A PUBLICATION OF RANDOM U.S.GOVERNMENT PRESS RELEASES AND ARTICLES
Monday, June 18, 2012
SPAIN: U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT PROFILE
Map From: U.S. State Department Website:
PROFILE
Geography
Area: 504,750 sq. km. (194,884 sq. mi.), including the Balearic and Canary Islands; about the size of Arizona and Utah combined.
Cities (2010 census): Capital--Madrid (3.3 million). Other cities--Barcelona (1.6 million), Valencia (809,267), Seville (704,198), Malaga (568,507), Zaragoza 675,121), Bilbao (353,187).
Terrain: High plateaus, lowland areas such as narrow coastal plains, and mountainous regions.
Climate: Temperate. Summers are hot in the interior and more moderate and cloudy along the coast; winters are cold in interior and partly cloudy and cool along the coast.
Time zone: Spanish mainland and Balearic Isles--local time is 1 hour ahead of Greenwich Mean Time (GMT) in winter and 2 hours ahead in summer. Canary Islands are on GMT.
People
Nationality: Noun--Spaniard(s). Adjective--Spanish.
Population (National Institute of Statistics (INE), January 1, 2011): 47,190,493.
Ethnic groups: Distinct ethnic groups within Spain include the Basques, Catalans, and Galicians.
Religion: Predominantly Roman Catholic (approx. 75%); Protestant and Islamic faiths also have a significant presence.
Languages: Spanish (official) 74%, Catalan-Valencian 17%, Galician 7%, Basque 2%.
Education: Years compulsory--to age 16. Literacy (INE, third quarter 2008)--97.6%.
Work force (third quarter 2011): 18.156 million.
Unemployment rate (third quarter 2011): 21.52%.
Government
Type: Constitutional monarchy (Juan Carlos I proclaimed King November 22, 1975).
Constitution: 1978.
Branches: Executive--president of government nominated by monarch, subject to approval by democratically elected Congress of Deputies. Legislative--bicameral Cortes: a 350-seat Congress of Deputies (elected by the d'Hondt system of proportional representation) and a Senate. Four senators are elected in each of 47 peninsular provinces, 16 are elected from the three island provinces, and Ceuta and Melilla elect two each; this accounts for 208 senators. The parliaments of the 17 autonomous regions also elect one senator as well as one additional senator for every 1 million inhabitants within their territory (about 20 senators). Judicial--Constitutional Tribunal has jurisdiction over constitutional issues. Supreme Tribunal heads system comprising territorial, provincial, regional, and municipal courts.
Subdivisions: 47 peninsular and three island provinces; two enclaves on the Mediterranean coast of Morocco (Ceuta and Melilla) and three island groups along that coast--Alhucemas, Penon de Velez de la Gomera, and the Chafarinas Islands.
Political parties: Spanish Socialist Workers Party (PSOE), Popular Party (PP), and the United Left (IU) coalition. Key regional parties are the Convergence and Union (CIU) in Catalonia and the Basque Nationalist Party (PNV) in the Basque country.
Economy
GDP (2011): $1.487 trillion (€1.068 trillion); seventh-largest economy in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).
Per capita GDP (2011): $31,508 (€22,635).
GDP annual growth rate (2011): 0.7%.
Natural resources: Coal, lignite, iron ore, uranium, mercury, pyrites, fluorspar, gypsum, zinc, lead, tungsten, copper, kaolin, hydroelectric power.
Agriculture and fisheries (2.3% of GDP, 2011): Products--grains, vegetables, citrus and deciduous fruits, wine, olives and olive oil, sunflowers, livestock and poultry, dairy products, seafood.
Industry (11.7% of GDP, 2011): Types--processed foods, textiles, footwear, petrochemicals, steel, automobiles, consumer goods, electronics.
Services (2011): 66.91% of GDP.
Trade (2011): Exports--$293.8 billion (€211.1 billion): automobiles, fruits, minerals, metals, clothing, footwear, textiles. Major markets--EU 66.7%, U.S. 4.4%. Imports--$361.2 billion (€259.5 billion): petroleum, oilseeds, aircraft, grains, chemicals, machinery, transportation equipment, fish, consumer goods. Major sources--EU 52.8%, U.S. 4%.
Average exchange rate (2011): 1 euro=U.S. $1.392.
PEOPLE
Spain's population density, lower than that of most European countries, is roughly equivalent to New England's. In recent years, following a longstanding pattern in the rest of Europe, rural populations are moving to cities. Urban areas are also experiencing a significant increase in immigrant populations, chiefly from North Africa, South America, and Eastern Europe.
Spain has no official religion. The constitution of 1978 disestablished the Roman Catholic Church as the official state religion, while recognizing the role it plays in Spanish society. According to the National Institute of Statistics (April 2010), 73.2% of the population are Catholic, 2.3% belong to another religion, 14.6% are agnostic, and 7.6% are atheists.
Educational System
About 70% of Spain's student population attends public schools or universities. The remainder attends private schools or universities, the great majority of which are operated by the Catholic Church. Compulsory education begins with primary school or general basic education for ages 6-14. It is free in public schools and in many private schools, most of which receive government subsidies. Following graduation, students attend either a secondary school offering a general high school diploma or a school of professional education (corresponding to grades 9-12 in the United States) offering a vocational training program. The Spanish university system offers degree and post-graduate programs in all fields--law, sciences, humanities, and medicine--and the superior technical schools offer programs in engineering and architecture.
HISTORY
The Iberian Peninsula has been settled for millennia. Some of Europe's most impressive Paleolithic cultural sites are located in Spain, including the famous caves at Altamira that contain spectacular paintings dating from about 15,000 to 25,000 years ago. Beginning in the ninth century BC, Phoenicians, Greeks, Carthaginians, and Celts entered the Iberian Peninsula. The Romans followed in the second century BC and laid the groundwork for Spain's present language, religion, and laws. Although the Visigoths arrived in the fifth century AD, the last Roman strongholds along the southern coast did not fall until the seventh century AD. In 711, North African Moors sailed across the straits, swept into Andalusia, and within a few years, pushed the Visigoths up the peninsula to the Cantabrian Mountains. The Reconquest--efforts to drive out the Moors--lasted until 1492. By 1512, the unification of present-day Spain was complete.
During the 16th century, Spain became the most powerful nation in Europe, due to the immense wealth derived from its presence in the Americas. But a series of long, costly wars and revolts, capped by the English defeat of the "Invincible Armada" in 1588, began a steady decline of Spanish power in Europe. Controversy over succession to the throne consumed the country during the 18th century, leading to an occupation by France during the Napoleonic era in the early 1800s and a series of armed conflicts throughout much of the 19th century.
The 19th century saw the revolt and independence of most of Spain's colonies in the Western Hemisphere; three wars over the succession issue; the brief ousting of the monarchy and establishment of the First Republic (1873-74); and, finally, the Spanish-American War (1898), in which Spain lost Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines to the United States. A period of dictatorial rule (1923-31) ended with the establishment of the Second Republic. It was dominated by increasing political polarization, culminating in the leftist Popular Front electoral victory in 1936. Pressures from all sides, coupled with growing and unchecked violence, led to the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War in July 1936.
Following the victory of his nationalist forces in 1939, General Francisco Franco ruled a nation exhausted politically and economically. Spain was officially neutral during World War II but followed a pro-Axis policy. Therefore, the victorious Allies isolated Spain at the beginning of the postwar period. The country signed the Mutual Defense Assistance Agreement with the U.S. on September 26, 1953 and joined the United Nations in 1955. In 1959, under an International Monetary Fund (IMF) stabilization plan, the country began liberalizing trade and capital flows, particularly foreign direct investment.
Despite the success of economic liberalization, Spain remained for years the most closed economy in Western Europe--judged by the small measure of foreign trade to economic activity--and the pace of reform slackened during the 1960s as the state remained committed to "guiding" the economy. Nevertheless, in the 1960s and 1970s, Spain was transformed into a modern industrial economy with a thriving tourism sector. Its economic expansion led to improved income distribution and helped develop a large middle class. Social changes brought about by economic prosperity and the inflow of new ideas helped set the stage for Spain's transition to democracy during the latter half of the 1970s.
Upon the death of General Franco in November 1975, Franco's personally-designated heir Prince Juan Carlos de Borbon y Borbon assumed the titles of king and chief of state. Dissatisfied with the slow pace of post-Franco liberalization, he replaced Franco's last prime minister with Adolfo Suarez in July 1976. Suarez entered office promising that elections would be held within 1 year, and his government moved to enact a series of laws to liberalize the new regime. Spain's first elections since 1936 to the Cortes (Parliament) were held on June 15, 1977. Prime Minister Suarez's Union of the Democratic Center (UCD), a moderate center-right coalition, won 34% of the vote and the largest bloc of seats in the Cortes.
Under Suarez, the new Cortes set about drafting a democratic constitution that was overwhelmingly approved by voters in a national referendum in December 1978.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Parliamentary democracy was restored following the 1975 death of General Franco, who had ruled since the end of the civil war in 1939. The 1978 constitution established Spain as a parliamentary monarchy, with the prime minister responsible to the bicameral Cortes (Congress of Deputies and Senate) elected every 4 years. On February 23, 1981, rebel elements among the security forces seized the Cortes and tried to impose a military-backed government. However, the great majority of the military forces remained loyal to King Juan Carlos, who used his personal authority to put down the bloodless coup attempt.
In October 1982, the Spanish Socialist Workers Party (PSOE), led by Felipe Gonzalez, swept both the Congress of Deputies and Senate, winning an absolute majority. Gonzalez and the PSOE ruled for the next 13 years. During that period, Spain joined the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and the European Community.
In March 1996, Jose Maria Aznar's Popular Party (PP) won a plurality of votes. Aznar moved to decentralize powers to the regions and liberalize the economy, with a program of privatization, labor market reform, and measures designed to increase competition in selected markets. During Aznar's first term, Spain fully integrated into European institutions, qualifying for the European Monetary Union, and participated, along with the United States and other NATO allies, in military operations in the former Yugoslavia. President Aznar and the PP won reelection in March 2000, obtaining absolute majorities in both houses of parliament.
After the terrorist attacks on the U.S. on September 11, 2001, President Aznar became a key ally in the fight against terrorism. Spain backed the military action against the Taliban in Afghanistan and took a leadership role within the European Union (EU) in pushing for increased international cooperation on terrorism. The Aznar government, with a rotating seat on the UN Security Council, supported the intervention in Iraq.
Spanish parliamentary elections on March 14, 2004 came only 3 days after a devastating terrorist attack on Madrid commuter rail lines that killed 191 and wounded over 1,400. With large voter turnout, PSOE won the election and its leader, Jose Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, took office on April 17, 2004. Carrying out campaign promises, the Zapatero government immediately withdrew Spanish forces from Iraq but continued to support Iraq reconstruction efforts. The Zapatero government supported coalition efforts in Afghanistan, including increasing Spanish troop strength in Afghanistan by 50% in February 2010 as part of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) troop surge, bringing Spain to its current commitment of 1,500 troops. The Zapatero administration also provided assets, including use of the Moron air base and Rota naval base, in support of Operation Unified Protector in Libya in 2011.
In 2010 Spain’s real estate bubble, the main driver of economic growth for more than a decade, started to collapse. Zapatero's administration was slow to recognize the extent of the problem and did not take aggressive measures until mid-2010, by which time his popularity had plummeted. In May 2011, Zapatero’s PSOE party suffered a heavy defeat in regional elections, losing the majority of regional and municipal governments to the PP. Bowing to PP pressure, Zapatero called for early national elections, moving them up from March 2012 to November 2011. In the November 20 elections, the PP won 187 parliamentary seats, the most ever for a PP government, giving it an absolute parliamentary majority. The PP's Mariano Rajoy became the president of the government (prime minister).
Local Government
The 1978 constitution authorized the creation of regional autonomous governments. By 1985, 17 regions covering all of peninsular Spain, the Canaries, and the Balearic Islands had negotiated autonomy statutes with the central government. In 1979, the first autonomous elections were held in the Basque and Catalan regions, which have the strongest regional traditions by virtue of their history and separate languages. Since then, autonomous governments have been created in the remainder of the 17 regions. Successive central governments have continued to devolve powers to the regional governments, especially health care, education, and other social programs.
Terrorism
The Government of Spain is involved in a long-running campaign against Basque Fatherland and Liberty (ETA), a terrorist organization founded in 1959 and dedicated to promoting Basque independence. ETA targets Spanish security forces, military personnel, Spanish Government officials, politicians of the Popular Party and the Socialist Party (PSOE), and business people and civilian institutions that do not support ETA. The group has carried out numerous bombings against Spanish Government facilities and economic targets, including a car bomb assassination attempt on then-opposition leader Aznar in 1995 in which his armored car was destroyed but he was unhurt. The Spanish Government attributes over 800 deaths to ETA terrorism since its campaign of violence began. In recent years, the government has had more success in controlling ETA, due in part to increased security cooperation with French authorities.
In November 1999, ETA ended a cease-fire it declared in September 1998. Following the end of that cease-fire, ETA conducted a campaign of violence and has been blamed for the deaths of some 50 Spanish citizens and officials. Each attack has been followed by massive anti-ETA demonstrations around the country, clearly demonstrating that the majority of Spaniards, including the majority of Spain's Basque populace, have no tolerance for continued ETA violence. In March 2006, ETA declared another cease-fire, which it ended in June 2007 as a number of bombings and assassinations continued. In December 2007, two undercover Spanish police officers were killed in Capbreton, in France's southwestern region, by suspected ETA gunmen. Days before Spain's general elections in March 2008, former councilman Isaias Carrasco was murdered outside of his home by an ETA gunman. It was seen by many as a political move by ETA to try and influence the elections. Ignacio Uria Mendizabal, head of the Altuna y Uria company, was assassinated on December 3, 2008. The company was involved in the construction of a high-speed rail network in the region, a project opposed by ETA.
In 2009, ETA marked its 50th anniversary with a series of high-profile and deadly bombings. On July 29, ETA detonated an explosive-laden, stolen van outside a Civil Guard barracks in Burgos. The blast injured more than 60 Civil Guards, spouses, and children. The following day, ETA murdered two Civil Guards in Mallorca with a car bomb. ETA had claimed its first victim of the year weeks earlier when it used a car bomb on June 19 to assassinate a national police officer in the Basque Region.
Also in 2009, the Basque regional government underwent a change of administration. The Socialist Party, under Patxi Lopez's regional leadership, assumed power as the first non-Basque nationalist government to administer the Basque country since the restoration of democracy in Spain 3 decades earlier. Lopez's administration implemented a more unequivocal counterterrorism policy to confront ETA. Meanwhile, Spain was pleased to see that the European Court of Human Rights in June upheld Spain's 2003 ban on the political party Batasuna for its ties to ETA.
The Spanish Government pursues a vigorous counterterrorist policy and has worked closely with its international allies to foil several suspected ETA attacks. In May 2008, Francisco Javier Lopez Pena, the political-military head of ETA, was arrested in Bordeaux. In November 2008, French authorities arrested reputed ETA military chief Miguel De Garikoitz Aspiazu Rubina, alias "Txeroki", closely followed by the arrest of his successor on December 8, 2008. These arrests struck a severe blow to the leadership of ETA. France and Spain have stepped up cooperation to crack down on ETA since a special accord was signed in January 2008 allowing Spanish agents to operate in southwestern France. Arrests by security forces have continued to decimate ETA, with 375 arrests since January 2008 (including 244 in Spain and 115 in France). These arrests have included those of key leaders, such as a March 11, 2011 raid in which ETA leader Alejandro Zobran Arriola and three other suspects were arrested by French police in a remote village near the Belgian border. ETA declared a permanent cease-fire in October 2010 and again in January 2011, followed by a “definitive cessation of armed activity,” but has yet to disarm or disband.
Radical Islamic terrorists are known to operate cells in Spain. On March 11, 2004, only 3 days before national elections, 10 bombs were detonated on crowded commuter trains during rush hour. Three were deactivated by security forces and one was found unexploded. Evidence quickly surfaced that jihadist terrorists were responsible for the attack that killed 191 people. Spanish investigative services and the judicial system have aggressively sought to arrest and prosecute suspected Al Qaeda-linked members and actively cooperate with foreign governments to diminish the transnational terrorist threat. A Spanish court convicted 18 individuals in September 2005 for their role in supporting Al Qaeda, and Spanish police disrupted numerous Islamist extremist cells operating in the country. The trial against 29 people for their alleged participation in the Madrid March 11, 2004 terrorist attack started in February 2007. One of the 29 was absolved during the trial. The prosecutor asked for sentences as high as 30,000 years of jail for some of them. In October 2007 three of the suspects were convicted of murder for their roles in the 2004 attack and received over 42,000 years in prison. Overall, 21 of 28 defendants were found guilty of some offense for their role in the bombings. In July 2008 the Spanish Supreme Court announced the acquittal on appeal of four of the 21 convicted defendants. The Supreme Court also upheld the lower court's acquittal of the suspected mastermind of the attacks, agreeing with the lower court's decision that because he had already been sentenced in Italy for belonging to a terrorist organization he could not be tried for the same crime twice. In a separate case, the Supreme Court overturned 14 of the 20 convictions, and reduced four other sentences, of a cell sentenced in February 2008 for plotting to truck-bomb the National Court.
In January 2008, Spanish authorities in Barcelona arrested 14 people believed to be connected to a Pakistani terrorist cell allegedly sympathetic to Al Qaeda. The group, potentially linked to Islamic terrorist activities, was believed to be on the verge of a terrorist bombing campaign against Barcelona's transportation network and possibly other targets in Europe. An informant working for the French intelligence services notified Spanish authorities of the pending attack. Spanish security forces have arrested 85 suspected violent extremists since April 2008.
Principal Government Officials
Chief of State, Commander in Chief of the Armed Forces--King Juan Carlos I
President of the Government (Prime Minister)--Mariano Rajoy
Minister of Foreign Affairs--Jose Manuel Garcia-Margallo
Ambassador to the United States--D. Jorge Dezcallar
Spain maintains an embassy in the United States at 2375 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20037 (tel. 202-452-0100) and nine consulates in U.S. cities.
ECONOMY
Spain's accession to the European Community--now European Union (EU)--in January 1986 required the country to open its economy to trade and investment, modernize its industrial base, improve infrastructure, and revise economic legislation to conform to EU guidelines.
These measures helped the economy grow rapidly over the next 2 decades. Unemployment fell from 23% in 1986 to a low point of 8% in mid-2007. The adoption of the euro in 2002 greatly reduced interest rates, spurring a housing boom that further fueled growth. The strong euro also encouraged Spanish firms to invest in the United States, where several Spanish firms have significant investments in banking, insurance, wind and solar power, biofuels, road construction, food, and other sectors. The end of the housing boom in 2007 and the international financial crisis led to a recession that began in the second quarter of 2008. Housing sales and construction declined dramatically, and the unemployment rate reached almost 23% by the end of 2011.
GDP growth for 2010 was -0.1%. The Spanish economy grew by 0.8% in the third quarter of 2011, Analysts predict that fourth-quarter growth was negative and that the economy will re-enter recession in the first quarter of 2012. The 2011 budget deficit is expected to be around 8% of GDP, but the new administration has already introduced serious cuts in order to reach the 2012 target of a 4.4% deficit. Spain’s debt to GDP ratio remains comparatively low (around 65% of GDP) due to budget surpluses maintained prior to 2008. The new government has pledged to implement rapid labor market reforms and complete the restructuring of the financial sector in an effort to stimulate growth and create employment.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
After the return of democracy following the death of General Franco in 1975, Spain's foreign policy priorities were to break out of the diplomatic isolation of the Franco years and expand diplomatic relations, enter the European Community, and define security relations with the West. As a member of NATO since 1982, Spain has established itself as a major participant in multilateral international security activities. Spain assumed the EU presidency in January 2010 and finished its term in June 2010. While the EU has steadily become a more important part of Spain’s foreign policy, in light of the European-wide financial crisis, President Rajoy has announced that the EU is his top foreign policy priority. Even on many international issues beyond Western Europe, Spain prefers to coordinate its efforts with its EU partners through the European political cooperation mechanism.
Spain has maintained its special identification with Latin America. Its policy emphasizes the concept of Hispanidad, a mixture of linguistic, religious, ethnic, cultural, and historical ties binding Spanish-speaking America to Spain. Spain has been an effective example of transition from authoritarianism to democracy, as shown in the many trips that Spain's King and prime ministers have made to the region. Spain maintains economic and technical cooperation programs and cultural exchanges with Latin America, both bilaterally and within the EU. President Rajoy has made it clear that Latin America will remain a top foreign policy priority, especially its trade and economic development.
Spain also continues to focus attention on North Africa, especially on Morocco, a source of much of Spain's large influx of legal and illegal immigrants over the past 10 years. This concern is dictated by geographic proximity and long historical contacts and more recently by immigration trends, as well as by the two Spanish enclave cities of Ceuta and Melilla on the northern coast of Africa. While Spain's departure from its former colony of Western Sahara ended direct Spanish participation in Morocco, it maintains an interest in the peaceful resolution of the conflict brought about there by decolonization. These issues were highlighted by a crisis in 2002, when Spanish forces evicted a small contingent of Moroccans from a tiny islet off Morocco's coast following that nation's attempt to assert sovereignty over the island.
Meanwhile, Spain has gradually begun to broaden its contacts with Sub-Saharan Africa. It has a particular interest in its former colony of Equatorial Guinea, where it maintains a large aid program.
In relations with the Arab world, Spain has sought to promote European-Mediterranean dialogue. Spain strongly supports the EU's Union for the Mediterranean (formerly called the Barcelona Process) to expand dialogue and trade between Europe and the nations of North Africa and the Middle East, including Israel. Barcelona serves as the headquarters of the Union for the Mediterranean, which was proposed by French President Nicolas Sarkozy in 2007.
Spain has been successful in managing its relations with its three European neighbors, France, Andorra, and Portugal. The accession of Spain and Portugal to the EU has helped ease some of their periodic trade frictions by putting these into an EU context. Franco-Spanish bilateral cooperation is enhanced by joint action against Basque ETA terrorism. Ties with the United Kingdom are generally good, although the question of Gibraltar remains a sensitive issue.
U.S.-SPANISH RELATIONS
Spain and the United States have a long history of official relations and are closely associated in many fields. In addition to U.S. and Spanish cooperation in NATO, defense and security relations between the two countries are regulated by the Mutual Defense Assistance Agreement signed on September 26, 1953 and the 1989 Agreement on Defense Cooperation, revised in 2003. Under this agreement, Spain authorized the United States to use certain facilities at Spanish military installations. In May 2011, Spain announced its intention to allow four U.S. ballistic missile defense-capable destroyers to be stationed at a base southern Spain. Parliamentary approval is expected in the first quarter of calendar year 2012.
The two countries also cooperate in several other important areas. The U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the Spanish National Institute for Aerospace Technology (INTA) jointly operate the Madrid Deep Space Communications Complex in support of Earth orbital and solar system exploration missions. The Madrid Complex is one of the three largest tracking and data acquisition complexes comprising NASA's Deep Space Network.
An agreement on cultural and educational cooperation was signed on June 7, 1989. A new element, support by both the public and private sectors, gave a different dimension to the programs carried out by the joint committee for cultural and educational cooperation. These joint committee activities complement the binational Fulbright program for graduate students, postdoctoral researchers, and visiting professors, which is among the largest in the world and celebrated its 50th anniversary in 2008. Besides assisting in these exchange endeavors, the U.S. Embassy also conducts a program of educational, professional, and cultural exchanges, as well as hosting high-level official visits between officials from Spain and the United States.
Spain and the U.S. are strong allies in the fight against terrorism.
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND UNDERSTANDING INFERENCES
Icon Credit: lcb.
FROM: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ARMED WITH SCIENCE
DEEP EXPLORATION AND FILTERING TEXT
Written on JUNE 8, 2012 AT 7:10 AM by JTOZER
Are You Inferring What I think You’re Inferring?
Much of the operationally-relevant information relied on in support of DoD missions may be implicit rather than explicitly expressed, and in many cases, information is deliberately obfuscated and important activities and objects are only indirectly referenced.”
In short, sometimes the meaning in messages just isn’t clear. Ironic, isn’t it?
That can be a problem, though, especially on the ground where accurate and timely intelligence can affect the success or failure of a mission.
Through various and sundry means, DoD collects vast sets of data in the form of messages, documents, notes and the like, both on and off the battlefield. Thoroughly and efficiently processing this data to extract valuable content is a challenge based on volume alone, but the problem is magnified when important information within those files is deliberately masked by its authors.
So, what is there to do when you have commanders and warfighters on the front line depending on analysts to help them build informed plans?
Why, you use technology, of course.
DARPA is developing a new type of automated, deep natural-language understanding technology which they say may hold a solution for more efficiently processing text information. A mumbo-jumbo decomplicator?
Go on…
When processed at its most basic level without ingrained cultural filters, language offers the key to understanding connections in text that might not be readily apparent to humans. A “just the facts” approach is more effective than the “the give us the whole story” angle,
so to speak. Also, it’s fun to talk like a 1940s detective.
But how do you do that? Not the detective talk, sweetheart, I mean the dialing-it-down. Getting to the root of the story. The meat and potatoes of the whole shebang (okay, I’ll stop).
In short, DEFT. At length…it makes more sense.
DARPA created the Deep Exploration and Filtering of Text (DEFT) program to harness the power of language. Sophisticated artificial intelligence of this nature has the potential to enable defense analysts to efficiently investigate documents so they can discover implicitly expressed, actionable information contained within them.
Letting the technology do the dirty work, eh? (last one I swear).
Actually that’s a smart idea. But that implies that the system will be capable of understanding the thought that goes behind human communication, right? How is an AI going to know what we mean by our vague platitudes or double entendres? Will it know what I mean when I type LOL?
“DEFT is attempting to create technology to make reliable inferences based on basic text,” said Bonnie Dorr, DARPA program manager for DEFT. “We want the ability to mitigate ambiguity in text by stripping away filters that can cloud meaning and by rejecting false information. To be successful, the technology needs to look beyond what is explicitly expressed in text to infer what is actually meant.”
The development of an automated solution may rely on contributions from the linguistics and computer science fields in the areas of artificial intelligence, computational linguistics, machine learning, natural-language understanding, discourse and dialogue analysis, and others.
They could have used this in Star Trek, you know. Something complicated would happen and then one of the characters would have to sum it up in a simple metaphor. With DEFT, they could have taken all those pithy one-liners out. Imagine all the time and energy they could have saved while the warp core breached. Again.
DEFT will build on existing DARPA programs and ongoing academic re
search into deep language understanding and artificial intelligence to address remaining capability gaps related to inference, causal relationships and anomaly detection.
“Much of the basic research needed for DEFT has been accomplished, but now has to be scaled, applied and integrated through the development of new technology,” Dorr said.
As information is processed, DEFT also aims to integrate individual facts into large domain models for assessment, planning and prediction. If successful, DEFT will allow analysts to move from limited, linear processing of insurmountable quantities of data to a nuanced, strategic exploration of available information.
So, by reading between the overly-complicated lines, DEFT might actually be able to glean useful information from what would otherwise be muddled and confusing messages. I wonder if they can turn this technology into a teenage-text filter so I can weed through the bizarre pseudo-cavemen texts I get from my cousin. Then I’ll finally know what “IDK, TTYL8R” means.
FROM: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE ARMED WITH SCIENCE
DEEP EXPLORATION AND FILTERING TEXT
Written on JUNE 8, 2012 AT 7:10 AM by JTOZER
Are You Inferring What I think You’re Inferring?
Much of the operationally-relevant information relied on in support of DoD missions may be implicit rather than explicitly expressed, and in many cases, information is deliberately obfuscated and important activities and objects are only indirectly referenced.”
In short, sometimes the meaning in messages just isn’t clear. Ironic, isn’t it?
That can be a problem, though, especially on the ground where accurate and timely intelligence can affect the success or failure of a mission.
Through various and sundry means, DoD collects vast sets of data in the form of messages, documents, notes and the like, both on and off the battlefield. Thoroughly and efficiently processing this data to extract valuable content is a challenge based on volume alone, but the problem is magnified when important information within those files is deliberately masked by its authors.
So, what is there to do when you have commanders and warfighters on the front line depending on analysts to help them build informed plans?
Why, you use technology, of course.
DARPA is developing a new type of automated, deep natural-language understanding technology which they say may hold a solution for more efficiently processing text information. A mumbo-jumbo decomplicator?
Go on…
When processed at its most basic level without ingrained cultural filters, language offers the key to understanding connections in text that might not be readily apparent to humans. A “just the facts” approach is more effective than the “the give us the whole story” angle,
so to speak. Also, it’s fun to talk like a 1940s detective.
But how do you do that? Not the detective talk, sweetheart, I mean the dialing-it-down. Getting to the root of the story. The meat and potatoes of the whole shebang (okay, I’ll stop).
In short, DEFT. At length…it makes more sense.
DARPA created the Deep Exploration and Filtering of Text (DEFT) program to harness the power of language. Sophisticated artificial intelligence of this nature has the potential to enable defense analysts to efficiently investigate documents so they can discover implicitly expressed, actionable information contained within them.
Letting the technology do the dirty work, eh? (last one I swear).
Actually that’s a smart idea. But that implies that the system will be capable of understanding the thought that goes behind human communication, right? How is an AI going to know what we mean by our vague platitudes or double entendres? Will it know what I mean when I type LOL?
“DEFT is attempting to create technology to make reliable inferences based on basic text,” said Bonnie Dorr, DARPA program manager for DEFT. “We want the ability to mitigate ambiguity in text by stripping away filters that can cloud meaning and by rejecting false information. To be successful, the technology needs to look beyond what is explicitly expressed in text to infer what is actually meant.”
The development of an automated solution may rely on contributions from the linguistics and computer science fields in the areas of artificial intelligence, computational linguistics, machine learning, natural-language understanding, discourse and dialogue analysis, and others.
They could have used this in Star Trek, you know. Something complicated would happen and then one of the characters would have to sum it up in a simple metaphor. With DEFT, they could have taken all those pithy one-liners out. Imagine all the time and energy they could have saved while the warp core breached. Again.
DEFT will build on existing DARPA programs and ongoing academic re
search into deep language understanding and artificial intelligence to address remaining capability gaps related to inference, causal relationships and anomaly detection.
“Much of the basic research needed for DEFT has been accomplished, but now has to be scaled, applied and integrated through the development of new technology,” Dorr said.
As information is processed, DEFT also aims to integrate individual facts into large domain models for assessment, planning and prediction. If successful, DEFT will allow analysts to move from limited, linear processing of insurmountable quantities of data to a nuanced, strategic exploration of available information.
So, by reading between the overly-complicated lines, DEFT might actually be able to glean useful information from what would otherwise be muddled and confusing messages. I wonder if they can turn this technology into a teenage-text filter so I can weed through the bizarre pseudo-cavemen texts I get from my cousin. Then I’ll finally know what “IDK, TTYL8R” means.
YALE UNIVERSITY CIVIL RIGHTS INVESTIGATION RESOLVED
Photo: Library at Yale University. Credit: Wikimedia.
FROM: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
U.S. Department of Education Announces Resolution of Yale University Civil Rights Investigation
The U.S. Department of Education announced today that its Office for Civil Rights has entered into a resolution agreement with Yale University, in New Haven, Conn., to resolve a complaint alleging that Yale failed to eliminate sex discrimination in violation of Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972. Discrimination on the basis of sex is prohibited by Title IX.
“Sexual violence and harassment have no place in our nation’s schools,” said Russlynn Ali, assistant secretary for civil rights. “Every student must have a fair chance to a high quality education, but sexual harassment and violence far too often deny students their right to an equal education. I applaud the steps Yale has taken and has agreed to take to address immediate concerns and to put systems in place to help prevent future Title IX discrimination. We look forward to continuing to work cooperatively with Yale to better ensure a safe and supportive environment for all students.”
In March 2011, the Office for Civil Rights received a complaint alleging that a sexually hostile environment existed on campus of the university, to which the university had not responded in a prompt and adequate manner. The complaint was filed, in part, as a result of a well-publicized incident in October 2010 when fraternity pledges chanted sexually aggressive comments outside the university’s Women’s Center located on Old Campus, where most freshman students live.
Based on the complaint allegations, OCR conducted an extensive investigation to assess whether the university had designated a Title IX coordinator, whether the university had grievance procedures to promptly and equitably address complaints under Title IX, and whether the university had allowed a sexually hostile environment to be created on campus by not sufficiently responding to notice of sexual harassment.
The university worked closely with OCR throughout its investigation, voluntarily and proactively made changes to its procedures and practices related to Title IX compliance, and notified the university-wide community of these changes. The university has further agreed to continue this commitment by entering into a voluntary resolution agreement.
The agreement provides that the university will continue to improve and publicize university resources and programming aimed at responding to and preventing sexual harassment and violence. The university will also conduct periodic assessments of the campus climate to evaluate the success of its efforts to provide a safe learning and living environment for its students, free of sexual harassment and violence. Further, the university will continue to coordinate its compliance efforts via its university Title IX coordinator and deputy coordinators and will widely publicize information regarding its designated Title IX coordinators. The university will continue to implement its new grievance process designed to promptly and equitably address complaints of sexual misconduct under Title IX and notify the university community of the outcome of complaints, when appropriate. It will continue its efforts to educate all sectors of the university community on Title IX, including training for administrators, faculty, staff, student service-providers and various student populations.
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OCR’s mission is to ensure equal access to education and promote educational excellence throughout the nation through the vigorous enforcement of civil rights. OCR is responsible for enforcing federal civil rights laws that prohibit discrimination by educational institutions on the basis of disability, race, color, national origin, sex, and age, as well as the Boy Scouts of America Equal Access Act of 2001.
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE CUTTING SPENDING ON TRAVEL AND CONFERENCES
Photo: Pop-Top Camper and Picnic Table. Credit: lcb.
FROM: AMERICAN FORCES PRESS SERVICE
FROM: AMERICAN FORCES PRESS SERVICE
DOD Tightens Spending on Travel, Conferences
By Cheryl Pellerin
WASHINGTON, June 15, 2012 - In response to a May 11 call to action from the Office of Management and Budget, Deputy Defense Secretary Ashton B. Carter has directed DOD officials and managers to reduce spending on travel, conferences and other agency operations.
"DOD consistently strives to be an excellent steward of taxpayer dollars and has focused on these issues for a number of years," Carter said in a June 3 memo.
Such efforts, he added, include the 2010 Secretary's Efficiency Initiative and implementation of President Barack Obama's June 2011 Campaign to Cut Waste.
In his memo, Carter directs the DOD comptroller to reduce travel expenses for fiscal year 2013 by 30 percent from DOD's fiscal 2010 baseline, excluding national security exemptions and without harming agency missions.
The deputy secretary also directs the undersecretary of defense for personnel and readiness to work with DOD components and services to implement a conference policy that establishes standard, tiered approval levels for conference spending.
Effective immediately, Carter is directing a review of upcoming conferences and temporarily suspending new conference obligations. The deputy secretary will personally review conferences that will cost more than $500,000. The department's Deputy Chief Management Officer Elizabeth McGrath will review conferences whose costs exceed $100,000.
DOD will report back to OMB, the deputy secretary said, on proposed reductions in these areas within 90 days, and in some cases 180 days, of the May 11 memo.
Carter said McGrath would coordinate DOD implementation of OMB's Executive-Branch-wide policies and practices involving travel, conferences, real estate and fleet management.
"Increased scrutiny is being applied to DOD spending," McGrath told American Forces Press Service, "which makes it more important than ever that we continue to instill a culture of cost consciousness and accountability across the Defense enterprise."
The department has always taken its duty to be an excellent steward of taxpayer dollars very seriously, she added.
"The appropriate offices for each of the areas discussed in the memorandum -- travel, conferences, real estate, and fleet management -- will work together to ensure that we are fully complying with the deputy secretary's direction," McGrath said, "and that we are making the best use of government funds."
The deputy chief management officer added, "It is important for us to assess our travel costs and practices to ensure that we maximize alternatives to travel, such as teleconferencing, that we combine trips when possible to minimize the frequency of travel, and that we send the right people to the right events."
McGrath said conferences can serve many important purposes, including training, professional development and continuing education opportunities required for professional accreditation.
As the increased spending efficiencies are put in place, he added, "we must ensure that these cuts do not lead to degradation of mission effectiveness."
FLIGHT INSTRUMENT DELIVERED FOR JAMES WEBB SPACE TELESCOPE
Photo Credit: NASA
FROM: NASA
WASHINGTON -- The first of four instruments to fly aboard NASA's James
Webb Space Telescope (Webb) has been delivered to NASA. The
Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI) will allow scientists to study cold
and distant objects in greater detail than ever before.
MIRI arrived at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.,
May 29. It has been undergoing inspection before being integrated
into Webb̢۪s science instrument payload known as the Integrated
Science Instrument Module (ISIM).
Assembled at and shipped from the Science and Technology Facilities
Council's Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in the United Kingdom, MIRI
was developed by a consortium of 10 European institutions and NASA's
Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, Calif., after having
been handed over to the European Space Agency.
MIRI will observe light with wavelengths in the mid-infrared range of
5 microns to 28 microns, which is a longer wavelength than human eyes
can detect. It is the only instrument of the four with this
particular ability to observe the physical processes occurring in the
cosmos.
"MIRI will enable Webb to distinguish the oldest galaxies from more
evolved objects that have undergone several cycles of star birth and
death," said Matt Greenhouse, ISIM project scientist at Goddard.
"MIRI also will provide a unique window into the birth places of
stars which are typically enshrouded by dust that shorter wavelength
light cannot penetrate."
MIRI's sensitive detectors will allow it to observe light, cool stars
in very distant galaxies; unveil newly forming stars within our Milky
Way; find signatures of the formation of planets around stars other
than our own; and take imagery and spectroscopy of planets, comets
and the outermost bits of debris in our solar system. MIRI's images
will enable scientists to study an object̢۪s shape and structure.
The most powerful space telescope ever built, Webb is the successor to
NASA's Hubble Space Telescope. Webb̢۪s four instruments will reveal
how the universe evolved from the Big Bang to the formation of our
solar system. Webb is a joint project of NASA, the European Space
Agency and the Canadian Space Agency.
Sunday, June 17, 2012
U.S.-TUVALU RELATIONS
Map Credit: U.S. State Department.
FROM: U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT
U.S.-TUVALU RELATIONS
During World War II, several thousand U.S. troops were in Tuvalu (then known as the Ellice Islands). Beginning in 1942, U.S. forces built airbases on the islands of Funafuti, Nanumea, and Nukufetau. Relations were friendly and cooperative between the local people and the troops, mainly U.S. Marines and U.S. Navy SeaBees. The airstrip in the capital of Funafuti, originally built by the U.S. during the war, is still in use, as is the "American Passage" that was blasted through Nanumea's reef by SeaBees assisted by local divers.
Tuvalu became fully independent from the United Kingdom in 1978, and in 1979 it signed a treaty of friendship with the United States, which recognized Tuvalu's possession of four islets formerly claimed by the United States. The two countries have worked as partners on regional and global issues promoting peace and strengthening democracy and security. The partnership looks to curb the effects of climate change, reinforce maritime security, and bolster the countries' economic development programs.
U.S. Assistance to Tuvalu
The United States provided assistance towards the purchase of a new desalination plant for Tuvalu following months of drought in 2011. The United States also signed a ship-rider agreement with Tuvalu in 2011 establishing a partnership to provide security and protect earnings from fishing licenses in Tuvalu’s EEZs.
Bilateral Economic Relations
The United States has no significant trade or investment with Tuvalu.
Tuvalu's Membership in International Organizations
Tuvalu maintains an independent but generally pro-Western foreign policy. Tuvalu and the United States belong to a number of the same international organizations, including the United Nations, International Monetary Fund, and World Bank.
MARINES KEEPING COOL

FROM: AMERICAN FORCES PRESS SERVICE
Marine Corps Lance Cpl. Joshua Flores replaces a broken conductor on an air conditioning unit at Camp Leatherneck, Afghanistan, May 19, 2012. U.S. Marine Corps photo by Sgt. Marco Gutierrez
Face of Defense: Marine Keeps Camp Leatherneck Cool
By Marine Corps Sgt. Marco Gutierrez
1st Marine Expeditionary Force
CAMP LEATHERNECK, Afghanistan, June 14, 2012 - Temperatures can reach more than 100 degrees here, but one Marine battles the heat to keep things cool for his fellow service members.
Lance Cpl. Joshua Daniel Flores, a refrigeration mechanic 9th Communication Battalion, 1st Marine Expeditionary Force, works every day to keep his fellow Marines and critical equipment from overheating.
"His mission is important, because he creates a controlled climate environment for the critical communications equipment here, which creates a lot of heat in an already hot environment," said Marine Corps Sgt. Jeremiah Loeffler, the battalion's air conditioning section head and quality control noncommissioned officer.
Flores monitors three sites that contain living spaces, offices and critical communication equipment. He keeps track of more than 170 air conditioning units, performs biweekly preventive maintenance and responds to trouble calls when the units malfunction.
Even though Flores has many people relying on him to get his job done, he always manages to stay upbeat. "He has a good work attitude, likes to learn, and he never does the bare minimum," Loeffler said.
Flores said he enjoys the satisfaction he gets when he repairs an air conditioning unit and knowing his supervisors trust his work.
His biggest challenge is the harsh environment and inclement weather that give the air conditioning units a beating and keep him moving and working. But despite the rigors of his job, he added, keeping Camp Leatherneck running smoothly is all the motivation he needs.
"Biweekly, I go to all my [air conditioning] units," he said. "I do visual inspections, make sure they're good, and clean the dust filters. Right now, I already know just by the wind which ones are dirty."
Even though his job requires him to be out in the blazing hot sun, Flores said, he takes pride in knowing he plays a critical role in helping others keep their cool.
EGYPT: U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT PROFILE

Map Credit: U.S. State Department
Formal Name: Arab Republic of Egypt.
PROFILE
Geography
Area: 1,001,450 sq. km. (386,000 sq. mi.); approximately equal to Texas and New Mexico combined.
Cities: Capital--Cairo (pop. estimated at 16 million). Other cities--Alexandria (6 million), Aswan, Asyut, Port Said, Suez, Ismailia.
Terrain: Desert plateau, except Nile valley and delta.
Climate: Dry, hot summers; moderate winters.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Egyptian(s).
Population (July 2011 est.): 82,079,636.
Annual population growth rate (2011 est.): 1.96%.
Ethnic groups (2006 census): Egyptian 99.6%, other 0.4%.
Religions: Muslim (mostly Sunni) 90%, Coptic Christian 9%, other Christian 1%.
Languages: Arabic (official), English, French.
Education: Years compulsory--ages 6-15. Literacy--total adult 71.4%.
Health: Infant mortality rate (2011 est.)--25.2 deaths/1,000 live births. Life expectancy (2011 est.)--72.66 years.
Government
Type: Republic.
Independence: 1922.
Constitution: Egypt is operating under a constitutional decree from March 2011. Egypt’s parliament began the process of drafting a new constitution in March 2012.
Branches: Executive—President (The Chairman of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces has held presidential authority since February 2011 and has pledged to hand over that function to a new president by June 30, 2012), Prime Minister, Cabinet. Legislative--People's Assembly (498 elected members and up to 10 presidentially appointed), and Shura Council (180 elected members, and 90 appointed by the next elected president). The two houses of Egypt’s parliament—the People’s Assembly and the Shura Council—were dissolved in February 2011, but were seated again in 2012 following elections for each house.
Administrative subdivisions: 27 governorates.
Suffrage: Universal at 18.
Economy
GDP (OER) (FY 2010 est.): $218.5 billion.
GDP (PPP) (FY 2010 est.): $497.8 billion.
Annual growth rate (Projected FY 2011 est.): 1.2%.
Per capita GDP (PPP, FY 2010 est.): $6,200.
Natural resources: Petroleum and natural gas, iron ore, phosphates, manganese, limestone, gypsum, talc, asbestos, lead, zinc.
Agriculture: Products--cotton, rice, onions, beans, citrus fruits, wheat, corn, barley, sugar.
Industry: Types--food processing, textiles, tourism, chemicals, petrochemicals, construction, light manufacturing, iron and steel products, aluminum, cement, military equipment.
Trade (FY 2010): Exports--$25.34 billion: petroleum, clothing and textiles, cotton, fruits and vegetables, manufactured goods. Major markets--EU, U.S., Middle East. Imports--$51.54 billion: machinery and transport equipment, petroleum products, livestock, food and beverages, paper and wood products, chemicals. Major suppliers--EU, U.S., China.
Photo Credit: Wikimedia
Egypt is the most populous country in the Arab world and the second-most populous on the African continent. Nearly all of the country's 80 million people live in the following locations: Cairo and Alexandria; elsewhere on the banks of the Nile; in the Nile delta, which fans out north of Cairo; and along the Suez Canal. These regions are among the world's most densely populated, containing an average of over 3,820 persons per square mile (1,540 per sq. km.), as compared to about 200 persons per sq. mi. for the country as a whole.
Small communities spread throughout the desert regions of Egypt are clustered around oases and historic trade and transportation routes. The government has tried with mixed success to encourage migration to newly irrigated land reclaimed from the desert. However, the proportion of the population living in rural areas has continued to decrease as people move to the cities in search of employment and a higher standard of living.
The Egyptians are a fairly homogeneous people of Hamitic origin. Mediterranean and Arab influences appear in the north, and there is some mixing in the south with the Nubians of northern Sudan. Ethnic minorities include a small number of Bedouin Arab nomads in the eastern and western deserts and in the Sinai, as well as some 50,000-100,000 Nubians clustered along the Nile in Upper (southern) Egypt.
The literacy rate is about 71.4% of the adult population. Education is free through university and compulsory from ages 6 through 15. Rates of primary and secondary education have strengthened in recent years. 93% of children enter primary school today, compared with 87% in 1994. Major universities include Cairo University (100,000 students), Alexandria University, and the 1,000-year-old Al-Azhar University, one of the world's major centers of Islamic learning.
Egypt's vast and rich literature constitutes an important cultural element in the life of the country and in the Arab world as a whole. Egyptian novelists and poets were among the first to experiment with modern styles of Arabic literature, and the forms they developed have been widely imitated. Egyptian novelist Naguib Mahfouz was the first Arab to win the Nobel prize for literature. Egyptian books and films are available throughout the Middle East.
Egypt has endured as a unified state for more than 5,000 years, and archeological evidence indicates that a developed Egyptian society has existed for much longer. Egyptians take pride in their "pharaonic heritage" and in their descent from what they consider mankind's earliest civilization. The Arabic word for Egypt is Misr, which originally connoted "civilization" or "metropolis."
Archeological findings show that primitive tribes lived along the Nile long before the dynastic history of the pharaohs began. By 6000 B.C., organized agriculture had appeared.
In about 3100 B.C., Egypt was united under a ruler known as Mena, or Menes, who inaugurated the 30 pharaonic dynasties into which Egypt's ancient history is divided--the Old and the Middle Kingdoms and the New Empire. The pyramids at Giza (near Cairo), which were built in the fourth dynasty, testify to the power of the pharaonic religion and state. The Great Pyramid, the tomb of Pharaoh Khufu (also known as Cheops), is the only surviving monument of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. Ancient Egypt reached the peak of its power, wealth, and territorial extent in the period called the New Empire (1567-1085 B.C.).
Persian, Greek, Roman, and Arab Conquerors
In 525 B.C., Cambyses, the son of Cyrus the Great, led a Persian invasion force that dethroned the last pharaoh of the 26th dynasty. The country remained a Persian province until conquered by Alexander the Great in 322 B.C., ushering in Ptolemaic rule in Egypt that lasted for nearly 300 years.
Following a brief Persian reconquest, Egypt was invaded and conquered by Arab forces in 642 A.D. A process of Arabization and Islamization ensued. Although a Coptic Christian minority remained--and constitutes about 10% of the population today--the Arab language inexorably supplanted the indigenous Coptic tongue. For the next 1,300 years, a succession of Arab, Mameluke, and Ottoman caliphs, beys, and sultans ruled the country.
European Influence
The Ottoman Turks controlled Egypt from 1517 until 1882, except for a brief period of French rule under Napoleon Bonaparte. In 1805, Mohammed Ali, commander of an Albanian contingent of Ottoman troops, won autonomy from the Ottoman Empire and founded the dynasty that ruled Egypt until his great-great grandson, Farouk , was overthrown in 1952. Mohammed Ali ruled Egypt until 1848, ushering in the modern history of Egypt. The rapid growth of Cairo as an urban center began in the reign of Ismail (1863-79). Eager to modernize the capital, he ordered the construction of a European-style city to the west of the medieval core. The Suez Canal was completed in Ismail’s reign in 1869, and its completion was celebrated by many events, including the commissioning of Verdi's "Aida" for a new opera house and the building of great palaces, such as the Omar Khayyam (originally constructed to entertain the French Empress Eugenie, and now the central section of the Cairo Marriott Hotel).
In 1882, British expeditionary forces crushed an Egyptian revolt led by Ahmed Orabi Pasha, marking the beginning of British occupation and the virtual inclusion of Egypt within the British Empire. Egypt became independent from the British Empire in 1922. British influence, however, continued to dominate Egypt's political life.
Between 1922 and 1952, three main political forces competed with one another: the Wafd, a broadly-based nationalist political organization strongly opposed to British influence; King Fuad, whom the British had installed during World War I; and the British themselves, who were determined to maintain control over the Suez Canal. Other political forces emerging in this period included the Communist Party (1925) and the Muslim Brotherhood (1928), which eventually became a potent political and religious force.
During World War II, British troops used Egypt as a base for Allied operations throughout the region. British troops were withdrawn to the Suez Canal area in 1947, but nationalist, anti-British feelings continued to grow after the war. On July 22-23, 1952, a group of disaffected army officers (the "Free Officers") led by Lt. Col. Gamal Abdel Nasser overthrew King Farouk, whom the military blamed for Egypt's poor performance in the 1948 war with Israel. Following a brief experiment with civilian rule, they abrogated the 1923 constitution and declared Egypt a republic on June 19, 1953. Nasser evolved into a charismatic leader, not only of Egypt, but of the Arab world, promoting and implementing "Arab socialism." He nationalized much of Egypt's economy.
Nasser helped establish the Non-Aligned Movement of developing countries in September 1961, and continued to be a leading force in the movement until his death in 1970. When the United States held up military sales in reaction to Egyptian neutrality toward Moscow, Nasser concluded a seminal arms deal with Czechoslovakia in September 1955.
When the U.S. and the World Bank withdrew their offer to help finance the Aswan High Dam in mid-1956, Nasser nationalized the privately owned Suez Canal Company. The crisis that followed, exacerbated by growing tensions with Israel over guerrilla attacks from Gaza and Israeli reprisals, resulted in the invasion of Egypt that October by France, Britain, and Israel; U.S. political intervention helped reverse the invasion, and the Canal remained nationalized.
Nasser's domestic policies were frequently oppressive, yet generally popular. All opposition was stamped out, and opponents of the regime frequently were imprisoned without trial. Nasser's foreign and military policies helped provoke the Israeli attack of June 1967 that virtually destroyed Egypt's armed forces along with those of Jordan and Syria. Israel also occupied the Sinai Peninsula, the Gaza Strip, the West Bank, and the Golan Heights. Nasser, however, was revered by the masses in Egypt and elsewhere in the Arab world until his death in 1970.
After Nasser's death, another of the original "Free Officers," Vice President Anwar el-Sadat, was elected President. In 1971, Sadat concluded a treaty of friendship with the Soviet Union, but a year later, ordered Soviet advisers to leave. In 1973, he launched the October war with Israel, in which Egypt's armed forces achieved initial successes but were driven back by Israeli counterattacks.
Camp David and the Peace Process
In a momentous change from the Nasser era, President Sadat shifted Egypt from a policy of confrontation with Israel to one of peaceful accommodation through negotiations. Following the Sinai Disengagement Agreements of 1974 and 1975, Sadat created a fresh opening for progress by his dramatic visit to Jerusalem in November 1977. This led to President Jimmy Carter's invitation to President Sadat and Prime Minister Begin to join him in trilateral negotiations at Camp David.
The historic Camp David accords were signed by Egypt and Israel and witnessed by the United States on September 17, 1978. The accords led to the March 26, 1979 signing of the Egypt-Israel Treaty of Peace, by which Egypt regained control of the Sinai in May 1982. Throughout this period, U.S.-Egyptian relations steadily improved, but Sadat's willingness to break ranks by making peace with Israel antagonized most other Arab states.
Domestic Politics after Camp David
Sadat introduced greater political freedom and a new economic policy, the most important aspect of which was the “infitah” or "open door." This relaxed government controls over the economy and encouraged private, including foreign, investment. Sadat dismantled much of the existing political machine and brought to trial a number of former government officials accused of criminal excesses during the Nasser era.
On October 6, 1981, Islamic extremists assassinated President Sadat. Hosni Mubarak, Vice President since 1975 and an air force commander during the October 1973 war, was elected President later that month. He was subsequently confirmed by popular referendum for four more 6-year terms; the most recent referendum took place in September 2005. Egypt was readmitted to the Arab League in 1989 after being expelled for reaching a peace agreement with Israel.
Between 1991 and 2011, Egypt undertook a domestic economic reform program to reduce the size of the public sector and expand the role of the private sector. Political reform stalled, however. The government repressed civil society and opposition groups and maintained Egypt’s longstanding state of emergency. The first competitive presidential elections, held in 2005, were marked by low voter turnout and charges of fraud. Parliamentary elections in 2005 saw significant opposition gains but also violence, low turnout, fraud, and vote rigging. In one notable case, Ayman Nour, member of parliament and popular leader of the opposition Al-Ghad (Tomorrow) Party, was arrested in 2005 and ultimately sentenced to five years’ imprisonment. He was released in 2009. Following parliamentary elections in 2010 that saw significant irregularities and pre-election restrictions, the ruling National Democratic Party (NDP) continued to dominate national politics by maintaining an overriding majority in the People’s Assembly and Shura Council.
The Arab Spring in Egypt: Revolution at Tahrir Square
After an 18-day massive, popular revolution centered on Cairo’s Tahrir (Liberation) Square, Hosni Mubarak was forced to resign as the President of Egypt on February 11, 2011. He relinquished the administration of power first to his Vice President and then to a transitional government led by the Egyptian military’s Supreme Council of the Armed Forces (SCAF), which then appointed a civilian prime minister and cabinet to run the Egyptian government.
In a March 19, 2011 referendum, Egyptians voted overwhelmingly to amend Egypt’s constitution, thus setting the legal groundwork for democratic parliamentary and presidential elections. The referendum included amendments that set term limits for the president, affirmed judicial oversight of elections, and prevented the state of emergency from remaining in effect for longer than six months unless approved by a public referendum. It also provided for the establishment of a 100-member constituent assembly to draft a new constitution. On January 23, 2012, Egypt’s newly elected lower house of parliament, the People’s Assembly, convened for the first time; the SCAF transferred legislative authority to the parliament on the same day. The new members of Egypt’s upper house of parliament, the Shura Council, met on February 28, 2012. The SCAF announced that presidential elections will take place on May 23-24, 2012, with a run-off scheduled for June 16-17 if necessary. By June 30, 2012, the SCAF has pledged to transfer executive authority to an elected president.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Egypt’s March 19, 2011 public referendum produced a temporary constitutional framework that empowers the SCAF to govern Egypt in the interim, with the goal of transferring power to a civilian government and drafting a new constitution in 2012.
Egypt’s parliament is made up of a 508-seat People’s Assembly (498 elected) and a 270-seat Shura Council (180 elected). Egyptians now vote in a mixed parallel proportional representation (PR) and individual candidate (IC) system, where two thirds of the parliament is elected by PR party lists and one third is elected by IC districts. Elections to the lower house of parliament took place in three rounds from November 2011-January 2012, while elections to the upper house occurred in two rounds from January-March 2012. Egypt’s March 2011 constitutional declaration stipulates that the next elected president will appoint 90 members of the Shura Council.
Egypt's judicial system is similar to European (primarily French) legal concepts and methods. The courts have demonstrated increasing independence, and the principles of due process and judicial review have gained greater respect since the January 25 Revolution. Egypt’s legal code is derived largely from the Napoleonic Code. Marriage and personal status (family law) are primarily based on the religious law of the individual concerned, which for most Egyptians is Islamic Law (Sharia).
Principal Government Officials
Presidential authority is currently held by Field Marshal Mohamed Hussein Tantawi, Chairman of the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces
Prime Minister—Kamal El Ganzouri
Minister of Foreign Affairs—Mohamed Kamel Amr
Ambassador to the United States—Sameh Shoukry
Permanent Representative to the United Nations--Maged Abdel Fattah Abdelaziz
FORMER CORPORATE VP PLEADS GUILTY TO FOREIGN BRIBERY OFFENCE
FROM: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Friday, June 15, 2012
Former Vice President at California Valve Company Pleads Guilty to Foreign Bribery Offense
WASHINGTON – David Edmonds, the former vice president of worldwide customer service at Rancho Santa Margarita, Calif.-based valve company Control Components Inc. (CCI), pleaded guilty today to violating the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), announced the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California and the FBI’s Washington Field Office.
Edmonds, who resides in San Clemente, Calif., pleaded guilty today before U.S. District Judge James V. Selna in Santa Ana, Calif., to a one-count superseding information charging him with making a corrupt payment to a foreign government official in Greece in violation of the FCPA. According to court documents, CCI designed and manufactured service control valves for use in the nuclear, oil and gas, and power generation industries worldwide.
At sentencing, Edmonds, 59, faces up to 15 months in prison. Sentencing is scheduled for Nov. 19, 2012.
Edmonds is the seventh former CCI executive to plead guilty to FCPA charges in connection with the company’s bribery scheme:
On May 29, 2012, Paul Cosgrove, CCI’s former head of worldwide sales, pleaded guilty to one count of making a corrupt payment to a foreign government official.
On April 17, 2012, Stuart Carson, CCI’s former president, and Hong “Rose” Carson, CCI’s former director of sales for China and Taiwan, each pleaded guilty to one count of making a corrupt payment to a foreign government official.
On April 28, 2011, Flavio Ricotti, CCI’s former vice president of sales for Europe, Africa, and the Middle East, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiring to violate the FCPA.
On Feb. 3, 2009, Richard Morlok, the former CCI finance director, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to violate the FCPA.
On Jan. 8, 2009, Mario Covino, the former director of worldwide factory sales for CCI, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to violate the FCPA.
Stuart and Rose Carson, Cosgrove, Covino, Morlok and Ricotti are scheduled to be sentenced later this year. FCPA charges brought in April 2009 against Han Yong Kim, the former president of CCI’s Korean office, are pending. An indictment merely contains allegations and defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.
On July 31, 2009, CCI pleaded guilty to a three-count criminal information charging the company with conspiracy to violate the FCPA and the Travel Act, and two substantive violations of the FCPA. CCI was ordered to pay an $18.2 million criminal fine, placed on organizational probation for three years, and ordered to create and implement a compliance program and retain an independent compliance monitor for three years. CCI admitted that from 2003 through 2007, it made corrupt payments in more than 30 countries, which resulted in net profits to the company of approximately $46.5 million from sales related to those corrupt payments.
The case is being prosecuted by Deputy Chief Charles G. La Bella and Trial Attorney Andrew Gentin of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section and Assistant U.S. Attorneys Douglas McCormick and Gregory Staples of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California. The case was investigated by the FBI’s Washington Field Office and its team of special agents dedicated to the investigation of foreign bribery cases.
GSA SAYS IT IS MEETING ENERGY AND SUSTAINABILITY GOALS
Photo: Windmills. Credit: Wikimedia.
FROM: U.S. GENERAL SERVICES ADMINISTRATION
GSA Meets Top Energy and Sustainability Goals
Agency receives top marks on all measured sustainability goals
June 15, 2012
WASHINGTON – Today, the U.S. General Services Administration released its sustainability and energy performance scorecard for Fiscal Year 2011 showing the agency continues to cut costs through energy efficiency and reducing pollution. Using the scorecard as a benchmark, GSA will continue to identify and track the best opportunities to make further progress toward meeting its sustainability and energy performance goals. Under Executive Order 13514, President Barack Obama directed federal agencies to lead by example in clean energy and to meet a range of energy, water, pollution, and waste reduction targets.
“Making buildings more efficient, saving energy, and creating a more fuel efficient fleet is helping government to improve its environmental performance and saves taxpayer dollars,” said Acting Administrator Dan Tangherlini. “GSA is on track to meet its own sustainability goals under the Executive Order, and we are uniquely positioned to help other federal agencies meet their goals as well.”
GSA, which owns and leases over 9,600 federal buildings nationwide, has partnered with industry to make federal buildings more energy-efficient through the use of innovative technologies such as solar panels, advanced lighting systems, geothermal technology, wind power, and low-flow plumbing systems. As a result in FY 2011, GSA reduced greenhouse gas emissions from federal buildings that it directly pays utilities for by 20.3 percent relative to its FY 2008 baseline, well ahead of its targeted reduction of 10 percent and well on its way to meeting its FY 2020 target of 28.7 percent. GSA now derives 15.8 percent of the electricity used in these facilities from renewable electricity sources, including 2.5 percent from new sources. Additionally, GSA has reduced water intensity by nearly 13.7 percent against a target of 6 percent, and reduced energy intensity by 19.2 percent against an 18 percent target.
By purchasing more fuel-efficient vehicles, including hybrids, GSA has reduced its agency’s fleet petroleum use by 25.6 percent against a 12 percent target.
GSA also recently released a set of key skills that federal building managers and contractors need to operate federal facilities at peak efficiency. These core competencies ensure that GSA goes beyond buildings themselves to the people that operate them, working with key industry associations and other federal agencies to create a next generation facilities management workforce. Green buildings and their efficient operation are key to achieving GSA’s goal to reduce the operating costs and footprint of the federal government. Federal buildings operations personnel will be required to demonstrate these core competencies by June of 2013.
In addition to being on track to meet its own sustainability goals, GSA procures sustainable products and services to help other federal agencies meet their sustainability goals. GSA assists agencies with incorporating sustainable building practices and procuring fuel-efficient vehicles for agency-owned fleets.
ADM. LOCKLEAR IS IN FAVOR OF THE "LAW OF THE SEA TREATY"
Locklear Backs Law of the Sea Treaty
By Karen Parrish
WASHINGTON, June 15, 2012 - The Law of the Sea Convention is one avenue toward peacefully resolving competing maritime claims that could otherwise lead to conflict, the leader of U.S. Pacific Command said here today.
Navy Adm. Samuel J. Locklear III spoke to Pentagon reporters following his testimony yesterday as part of a military panel addressing the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on the Law of the Sea Convention.
The United Nations treaty opened for signature in December 1982 and took effect in November 1994, after 60 countries had signed. The United States has not ratified the treaty, but the nation's military leaders have in recent months urged U.S. accession to the agreement.
Locklear told the committee yesterday the convention "is essential to locking in a stable, legal framework for the maritime domain that is favorable to our national interest and preserves our access to this critical region."
As a Pacific power, the United States has defended freedom, enabled prosperity and protected peace in the region for more than six decades, and it must continue to lead security efforts, the admiral said in testimony.
He told senators, "The convention specifically codifies the rights, the freedoms and the uses of the sea that are critical for our forces to transit through and operate in the waters of the Asia-Pacific region."
Population and economic growth in the Asia-Pacific make competing maritime claims both more numerous and more contentious, he said.
"Nowhere is this more prevalent than in the South China Sea, where claimants have asserted broad territorial and sovereignty rights over land features, sea space and resources in the area," Locklear noted.
"The convention is an important component of a rules-based approach that encourages peaceful resolution of these maritime disputes," he said in testimony. "Moreover, the convention codifies an effective balance of coastal state and maritime state rights, a stable legal framework that we help to negotiate that is favorable to our interests and that we should leverage as a check on states that attempt to assert excessive maritime claims."
Because the United States is not a party to the convention, he said, "Our challenges are less credible than they might otherwise be."
Joining the convention would place the United States "in a much stronger position to demand adherence to the rules contained in it -- rules that we have been protecting from the outside since the '80s and before," he said.
Locklear told reporters today the convention and "customary law" set standards for military vessels' passage through territorial waters, archipelagos and major straits.
"There are a number of countries in the world -- I think China being one of them -- who from our perspective place excessive claims and excessive restrictions that are not consistent with international [law] and aren't consistent with Law of the Sea," he added.
Locklear told reporters today the convention and "customary law" set standards for military vessels' passage through territorial waters, archipelagos and major straits.
"There are a number of countries in the world -- I think China being one of them -- who from our perspective place excessive claims and excessive restrictions that are not consistent with international [law] and aren't consistent with Law of the Sea," he added.
Those restrictions, if added together and enacted, would limit international use of roughly a third of the world's ocean area, Locklear said, and would affect every major strait and every "sea line of communication" -- the primary maritime trade, logistics and naval routes between ports.
All nations concerned with shipping access will be "further at risk if these excessive claims aren't resolved," the admiral said.
The Law of the Sea Convention could form the basis for an international forum allowing countries to express competing claims, he noted.
"Then there will have to be some compromise," he added, "because you can't just have continually competing claims that end up causing miscalculation at some point in time, which would lead us to conflict."
Locklear said there are enough maritime resources "for everybody in the world," and competing claims should be resolved peacefully.
Responding to a question on U.S.-China military relations, the PACOM commander said he has been encouraged by the receptiveness he has seen from his Chinese counterparts.
"I look forward to continuing our dialogue and to doing some visits," he added. "I plan to visit [China] within the next several weeks, at their invitation."
That visit will involve discussions about "military claims and all of the other issues that surround that," he said.
A productive partnership between the two nations is "very important" to Asia-Pacific security, the admiral said.
"I think the good news is that ... we're in a position in the coming months and years to continue to have a productive dialogue," he added.
U.S.-CAMBODIA RELATIONS
Map Credit: U.S. State Department Website:
FROM: U.S. DEPARTMETN OF STATE
U.S. Relations With Cambodia
Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs
Fact Sheet
June 13, 2012
Over the last several decades of the 20th century, the United States and Cambodia established, broke off, and reestablished relations as a result of armed conflict and government changes in Cambodia. Full diplomatic relations were established after the freely elected Royal Government of Cambodia was formed in 1993. In recent years, bilateral relations between the U.S. and Cambodia have deepened and broadened. The two countries have worked together to increase trade and address challenges from promoting regional security and democracy to expanding global health and development. The U.S. supports efforts in Cambodia to combat terrorism, reduce the prevalence of HIV/AIDS, build democratic institutions, promote human rights, foster economic development, eliminate corruption and trafficking in persons, achieve the fullest possible accounting for Americans missing from the Indochina conflict in the 1960s and 1970s, and to bring to justice those most responsible for serious violations of international humanitarian law committed under the 1975-79 Khmer Rouge regime.
U.S. Assistance to Cambodia
Cambodia is at peace after decades of conflict, although important challenges remain. Cambodia relies heavily on foreign assistance--about half of the central government budget depends on donor aid. U.S. assistance makes significant contributions to the country’s development. In 2010, U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID)-administered assistance was approximately $70 million for programs in health, education, governance, and economic growth.
Bilateral Economic Relations
Cambodia's economy suffers from the legacy of decades of war and internal strife. The economy is heavily dollarized; the dollar and riel can be used interchangeably. The U.S. normalized economic relations with the country in 1992 and is one of Cambodia's major trading partners. Manufacturing output is concentrated in the garment sector, and garments dominate Cambodia's exports, especially to the U.S. and the European Union.
Cambodia's Membership in International Organizations
Cambodia became a member of the United Nations in 1955 following independence from France in 1953. Cambodia and the United States belong to a number of the same international organizations, including the UN, International Monetary Fund, World Bank, and World Trade Organization.
COURT ORDERS OWNER AND TRADING COMPANY TO PAY RESTITUTION, CIVIL PENALTIES TO SETTLE CFTC CHARGES
FROM: U.S. COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
Federal Court in Illinois Orders Defendants Richard C. Regan and Pro Trading Course, LLC to Pay More than $600,000 in Restitution and Civil Monetary Penalties to Settle CFTC Anti-Fraud Action
Washington, DC – The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) today announced that Judge James B. Zagel, of the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, entered an order of default judgment and permanent injunction against defendants Richard C. Regan (Regan) and Pro Trading Course, LLC(PTC), both of La Jolla, Calif.
The court’s order stems from a CFTC enforcement action filed on December 7, 2011, that charged the defendants with fraudulently soliciting members of the public to enroll in a commodity futures training program .
The order, entered on May 29, 2012, requires the defendants jointly and severally to pay a $461,100 civil monetary penalty and restitution of $232,200. The order also imposes permanent trading and registration bans against the defendants and prohibits them from violating the Commodity Exchange Act and CFTC regulations, as charged.
The order finds that PTC, through Regan and its employees, used false and misleading promotional material and sales solicitations, which overstated the advancement opportunity and profit potential of PTC’s commodity futures training program. The defendants also failed to disclose that not one of the 126 clients who completed PTC’s training and became PTC proprietary traders ever advanced beyond Level 1 of the program, according to the order. In addition, no PTC trader ever met the monthly profit targets set by Regan or received profit “payouts” approximating those depicted on the “Payout Charts” Regan prepared, the order finds.
The order further finds that PTC, through Regan and its sales associates, used false and misleading promotional material and sales solicitations to sell access to PTC’s Virtual Trading Room (VTR). This created the impression that VTR sessions involved actual commodity futures trading, but they failed to disclose that Regan and his team placed only simulated trades while conducting VTR sessions.
The CFTC appreciates the assistance of the National Futures Association.
BROOKLYN DOCTOR CONVICTED OF MEDICARE AND INSURANCE FRAUD

FROM: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Friday, June 15, 2012
Brooklyn Doctor Convicted for Role in Medicare and Private Insurance Fraud Scheme
WASHINGTON – A Brooklyn board-certified colorectal surgeon, who owned and operated a New York medical clinic, was convicted for his role in a fraud scheme that billed Medicare and numerous private insurance companies for surgeries and other complex medical procedures that were never performed, the Department of Justice, FBI and Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced today.
On Wednesday, June 13, 2012, after a two-week trial in federal court in Brooklyn, a jury found Boris Sachakov, M.D., 43, guilty of one count of health care fraud and five counts of health care false statements.
The trial evidence showed that from January 2008 to January 2010, Sachakov, who owned and operated a clinic called Colon and Rectal Care of New York P.C., defrauded Medicare and private insurance companies by billing for surgeries and medical services that he never provided. According to trial testimony, several private insurance companies began investigating Sachakov after receiving complaints from patients that Sachakov had submitted claims for surgeries, including hemorrhoidectomies, that he never performed.
At trial, 11 of Dr. Sachakov’s patients testified that they had not received the surgeries and other medical services for which Sachakov had billed their insurance companies. The evidence presented at trial showed that the medical records Dr. Sachakov created and maintained on these patients, including letters to the patient’s referring doctors, did not support the extensive billings he submitted. After Dr. Sachakov was confronted by two insurance companies about complaints of billings for surgeries that did not happen, the evidence at trial showed that Dr. Sachakov sent letters to his patients, asking them to falsely certify in writing that they had received the phony surgeries.
The indictment alleged that Sachakov submitted and caused the submission of over $22.6 million in false and fraudulent claims to Medicare and private insurance companies, and received more than $9 million on those claims.
At sentencing, scheduled for Sept. 24, 2012, Sachakov faces a maximum penalty of 35 years in prison and an $18 million fine.
The charges were announced by Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division; Assistant Director-in-Charge Janice K. Fedarcyk of the FBI’s New York field office; and Special Agent-in-Charge Thomas O’Donnell of the HHS Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG).
The case is being prosecuted by Trial Attorney Sarah M. Hall and Assistant Chief William Pericak of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section. The case was investigated by the FBI, HHS, the New York State Office of Medicaid Inspector General and the New York State Department of Financial Services, Criminal Investigative Division.
The case was brought as part of the Medicare Fraud Strike Force, supervised by the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section. The Medicare Fraud Strike Force operations are part of the Health Care Fraud Prevention & Enforcement Action Team (HEAT), a joint initiative announced in May 2009 between the Department of Justice and HHS to focus their efforts to prevent and deter fraud and enforce current anti-fraud laws around the country.
Since their inception in March 2007, strike force operations in nine districts have charged 1,330 defendants who collectively have falsely billed the Medicare program for more than $4 billion. In addition, the HHS Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, working in conjunction with the HHS-OIG, are taking steps to increase accountability and decrease the presence of fraudulent providers.
CLOUD COMPUTING, THE NEXT IT REVOLUTION


FROM: U.S. GENERAL SERVICES ADMINISTRATION
Statement of Dr David McClure "The Next IT Revolution? Cloud Computing Opportunities and Challenges"
STATEMENT OF
Dr. David McClure
Associate Administrator
Office of Citizen Services and Innovative Technologies
General Services Administration
BEFORE THE
HOUSE SCIENCE, SPACE AND TECHNOLOGY COMMITTEE
SUBCOMMITTEE ON TECHNOLOGY AND INNOVATION
September 21, 2011"The Next IT Revolution? Cloud Computing Opportunities and Challenges"
Chairman Quayle and Members of the Subcommittee:
Thank you for the opportunity to appear before you today to discuss the General Service
Administration's (GSA) leadership role in ongoing efforts to enable and accelerate adoption of cloud computing across the federal government. Cloud adoption is a critical component of the Administration’s plan to improve management of the government’s IT resources. The reforms underway are enabling agencies to use information more efficiently and effectively, delivering improved mission results at lower cost.
Cloud computing offers a compelling opportunity to substantially improve the efficiency, agility and performance of the federal information technology portfolio. It allows agencies to pay only for the resources they use in response to fluctuating demand, avoid the expenses of building and maintaining costly IT infrastructure, and control the appropriate level of security for data and applications. Cloud computing is also a key technology for achieving cost effective IT. In fact, agencies have already started to realize numerous benefits as they begin to adopt cloud computing across their programs. These include cost reduction, faster deployment of systems and applications, increased productivity, greater flexibility and scalability and improved self-service capabilities. As agencies consolidate and virtualize their data centers, cloud provides an ideal path forward to achieve needed results while substantially lowering costs – an essential focus given federal budget constraints.
GSA is playing a leadership role in facilitating easy access to cloud-based solutions from
commercial providers that meet federal requirements, enhancing agencies’ capacity to analyze viable cloud computing options that meet their business and technology modernization needs, and reducing barriers to safe and secure cloud computing. We are developing new cloud computing procurement options with proven solutions that leverage the government’s buying power, ensuring effective cloud security and standards are in place to lower risk, and identifying and leveraging government-wide uses of cloud computing solutions such as email.
These are highlighted on our web page Info.Apps.gov, which provides useful information about cloud computing and available solutions. The Administration’s efforts to apply rigor to information technology management and foster cloud adoption is framed by several key guidance documents and policies, including the OMB 25 Point Implementation Plan to Reform Federal Information Technology Management and the Federal Cloud Computing Strategy issued by the federal CIO’s office. The initiatives being implemented in response to these documents are making significant progress tackling long standing challenges in the way IT is acquired and managed. These reforms are also meeting the Administration’s goals to make government more responsive, operationally effective, cost efficient, transparent, participatory, collaborative, and innovative for the citizens it serves.
The Subcommittee asked that I address the four questions outlined below.
(1) Please provide an overview of how the General Services Administration (GSA) is
implementing the Office of Management and Budget’s (OMB) 25 Point Implementation
Plan to Reform Federal Information Technology Management, the OMB Federal Data
Center Consolidation Initiative, and the Federal Chief Information Officer’s Federal
Cloud Computing Strategy. GSA plays a central role in realizing the goals set forth in the Administration’s initiatives and strategies to reform IT management, consolidate data centers and implement cloud computing Below are the primary initiatives underway to achieve the policy goals of Data Center Consolidation, the Cloud Computing Strategy and the specific objectives of the 25 Point Plan. Below is an overview of the work we are conducting to support specific objectives of the Federal IT Reform Strategy. Each objective of the 25 Point IT Reform Plan for which GSA is directlyresponsible is identified in bold; the specific section is in parenthesis.Complete detailed implementation plans to consolidate at least 800 data centers by 2015.
(#1)
Create a government-wide marketplace for data center availability (#2)
The Federal Data Center Consolidation Initiative (FDCCI), managed jointly by GSA and OMB, is charged with reversing the federal government’s explosive data center growth to optimize and improve efficiency of federal IT infrastructure. The FDCCI is chartered to engage with agencies, support and facilitate agency data center consolidation planning, and to provide tools to federal partners.
Under the FDCCI, GSA is accomplishing the following:
Working with a government-wide task force co-chaired by DHS and DOI that meets
monthly and includes representatives from all 24 CFO Act agencies.
Assisting agencies to maximize the return on investments for data centers to remain in
their inventory after consolidation Ensuring consistent data collection of the federal data center inventory by developing
and disseminating standard templates to collect, manage, and analyze agency data
center inventory data.
Collaborating with industry on best practices and solutions for key data center
consolidation issues. Developing a comprehensive data center Total Cost Model for agencies to use to
analyze alternative consolidation scenarios, enable data-driven decision-making for
infrastructure cost and performance optimization.
Pursuing development of a data center marketplace that would help optimize
infrastructure utilization across government by matching agencies with excess
computing capacity with those that have immediate requirements. A working group is
addressing consensus-building, requirements gathering, and other key facets necessary
to ensure the marketplace’s success. Stand up contract vehicles for secure IaaS solutions
(#4)
IT infrastructure represents a multi-billion dollar investment that requires constant maintenance, expensive technology upgrades, and dedication of valuable personnel. Agencies are faced with outdated infrastructure requiring ongoing, major investments to keep pace with growing demand and rapidly changing technology. Servers across both government and industry are highly underutilized. To address these issues, GSA’s Federal Acquisition Service (FAS) established a Blanket Purchase Agreement (BPA) with 12 companies (many with multiple partners) that offer cloud storage, computing power, and cloud-based website hosting as commodity services that enable agencies to optimize their infrastructure and achieve substantial, long-term cost savings.
Under these Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) contracts, agencies pay only for what they need, define performance requirements, have the flexibility to respond to changing demands, benefit from commodity pricing, and are assured of secure solutions. At present, four contractors are offering services under the BPA, with the remaining completing the security authorization process. DHS has recently awarded a task order under this BPA for the consolidation and migration of its public facing websites to a cloud hosting service. Stand up contract vehicles for commodity services
(#5)
Working closely with email and collaboration experts from across government, GSA developed a government-wide contract vehicle to help agencies move email and collaboration solutions to the cloud. The Email as a Service (EaaS) BPA is an active procurement managed by FAS; responses are currently being evaluated. It will offer federal customers a streamlined procurement vehicle to commercially available cloud email solutions that best fits their agency's needs. Based on information from Forrester Research, average cost savings for agencies migrating to cloud-based email are expected to be $11/mailbox/month, $1 million in annual savings for every 7,500 users, or approximately 44% over existing on-premise email solutions.
The BPA will offer a range of email services in public, private, and highly secured clouds,
making available robust, feature-rich, secure email and collaboration service options similar to those currently being implemented at GSA, USDA, USAID, DOE, and other agencies. It can meet the needs of the 15 agencies that have identified 950,000 e-mail boxes they plan to move to the cloud under the Administration’s IT Reform effort. Launch an interactive platform for pre-RFP agency-industry collaboration
(#25)
To streamline the procurement process and enhance communication with industry, GSA is
establishing "cross-trained" program teams and improving the way requirements are defined. GSA is working to establish an interactive platform for pre-RFP agency-industry collaboration. Based on input from government and industry, alternatives for design and delivery of an online collaboration tool have been examined and rated. Candidates for the tool included existing government systems and commercial collaboration tools.
GSA not only is fostering adoption of cloud computing government-wide, but as required under the Cloud First policy, has recently completed a major cloud migration of our internal email and collaboration solution that demonstrates the significant potential of cloud solutions to achieve substantial cost savings. In approximately seven months, we moved 17,000 users to Google Apps for Government. Savings over the next five years are projected to be over $15M. Not only have we reduced costs, but we have also made significant gains in environmental sustainability – we shut down 45 servers, which is equivalent to taking 60 cars off the road. The lessons learned from our cloud implementation have been captured and are being shared with agencies across the government as they seek to achieve similar success.
2. Please provide an overview of the costs associated with implementing these plans at
GSA, and provide a description of both the short-term and long-term budgetary impacts of these changes. To date, GSA’s Federal Cloud Computing Initiative has been funded under the e-Government program administered by the Federal Chief Information Officer. In FY10 and FY11 GSA’s Federal Cloud Computing Initiative (FCCI) Program Management Office (PMO) budget of $4.8 million was allocated to five primary tasks:
Establish procurement vehicles that allow agencies to purchase IT resources as
commodities - resulting in the award of the Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) Blanket
Purchase Agreement under GSA Schedule 70.
Address security risks in deploying government information in a cloud environment -
resulting in the development of the Federal Risk Authorization Management Program
(FedRAMP)
Establish a procurement vehicle that allows agencies to purchase cloud-based e-mail
services - resulting in the issuance of the Email as a Service (EaaS) procurement that is
currently underway
Work with agencies to consolidate their data center asset - resulting in the Federal Data
Center Consolidation Initiative that works with agencies to inventory their data center
assets and to identify targets for consolidation and optimization
Create apps.gov, an on-line storefront that provides access to over 3,000 cloud-based
products and services where agencies can research solutions, compare prices and
place on-line orders using GSA’s eBuy system.
This initial funding provided by the e-Gov Fund allowed GSA to accomplish significant results. However, there are key activities that still need to be accomplished to realize the significant, additional potential cost savings and productivity improvements that GSA can help agencies achieve. The continuation of these cost-saving initiatives is dependent on FY12 eGov Fund budget levels and decisions.
3. What cybersecurity steps is the GSA taking to protect federal data and communications in the cloud? To what extent does GSA work with NIST on the development of cybersecurity standards for federal cloud computing use?
The primary goal of the Administration’s Cloud First policy is to achieve widespread practical use of secure cloud computing to improve operational efficiency and effectiveness of government. Currently, each agency typically conducts its own security Certification and Accreditation (C&A) process for every system it acquires, leading to unnecessary expense, duplication and inconsistency. According to the 2009 FISMA report to Congress, agencies reported spending $300M on C&A activities alone. Working in close collaboration with DHS, NIST, DoD and OMB and the Federal CIO Council,
GSA is leading establishment of the Federal Authorization Risk Management Program
(FedRAMP) to accelerate adoption of secure cloud solutions by agencies across government.
Key benefits include:
Provides a single, consistent security risk assessment and authorization that can be
leveraged across agencies – an "approve once, and use often" approach
Establishes a common set of baseline security assessment and continuous monitoring
requirements using NIST standards
Approves and makes available qualified, independent third party assessors, ensuring
consistent assessment and accreditation of cloud solutions and based on NIST’s proven
conformity assessment approach
Shifts risk management from annual reporting under FISMA to more robust continuous
monitoring, providing real-time detection and mitigation of persistent vulnerabilities and
security incidents.
There is strong support and demand for FedRAMP from agencies seeking to adopt cloud
services, as required by the Administration’s Cloud First policy, and from industry. FedRAMP's processes, policy, governance, and technical security standards have all been arrived at via a consensus-based approach that includes agencies’ Chief Information Security Officers, the Federal CIO Council, National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), Department of Homeland Security (DHS), Department of Defense (DoD), National Security Agency (NSA), and numerous industry organizations. This new program is expected to be initially launched this Fall.
4. What other challenges face federal agencies in adopting cloud computing services,
and what steps is the GSA taking to overcome these challenges?
Considerable progress has been made in adopting successful cloud solutions. Cloud computing’ is now an accepted part of the federal IT lexicon. However, there continues to be a need for more thorough understanding of the cloud’s deployment models, unique security implications, and data management challenges. Agency executives should not focus on cloud technology itself; rather, they should focus on the desired outcome driving the need for cloud adoption.
CIOs need to work with their line of business executives and program managers to develop and deploy effective cloud roadmaps that address pressing agency mission needs, taking into account costs savings and expected performance improvements. Agencies should analyze business needs and identify cloud solutions that best fit their requirements by making cloud adoption part of an overall IT portfolio management and sourcing strategy. NIST is currently working on a Cloud Computing Technology Roadmap that will be released in November. If linked to cloud provider products and services, it would greatly assist in this decision-making.
Cultural resistance is also a major challenge. Cloud adoption requires moving away from
managing physical assets to buying services. As GSA’s own experience has shown, these
issues can be effectively addressed. Critical success factors include robust communication,
practical training and emphasis on the benefits of cloud, and especially on the control agencies gain by buying what they need and defining performance metrics that are tied to desired performance results. GSA found that having a group of early adopters fostered buy-in and enthusiasm, and provided a ready corps of skilled users.
Conclusion
Mr. Chairman, General Services Administration is leading the Administration’s charge to make government more open, transparent, and effective for the citizens it serves. In our increasingly data-centric and network-based world and workplace, effective and efficient procurement and implementation of information technology will be paramount in making sure the federal government closes the IT performance gap between it and the private sector. Cloud computing and data center consolidation are key initiatives that should be pursued aggressively to achieve needed costs savings and improve effectiveness of government operations.
Thank you for the opportunity to appear today. I look forward to answering questions from you and members of the Subcommittee.
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