the British people, all of whom now, it seems, when you read the research data and the polling data, are saying it's time to get out. 
                SEC. PANETTA:  You know, after 10 years of war, everybody's tired of war. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  But they don't seem to be hearing the story you just told me, about the accomplishments that are happening. 
                SEC. PANETTA:  No, I think – part of that is that everybody focuses on what happens that day and the incident that takes place, you know, that's always a focal point.  Good news has a hard time making it to the headlines these days, but the fact is there is good news.  
                The fact is we are on the right track and the fact is we've got to stay committed there because in the end, you know, the American people, the Canadian people, the British people, people of the world, I think, understand that the lives we've lost there – and we've spilled a lot of blood there – that those lives cannot be lost in vain, that the whole goal here was to achieve an Afghanistan that could secure and govern itself, and that's what we've got to stay focused on and that's the mission we've got to accomplish. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:    Why are the kind of incidents that are happening, happening? 
                SEC. PANETTA:  I think, you know, my own view is that part of this is the frustration of the Taliban who've been unable to get back into the populations.  One of the important things that happened in 2011 is that the Afghans themselves – because of the army, because of the police, because of the Afghan people themselves – basically have rejected the Taliban and what they've tried to do.  And they haven't been able to work their way back in, they haven't been able to, as I said, conduct any kind of organized effort to regain any land that they've lost. 
                And so what do you do in that situation?  You always turn to the kind of incidents that can try to undermine the population and the public support for this because of the impact of that particular incident.  So the whole green on blue incidents that we've seen I think is in part a reflection of that, and in part it's a reflection of certain individuals who, for whatever reason, decide to behave in that manner.               
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  You're suggesting – I assume you're suggesting that the Taliban has been successful in infiltrating small parts, but parts nevertheless, of the Afghan security forces. 
                SEC. PANETTA:  I think we're seeing incidents where they've been able to do that, but at the same time, you know, when you look at the overwhelming majority of the Afghan army and Afghan police, they're out there doing the job every day.  As a matter of fact, in response to every one of these incidents they've maintained order, they've maintained law enforcement in these areas, they've protected against the kind of demonstrations that have gotten out of hand.  There have been no large-scale desertions.  They're doing the job that they're supposed to do. 
                The overwhelming majority of Afghans who are in the service are doing the right thing.  Yes, you're going to run into a bad apple.  Hell, we run into bad apples on our own side every once and a while that do crazy things.  But that should not be the measure on which you decide whether or not your mission is being achieved.  The measure has to be the success of that mission and that's what we're doing. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  It's almost been a year now since the night you took out Osama bin Laden.  What's different because of that? 
                SEC. PANETTA:  The world is safer. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  Because of one man?
                SEC. PANETTA:  Oh, yes, absolutely.  This man was committed to attacking the United States, committed to attacking other countries. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:    Does he still have the ability to control that? 
                SEC. PANETTA:  I think there's no question he continues to assert that kind of almost spiritual leadership that he had, and people continued to refer to that.  He continued to try to assert that and did – one of the things we found by going through the material at Abbottabad, the compound he had there, is that he was continuing to make efforts, continuing to work with his leadership to be able to conduct further attacks. 
                And so he was clearly committed to that goal, and the very fact that, you know, he was the individual that put together the 9/11 attack I think made very clear that he was someone we absolutely had to go after, we had to get, and that the key to undermining al-Qaida and to undermining their effort to continue that effort was in large measure going to be getting rid of bin Laden. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:    So his leadership was beyond spiritual.  He still had direct connection through his people. 
                SEC. PANETTA:  Oh, yes.  He was still working through couriers to get his message across.  Matter of fact, it was the couriers that ultimately led us to the compound.  But he was continuing to use them in order to be able to get his message out and in order to be able to communicate with the other leaders within al-Qaida. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  But was al-Qaida still, and is still now, a significant force at that time?  Because we were getting used to being told that, you know, it's a spent force. 
                SEC. PANETTA:  There's no question that we have been very successful at going after their leadership, not only bin Laden but we've gone after a number of their other key leaders, and we made it very difficult for them to put any kind of command and control together or to put together the kind of plan that was involved in the attack on 9/11.  
                Having said that, they continue to be a threat.  Continue to be a threat not just in the FATA, in Pakistan.  They continue to be a threat in Yemen and Somalia and in North Africa, and so for that reason we just can't stop continuing to put pressure on them to make sure that they never again have the opportunity to attack our country. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:    Now you mention how – you took a lot of material out of that compound and you've now had almost a year to go through it all.  Have you been able to determine, in what you've seen, any direct connection with Pakistan for his ability to live and operate within a stone's throw of Pakistan's – one of its most important military installations?
                SEC. PANETTA:  I have not.  And you know, there's been a lot of material.  They've gone through a lot of material.  We haven't had access to, obviously, all of the analysis that's been done, but I have not heard any kind of evidence that involved a direct connection to the Pakistanis.  Obviously the concern has always been how could a compound like this, how could bin Laden be in an area where there were military establishments, where we could see the military operating and not have them know.               
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  And how could it?  How could it operate there without their knowledge? 
                SEC. PANETTA:  Well, you know, these situations sometimes, you know, the leadership within Pakistan [sic] is obviously not aware of certain things and yet people lower down in the military establishment find it very well, they've been aware of it.  But bottom line is that we have not had evidence that provides that direct link. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  Are you comfortable with the Pakistan military and intelligence community? 
                SEC. PANETTA:  Well, you know, it's a complex relationship.  It always has been and I suspect it always will be.  In some ways we share a common – common concern and a common threat.  Terrorism is as much a threat to Pakistan and the people of Pakistan as it is to us and to the people of Afghanistan.  And the fact is that they lost an awful lot of lives because of terrorism. 
                And they continue to conduct military operations against the terrorists.  So in many ways we have common cause, but the problem is that they view their position in that part of the world as one that is threatened, threatened by India, threatened by others, threatened by some of the terrorists, threatened by the concern about, you know, how they're going to be viewed in that region, what kind of position are they going to have for the future. 
                And as a result of that, sometimes we get very mixed messages from Pakistan as to just exactly where they're going to be.  We've had ups and downs, but my view is it's an absolutely essential relationship if we're going to be able to, A, go after the enemy that we're concerned about, and B, frankly, you can't really have peace in Afghanistan until we've been able to ensure that we have peace in Pakistan with regards to the terrorists. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  Now you never told the Pakistanis anything about the raid that was about to take place on bin Laden, for those fears, right?  Fears that they wouldn't keep it a secret? 
                SEC. PANETTA:  The concern we had is that, you know, we had provided intelligence to them with regards to other areas and unfortunately, for one way or another, it got leaked to the individuals we were trying to go after.  So as a result of that we were concerned that if we were going to perform a sensitive mission like this, we had to do it on our own. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  Is the trust any deeper or better today than it was a year ago? 
                SEC. PANETTA:  Well, you know, we've – as I said, it's a complex relationship.  We've been through our ups and downs.  We're actually in a period now, after coming out of a couple of incidents, where I think they're interested and we're interested in trying to put this back on track.  And as a result of that actually I think we're making some progress, trying to re-open the blocks, the portals for our supplies.  We're making some good progress with regards to cross-border operations.  They are taking some steps to go after terrorists. 
                So, you know, slowly but surely we're trying to get things back in the right place, to try to ensure that both of us are working against terrorism.               
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  Iran.  The focus has been on Iran a lot this year, from a lot of different Western governments and we all know why.  Can you share what you believe to be the latest situation on Iran's nuclear capability? 
                SEC. PANETTA:  You know, we obviously have common cause with the world really, all of our international partners, the international community.  Many of the Arab countries are worried about what's happening in Iran.  I think all of us have common cause that we cannot allow Iran to develop a nuclear weapon.  And you know, the best intelligence we have now indicates that obviously they continue to work at developing their – some of their nuclear capabilities but that they have not made the decision to actually produce a nuclear weapon.  I think there's consensus on that in terms of the intelligence community. 
                But having said that, there remains a lot of concern about just exactly, you know, how are they behaving, what are their motivations.  They seem to be involved in spreading terrorism.  They're involved in providing weapons to groups that, you know, that are terrorists.  They work with Hezbollah, they work with Hamas, they work with other terrorist-associated groups.  And they continue to violate international rules and we can't have that happen. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  Why would a policy of containment not work, given that situation, and the fear that they may start to just, you know, to build a nuclear weapon?   I mean, containment worked against the Soviet Union, worked against China.  Why wouldn't it work against a country like Iran?   They've ruled it out, have you not? 
                SEC. PANETTA:  That's right.  And the reason we ruled it out is that we cannot allow a country that supports terrorism to have a nuclear weapon.  If they have a nuclear weapon and they're basically providing weapons to terrorist groups around the world, imagine what that would mean in terms of the safety of the world. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  Would not containment mean sealing that country off to prevent it, Iran, supplying any kind of weapon to anyone else? 
                SEC. PANETTA:  What we're trying to do now with sanctions we're putting in place, both diplomatic and economic sanctions, is to isolate them and to make very clear to them that until they change the way they behave, they're going to continue to be isolated.  And they're not going to be welcomed to the family of nations. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  Do you have any evidence that they've stopped providing weapons, given the fact that they're – those sanctions – 
                SEC. PANETTA:  No, but you know, there is evidence that these sanctions are hurting, that it's impacting on their economy, it's impacting on their ability to govern themselves.  It's impacting on their relationships with other countries.  It's impacting on their position in the world, and we are weakening Iran as a result of that.  We're isolating them and I think we just have to keep that pressure on them until they recognize that they have to change their ways. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  But the bottom line, you have seen no reason to believe as of this moment that in their work on their nuclear capabilities that it is leading in any way towards the building of a weapon? 
                SEC. PANETTA:  As I said, the intelligence analysis to this point has been that while they continue to enrich, while they continue to try to develop their nuclear capabilities, that they have not made that decision to actually proceed with developing a nuclear weapon. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  A couple of quick issues that impact on this country.  The F-35, as you know, is an issue of some discussions here in this country.  You're 100 percent behind the F-35.  Are you concerned, hearing the things that you've heard from Canada, especially in the last month, that the Canadian government is beginning the process of withdrawing? 
                SEC. PANETTA:  You know, I had good conversations with the defense leader – the defense minister, Peter Mackay, and I really feel that they are fully committed to proceeding with trying to obtain the F-35.  In the end obviously Canada's going to have to make their decision based on what they think is right for their defense. 
                The United States is committed to this because this is a fifth-generation fighter.  This is the future.  We're in the 21stcentury.  We have got to develop that kind of capability for the future, and yes, it's – it's not easy.  This is all cutting edge technology.  You're going to have to test it, you're going to have to make sure it works, and we've been through that. 
                We've got three variants on the fighter that we're trying to develop.  They're all testing pretty well.  We think we've gone through a lot of the difficult challenges, and at this – 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  Are they testing well? 
                SEC. PANETTA:  Yeah, they are.               
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  Because, you know, from a distance you keep hearing things about cost overruns.  That's one thing.  They're significant.  That the testing isn't going as well, it's not delivering on the kind of things that a fifth-generation fighter is supposed to be delivering on. 
                SEC. PANETTA:  Well, let me give you – let me give you an example.  The STOVL, which is the one that takes off this way.               
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  Vertical.               
                SEC. PANETTA:  Vertical takeoffs.  It had five particular problems that concerned my predecessor, Secretary Gates, so he put it on probation, and I think it was about a year ago.  And over this last year every one of those issues has been addressed to the satisfaction of the people in the procurement area, that we've now got this in the right place.  So – 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  Unfortunately, that's not the one Canada's buying. 
                SEC. PANETTA:  No, I understand, but you know, the other planes have done the same thing.  Questions have arisen, the concerns have been addressed. 
                Now, look, this is, as I said, this is cutting-edge technology.  You're dealing with the latest – it's going to have to be fully tested.  I have a responsibility to the American taxpayer to make sure that this is done in as cost-efficient a way as possible and we're going to do that.  And in addition to that, frankly, the industries that are developing this plane have a responsibility to hold the costs down as well.               
                If they want to be able to benefit from this, then they're going to have to do their part in making sure that we try to hold this within cost limits.  So we're making progress.  We've got to keep a steady pace on this, with proper oversight but also proper dedication to getting this weapon in place. 
                Mr. MANSBRIDGE:  The name Omar Khadr.  Does that mean anything to you?
                SEC. PANETTA:  (Inaudible.) 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  Did that come up in any of your discussions –               
                SEC. PANETTA:  Well – 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  And what can you share with us on that?  Has Canada asked for his – 
                SEC. PANETTA:  We are negotiating to try to see if we can transfer that individual to Canada.  Those discussions are ongoing.  I'm confident that ultimately we will be able to work out the issue so that in fact he can be transferred to a Canadian jurisdiction. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  Has Canada asked for a transfer yet? 
                SEC. PANETTA:  Canada has expressed an interest in trying to work this through and we are working with them to make it happen. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  How long have those discussions been going on? 
                SEC. PANETTA:  They've been going on a while, but we're making good progress.  And I'm really confident that we're going to be able to do it this time. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  A quick word on the relationship with Canada, U.S., Mexico.  We're going finish here on time.  Are you OK, or a couple of minutes? 
                STAFF:  Sure. 
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  Well, if I get two minutes, I'll go another way.  (Laughter.) 
                You know, anybody who goes through your background and goes through the things that you've done in your career, decades of public service in a lot of different positions – you know, elected positions and appointed positions, leadership roles and very close – well, senior leadership roles.  This is a question I ask as often as I can because to me it's still one of the great puzzles.  And that's to try to understand leadership and what makes strong, good, responsible leadership. 
                You've been there.  What is it to you? 
                SEC. PANETTA:  Well, you know, I guess everybody has to – everybody comes to leadership from, you know, from their own backgrounds obviously, and my background is basically what committed me to public service.  One, I had immigrant parents from Italy who came and got the opportunity to succeed and wanted to make sure they gave something back to the country. 
                Secondly, I was in the Army for two years and saw what it was like to work together with a group of people to accomplish a mission together and that impressed me as to that kind of duty.  
                And then lastly there was a young president who said it was more important to ask not what you're country can do for you but what you can do for your country.  All of that combined to interest me in public service and giving back to the country.  That's what I've done through most of my career.               
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  When you stand beside a president, serving that person – and I'm not asking for any particulars, what is it that makes a leader?  What's the one quality that you point to that says this person can lead; I would follow this person?  What is it? 
                SEC. PANETTA:  I think the one quality that I think is what the American dream is all about, and the Canadian dream is all about, is whether or not what you do improves the lives of our children.  If you can say that what you're doing helps improve the lives of our children, then you're a leader.  
                MR. MANSBRIDGE:  Mr. Secretary, on that note I'll leave it.  Thanks so much for being here.  Nobody's ever given that answer.
 U.S. Department of Defense 
Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense (Public Affairs)

On the Web: http://www.defense.gov/Transcripts/ 

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