Tuesday, November 20, 2012

SNAILS AND HUMAN DISEASE

Countries worldwide where people are at risk for the snail-borne disease schistosomiasis.

Credit-CDC
FROM: NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION
Snails in the Waters, Disease in the Villages
November 19, 2012

Watch where you jump in for a swim or where your bath water comes from, especially if you live in Africa, Asia or South America. Snails that live in tropical freshwater in these locations are intermediaries between disease-causing parasitic worms and humans.

People in developing countries who don't have access to clean water and good sanitation facilities are often exposed to the infected snails. Then they're left open to the parasitic worms.

The worms' infectious larvae emerge from the snails, cruise in shallow water, easily penetrate human skin and mature in internal organs.

The result is schistosomiasis, the second most socioeconomically devastating disease after malaria. As of 2009, 74 developing nations had identified significant rates of schistosomiasis in human populations.

There has been much debate about how best to prevent the disease, says Charles King, a physician and researcher at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio. "Beyond that," he asks, "how long should treatment last once someone has schistosomiasis?"

"Current guidelines focus on suppressing the disease's effects by limiting the infection during childhood," says King. "But that may not be enough to cure it or to prevent re-infection, leaving children still at risk for stunted growth and anemia."

King and colleagues recently published results of a study of long-term treatment of schistosomiasis in the journal PLOS Neglected Tropical Diseases.

The team's work is funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF)-National Institutes of Health (NIH) Evolution and Ecology of Infectious Diseases (EEID) program.

At NSF, the EEID program is supported by the Directorate for Biological Sciences and Directorate for Geosciences. At NIH, it's supported through the Fogarty International Center.

Schistosomiasis is usually treated with a single dose of the oral drug praziquantel.

World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines set forth in 2006 recommend that when a village reports that more than 50 percent of its children have parasite eggs in their urine or stool--a clear sign of schistosomiasis--everyone in the village should receive treatment.

When 10 to 50 percent of children are affected, say the guidelines, only school-age children should be treated--every two years. With less than 10 percent, mass treatment is not suggested.

But because of the long-term health effects of schistosomiasis, says King, "we now think it's better to provide regular yearly treatment."

He and scientists Xiaoxia Wang, David Gurarie and Peter Mungai of Case Western Reserve University; Eric Muchiri of the Ministry of Public Health and Sanitation in Nairobi, Kenya; and Uriel Kitron of Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, used data collected in 10 villages in southeastern Kenya to run advanced models of village-level schistosomiasis transmission.

They scored the number of years each of the 10 villages would be projected to remain below a 10 percent infection level during a simulated 10-to-20-year treatment program.

All strategies that included an initial four annual treatments reduced community prevalence of the disease to less than 10 percent. Programs with gaps in treatment, however, didn't reach this objective in half the villages.

At typical levels of treatment, the researchers found, current WHO recommendations likely could not achieve full suppression of schistosomiasis.

"With more aggressive annual intervention that lasts at least four years," says King, "some communities might be able to continue without further treatment for 8 to 10 years.

"But in higher-risk villages, repeated annual treatment may be necessary for an indefinite period--until the eco-social factors that foster the disease [such as poor wastewater treatment] are removed."

In high-risk places, ongoing surveillance for the disease and annual drug treatment, the scientists say, need to become the mainstays of control.

In short, these villages require what they call "re-worming after de-worming."

But what happens if townspeople move to a more arid location, one with less freshwater and fewer snails?

In drier landscapes, schistosomiasis is a rare event that happens only during floods. Response to treatment therefore may be much better. Unless or until another flood occurs.

Although drier locales carry less risk for the disease, they're by no means free and clear. Even in arid locations, people would likely need to be treated more than once to get rid of the parasites.

"This research demonstrates the value of understanding where disease-causing organisms are in the environment," says Sam Scheiner, NSF program officer for EEID.

"Such knowledge can reduce human diseases much more effectively and at a lower cost than simply focusing on treatment."

The best goal, says King, is complete eradication of schistosomiasis.

To achieve that, scientists need to determine what makes a "wormy village," how often therapy is needed to prevent disease in such locations--and what can be done to change the environment such that a high-risk village becomes a low-risk one.

 

HIGH-RESOLUTION GLOBAL ATMOSPHERIC MODELING GIVES LOOK AT GLOBAL AERSOLS


FROM: NASA
Portrait of Global Aerosols

High-resolution global atmospheric modeling run on the Discover supercomputer at the NASA Center for Climate Simulation at Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., provides a unique tool to study the role of weather in Earth's climate system. The Goddard Earth Observing System Model, Version 5 (GEOS-5) is capable of simulating worldwide weather at resolutions of 10 to 3.5 kilometers (km).

This portrait of global aerosols was produced by a GEOS-5 simulation at a 10-kilometer resolution. Dust (red) is lifted from the surface, sea salt (blue) swirls inside cyclones, smoke (green) rises from fires, and sulfate particles (white) stream from volcanoes and fossil fuel emissions.

Image credit-William Putman, NASA-Goddard

COMBATING TRAINING MISCONDUCT IN U.S. AIR FORCE

Air Force Chief of Safety Maj. Gen. Margaret H. Woodward briefs reporters on the findings and recommendations of the investigation of misconduct of the Air Force's basic military training on Joint Base San Antonio-Lackland at the Pentagon, Nov. 14, 2012. DOD photo by Glenn Fawcett
FROM: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE

Air Force Leadership Council to Combat Training Misconduct

By Army Sgt. 1st Class Tyrone C. Marshall Jr.
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Nov. 14, 2012 - Air Force officials discussed the results of a commander-directed investigation into basic military training instructor misconduct and the service's commitment to correcting those issues at a press conference.

Air Force Gen. Edward A. Rice Jr., commander of the Air Education and Training Command, and Air Force Maj. Gen. Margaret H. Woodward, chief of Air Force Safety, outlined the underlying causes of basic training leader misconduct.

In his review of Woodward's report on the investigation, Rice said he found weaknesses in institutional safeguards, leadership, and the instructor culture of self-accountability, with the conditions leading to abuse of power in basic military training "ever-present."

"To that end, I am directing the establishment of the Military Training Oversight Council, which will be chaired by a three-star general," he said. "The purpose of this council is to ensure we have the appropriate level of leadership oversight over issues associated with trainee safety and the maintenance of good order and discipline."

According to Rice, the report includes nearly two-dozen findings and more than 40 recommendations based on 215 in-depth interviews, surveys of 18,000 service members, and meetings with basic trainees and training instructor spouses.

The report's findings and recommendations "accurately reflect the deficiencies in our basic military training program and provide effective proposals to remedy those deficiencies," he said.

Rice noted he intends to implement 45 of the 46 recommendations, with the final recommendation -- adjusting the length of basic training -- still under review, as part of a previous evaluation.

"Because we know the basic military training environment is highly susceptible to the abuse of power, we have established a set of institutional safeguards to prevent misconduct by instructors," Rice said.

Rice also noted he intends to hold commanders accountable, having "found areas where commanders did not meet my expectations with respect to creating the type of command climate that's necessary for good order and discipline to be in a healthy state."

The Air Force has relieved two commanders since the misconduct cases surfaced -- one at the squadron level and one at the group level, Rice said.

"I have also [taken] disciplinary action with six additional commanders," he said.

Rice and Woodward both emphasized there are honorable men and women in the enlisted basic training complex who continue to serve with distinction.

Rice, quoting Woodward in her report, said, "This report necessarily focuses on the few who violated a sacred trust and broke faith with fellow airmen everywhere."

Woodward said the investigation also determined that instructors found guilty of misconduct "knew that they were violating a regulation or policy, and that was very clear to them," she said.

Moving forward, Rice said, AETC will continue to "fix what went wrong in our basic military training program."

"We are committed to doing everything we can to make our basic military training program the world's finest example of military professionalism," he said.

Monday, November 19, 2012

RECENT U.S. NAVY PHOTOS



FROM: U.S. NAVY, MARK 48 ADCAP TORPEDO
Sailors from the submarine tender USS Frank Cable (AS 40) remove a Mark 48 ADCAP (Advanced Capability) torpedo from the Los Angeles-class attack submarine USS Oklahoma City (SSN 723). Frank Cable conducts maintenance and support of submarine and surface vessels deployed in the U.S. 7th Fleet area of responsibility. The U.S. Navy is constantly deployed to preserve peace, protect commerce, and deter aggression through forward presence. Join the conversation on social media using #warfighting. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Ricardo Danan (Released) 121115-N-BE353-009




Twenty-six ships from the U.S. Navy and the Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force, including ships from the George Washington Carrier Strike Group, transit together at the conclusion of exercise Keen Sword 2013. Keen Sword 2013 is a biannual exercise held to enable the United States and Japan to train in coordination procedures and heighten interoperability needed to effectively defend or respond to a crisis in Japan and the Asia-Pacific region. The U.S. Navy is constantly deployed to preserve peace, protect commerce, and deter aggression through forward presence. Join the conversation on social media using #warfighting. U.S. Navy photo by Chief Mass Communication Specialist Jennifer A. Villalovos (Released) 121116-N-WW409-533

ANTIETAM BATTLEFIELD AND NEW SOUTHERN COMMAND

Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, left, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Air Force Gen. William Fraser III, center, and Marine Gen. John Kelly salute during the national anthem at the Southern Command Change of Command in Miami, Nov 19, 2012. Kelly is the incoming commander and Fraser is the outgoing. DOD photo by Erin A. Kirk-Cuomo
FROM: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE, CHANGE IN SOUTHERN COMMANDER

Dempsey Praises Old, New Southern Command Commanders
By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Nov. 19, 2012 - In presiding at the change of command ceremony at U.S. Southern Command in Miami, today, Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey said he thought of the words he saw on a monument at the Antietam battlefield, ""Not for themselves, but for their country."

Antietam was the bloodiest day of the American Civil War. On September 17, 1862, more than 23,000 Americans became casualties.

"What you see here today is that spirit played out yet again," the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff said. "Where two great military leaders have given their lives ... as families for this country. 'Not for themselves, but for their country.'"

Dempsey presided at the change of command that saw Marine Gen. John Kelly assume command from Air Force Gen. Douglas Fraser. He praised both men and their families for their willingness to serve.

Southern Command is a true partnership among American agencies and with international partners, Dempsey said, thanking the international partners who attended the ceremony. He also thanked the interagency partners who are integral parts of the command.

Building trust was a large part of the chairman's speech at the ceremony. He said one reason Fraser traveled so much during his command was "because he knows the importance of building trust," Dempsey said. "He understands that trust is how we turn relationships into partnerships, and how we turn partnerships into friendships."

Fraser has built an impressive interagency team at Southern Command, Dempsey said.

"It reflects the reality of our complex world," he said. "Tragedies like the earthquake in Haiti, or challenges like illicit trafficking, all require us to collaborate in new ways and with new partners."

Fraser has shown what can happen when organizations break down barriers between them and build on the strengths of each organization, the chairman said.

Demspey said Kelly is the right man to succeed Fraser at Southern Command. Kelly, who was promoted to full general just before the ceremony, served as the senior military advisor to Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta and former Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates.

"He's direct and tough," Dempsey said. "He's a thinker and a learner, and one of the most experienced leaders we have in the military today."

Kelly is well placed to get the friends and neighbors of the region working together to solve common problems. The general will have a full plate with transnational crime, terrorism, natural disasters, and many other challenges awaiting him, Dempsey said.

"Achieving together as friends and neighbors is what SouthCom is all about," he said.

NEWS FROM AFGHANISTAN FOR NOVERMBER 19, 2012

U.S. Marine Corps Staff Sgt. Travis M. Barnes provides close-air support over Afghanistan's Helmand province, Nov. 8, 2012. Barnes is assigned to Marine Light Attack Helicopter Squadron 469, Marine Aircraft Group 39, 3rd Marine Aircraft Wing. U.S. Marine Corps photo by Sgt. Keonaona C. Paulo
FROM: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE

Combined Force Arrests Taliban Operative
Compiled from International Security Assistance Force Joint Command News Releases

WASHINGTON, Nov. 19, 2012 - An Afghan and coalition security force arrested a Taliban suicide attack operative in Afghanistan's Kandahar province today, military officials reported.

The arrested insurgent is suspected of planning and executing suicide attacks against Afghan and coalition forces throughout Kandahar province, officials said.

The security force also detained a number of suspected insurgents as a result of the operation.

In other Afghanistan operations today:

-- A combined force arrested a Taliban facilitator and detained two suspects in Helmand province. The arrested insurgent is believed to have organized the acquisition and transportation of mass shipments of homemade explosives and improvised explosive device-making materials to insurgents throughout Kandahar and Helmand provinces.

-- In Logar province, a combined force arrested a Taliban leader. The arrested leader is alleged to have performed high-profile attack planning, conducted indirect-fire attacks against Forward Operating Base Shank and carried out IED attacks on Afghan security patrols throughout southern Logar province.

In operations yesterday:

-- A combined force arrested two Taliban weapons and explosives facilitators, detained one other suspected insurgent and seized IED-making materials in Kandahar province. The first detained Taliban facilitator is an IED expert who is believed responsible for the acquisition, construction and emplacement of IEDs for attacks against Afghan and coalition forces throughout the province. The second detainee is a weapons trafficker alleged to have coordinated transport of weapons and IED components to Taliban insurgents in Helmand and Kandahar provinces.

-- A combined force arrested five insurgents and seized 20 pounds of illegal narcotics during a search for a Taliban lethal aid facilitator in Helmand province.

In Nov. 17 operations:

-- A combined force arrested a Taliban leader and detained one other suspect in Kandahar province. The arrested leader is believed to have coordinated the movement and storage of machine guns, weapons, and ammunition to support the Taliban insurgency.

In Nov. 16 operations:

-- Afghan commandos and coalition forces discovered a weapons and drug cache which included AK-47 rifles, rocket-propelled grenade launchers and nearly 88 pounds of heroin in Helmand province.

-- Afghan National Army Special Forces and coalition forces discovered 15 emplaced IEDs and two caches in Kandahar province. The caches consisted of IED-making materials, one AK-47 magazine, some nine-volt batteries, and 500 Pakistani Rupees. The IEDs and both caches were destroyed.

-- Afghan Provincial Response Company Ghazni and coalition forces detained one suspected insurgent and seized a cache of weapons, homemade explosives and IED-making materials in Ghazni province. All discovered items were destroyed on site.

U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT DAILY PRESS BRIEFING NOVEMBER 19, 2012

Daily Press Briefing - November 19, 2012

U.S. CONCERNED OVER DELAYS IN IMPLEMENTING AGREEMENTS BETWEEN SUDAN AND SOUTH SUDAN



Maps:  Sudan Left, South Sudan Right.  Credit:  CIA World Factbook
FROM: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE

Delayed Implementation of Agreements by Sudan and South Sudan

Press Statement
Victoria Nuland
Department Spokesperson,

Office of the Spokesperson
Washington, DC
November 19, 2012
The United States is increasingly concerned about the delays in implementation of the historic agreements signed in Addis Ababa by Sudan and South Sudan on September 27. The Sudanese and South Sudanese people deserve swift and complete implementation of these agreements, as called for in the October 24 African Union Peace and Security Council communique.

The creation of the safe demilitarized border zone between the two countries is vital to ensure that both countries honor their commitments to cease support to proxies and, most importantly, prevent inter-state conflict. We are concerned that no progress was made at the November 6-7 Joint Political and Security Mechanism meeting between the two parties, and we call on Sudan and South Sudan to immediately reconvene and recommit themselves to the September 27 agreements. Allowing this unresolved issue to impede implementation of the other agreements threatens the stability of both countries.

We are also disappointed by delays in the resumption of oil production. This denies much needed revenue to both economies, and we urge both parties to resume production while they work to resolve other bilateral issues and, along with the African Union, urgently stand-up the Petroleum Monitoring Committee.



The President's Trip to Asia | The White House

The President's Trip to Asia | The White House

Be Tobacco Free

Be Tobacco Free

AFRICAN AMERICAN WOMEN HAVE HIGHER BREAST CANCER DEATH RATES

FROM: U.S. CENTERS FOR DISEASE CONTROL

Disparities in breast cancer continue among U.S. women

Report shows importance of improved access to preventive care and high-quality treatment

Black women have higher death rates from breast cancer than any other racial or ethnic group. They are 40 percent more likely to die from breast cancer than white women, according to a Vital Signs report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Despite the decline in breast cancer death rates in the past 20 years, black women had higher death rates even though they had fewer new cases of breast cancer, the report says.


The report’s findings highlight the importance of educating women about the preventive benefits and coverage provided by the Affordable Care Act, including coverage of mammograms without co-pays in many health plans and, beginning in 2014, the law will expand access to health insurance coverage for 30 million previously uninsured Americans.

"Although we are making progress reducing deaths from breast cancer, we have much work to do to reduce preventable deaths, particularly among African-American women," said CDC Director Thomas R. Frieden, M.D., M.P.H. "Only when every woman receives adequate screening, timely follow-up, and high-quality treatment, will the full benefit of breast cancer screening be achieved."

The researchers reviewed data on new cases of invasive breast cancer reported during 2005 through 2009 from CDC’s National Program of Cancer Registries and the National Cancer Institute’s Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results Program. Breast cancer deaths were based on death certificates submitted to National Vital Statistics System.

Major findings:
About 40,000 women die of breast cancer each year in the United States.
Black women have 9 more deaths per 100 breast cancers diagnosed compared to white women.
Black women have higher numbers of advanced stage breast cancer (45 percent) compared with white women (35 percent).

The report says better treatment and finding breast cancer early are likely responsible for half of the recent drop in breast cancer deaths. However, black women do not get the same quality treatment for breast cancer as white women, it says.


Breast cancer is the most common cancer, and is the second leading cause of cancer death among U.S. women. A mammogram—an X-ray of the breasts—often can find breast cancer early, before it is big enough to feel as a lump, or cause other symptoms, and when it is easier to treat. Because of the Affordable Care Act, many private health plans and Medicare now cover mammograms and certain other preventive services with no copays or other out-of-pocket costs. Approximately, 5.1 million black women are estimated to receive guaranteed women's preventive health services without cost-sharing under the Affordable Care Act.

CDC’s National Breast and Cervical Cancer Early Detection Program provides low-income, uninsured, and underinsured women access to timely breast and cervical cancer screening and diagnostic services in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, five U.S. territories, and 11 American Indian/Alaska Native tribes or tribal organizations.
For information about CDC’s efforts in breast cancer prevention, please visit
http://www.cdc.gov/cancer/breast.

U.S. ARMY CYBER COMMANDER DISCUSSES TRANSFORMATION

Lt. Gen. Rhett A. Hernandez, commanding general for the Army Cyber Command, discusses the Army’s transformation to a joint-information environment during a Cyber and LandWarNet panel at the Association of the United States Army annual meeting.
 

FROM: U.S. DELPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
ARMED WITH SCIENCE
by jtozer
ARCYBER Working To Build Joint-Info Environment


The opportunities and challenges cyberspace presents have changed not only the way the world operates, but also the
Army, service officials said Tuesday.

Army leaders addressed the growing arena of cyberspace and the threats it presents during the "Cyber Domain and LandWarNet: Powering the Army" panel at the Association of the United States Army annual meeting.

"(Cyber) threats are real, growing, sophisticated and evolving," said Lt. Gen. Rhett A. Hernandez, commanding general for the
Army Cyber Command. He led the panel, which discussed the Army’s transformation to a joint-information environment.

Collectively, the cyber threats facing the Army create a "dynamic and dangerous" environment, Hernandez said. The force has had to change the way it thinks about cyberspace to continue to guarantee versatility, agility and depth to "prevent, shape and win," he explained.

To prevent conflict, the Army needs to deter and influence potential enemies through a modernized force ready to conduct a full range of cyberspace operations, Hernandez continued. If prevention fails, the Army needs to be ready to rapidly apply its combined arms capabilities to win.

"In cyberspace, the significant advantage will go to the side that can protect and secure critical information as well as gain and exploit advantages," he said.

Chief Information Officer and G-6 Lt. Gen. Susan S. Lawrence agreed, stating that the current cyber operational environment is disjointed and difficult to mobilize or integrate, and the Army cannot afford to continue to operate in that environment.

The joint information environment the Army is working toward will be key in maintaining dominance in the cyber arena, Lawrence said.

It will provide the ability to deploy with little to no notice into any theater; allow installations to be used as docking stations, which will enable soldiers to take their technology and train anywhere; it will allow a modernized force from the "strategic core" to the "tactical edge" and provide a single, secure network with centralized management and decentralized execution, she said.

said.
"We have got to able to, in any type of combat or spectrum of operations, have technology overmatch against any enemy, and getting to this environment will allow us to do that," Lawrence said.
The G-6 is aligning LandWarNet with the joint information environment, working toward a single, secure-based, versatile environment that is ready to deploy at any time. , Lawrence said the four lines of operation the G-6 is working through are:
– building technological capacity
– improving cyber security
– providing enterprise services to the tactical edge
– enforcing network standards


"Our energy is shifting to an active defense while moving us to a joint information environment, which will strengthen our ability to operate and defend our networks," Hernandez said.

The cyberspace environment requires quite a bit of support from throughout the Army. Lt. Gen. Mary A. Legere, deputy chief of staff for the G-2, was on hand to discuss Army’s intelligence role.

"(Intelligence) provides the kinds of capabilities necessary to support the mission," Legere said, "and the kinds of capabilities that General Hernandez needs to defend the networks and, as required, to conduct full-spectrum operations on behalf of other Army commanders are quite unique. They aren’t something we have parked in motor pools."

The community’s job is to develop an intelligence corps that has the right capabilities, and develop cyber forces that are appropriate to the mission in the cyber domain, she said.
"It is a conscious development of some of the brightest and most skilled soldiers and civilians we’ve ever attempted to create," Legere said.
"The reality is this is a very dynamic, challenging environment that we’re in and it’s going to require a kind of agility we’ve never seen before, machine-to-machine agility — soldiers and leaders that are capable of making quick decisions and policies that are responsive," Legere said.

Another key organization in supporting Cyber Command is the Space and
Missile Defense Command/Army Forces Strategic Command.

Cyberspace and space are separate domains, Lt. Gen. Richard P. Formica, SMDC, explained, but they are linked. Space enables the delivery of cyber signals, while cyberspace supports space operations through enabling payloads of systems. They both rely on the intelligence community and the joint information environment.

"They are both information-centric and information-enabled and they share network systems, and in some cases physical infrastructures. As I said, both Space and Cyber are global warfighting domains with distinctive space and cyber military activities that occur in those domains," Formica said.

"I don’t envision a cyber war, or a space war, but rather the delivery and application of both space and cyber effects in support of joint and unified land operations," he said.

By Jacqueline M. Hames


INFORMATION TECH AND THE FUTURE OF U.S. DOD'S TRANSCOM

Personnel assigned to the 618th Tanker Airlift Control Center coordinate with aircrews, maintenance personnel and aerial porters around the world from the unit's operations floor at Scott Air Force Base, Ill. The center makes global reach a reality by transforming requirements into effective missions through the planning, tasking and execution of a fleet of more than 1,200 mobility aircraft in support of combat delivery and strategic airlift, air refueling and aeromedical evacuation operations around the world. DOD photo by Robert Fehringer
FROM: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE

IT Plays Central Role in Transcom's New Strategy
By Donna Miles
American Forces Press Service
SCOTT AIR FORCE BASE, Ill., Nov. 13, 2012 - Shaping itself for the future as it implements its new five-year strategy, U.S. Transportation Command is maximizing what one of its senior officers calls the ultimate enabler: information technology.

Information technology is the driver that keeps the wheels of Transcom's global transportation and distribution enterprise turning, Air Force Brig. Gen. Gregory J. Touhill, the command's director of command, control, communications and cyber systems, told American Forces Press Service.

"There is not one single organization in this command or its components that does not rely on information technology," said Touhill, Transcom's self-described "head geek."

"We share a lot of information in order to choreograph the many movements that Transcom makes ... on behalf of the nation," Touhill said. "And it is all reliant on getting the right information to the right people at the right time, in a trusted manner.

"In fact," Touhill added, "some would argue that information technology provides the fuel for this command."

Among those proponents is Air Force Gen. William M. Fraser III, Transcom's commander. He puts such a high emphasis on IT's value to the mission that he made IT management excellence one of the four pillars in his new strategy.

"As we look at our strategy of how we are going to get better to meet the demands of the future, it is all built upon a foundation of having solid information so that decision makers have the right information to make informed and valued decisions in a spirit of collaboration and partnership," Touhill said.

That requires rethinking the whole way Transcom approaches information technology. One of the first steps is evaluating the 77 major IT systems Transcom's headquarters and its components currently operate across 16 discrete networks, to the tune of about $500 million a year.

"We are working as a team with our components and within the headquarters here, looking at opportunities to consolidate where it makes sense, retire some old and inefficient systems and perhaps birth some new capabilities using some of the latest techniques and technologies," Touhill said.

Some of the systems being evaluated, like a logistics system from 1972 used to maintain Transcom's inventories, still perform beautifully, he said. But many could work just as well -- even better and more securely -- if they were migrated onto platforms that also cost less to operate and maintain.

They key to the whole initiative, Touhill said, is standardization: standardized views, information exchanges, architectures and delivery.

Transcom relies on multiple portals to exchange vast quantities of information with customers and the components and commercial partners that provide the aircraft, ships, ground vehicles and other assets that support the mission.

Adopting a standard language -- most likely, the universally recognized Extensible Markup Language, or XML -- would reduce maintenance costs while streamlining the process. Touhill said it also would better position Transcom to leverage industry-wide best practices.

Similarly, Touhill wants to introduce more Web technologies to replace the service-oriented architectures used to link these multiple communications systems. This could dramatically reduce costs, he said, eliminating the need to maintain interfaces that cost about $100,000 apiece to maintain each year.

Air Mobility Command, Transcom's air component, already has started adopting this practice, one that's been proven across the business world, Touhill noted.

Meanwhile, Transcom is exploring ways to standardize the way it delivers information, eliminating the need for separate infrastructure and support stovepipes for individual IT systems.

"Technology has evolved to the point now where we can host multiple systems and multiple capabilities on a reduced number of platforms," Touhill said. "Furthermore, we believe that we will get greater operational effectiveness by putting our development, test and production environments in synchronization with each other, and virtualizing across the entire enterprise."

In simple terms, that means using the same systems throughout its processes. It also involves running multiple operating systems at the same time using a single central processing unit -- a cornerstone of the Defense Department's Joint Information Environment initiative, which is designed to enhance information-sharing.

"We are not going to go out and buy a separate computer for every single system," Touhill said. "Rather, technology allows us to host multiple applications and systems, all on the same box."

One of the challenges in implementing Transcom's five-year strategy is that many of the best solutions haven't yet been invented. So any plan for moving forward has to be flexible enough to incorporate new technologies as they are introduced.

"We are not going to go chase the latest fad just because it is out there," Touhill said. "We certainly will be monitoring all the new and latest technologies, but we are only going to invest in those that can demonstrate great value to the mission."

"And ultimately, that is what IT is all about: providing value -- to the mission, to the taxpayer and to our customers," he said. "There is great power in the capabilities that information technology provides."

U.S. SECRETARY OF STATE CLINTON'S REMARKS AT TECHPORT AUSTRAILIA

Koala And Joey.  Credit:  CIA World Factbook. 
FROM: U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT      
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Secretary of State

Adelaide, South Australia
November 15, 2012
 
Thank you. First, let me say what a great pleasure it is to visit Adelaide and South Australia for the first time. I'm proud to be the first Secretary of State ever to do so. And the others did not know what they were missing. Adelaide is, from our perspective, one of the great, critical industrial centers in the world, the heart of Australia's defense manufacturing, and a place where American and Australian companies work in close partnership every day.

This city, this place showcases two of the strongest elements of the U.S.-Australia relationship: our security alliance, and our economic ties. I want to thank Rod Equid and AWD Alliance for hosting us. I want to thank Senator Wang, Penny, thank you for being here, back home for you. And I want to thank the Premier. Premier Weatherill has been a very great visionary when it comes to understanding the partnership, the public-private partnership that is essential for advanced manufacturing to be successful, not only here in Australia, but around the world.

Techport, this world-class maritime industrial hub is where you can see the future of the Royal Australian Navy being built, including the next generation of Air Warfare Destroyers. Now, this work is obviously critical to Australia's continued defense, your ability to provide security for yourselves and throughout the region, and to maintain and advance your role as a global force for peace and stability.

Now, these are goals that the United States shares with Australia, and we are deeply committed to your continued security. We are proud to work with Australia across a range of regional and global security challenges, including standing shoulder to shoulder in Afghanistan and fighting piracy together in the Horn of Africa. So I am greatly impressed by the work being done here to keep Australia strong at home and abroad and very proud of the role that American companies are playing in this effort.

In 2011 alone, U.S. military sales to Australia came to nearly $4 billion making Australia one of our top defense trading partners. And that partnership just received a major boost. Your parliament passed the bill to implement the Defense, Trade, and Cooperation Treaty between our two countries, which the Governor-General assented to this week.

Our leaders signed this treaty back in 2007. The United States Senate passed it in 2010, and now that it has passed your parliament, U.S. and Australian forces will be able to cooperate even more closely and swiftly for our mutual defense. They will be building on a strong foundation. American defense manufacturers are helping to modernize Australia's defense forces through programs like the Joint Strike Fighter project, the Growler upgrades to your Super Hornets, Wedgetail Airborne Early Warning and P-8 anti-submarine warfare aircraft, C-17 and C-27 transport aircraft, MH-60 helicopters for your navy, and the AEGIS weapons systems for you new Air Warfare Destroyers built right here.

But this is a two-way street, because Australian defense manufacturers in turn are contributing to our U.S. defense projects. I just saw the turrets that are manufactured and then exported to the United States for us to be using in our defense. We're also working with you and getting your help in our littoral combat ships. So this is a mutual partnership where we both look out for each other, and we both benefit.

But I want to emphasize that all the work happening here at Techport Australia and at other manufacturing hubs across both our countries is not only about defense and security as important as that is. It's about jobs. It's about trade and investment. It's about putting people to work, and I see some of the high-skilled workers here in front of me.

Now, this economic relationship is just as vital to both of our nations' continued strength as our defense partnership, because in today's world, power is increasingly measured and exercised in economic terms. So it is critical that Australia and the United States keep seeking every opportunity to increase trade and investment between us, to build economic partnerships, to share innovation and technological advances so we can continue not only to lead in the global economy, but more importantly to provide a rising standard of living to the hardworking people in both our countries.

We're on the right path. Since the U.S.-Australia Free Trade Agreement entered into force seven years ago, bilateral trade and investment between our countries has steadily increased, and we're very proud to be Australia's third largest trade partner and your leading investment partner. Now, sometimes it may not always be reflected in the press, but American investment is the biggest source of investment in Australia.

American firms have $136 billion in direct investment in Australia ranging across many industries, including Chevron's gas projects off the cost of Western Australia, and I heard a lot about that in Perth yesterday, or the IBM data centers across Australia, or Boeing, GE, Citigroup, Exxon Mobile, dozens of other American companies whose names I have seen both here in Adelaide and in Perth and of course in Melbourne and Sydney and Canberra on previous visits.

Australia is also a growing market for growing exports even as we welcome more trade from you. In fact, our exports to Australia jumped more than 40 percent between 2009 and 2011 raising from under 20 billion to more than 27 billion, and in the first nine months of this year, they're up another 20 percent. President Obama set a goal of doubling U.S. exports within five years, and we've seen extraordinary progress in our relationship with Australia.

So it's fair to say that our economies are entwined, and we need to keep upping our game both bilaterally and with partners across the region through agreements like the Trans-Pacific Partnership or TPP. Australia is a critical partner. This TPP sets the gold standard in trade agreements to open free, transparent, fair trade, the kind of environment that has the rule of law and a level playing field. And when negotiated, this agreement will cover 40 percent of the world's total trade and build in strong protections for workers and the environment.

That's key, because we know from experience, and of course research proves it, that respecting workers' rights leads to positive long-term economic outcomes, better jobs with higher wages and safer working conditions. And including everybody in that, those who have been previously left out of the formal economy will help build a strong middle class, not only here in Australia or in our country, but across Asia. And that will be good for us.

If we do this right, and that's what we're trying to do, then globalization, which is inevitable, can become a race to the top with rising standards of living and more broadly shared prosperity. Now, this is what I call jobs diplomacy, and that's what I've been focused on in part as Secretary of State. And that's one of the reasons that I wanted to come here to Adelaide and come to this impressive facility.

But for me, and I think for most Americans, it's not only about security, and it's not only about our economy. So let me close with a word about our alliance. These last three days have reinforced for me the indispensability of the U.S.-Australia partnership, indispensible to our shared prosperity, yes, and to our shared security for sure, but also indispensible for our shared values. We are cooperating everywhere together, in businesses, in shipbuilding, from the mountains of Afghanistan to the atolls of the Pacific to the thriving cities of Asia.

But I know there are some who present a false choice, that Australia needs to choose between its longstanding ties to the United States and its emerging links with China. Well, that kind of zero-sum thinking only leads to negative-sum results. We support Australia having strong, multifaceted ties with every nation in the Asia Pacific, indeed in the world, including China just as we seek the same. And I have said repeatedly the Pacific is big enough for all of us.

But for both of us, the U.S.-Australia alliance is not a matter of calculation or cost-benefit analysis, though the benefits are clear. It is much deeper than that. It is in our DNA. It is rooted in shared history and shared struggles to overcome adversity and build a better future for ourselves, our families, and future generations. We are not fair-weather friends. We've been there for each other for decades, and we will keep being there to deliver greater security, greater prosperity, greater opportunity, and the chance for all Australians and Americans alike to live up to our God-given potential in this, the Pacific century. God bless you. And God bless Australia and our relationship forever. Thank you. (Applause.)

U.S.-SINGAPORE RELATIONS

Singapore Map Credit:  CIA World Factbook.

FROM: U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT

United Sattes-Singapore Relations
Fact Sheet
Office of the Spokesperson
Washington, DC
November 17, 2012


Singapore is a close strategic partner of the United States across a range of developmental, economic, people-to-people and security issues. We maintain this close relationship in regional multilateral fora such as the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC), and the East Asia Summit (EAS) to support regional integration, prosperity, and security. We are building on the strong foundation of our bilateral Free Trade Agreement in negotiating a successful outcome for the Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiations.

Bilateral trade in 2011 exceeded $50 billion, making Singapore the United States’ 15th largest trading partner and 11th largest export market. Cumulative U.S. investment in Singapore is over $116 billion while Singapore has $22 billion of foreign direct investment in the United States. Approximately 1,500 American companies use Singapore as a regional base for Asian operations, contributing to job creation and economic development in Singapore and the United States.

Our people-to-people relationships are also strong with 25,000 U.S. citizens residing in Singapore and a similar number of Singaporeans in the United States. A broad range of State Department exchange programs are building academic, professional, and cultural ties between our citizens. In addition, formal educational links are growing, as numerous U.S. universities establish satellite campuses in Singapore.

The United States-Singapore
Strategic Partnership Dialogue, announced in 2012, introduced new mechanisms to further strengthen our cooperation to support regional development. Our multifaceted cooperation includes the Third Country Training Program (TCTP), a joint technical assistance program for developing countries in the region, including in the Lower Mekong area. The first projects under this program have focused on training officials in the Lower Mekong region in the areas of environment, health, urban planning, and disaster management.

The United States and Singapore enjoy a close security relationship. Bilateral defense cooperation has deepened since the signing of the Strategic Framework Agreement in 2005, and both militaries interact regularly through joint exercises, operations, training and technological collaboration. Starting in 2013, Singapore will host the first of up to four United States’ Littoral Combat Ships (LCS) on a rotational basis. The LCS will strengthen U.S. engagement in the region, through port calls and interaction with regional navies.

Singapore Locator Map Credit:  CIA World Factbook.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FROM CIA WORLD FACTBOOKSingapore was founded as a British trading colony in 1819. It joined the Malaysian Federation in 1963 but separated two years later and became independent. Singapore subsequently became one of the world's most prosperous countries with strong international trading links (its port is one of the world's busiest in terms of tonnage handled) and with per capita GDP equal to that of the leading nations of Western Europe.

Mieux connaître l’ESA, l'Agence Spatiale pour l’Europe

Mieux connaître l’ESA, l'Agence Spatiale pour l’Europe


ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL BREUER'S SPEECH ON FOREIGN CORRUPT PRACTICES ACT

FROM: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer Speaks at the American Conference Institute’s 28th National Conference on the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act

National Harbor, Md. ~ Friday, November 16, 2012

Thank you, Joe, for that kind introduction. This is the fourth year in a row that I have been privileged to address this conference.

I am told that I have been the longest serving Assistant Attorney General of the Criminal Division in nearly 50 years. And during my time as head of the division, I have spoken about our ambitious efforts in the United States to fight foreign bribery, perhaps more than on any other subject, and all over the world. I have traveled around the globe – from Russia and Romania, to Liberia and Ghana, from Sweden and France, to the Ukraine and the U.K. – to discuss our anti-corruption enforcement work. And just as I have done here, I have told those countries that combating corruption around the world is, and will remain, a priority of the United States.

This message resonates in every country, because everyone – from the fruit stand owner in Tunisia, to the oil rig worker in Nigeria, to the punk rock musician in Russia – knows how pernicious corruption can be; and we in the United States are in a unique position to spread the gospel of anti-corruption, because there is no country that enforces its anti-bribery laws more vigorously than we do. The Justice Department’s record of accomplishment in this area is a signature achievement of ours, and I’m delighted to have this occasion to address you once again.

Three years ago, I came here and told you that, building on the work of my predecessors, I was going to make fighting corruption, and expanding our enforcement of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, a critical piece of the Criminal Division’s mission. I think I’ve kept that promise. Since 2009, the number of prosecutors we have devoted to working on FCPA cases has approximately doubled; we launched a new initiative – the Kleptocracy Asset Recovery Initiative – through which we seize and forfeit the assets of corrupt leaders around the world; and we have also rebuilt the Public Integrity Section – which is one of the Department’s crown jewels.

As a result of our efforts over the past three-and-a-half years, robust FCPA enforcement has become part of the fabric of the Justice Department: Our global anti-corruption mission has seeped into the Criminal Division’s core. And there is no turning back. The FCPA is now a reality that companies know they must live with and adjust to; and this nation is better off for it.

The dramatic change in the way the corporate world thinks about the FCPA didn’t happen overnight. It is the product of years of work, by a talented corps of dedicated and tenacious prosecutors. This audience, perhaps more than any other I’ve addressed, knows our record. I’ve heard that there are even several blogs that keep track of each one of our cases, which I think is terrific.

I will point out just two statistics: First, since 2009, our FCPA Unit has entered into over 40 corporate resolutions, including nine of the top ten resolutions ever, as measured by the size of the penalty, resulting in over $2 billion in fines. Second, since 2009, we have secured convictions against over three dozen individuals. One corporate executive, the former president of Terra Telecommunications, was sentenced to 15 years in prison – the longest sentence ever imposed in an FCPA case.

Looking back at these cases, and thinking about the ones in the pipeline, I see a Criminal Division that is focused on the cases and investigations that matter. We are focused on bribes of consequence – ones that have a fundamentally corrosive effect on the way companies do business abroad. And our record of success has meant that corporate executives now actually believe – for good reason – that if they participate in a scheme to improperly influence a foreign official, they face the very real prospect of going to prison. That may be our single most important achievement.

Because the prosecutors handling FCPA cases for the Criminal Division are experienced, sophisticated lawyers, companies also know that we are always attempting to strike an appropriate balance between vigorous and responsible enforcement.

The most vivid, recent illustration is our prosecution of Garth Peterson. As a managing director of Morgan Stanley, Peterson conspired to circumvent Morgan Stanley’s internal FCPA controls in order to transfer a multi-million-dollar ownership interest in a Shanghai building to himself and a Chinese public official with whom he had a personal friendship. Morgan Stanley voluntarily disclosed Peterson’s conduct, cooperated with our investigation, and showed us that it maintained a rigorous compliance program, involving extensive training of bank employees – including Peterson – on the FCPA and other anti-corruption measures. So we decided not to bring any enforcement action against the bank. But Peterson had to face the music. He pleaded guilty to conspiring to evade Morgan Stanley’s internal FCPA controls, and is currently serving time in federal prison, in Edgefield, S.C.

When we announced earlier this year that Garth Peterson had pleaded guilty, we took the unusual step of publicizing the fact that we were declining to bring a case against Morgan Stanley. Three days ago, I would have told you that our decision to make that declination public best illustrates our commitment to transparency. But, this past Wednesday marked an even more vivid example of that commitment.

Last year, I told you, in this room, that in 2012 we would release detailed guidance on the FCPA’s criminal and civil enforcement provisions. On Wednesday, keeping that promise, S.E.C. Director of the Division of Enforcement, Robert Khuzami, and I announced the release of A Resource Guide to the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

At roughly 120 pages, the Guide may be the most comprehensive effort ever undertaken by either the Justice Department or the SEC to explain our approach to enforcing a particular statute. I am extraordinarily proud of the lawyers and staff in the Criminal Division and at the SEC who worked on the Guide over the past year. In it, we analyze the central provisions of the Act and provide commentary and analysis for enterprises big and small – from small businesses doing their first transactions abroad to multi-national corporations with subsidiaries around the world.

Transparency is, of course, a worthwhile goal all by itself. We want U.S. businesses, foreign officials, non-governmental organizations and others to understand why we prosecute FCPA cases as vigorously as we do, and also how and why we make our charging decisions. But there are additional reasons why we strive to be so open in this area. The vast majority of companies doing business internationally want to get it right. They want to comply with the FCPA – and they know they may face Justice Department prosecutors and S.E.C. enforcement lawyers if they don’t. The Guide, which is perhaps the boldest manifestation of our transparent approach to enforcement, will help businesses that are unsure of their obligations, and should therefore improve compliance. Compliance officers and others have, over the years, worried out loud to me that their employees live in doubt. Does the cup of coffee they bought for a contracting official violate the FCPA? Will paying for a taxi for someone who might be a foreign official land them in prison? As you will see, the Guide addresses those questions and many others.

The Guide is the product of a remarkably close collaboration between the Criminal Division and the SEC’s Division of Enforcement. It could not have happened without the close partnership our two agencies have developed. And, as a non-neutral party, let me say that the Guide is simply an extraordinary piece of work. No guide will satisfy every constituency, and I would be surprised if the people in this room thought the Guide answered all of their questions. But, I think it’s fair to say that the Guide is one of the most comprehensive efforts ever by law enforcement to explain how and why we do what we do.

Thirty-five years after Congress passed the FCPA, we are in an important, and developing, era of foreign bribery enforcement. Countries across the globe are passing new anti-bribery legislation, or revising outdated laws. Russia, China, India, Sweden, the U.K. – the list goes on and on. More countries are also joining international bodies such as the OECD Working Group on Bribery. And we are cooperating with foreign law enforcement on FCPA cases more closely than ever before. In addition to our well publicized FCPA prosecutions, we have recently had our first Kleptocracy Initiative successes. In June, we successfully forfeited over $400,000 belonging to a corrupt former governor of a Nigerian oil-producing state; and since July we have secured restraining orders against more than $7 million in proceeds related to a different governor of another oil-producing state in Nigeria, including the proceeds from the sale of a penthouse unit in the Ritz-Carlton in Washington, D.C. Also, just this week, we announced the forfeiture of $2.1 million worth of property purchased with alleged bribes paid to the family of the former president of Taiwan. These are challenging, and extremely meaningful, cases. Our theory is simple: Corrupt leaders should not be allowed to use the United States as a safe haven for their ill-gotten gains; so, even if we cannot pursue you criminally in the United States – because we lack criminal jurisdiction, for example – we will pursue your assets.

As Assistant Attorney General, I am acutely aware that we have many urgent law enforcement priorities – fighting child exploitation, stemming the flow of narcotics from South America and elsewhere, stopping gang violence. I am here to tell you that fighting global corruption is just as urgent, and with the momentum of many countries behind us, now is the time to redouble our anti-corruption efforts. Because corruption – at home and abroad – has such corrosive effects, I have pledged to use every tool at our disposal to fight it. Not only does corruption undermine the public trust and weaken democratic institutions; it also creates gaps in government structures that organized criminal groups and terrorist networks can exploit. In short, corruption is a "gateway crime" that we must do everything we can, working with others around the globe, to stamp out.

Some practitioners and commentators see FCPA enforcement as no more than an esoteric area of the criminal law. But, for me, the global anti-corruption fight is so much more than that. During my tenure as Assistant Attorney General, I have seen people agitate for the rule of law during the Arab Spring. I have seen, first hand, how nations in upheaval are struggling to cope with corrupt leaders. I have spent time with our Justice Department prosecutors stationed abroad, who are fighting to establish rule-of-law programs in emerging democracies and contending with governments that are ill-equipped to resist corruption. And I have seen, first hand, people across the globe demanding more from their leaders. For me, our enforcement of the FCPA – as well as our Kleptocracy and capacity building work – is our way of ensuring not only that the Justice Department is on the right side of history, but also that it has a hand in advancing that history.

The idea that a company could get away with bribing foreign officials for the sake of corporate profits didn’t make sense 35 years ago. It doesn’t make sense today. As I have tried to convey to you in the four speeches I’ve delivered here, nothing is more important than curbing corruption around the world – and we must, and we will, continue to do everything we can to ensure that young people across the globe can dream big dreams without having to worry that a corrupt leader will extinguish them. It’s a critical mission, and one I’m very proud to be part of.

It has been my privilege to speak with you once again. Thank you.

U.S.-MYANMAR WORK TO COMBAT HUMAN TRAFFICKING

Photo:  Golden Buda.  From:  CIA World Factbook
FROM: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF STATE

United States-Myanmar Joint Plan on Trafficking in Persons
Media Note
Office of the Spokesperson
Washington, DC
November 18, 2012


The Governments of the Union of Myanmar and the United States; affirming their commitment to the global effort to combat human trafficking, a modern form of slavery that afflicts both of our nations; recognizing the requirements and provisions of the UN Protocol to Suppress, Punish, and Prevent Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children, supplementing the 2000 UN Convention on Transnational Organized Crime; acknowledging the progress made by the Government of Myanmar in addressing sex trafficking and forced labor over the last two years, particularly:
The repealing of the 1907 Towns and Villages Acts, which provided legal condoning of the government officials’ use forced labor;
The enactment of the 2012 Wards and Village Tracts Administration Act, which explicitly criminalizes all forms of forced labor;
The forging with the International Labor Organization (ILO) of a time-bound, comprehensive action plan to tackle forced labor in Myanmar;
The opening of two additional border liaison offices on the Thai border to prevent cross-border trafficking;
The signing of a child soldiers action plan with the United Nations that calls for the release of child soldiers from the Burmese armed forces and access to military sites and prisons to inspect for the presence of child soldiers;
The opening, in collaboration with the Thai government, of five Myanmar Ministry of Labor-staff migrant help centers inside Thailand; and the more robust anti-trafficking efforts undertaken by the Ministry of Home Affairs-chaired Central Body on Trafficking in Persons (CBTIP), such as the abolishment of the mandatory detention time in government shelters for trafficking victims;

And recognizing that the Union of Myanmar’s anti-trafficking efforts will be enhanced through the sharing of technical knowledge and best practices from the United States and its partners in this global effort against trafficking in persons;

Declare as follows:

Objectives

1. The governments affirm that this joint plan provides a framework for joint action against all forms of trafficking in persons, including both sex and labor trafficking, whether committed across international borders or wholly within a country’s borders – through efforts to boost the capacity of Myanmar government officials and civil society partners in jointly identifying cases of forced labor, the illegal recruitment of child soldiers, and sex trafficking, including the sharing of best practices, and technical assistance and training provided by the United States government and partner entities.

2. The governments emphasize that this joint plan heralds a new era of Myanmar-United States cooperation in addressing this serious crime and human rights issue.

Areas of Cooperation

The Governments of the Union of Myanmar and the United States commit to areas of cooperation and measurable progress in increasing the capacity of Myanmar efforts to: identify trafficking offenses; investigate and prosecute trafficking offenders; provide victims with access to services in line with existing international guidelines; and to prevent Myanmar citizens from being subjected to sex trafficking or forced labor either within the country’s border or abroad.

Specifically, the governments commit to:

A. Implement the ILO Action Plan on Forced Labor and the provisions of the new Wards and Village Tracts Administration Act by registering with Myanmar government authorities an increased number of alleged cases of forced labor, both through the ILO complaint mechanism and the government’s own enforcement authorities;

B. Expand CBTIP’s official responsibilities over human trafficking issues. Demonstrate progress in this regard by increasing the number of criminal investigations and prosecutions of those who are alleged to have committed forms of human trafficking to include forced labor and the unlawful recruitment and use of child soldiers;

C. Encourage greater civil society participation in anti-trafficking efforts throughout the country, including through more robust and structured partnerships – both at the policy and operational levels – between Myanmar authorities (law enforcement and social services) and a wide range of civil society organizations and faith institutions; and

D. Provide technical assistance, training, and the regular sharing of best practices in the areas of law enforcement investigations, victim/witness interviewing, victim assistance, and trafficking prevention, through U.S. government-funded programs to be closely coordinated with Myanmar government partners to ensure the most effective collaboration possible.

Bilateral Anti-Trafficking Dialogue and Participation

With the announcement of this joint plan, the Governments of the Union of Myanmar and the United States are opening a regular anti-TIP dialogue that will be structured to have at least annual meetings in either Myanmar or the United States, supplemented by regular ad hoc meetings at both senior and working levels throughout the year.

RECENT U.S. NAVY PHOTOS





FROM: U.S. NAVY, MH-60S SEA HAWK HELICOPER
An MH-60S Sea Hawk helicopter assigned to the Eightballers of Helicopter Sea Combat Squadron (HSC) 8, embarked aboard the aircraft carrier USS John C. Stennis (CVN 74), circles around a flare during a casting and recovery exercise. John C. Stennis is deployed to the U.S. 5th Fleet area of responsibility conducting maritime security operations, theater security cooperation efforts and support missions for Operation Enduring Freedom. The U.S. Navy is constantly deployed to preserve peace, protect commerce, and deter aggression through forward presence. Join the conversation on social media using #warfighting. U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Kenneth Abbate (Released) 121112-N-OY799-139




121113-N-XQ375-034 ARABIAN SEA (Nov. 13, 2012) Sailors assigned to a visit, board, search and seizure team from the guided-missile destroyer USS Jason Dunham (DDG 109) approach the Comoros-flagged cargo vessel Al Dahab for a flag verification. Jason Dunham is deployed to the U.S. 5th Fleet area of responsibility conducting maritime security operations, theater security cooperation efforts and support missions for Operation Enduring Freedom. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Deven B. King/Released)

ACUPUNCTURE AND BATTLEFIELD MEDICINE

Dr. John Baxter, middle, Pentagon Clinic Director and acupuncturist, assists a Beijing University of Chinese Medicine student with inserting acupuncture needles into fellow student, Minli Sun's ear Oct. 24, 2012 in Beijing, China. At the invitation of China's People Liberation Army, U.S. Air Force medical physicians, alongside their Chinese military and civilian counterparts, conducted the first-ever Medical Acupuncture Subject Matter Expert Exchange in Beijing Oct. 21-27, 2012. (U.S. Air Force courtesy photo)

FROM: U.S. AIR FORCE
AF, China's PLA physicians gather for first-ever acupuncture exchange
by Tech. Sgt. Matthew McGovern
Pacific Air Forces Public Affairs

11/16/2012 - BEIJING, China (AFNS) -- At the invitation of China's People Liberation Army, Air Force medical physicians, along-side their Chinese military and civilian counterparts, conducted the first-ever Medical Acupuncture and Battlefield Medicine Subject Matter Expert Exchange in Beijing, China, on Oct. 21-27.

The exchange, attended by seven U.S. representatives from the Air Force Medical Service, civilians from the National Intrepid Center of Excellence, and more than 30 PLA members, was an effort to help U.S.-China militaries increase mutual trust and understanding while sharing practices in traditional Chinese medicine.

"The sessions were friendly, informative and far-reaching in their scope," said Lt. Col. Gregory Sweitzer, Pacific Air Forces clinical quality and innovation chief from Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam, Hawaii. "The enthusiasm and camaraderie that emerged from this exchange was clearly palpable and led to a series of discussions that extended outside the conference rooms and into the break room where genuinely enthusiastic inter-personal exchanges took place."

The exchange was held at three separate locations: a military hospital, university of medicine and a traditional Chinese medicine clinic. The different venues allowed the group to explore each other's acupuncture techniques, operational medicine issues, and acupuncture research. The group also focused on ways acupuncture remedies hypertension, diabetes, obesity, stroke, chronic pain, as well as gynecological complaints.

At the military hospital, where the Americans were greeted with prominently displayed U.S. and China banners and multiple cameramen, discussions included acupuncture treatment of battlefield injuries, post-traumatic stress disorder, traumatic brain injury, and treatment of pain associated with amputations.

"We were treated very graciously (by our Chinese counterparts) and our hope is that we can have future exchanges in acupuncture and other medical exchanges with the PLA and civilian counterparts to learn more from them and them from us," said Sweitzer.

The Chinese physicians formed a similar opinion regarding the exchanges.

"The exchange (facilitated) Sino-U.S. friendship, enhanced relations, and I hope communications," said Col. Lou Yongchang, PLA air force aviation medicine branch director.

Sweitzer remained optimistic about further relations with the Chinese experts.

"We believe this visit truly enhanced U.S.-China military-medical relations, particularly with regard to the provision and utilization of acupuncture in our respected militaries. In fact, our group has already identified some prospective topics and workshops that could provide the framework for a second U.S.-China exchange," said Sweitzer.

Pacific Air Forces conduct subject matter exchanges throughout the pacific to collaborate with other professionals and assist with communications across various military disciplines. Dialogue and exchanges are designed to promote stable military-to-military relationships by reducing misunderstanding, misperception, and miscalculation through increased communication and interaction

 

Search This Blog

Translate

White House.gov Press Office Feed