Wednesday, June 13, 2012

IN AFGHANISTAN: DRUG CACHES OF HASHISH FOUND AND ORDER ISSUED TO HALT AERIAL STRIKES OF HOMES


Photo:  Predator Drone.  Credit:  U.S. Air Force.
FROM:  AMEICAN FORCES PRESS SERVICE 
Combined Forces Seize Large Hashish Caches
Compiled from International Security Assistance Force and ISAF Joint Command News Releases
WASHINGTON, June 13, 2012 - Combined Afghan-coalition forces seized 1,180 pounds of hashish during operations conducted over the past two days in the Panjwai district of Afghanistan's Kandahar province, military officials reported.
An Afghan-coalition patrol discovered more than 220 pounds of hashish in the Panjwai district today, officials said.

Yesterday, officials said, combined patrols discovered drug caches totaling more than 960 pounds of hashish and detained one suspected insurgent in the same district.
Drug samples were collected and the hashish was burned at both sites, officials said.

Also yesterday, Marine Corps Gen. John R. Allen, commander of the International Security Assistance Force and U.S. Forces-Afghanistan, gave the order to coalition forces that no aerial munitions will be delivered against civilian dwellings in Afghanistan. This measure, officials said, is a further step in U.S.-coalition efforts to protect the lives of Afghan civilians.

Other conventional methods will be deployed against the insurgents, in coordination with Afghan National Security Forces, officials said.

As always, Afghan and coalition forces retain the inherent right to use aerial munitions in self-defense if no other options are available, officials said.

U.S. SECRETARY OF STATE HILLARY CLINTON OP-ED ON U.S.-INDIA RELATIONS


Photo Credit:  Wikimedia.
FROM:  U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT
India and the United States: A Focus on the Fundamentals
Media Note Office of the Spokesperson Washington, DC
June 13, 2012
The following op-ed written by Secretary Clinton is appearing in print in India Abroad.
This week, leaders from India and the United States will gather in Washington to discuss our expanding cooperation on everything from trade to technology to terrorism. There also will be issues on which we don't see eye to eye, and some of those may dominate the media coverage. But if we look at the trend-lines as well as the headlines, a much more important story emerges: The strategic fundamentals of our relationship – shared democratic values, economic imperatives and diplomatic priorities – are pushing both countries' interests into closer convergence. The world's oldest democracy and the world's largest democracy are entering a new, more mature phase in our relationship.

The most important bond between our two nations continues to be our common democratic heritage. We are both big, diverse, noisy democracies, committed to pluralism, freedom, and opportunity. Yet, for many decades, our economic and strategic policies often diverged. Only after the end of the Cold War, with India's rapid economic development and growing regional leadership, did the trajectory of our relationship begin to change.

India's expanding GDP, thriving private sector, emerging consumer class, and increasing diplomatic clout have all combined to make it a global power with a big stake in maintaining international security and prosperity. As a result, we find ourselves sharing more than just common values and political systems -- we also increasingly share common interests in an open, free, fair, and transparent global economic system; peace and prosperity in South Asia and the Asia-Pacific; and a coordinated international response to violent extremism and other shared global challenges.

A bipartisan commitment across successive American and Indian administrations has driven a steady improvement in relations, marked by high-profile visits like the one my husband took to India in 2000 and achievements such as President Bush's landmark civilian nuclear cooperation agreement. Today, under President Obama and Prime Minister Singh's leadership, we are continuing those efforts. There is less need for dramatic breakthroughs and more need for steady, focused cooperation. So together, we are building a mature partnership defined by near-constant consultation aimed at working through our differences and advancing the interests and values we share. This kind of daily collaboration isn't always glamorous, but it is strategically significant -- and a long way from the old days of the Cold War.

Let's look at three examples of how this works.
First, on the economic front. Two decades after it began to open its economy, India's industries and innovators have gone global, investing and trading all over the world. Like American businesses, they have come to see that further growth depends on open markets, transparent regulations, and fair mechanisms to settle disputes. And while people in both India and America have important and sometimes conflicting concerns about market access and the effects of globalisation, the benefits of growing economic ties are clear: bilateral trade and investment has reached $100 billion a year, creating jobs and opportunities for Americans and Indians alike. There is much room for growth, and so we need to keep up the momentum, further reducing barriers to trade and investment in areas like multi-brand retail and creating hospitable environments for companies to do business. Because the world's two biggest democracies should have one of the world's most robust and consequential economic relationships.

Second, on Asia. For years, Pakistan and South Asia were a chief focus of India's strategic thinkers. Today, India is also looking east, and playing a larger role in the broader Asia-Pacific. Both India and the United States recognise the strategic and economic significance of the waterways that connect the Indian Ocean through to the Pacific, and the necessity of protecting freedom of navigation. So we are working together and through multilateral institutions such as the East Asia Summit to build a regional architecture that will boost economic growth, settle disputes peacefully, and uphold universal rights and norms. And we are exploring ways to ensure a constructive relationship among the United States, India, and China. Effective cooperation between all three countries will be essential to tackling many of the greatest challenges in the 21st century.

Third, on global challenges like terrorism, climate change, human rights, and nuclear proliferation. Both India and the United States have been targeted by violent extremists, and we understand that defeating terrorist networks takes international coordination and a comprehensive approach that goes after recruits, safe havens, and finances. We also both know that addressing cross-cutting challenges like climate change will require developed and developing countries alike to work together. Even on issues where we have at times disagreed, like human rights in Burma or sanctions on Iran, you can see our new habits of cooperation paying off. India understands the importance of denying Iran a nuclear weapon and supports efforts to ensure Iran's compliance with its international obligations. And India has taken steps to diversify its sources of imported crude by reducing purchases of Iranian oil. At the same time, the US recognises India's energy needs, and we're working together, along with other partners around the world, to ensure stable oil markets that can meet global demand. And that's what a good partnership is all about -- respecting each other's interests and needs and working to find mutually-acceptable approaches to common challenges.

These are just three of the most significant areas in which the strategic fundamentals of our relationship are redefining the US-India partnership. On issue after issue, we find that India's interests and America's interests are lining up.

The effectiveness of this partnership will hinge on our ability together to convert common interests into common action. It's not enough to talk about cooperating on civilian nuclear energy or attracting more US investment in India or defending human rights, we have to follow through so that our people can see the results. And we recognise that some Indians still fear that working closely with the United States will undermine their "strategic autonomy." But at the end of the day, a strategic partnership isn't about one country supporting the policies or priorities of the other. It's about working together on shared goals and preventing short-term disagreements from derailing long-term cooperation.
The United States is determined to keep this partnership going and growing. And that means working together -- including through mechanisms like this week's US-India Strategic Dialogue -- to build trust and deepen the habits of cooperation that will help break through areas of disagreement and bring benefits to the people of both countries.
Together, we can turn strategic fundamentals into strategic partnership.

Hillary Clinton

U.S. SEC. OF DEFENSE PANETTA SAYS NATO IS CRITICAL TO U.S. SECURITY


FROM:  AMERICAN FORCES PRESS SERVICE 
Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta testifies before the Senate Appropriations subcommittee on defense, June 13, 2012. DOD photo by Glenn Fawcett  
NATO is Crucial to U.S. Security, Panetta Tells Senators
By Jim Garamone
WASHINGTON, June 13, 2012 - Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta told a Senate panel today the NATO alliance is crucial to American security, but that NATO countries need to spend more on defense.

"We can't do it alone. We've got to be able to have alliances like NATO be able to work with us in confronting the many challenges that we face in the world," he said, during testimony on the 2013 defense budget request at the Senate Appropriations subcommittee on defense.

U.S. defense officials have repeatedly raised concerns that some NATO nations are not investing enough in their militaries. NATO's goal is for members to spend roughly 2 percent of their gross domestic product on defense. Most have not met that goal. NATO nations must continue developing their capabilities and improving their defense postures, the secretary said.

At NATO's summit in Chicago last month, leaders agreed to develop greater capabilities in missile defense, in intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance, and in air-to-air refueling, among other things.

But with Europe going through an economic downturn, the United States has concerns that many European nations will "constantly go back to defense and seek further savings there, which I think would be dangerous," Panetta said.

This has already eroded some capabilities. Panetta said that during last year's Libya operation, the United States provided roughly 60 percent of the support, and that NATO officials told him if the mission were today, the United States would have to pick up about 80 percent.

MALARIA: FOCUSING ON THE TOP KILLER IN AFRICA


FROM:  AMERICAN FORCES PRESS SERVICE
U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Melissa McGaughey delivers mosquito bed nets to residents of Debaka Debobesa, Ethiopia, March 15, 2012. U.S. Air Force photo by Tech. Sgt. James Brock  

New Malaria Task Forces Will Address Top Africa Killer
By Donna Miles
STUTTGART, Germany, June 13, 2012 - Two new task forces being stood up by U.S. Africa Command have set their sights on one of the biggest killers on the continent: the mosquito.

Malaria -- that same affliction that decimated Roman legions,
Revolutionary War and Civil War soldiers and a scourge in the South Pacific during World War II -- continues to plague Africa, particularly the sub-Saharan region. Ninety percent of the world's malaria-related deaths are reported in Africa, and the disease kills some 600,000 African children each year.

The toll is so devastating that it overshadows Africa's other medical challenges, including HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis, Army Col. (Dr.) John Andrus, Africom's deputy surgeon and medical logistics division chief, told American Forces Press Service.

And beyond the pure humanitarian toll, there's an operational one, too. Last year, during Africom's World Malaria Day observance, a soldier from an African partner nation told Andrus malaria is one of the biggest concerns among his troops deploying for peacekeeping operations across the continent. "This was a real eye opener to us," he said.
Africom incorporates malaria prevention into much of its theater engagement, distributing mosquito nets and teaching new diagnostic techniques during training events throughout Africa.

But at the African soldier's suggestion, Africom went to work to establish regional task forces to help partner nations create a unified front against the problem. The command stood up the East African Malaria Task Force in December with plans to form a similar task force in West Africa by the year's end, Andrus reported.

The East African task force includes Burundi, Kenya, Uganda, South Sudan, Rwanda and Tanzania. The United States is a member, but has no leadership role, Andrus said. "The task force is led by the African partners who are members," he said.

The task force plans to meet in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, in late July to discuss their battle plan for combating the disease, Andrus said. They're expected to identify ways to encourage self-protection while promoting improved surveillance, diagnosis and treatment.

"This will give them an opportunity to move forward against a very challenging disease in a very positive way," he said.

Meanwhile, the first meeting of the new West Africa Malaria Task Force is scheduled for November.

Andrus called the task forces an example of the command's goal of helping African nations confront African problems.

"This is a wonderful example of what it means to work with our partners, assist them in coming up with solutions to their own challenges, and then to be a partner with them as we move toward addressing those challenges," he said.

Ultimately, this supports the concept of "stability through health," Andrus said. Helping partner nations protect their military forces against disease supports the bigger goal of establishing professional militaries that are trusted by their populations and able to respond to crises, he explained.
It also builds confidence within partner-nation militaries that they will be taken care of when they are called on to carry out their missions, he said. "If they can deploy forward, knowing that they are able to receive the health care they need, it gives them confidence they need to be able to perform in a way that promotes stability on the continent," he said.
While helping partner nations confront malaria, Africom also ensures U.S. service members who deploy to Africa are protected, Andrus said.

The Kelley Health Clinic here recently celebrated its one-year anniversary as a one-stop shop for Africom members traveling to the continent. It provides health screenings, immunizations, malaria prophylaxis and mosquito repellents.

"The first step is to get to know who you're fighting," said Lt. Col. (Dr.) Steven Baty, a veterinary epidemiologist for Public Health Command Region -- Europe. "If we can identify the mosquitoes in the area that are going to carry malaria, then we can look at prevention programs."

Because Africom personnel often travel in small groups to the continent, officials recognize the importance of keeping them healthy.

"Each person is critical," said Army Lt. Col Jose Nunez, chief of the command's health protection branch. "If you have one person go down, that person can't do his or her job."

PANETTA AND MILITARY LEADERS WANT CONGRESS TO KEEP 2012 BUDGET REQUEST


FROM:  AMERICAN FORCES PRESS SERVICE
DOD Leaders Strongly Urge Congress to Preserve 2012 Budget Request
By Karen Parrish
WASHINGTON, June 13, 2012 - Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta cautioned Congress today against dismantling the strategic framework that supports the 2012 defense budget request.

Testifying along with Army Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff before the Senate Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense, the secretary said some changes to the request could undermine the careful balance department leaders built into military spending projections.

"Some of the [Congressional] committees have ... made changes with regard to our recommendations that we're concerned about," Panetta said.
He listed three areas DOD leaders have targeted for cuts, and which some members of Congress have challenged during defense budget consideration.

"Some of the bills seek to reverse the decisions to eliminate aging and lower-priority ships and aircraft," the secretary noted. "My concern is that if these decisions are totally reversed, then I've got to find money somewhere ... to maintain this old stuff."

Keeping outdated equipment in service would rob needed funds from other areas, he said. That, he added, would lead to what he has long called a "hollow force" – a military that is not trained, manned or equipped to meet current and future threats.

"We've got to be able to retire what is aged and what we can achieve some savings on," Panetta said.

Some in Congress have also objected to "the measured and gradual reductions in end strength that we've proposed for the Army and the Marine Corps," he added.
Panetta noted under current plans, DOD will reduce the active Army from roughly 560,000 to 490,000, while the Marine Corps will downsize from 202,000 to 182,000 over five years.

"Again, if I have a large force and I don't have the money to maintain that large force, I'm going to end up hollowing it out because I can't provide the training, I can't provide the equipment," the secretary said. "So that's why, if we're going to reduce the force, then I've got to be able to do it in a responsible way."

The third spending area he discussed involves military compensation and health care. The budget request includes some additional fees for retiree health care, and limits active-duty pay raises after 2013. Panetta and Dempsey both emphasized that the department does not plan to cut pay, but that compensation cost growth must be controlled to meet budget constraints.

"If I suddenly wind up with no reductions in that area, I've got to reach someplace to find the money to maintain those programs," the secretary said. "... Every low-priority program or overhead cost that is retained will have to be offset by cuts in higher-priority investments in order to comply with the Budget Control Act."

Panetta noted that act, which mandated the defense spending cuts reflected in the 2012 request, also holds a more dire threat to military spending: sequestration. That provision will trigger another $500 billion across-the-board cut in defense spending over the next decade if Congress doesn't identify an equivalent level of spending cuts by January.
"Obviously, this is a great concern," he said, calling sequestration a "meat-axe approach."
"It would guarantee that we hollow out our force and inflict severe damage on our national defense," the secretary asserted.

Dempsey also spoke about the damage changes to defense spending plans could cause.
The strategy-based budget request, the chairman said, "ensures we retain our conventional overmatch while divesting capabilities not required in the active force -- or at all."
The spending plan reflects choices that maintain a needed balance among force structure, modernization, readiness, pay and benefits, he added.

"Different choices will produce a different balance," the chairman cautioned. "So before giving us weapons we don't need or giving up on reforms that we do need, I'd only ask you to make sure it's the right choice, not for our armed forces but for our nation.
"Sequestration is absolutely certain to upend this balance," he continued. "It would lead to further end-strength reductions, the potential cancellation of major weapons systems and the disruption of global operations."

Dempsey said slashing another half-trillion dollars from defense funding over the next 10 years under sequestration would transform U.S. forces "from being unquestionably powerful everywhere to being less visible globally and presenting less of an overmatch to our adversaries."

That transformation would, in turn, change the nation's deterrent stance and potentially increase the likelihood of conflict, the chairman said.

The general noted that because the law allows defense leaders to cut spending in only certain areas, only three broad areas would be available to service chiefs faced with sequestration: training, maintenance and modernization.

"That's it. There's no magic in the budget at that point," Dempsey said. "And those three accounts will be subjected to all of the cuts mandated by sequestration."
Panetta appealed to the senators to take action to avert a "potential disaster" by preserving the strategy-based defense spending plan submitted in February.

"I know the members of this committee are committed to working together to stop sequester, and I want you to know that we are prepared to work with you to try to do what is necessary to avoid that crisis," he said.

CFTC COMMISSIONER CHILTON ON "OPRISK EUROPE"


Photo:  London.  Credit:  Wikimedia.
FROM:  COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
“Where the History Comes From”
Speech of Commissioner Bart Chilton, OpRisk Europe London, England
June 13, 2012
Introduction: Hey Lama
Hey, OpRisk Europe 2012. “Hey” isn’t one of our more formal American salutations. It is colloquial, and I mean it in a friendly way. Of course, it is still used to gain attention, “hey!” We Americans aren’t always so formal. You never hear, as a farewell, an American saying “cheerio” for example.

At any rate, thank you for that generous introduction and for the invitation to be here this morning. It really is an honor and personal privilege to be with you—folks who work to make these global economic engines, these seemingly boundless and exciting financial markets, work.

A lot of times you—the people in this room—don’t get the reverence and respect you merit. Your work is important and imperative to our economies. Being someone from government, I really know how not getting respect feels. Nonetheless, I appreciate what you do, although, the value of that praise is questionable.

Anyone recall the old movie Caddyshack? I know it wasn’t a hit in Europe, except reportedly in Denmark—those Danes have a great sense of humor. There is a scene where Carl Spackler (actor/comedian Bill Murray) tells a story about when he was a looper, a golf caddy, in the Himalayas. One day, he caddies for the Dalai Lama, the Dalai Lama! At the end of the golf round, Carl thinks he is not going to get a tip, a gratuity, so he says, “Hey, Lama, hey, how about a little something, you know, for the effort, you know.” And the Dalai Lama says, “Oh, uh, there won’t be any money, but when you die, on your deathbed, you will receive total consciousness.” And, Carl explains, “So, I got that going for me, which is nice.” Thus, I think each of you is often under-recognized for your important work, but I thank you. So, you got that going for you, which is (maybe) nice.
International Context

I speak often about what and how we are developing U.S. financial regulations in the wake of our regulatory reform law—the Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, otherwise known as Dodd-Frank. That is, however, only one part of the story. As hard as it is for many in the States to sometimes comprehend, there is an entire world out there. So today, let’s talk financial reform with a focus on the international context. This is something which we must address if these rules are going to be efficient and effective. When I say “we” must address, I am suggesting all regulators and those, including you here, involved in these incredible markets.

The only true method for financial regulations to work well is if they are harmonized, to a robust degree, among nations. I appreciate there will be individual and idiosyncratic issues. I appreciate we all need to respect each other’s sovereignty. There is no suggestion here that financial regulation has to be word-for-word identical. Of course it doesn’t have to be identical. But to the extent we can, we should realize and address the interconnectedness of these markets. Not to do so would be a faulty premise on which to establish these new and improved regulatory regimes. Sounds like a laundry detergent: new and improved regulatory regimes, with added transparency for cleaner markets!

Where the History Comes From
As we undertake these challenges, we need not only to be respectful of others, but learn from each other, from various experiences, and from each other’s history.
Eddie Izzard (another actor/comic) does a stand-up bit where he says, “I grew up in Europe, where the history comes from.” He’s so funny. I bet the Danes love him. He says, “We’ve got tons of history, lying about the place—big old castles.” He talks about Euro Disney and building the Disney fairytale castle. One of European engineers says to an American: “You’d better make it a bit bigger. They’ve actually got them here . . . and they’re not made of plastic.”

Nevertheless, this is where the history comes from. You have a lot of experience—a plentiful past. You have thousands of years of financial know-how. I’m not suggesting that the market economy from the 1500s, or joint-stock companies in the late seventeenth century are terribly apropos to our global markets these days. However, we should learn from all of our applicable experiences and be determined to craft considerate rules and regulations which reflect the experiences and history of others, while harmonizing to the greatest extent attainable.

Ace and Amazing
Just think about the improbable inter-related global markets that exist at the present time. Every single business day, there are at least 160 million, million, financial transactions. And I’m talking market-related transactions, not something resembling a check being cashed, an ATM withdrawal, or a commercial store purchase. There are 160 million global financial market transactions per day. However, it isn’t just the number that is staggering; it is how all of those mind-boggling transactions work together, in harmony, between markets, crossing borders, trading venues and regulatory jurisdictions. It is simply incredible.

It is almost too difficult to process with a normal brain. It’s ace and amazing that it all works so well. But then again, we only need to look at recent history to know it doesn’t always work so well. In fact, given 2008, “it didn’t work so well” is a fairly substantial sarcasm.

Thing One and Thing Two
There are a couple of causes to the crisis—“Things,” if you will—that led to the system pretty much failing the entire world.

Thing One—shout out to good Dr. Seuss—were lax or non-existent laws and regulations that allowed the free markets to rock ‘n’ roll so much that they rolled right over our economies—and our citizens. There is an old saying about how the best things in life are free—well, the worst things in life are also sometimes free, like unbridled free markets with no oversight. Of course, it wasn’t just the lax laws, rules and regulations. Nope, Thing One just set the table for the banquet to come.

Thing Two were the cooks in the kitchen: the Wall Street wizards, the global gatherings of gurus all things financial, the economic intelligencia. They wholly developed these very pioneering products, these innovative investments to be traded and re-traded. Don’t get me wrong. Some were full stop dodgy, but party on they did. Yep, they cooked and prepared this big buffet of myriad exotic economic products that were progressively consumed by traders, investors, big banks and small banks; a wide panoply of the financial world taste tested the treats. And, many of them did so over and over, again and again.

Even on the regulated exchanges, markets were unbelievably morphing in new and exciting ways. There were new investors bringing in hundreds of billions in fresh dough and new technologies. A lot of the trading was occurring at lightning speeds. It was all enormously exhilarating.

Boy oh boy: Thing One and Thing Two, those troublemakers. Dark markets, lighter markets, monster markets of unprecedented size and girth, mini-markets with bantam volumes trading this or that—sometimes being pushed or pulled due to the slim liquidity, here markets, there markets, now markets, later markets. Traders were burning and churning up the fiber optics, and phones were on fire, nearly 24-7-365, with all of the action-packed bartering and bargaining.

Plus, think about the portability of risk in these global markets with worldwide institutions. The risk can be true and tried, freeze dried, flash fried and moved all around. It can be done abruptly, to boot. You don’t want risk in one nation? No problemo. Hasta la vista, baby. With a few clicks of the mouse, presto change-o, your risk can be transmitted, transferred or transported from one firm to another, from one market to another, from one country to another. And from a regulator’s view, I can tell you that it might sometimes look more like of one of those shell games than anything else.

This risk transferring isn’t just hypothetical, as many of you know. We all recall American International Group (AIG) Financial Products. Well, while they were initially structured in the U.S., they were managed from here, in London. Mammoth risks ended up in the States. In fact, U.S. taxpayers, as part of the Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP), bailed out AIG to the not-so-tasty tune of 40 billion buckaroos. Bottom line: these are global markets with interconnectedness that is simply part and parcel to the sheer existence of how the world’s finances function today.

Wow. Whew. I’m dog-tired describing it! Thing One and Thing Two: those harmless numskulls, what could gopossibly go wrong? Gulp. Wait until mom gets home.

Greatly Grubby
Well, unfortunately—shocker—we know all too well what went wrong. There were totally unregulated markets in the dark over-the-counter (OTC) space, trading in the hundreds-of-trillions of dollars.

To give you a size comparison, and size does matter, we at the CFTC currently oversee roughly $5 trillion in annualized trading volume, but the global OTC market is roughly $650 trillion—$650 trillion! That’s ginormously humongous—a term of art. The Danes are writing that one down. Plus, as I said, there was absolutely no government oversight. No government in the world had the OTC markets on their plate. Not an iota of enforcement or regulatory oversight—zippo, zilch, nil. No requirements for trades to be cleared or backed with some orderly accounting technique or standard existed. No requirements for transparency for pre-trade or post-trade reporting. There is a line that people use. I’ve used it—perhaps even today—that transparency is the best market disinfectant. Well, the OTC markets had no transparency, and it was greatly grubby. We just didn’t know how soiled or huge it was.

It’s astonishing, still today. Each party to a trade could value what was being exchanged at whatever amount they desired to accommodate their own balance sheets. Things were traded and re-traded to such a degree that nobody knew what was worth what. The result is that some firms were excessively over-leveraged—much more than made sense to any economist on the planet.

Take for example Lehman Brothers, before they were another one bites the dust, (yeah, shout out Queen). Who recalls how excessively they were leveraged? Are you ready? Are you ready for this? Are you hanging on the edge of your seat? They were leveraged at 30 to one. Their last financial report had the firm with $691 billion in assets, yet only $22 billion in shareholder equity. The trading that was going on in the OTC world allowed them to put whatever valuation they required on their balance sheets. And, it appears they did at Lehman. That risk wasn’t just a U.S. risk, but a U.K. risk and a risk transferred to other places around the globe.

What Now?
Now, there is not only an acknowledgement that Thing One and Thing Two led to the crisis, but there are laws, rules and regulations in various stages of being implemented to guard against a sequel to the economic calamity. There is an acknowledgement that new regulatory rules are required—particularly in the other major market jurisdictions like here in Europe, in Japan and in Canada. There is agreement that we should never again allow our economies and our citizens to be defenseless against unregulated or poorly regulated markets and the collateral risks associated with such markets.

The ET: Borderlines
As we seek to harmonize rules and regulations, however, there will be issues that ruffle the feathers of our colleagues here or there, and we too, will get concerned at certain points. It has happened in our history when things cross borderlines and it will continue to happen. Amongst the significant remaining issues we are communicating with our colleagues in the European Union (E.U.) and other jurisdictions is trying to ensure we have a sensible approach to the cross-border application of the Dodd-Frank swaps market reforms. This is commonly referred to as the “ET”—not E.T.: The Extra Terrestrial (although some of what we discuss seems alien)—but the extra territoriality issue, ET— extra territoriality.

On one hand, if a transaction takes place, let’s say, here in London, should I care about it as U.S. regulator? Well, I can understand the argument of those that say it shouldn’t involve anything U.S. However, on the other hand, what about that transference of risk? What about risk being shifted from one nation to another, that movement I equated to sometimes looking like a shell game. Isn’t that something which should be of interest, if not concern, for all of us? And believe me, we watch carefully when we see problems in the Eurozone—it has a direct and immediate impact on our markets. Did you know, for example, that 21% of all U.S. exports go to Eurozone countries? So when there’s a problem in one or two or three of them, it has a real impact in the States.

For our part as U.S. regulators, Dodd-Frank requires—Section 722(d)—that swaps reforms shall apply to activities outside the U.S. if those activities have “a direct and significant connection with activities in, or effect on, commerce” of the United States.

Consider JPMorgan Chase (JPM). We all know they recently experienced a multi-billion dollar trading loss. These trades were transactions out of here, out of London. But you know where the losses are being absorbed—in the United States at JPM. As a U.S. bank, JPM has direct access to the Federal Reserve’s discount window and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). So, do I care about JPM’s trading in London when U.S. consumers and taxpayers might theoretically be on the hook in the future for a loss insured by the FDIC? I sure as shooting do! Besides, as a matter of U.S. law, billions in JPM trading losses, regardless if the transactions took place in London, Luxembourg or Lisbon, would certainly constitute a direct and significant connection with activities in, or effect on, the commerce of the United States.

How do we deal with this somewhat troubling set of circumstances? Well, first we need to treat each other with dignity and respect. Regulators have done a good job on this count to date. Additionally, we need to learn from each other’s experiences, including the place where the history comes from: Europe. Vitally important is that we need to harmonize our laws, rules and regulations to the greatest extent possible. Here’s why: if we do that, for example and we have comparable rules and regulations, then there would be no need for U.S. regulators, or other global regulators, to impose some seemingly over-reaching provision involving ET.

We have the authority to rely upon another nation’s ability to oversee these things even if the trading has a direct and significant effect on U.S. commerce if the foreign nation’s regulatory structure is comprehensive and comparable. This, “substituted compliance” is how to best address the thorny ET issue. However, it requires that vital harmonization occur, and not just between the U.S. and E.U.

In that regard, one of the problems is that at this point, we (my Agency) haven’t put any more meat on the bones of the issue—our bad. In order to flesh the issue out some more, we will, I expect very soon, show a little leadership and release some interpretive guidance on the subject. We will let folks know how the reforms might apply and provide a synopsis about when and how overseas swaps market participants and swap dealers, might comply with the Dodd-Frank reforms. Significantly, we will spell out how we might be able to rely upon these comparable and comprehensive foreign regulatory regimes.

I look forward to having this proposed interpretive guidance out in the public, and soon. More importantly, however, I look forward to receiving public comments. I am confident and optimistic that we will see increased efforts at greater harmonization of the main regulatory issues being considered here, and in other nations. That really is in all of our collective interests.

Of particular consequence from my perspective are rules and regulations regarding clearing, margining, capital, trading and transparency, limits on speculation, and with regard to high frequency traders (HFTs).

Customer Protection—Full Segregation
We also need to address the protection of customer money. Recently, both in Europe and in the U.S., we’ve seen the apparent misuse of customer funds.  Here is where we can take a good idea from the E.U. The European Market Infrastructure Regulation (EMIR) has some thoughtful protections for customers that the CFTC should adopt.  Article 39.5 of EMIR, for example, allows customers to elect to choose between “omnibus client segregation” (which is similar to what the CFTC requires) and “individual client segregation” or what I call “full segregation.”  While we don’t offer full segregation in the U.S., I believe we should.  We ought to let customers elect to have their fully segregated funds and the excess margin to be deposited in a separate account under the custody of the clearing organization. We should allow customer money to literally be off-limits to a firm.  If that means that a firm charges the customer extra, and the customer agrees to pay it, so be it. Let the firms compete in the free market and customers can choose that, too. (See, I’m a free market guy, too).

And by the way, we need to hold firm executives accountable for any misuse of customer funds. By that, I mean they should be personally accountable and personally liable.

The Van Gogh
Another fundamental issue that I’ve talked about for years, but which only seems to gain public attention when petrol prices are high, is speculative position limits. As we all know, prices were very high just in March and April, so there was a lot of attention to the subject. Today, not so much, although it is still very important, and I’m like a dog with a bone on this one. I won’t back down.

You may have heard about the Paris thief who tried to steal some valuable art from the Louvre. It is all very valuable there I suppose. Anyway, the thief was caught by the authorities only a few blocks from the museum when his van ran out of fuel. When he was asked about it, he said, “That was the entire problem: I had no Monet to buy Degas to make the Van Gogh.” Sorry, I wondered if I’d have de Gaulle to tell you that one. I figured I had nothing Toulouse.

Numerous studies show a link between speculation and prices. Studies from Oxford, the International Monetary Fund and from the

U.S. Federal Reserve all show it. Why does a trader need to have so much concentration that they can push prices around? I just don’t get it. So, speculative position limits are another key area where I hope we will harmonize to a great extent. I’ll leave it at that for now.

An App for That
One final policy issue I want to address is another topic that has been more of a concern in the E.U. than in the U.S., and is an example of where I think my regulator colleagues in the States need to pay more attention. Specifically, I’m talking about how the regulated markets are transforming with technology.

High frequency traders—those folks I call cheetahs due to their incredible speed, are out there all the time trying to scoop up micro dollars in milliseconds. I’m not saying they are unscrupulous or that these cheetahs should be an endangered species. What I am saying is that they are either unregulated or under-regulated and that needs to change.

The largest futures exchange in the World is in Chicago. Their third largest trader has been a cheetah based in Prague. Hooray for that cheetah. Hooray for Prague. But if we, the U.S. regulators simply want to look at books and records, that cheetah is not required to provide us with diddly squat—another term of art. We won’t get anything. Furthermore, we don’t even have the ability to command books and records information from domestic cheetahs. These cats are not required to provide a thing to the U.S. regulators, under the current set of circumstances, unless we get a judge to issue a subpoena. It is simply wacky. I do, however, have an app for that. At the very least, the cheetahs need to be registered. Yet, there are no places in the Dodd-Frank law where these traders are even mentioned. That is how quickly the markets are morphing.

Take the Flash Crash in the U.S., when the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped by nearly 1,000 points in 20 minutes. That precipitous and speedy drop and the ensuing bounce back, would not have occurred if cheetahs weren’t involved. They didn’t start the fire. No, they didn’t light it, but they were ignited by it.
Think about this: The Flash Crash took place on May 6, 2010 at 2:45 in the afternoon. What if it had taken place very early in the trading day when these E.U. markets were open? The damage could have been much worse.

Why didn’t Dodd-Frank even address the cheetahs? Well, the legislation was in the final stages of being negotiated. It passed just over two months following the Flash Crash.

Here is what we know: There is a need for regulators to do something now to ensure that we aren’t vulnerable to some feral cheetah’s, or cheetahs’ action(s) in the future. In addition to being registered, shouldn’t the cheetahs be required to test their programs? Shouldn’t they be required to have kill switches in the event that they do go feral? I think so. I’m calling for that and today for the cheetahs to be required to establish pre-trade risk controls to prevent wash trades—period. And when I’m talking about cheetahs, I don’t only mean those with faster- than- speeding- bullet computers. This registration should include automated trading systems (ATSs), too. We need to ensure that cheetahs do not intentionally or unintentionally screw up price discovery. I’m also suggesting that there be periodic compliance reports from the cheetahs and that senior executives sign their names and be held personally liable for any false or misleading information. The days of “he said, she said” accountability in financial markets needs to stop, and now.

I anticipate our Agency will issue a concept release in the very near future to spell out some of these issues, and others. We will gather comments on this one, too. I also hope that we keep looking to the E.U. for leadership, coordination and cooperation on these critical matters that really are on the cutting edge of our markets around the globe.

The Cheerio Effect
You have an action-packed day, so in a bit here, I'll make like a tree and leave. However, I want to leave you with two quick final thoughts on what we've spoken about today.
The first involves breakfast cereals. Yeah, breakfast cereals—hang with me. As we move to harmonize rules and regulations—addressing cross border ET issues, customer segregation, position limits and caging the financial cheetahs, we understand that we aren't alone in the world. Yes, the markets in the U.S. and the E.U. are large, but we certainly aren't alone. There are a bunch of us in the bowl together.

There are other nations and other regulators looking at what we are doing. In fact, some are looking to gain from our regulation implementation. Not many people talk about it, but it has been happening for a while. Many of you may have already been given a sales pitch to move your trading to another nation. I’ve heard many stories about this. I know it to be the case.

Some believe with fewer requirements for reporting, clearing and registration that they can capture a portion of markets that are subject to new regulation. The idea is there will be some massive market migration as a result of overly-prescriptive rules and regulations. I won't mention nation names, although I have before, but there are some out there, right now.

Contrary to all that, I don't think that this market migration will occur. I don’t see a regulatory race to the bottom. The global trading environment requires thoughtful and harmonized regulations. Suitable regulations will make jurisdictions more competitive, not less. I don't believe, as long as we are cautious and careful, that we will see market migration to nations with the thinnest of rulebooks. In fact, I don’t think there will ultimately be many thin rulebooks.

Here is why, and here is where we get to what is called, in fluid dynamics, and that lovely British expression, “cheerio”—the Cheerio Effect. The Cheerio Effect is the predisposition for slight, wet-able, floating substances to attract one another. In a breakfast cereal, like Cheerios, we see a phenomenon in which the cereals tend to cluster together or stick to the edges of a bowl of milk. You’ve all seen this phenomenon at breakfast or even in a soup with oyster crackers. The Cheerio Effect: it all has to do with the surface tension and buoyancy. In the financial world these days, there certainly is tension, and if we’re going to have the buoyancy to rise above it, we, like Cheerios, need to stick together.

My point, and I do have one, is this: like the Cheerio Effect, I believe financial regulations will cling together in the proper environment. They will attract each other. So, if the U.S. and the E.U. implement harmonized financial regulations, it will attract others to adhere to similar financial rules.

Fuel-Injecting Economies
The second takeaway and final thing today, is this: there has been a lot of talk about how these regulatory changes will stifle innovation. They'll be so wicked evil restrictive that no financial business will ever survive—never—they just couldn't. The cost of compliance alone will run firms straightaway to death’s dark door.

I consider that rubbish—raving rubbish. In fact, there is an abundant amount of competition out there already, right now, today. We see it all the time. These regulatory reforms are going to create more jobs, more innovation, and fuel-inject our economies more than anyone ever would have thought possible. Firms are already making strategic moves. Their tactical teams are reckoning what to do when and how. All of this, before we have even completed all our rules. New clearing houses, swaps data repositories, and swaps execution facilities are all not only on the drawing tables; some are already up and running.

I have confidence in the Cheerio Effect and that the rest of the world will cling to our harmonized financial regulations. I believe these regulations will provide a competitive advantage to first-movers on the regulatory front.

This is all very exciting, indeed, and isn’t it neat that you are all part of it? You are right in the smack dab ma-diddle of it all. There are myriad opportunities out there and more presenting themselves all the time. It is exhilarating. There's a lot going on in these incredible financial markets, even beyond the 160 million transactions per day, and guess what? There's a lot more to come—a lot more.

So, buckle up. Enjoy OpRisk Europe 2012. The Danes and I will do a little debriefing. Hasta la vista, baby . . . and, cheerio.

Thank you.

Last Updated: June 13, 2012

ART AND MOTIVATION IN THE MARINE CORPS



Marine Corps Pfc. Coty Thomas paints the lettering for a going-away canvas for one of the Marines in his shop on May 13, 2012. U.S. Marine Corps photo by Cpl. Joshua Pettway  
FROM:  AMERICAN FORCES PRESS SERVICE 
Face of Defense: Marine Employs Artistic Talent to Motivate
By Marine Corps Cpl. Joshua Pettway
Marine Corps Air Station Beaufort
MARINE CORPS AIR STATION BEAUFORT, S.C., June 12, 2012 - Marine Corps Pfc. Coty Thomas uses his flair with paint to motivate his fellow Marines here.

Thomas, an aircraft technician assigned to Marine Fighter Attack Squadron 122, airbrushes different symbols and meaningful pictures on his shop's interior walls.

"I have been airbrushing for the past four to five years and it's easy to become lost in my work," Thomas said. "So far, I've painted a few different things for my shop ... you won't see anything like [my work] in any other shop."

"I like it because it's not something that everyone can do, and I take pride in the end result," he added.

Right outside the Thomas' office is an airbrushed rendering of a knight clad in armor with a shield depicting a previous unit mascot. This work of art was completed with the help of Marine Corps Pfc. Frederick Stewart, a fellow maintenance technician.

"I think it's pretty cool to do something like this for our unit," Stewart said. "Everything looks really good, and it's unique to our shop. And it lets me do something for everyone in it."

Airbrushing can take a lot of time to complete, depending on the level of difficulty and effort behind the image.

"I could spend hours painting because I'm so focused on finishing once I start," Thomas said. "I can't just rush through it because it's my name going on the work, and I want whoever sees it to think it looks good."

Thomas said he always begins from scratch and cuts out all of the outlines for the artwork himself.

"But it's worth it in the end," he said.
Thomas recently completed airbrushing a canvas for one of the Marines in his shop as a going-away gift and reminder of the effort and work they put in before departing for a new unit.

"Starting is the hardest part, but the last project I finished took [about] 22 hours," Thomas said. "With the free time I had after work, I would add as many details as I wanted.
"It's unfortunate being a perfectionist when you really enjoy something because you can't allow yourself to make a mistake," he added.

As Thomas' artwork catches the eyes of the Marines of his shop, he hopes they appreciate it after he leaves.

Thomas' long-term goal, he said, is to establish a portfolio of his work. However, he added, it's an enjoyable hobby creating airbrushed artwork for his fellow Marines.



CLEANING UP THE CALUMET RIVER WITH $52 MILLION PROJECT


Photo:  Water Runoff.  Credit:  Wikipedia.
FROM:  U.S. ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
Great Lakes Initiative Cleanup Helps Restore Grand Calumet River
CHICAGO (June 11, 2012) - The recent completion of a $52 million project to rid Roxana Marsh of contaminated sediment will speed the recovery of Indiana’s Grand Calumet River, marking a step forward for one of the Great Lakes’ most complex Area of Concern cleanups. Representatives from U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the State of Indiana were joined by Congressman Pete Visclosky to discuss the project's impact at an event today in East Chicago, Indiana.

More than 575,000 cubic yards of sediment contaminated with PCBs and PAHs (polychlorinated biphenyls and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons), heavy metals and pesticides were removed or isolated from the marsh and the river.  Fish consumption advisories, loss of habitat and other environmental problems in the Grand Calumet have largely been caused by contaminated sediment.  

"The work by federal, state, county, city and other partners over the years has helped deliver real results under the Great Lakes Restoration Initiative," said Cameron Davis, Senior Advisor to the EPA Administrator.  “The work we’re talking about today will help give the Grand Cal a fighting chance to be grand again. But we can’t stop here. We’re looking for new partners to match funds to accelerate cleanups in other Areas of Concern around the Great Lakes."

The federal government contributed 65 percent or $33.8 million to this GLRI Legacy Act project.  Indiana used $18.2 million from its Natural Resources Damage Assessment Fund for the required 35 percent match.  In the 1980s, the U.S. and Canada identified 43 highly degraded shoreline areas along the Great Lakes. Today there are 30 AOCs wholly in the U.S. or shared with Canada.

"The Fish and Wildlife Service is dedicated to restoring fish, wildlife and habitat in places where contaminants have impacted those resources,” said Charlie Wooley, Deputy Regional Director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service-Midwest Region.  “Here, the contaminants are gone and Roxana Marsh is alive again, making it a haven not only for birds, fish and plants, but for the people of this community."

The Grand Calumet River originates in the east end of Gary, Indiana, and flows through the heavily industrialized cities of Gary, East Chicago and Hammond. The majority of the river's flow drains into Lake Michigan via the Indiana Harbor and Ship Canal, sending about one billion gallons of water into the lake per day. The Area of Concern begins 15 miles south of downtown Chicago and includes the east branch of the river, a small segment of the west branch and the Indiana Harbor and Ship Canal.

“I am pleased by the progress that has been made to address the environmental degradation associated with the Grand Calumet River,” said Congressman Pete Visclosky. “Investments made in restoration projects along the river, such as the work completed at Roxana Marsh in East Chicago and in the City of Hammond, are investments in the health and safety of our local communities and a commitment to the betterment of Northwest Indiana.”

The Great Lakes provide more than 30 million Americans with drinking water and underpin a multi-billion dollar economy.  In February 2009, President Obama proposed the GLRI, the largest investment in the Great Lakes in two decades.

The GLRI Action Plan, which covers FY 2010 through 2014, was developed by a task force of 16 federal agencies to implement the president’s historic initiative.  It calls for aggressive efforts to address five urgent priority focus areas:

    Cleaning up toxics and toxic hot spot areas of concern.
    Combating invasive species.
    Promoting near-shore health by protecting watersheds from polluted runoff.
    Restoring wetlands and other habitats.
    Raising public awareness, tracking progress and working with partners.

The plan also ensures accountability by establishing measures of progress and benchmarks for success.

UNEMPLOYMENT WEEKLY CLAIMS REPORT FOR WEEK ENDING JUNE 2, 2012


UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE WEEKLY CLAIMS REPORT
SEASONALLY ADJUSTED DATA
In the week ending June 2, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims was 377,000, a decrease of 12,000 from the previous week's revised figure of 389,000. The 4-week moving average was 377,750, an increase of 1,750 from the previous week's revised average of 376,000.

The advance seasonally adjusted insured unemployment rate was 2.6 percent for the week ending May 26, unchanged from the prior week's unrevised rate.

The advance number for seasonally adjusted insured unemployment during the week ending May 26 was 3,293,000, an increase of 34,000 from the preceding week's revised level of 3,259,000. The 4-week moving average was 3,279,500, an increase of 11,500 from the preceding week's revised average of 3,268,000.

UNADJUSTED DATA 
The advance number of actual initial claims under state programs, unadjusted, totaled 321,884 in the week ending June 2, a decrease of 24,376 from the previous week. There were 366,816 initial claims in the comparable week in 2011.

The advance unadjusted insured unemployment rate was 2.4 percent during the week ending May 26, unchanged from the prior week's unrevised rate. The advance unadjusted number for persons claiming UI benefits in state programs totaled 3,039,077, a decrease of 21,271 from the preceding week. A year earlier, the rate was 2.7 percent and the volume was 3,426,345.

The total number of people claiming benefits in all programs for the week ending May 19 was 5,970,729, a decrease of 167,133 from the previous week.

Extended benefits were available in the District of Columbia, Idaho, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, and West Virginia during the week ending May 19.
Initial claims for UI benefits by former Federal civilian employees totaled 1,459 in the week ending May 26, an increase of 260 from the prior week. There were 2,304 initial claims by newly discharged veterans, a decrease of 228 from the preceding week.

There were 16,188 former Federal civilian employees claiming UI benefits for the week ending May 19, an increase of 136 from the previous week. Newly discharged veterans claiming benefits totaled 38,492, a decrease of 661 from the prior week.

States reported 2,572,558 persons claiming EUC (Emergency Unemployment Compensation) benefits for the week ending May 19, a decrease of 45,808 from the prior week. There were 3,381,090 claimants in the comparable week in 2011. EUC weekly claims include first, second, third, and fourth tier activity.

The highest insured unemployment rates in the week ending May 19 were in Alaska (4.6), Puerto Rico (3.8), Pennsylvania (3.5), California (3.4), New Jersey (3.3), Connecticut (3.2), Oregon (3.2), Illinois (3.0), Nevada (3.0), Rhode Island (2.9), and Virgin Islands (2.9).

The largest increases in initial claims for the week ending May 26 were in Georgia (+2,078), Tennessee (+1,983), Missouri (+1,898), Illinois (+1,798), and New York (+1,578), while the largest decreases were in Texas (-376), North Carolina (-371), California (-344), Pennsylvania (-291), and Virginia (-275).


AFGHAN SENTENCED TO PRISON FOR NARCO-TERRORISM


Photo:  Poppy Field Afghanistan.  Credit:  Wikimedia.
FROM:  U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
Haji Bagcho Sentenced to Life in Prison on Drug Trafficking and Narco-Terrorism Charges Afghan National Responsible for Almost 20 Percent of World’s Heroin Production
WASHINGTON – An Afghan national with ties to the Taliban was sentenced to life in prison today for conspiring to distribute heroin to the United States and for using drug proceeds to fund, arm and supply the Taliban, announced Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division and Administrator Michele M. Leonhart of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA).
 
Haji Bagcho, an Afghan national and large scale drug trafficker, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Ellen S. Huvelle in the District of Columbia.   In addition to his prison term, Bagcho was ordered to forfeit $254,203,032 in drug proceeds along with his property in Afghanistan.

 “Haji Bagcho led a massive drug production and trafficking operation that supplied heroin in more than 20 countries, including the United States,” said Assistant Attorney General Breuer.  “In 2006 alone, he conducted heroin transactions worth more than $250 million.   Bagcho used the profits of his narcotics trafficking operation to support high-level Taliban commanders in Afghanistan.   Today’s life sentence is an appropriate punishment for one of the most notorious heroin traffickers in the world.”

“This is DEA at its finest, working in close collaboration with our Afghan partners to end the long reign of this Afghan drug lord whose drug proceeds financed terror,” said DEA Administrator Leonhart.   “One of the world’s most prolific drug traffickers who helped fund the Taliban will spend his remaining days behind bars in a U.S. prison due to the relentless efforts of DEA, our Afghan counterparts and our prosecuting partners.”  

Bagcho was convicted by a jury on March 13, 2012, after a three week trial, of one count of conspiracy to distribute one kilogram or more of heroin, knowing and intending that it would be unlawfully imported into the United States; one count of distribution of one kilogram or more of heroin knowing and intending that it would be unlawfully imported into the United States; and one count of narco-terrorism.   The trial, before Judge Huvelle, was only the second under the narco-terrorism statute since its enactment in 2006.

Bagcho was charged in a superseding indictment on Jan. 28, 2010, after his arrest and extradition to the United States from Afghanistan in May 2009.

The DEA, in cooperation with their Afghan counterparts, conducted the investigation, which revealed that Bagcho was one of the largest heroin traffickers in the world and manufactured the drug in clandestine laboratories along Afghanistan’s border region with Pakistan.   According to information presented at trial, Bagcho, who had been operating his heroin business since at least the 1990s, sent the drug to more than 20 countries, including the United States.   Proceeds from his heroin trafficking were then used to support high-level members of the Taliban in furtherance of their insurgency in Afghanistan.

With the help of cooperating witnesses, evidence showed that the DEA purchased heroin directly from Bagcho’s organization on two occasions, which Bagcho understood was destined for the United States.   They also conducted several searches of residences belonging to Bagcho and his associates, recovering evidence consistent with drug trafficking.   During one search, ledgers belonging to the defendant were found and were later introduced at trial.   One ledger, cataloguing Bagcho’s activities during 2006 alone, reflected heroin transactions totaling more than 123,000 kilograms, worth more than $250 million.   Based on heroin production statistics compiled by the United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime for 2006, the defendant’s trafficking accounted for approximately 20 percent of the total amount of heroin produced worldwide that year.

Over several years, evidence at trial established that Bagcho used a portion of his drug proceeds to provide cash, weapons and other supplies to the former Taliban governor of Nangarhar Province and two Taliban commanders responsible for insurgent activity in eastern Afghanistan, so that they could continue their “jihad” against western troops and the Afghan government.

The case was prosecuted by Trial Attorneys Matthew Stiglitz and Marlon Cobar of the Criminal Division’s Narcotic and Dangerous Drug Section.   The case was investigated by the DEA Special Operations Division in the United States, with assistance from the DEA’s Foreign Deployed Advisory Support Team and Kabul Country Office in Afghanistan, the U.S. Embassy in Kabul, and in close cooperation with Afghan law enforcement.   The Criminal Division’s Office of International Affairs and Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering Section provided invaluable support.



AFRICOM TO LEAVE LIGHT FOOTPRINT


FROM:  AMERICAN FORCES PRESS SERVICE
Army Pfc. Daniel Baetson, deployed to Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti, serves as a mentor with Combined Joint Task Force Horn of Africa to help African partners build niche capabilities such as logistics, legal affairs and medicine, Aug. 6, 2009. U.S. Navy photo by Petty Officer 2nd Class Kelly Ontiveros  

Africom Will Maintain 'Light Footprint' in Africa
By Donna Miles
STUTTGART, Germany, June 12, 2012 - The United States has no plans to seek permanent bases in Africa, and, in the spirit of the new defense strategic guidance, will continue to maintain a "light footprint" on the continent, the top U.S. Africa Command officer said.

"In Africa, I would say a light footprint is consistent with what we need and consistent with the defense guidance," Army Gen. Carter F. Ham told the House Armed Services Committee in February.

With no troops directly assigned to it, Africom relies heavily on its service components: U.S. Army Africa based in Vicenza, Italy; U.S. Air Forces Africa, at Ramstein Air Base, Germany; U.S. Marine Forces Africa and Special Operations Command Africa, both based here.

"It is that proximity to the theater that enables the agility we require," Ham told Congress.
Africom has had its headquarters here since it initially stood up in 2007 as a subcommand of U.S. European Command before reaching full operational capability in 2008. Then-Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates and the first Africom commander, Army Gen. William E. "Kip" Ward, agreed to defer any decision on its permanent location until 2012.
A congressionally directed review of alternate basing plans is under way, and is expected to be delivered sometime this year. None of the plans being developed involves relocating the headquarters to the African continent, Ham said.

While not expressing his own preferences, Ham said he believes Africom has "been very well served" by its Stuttgart headquarters. In addition to good facilities and proximity to an international airport with direct links to Africa, he noted, Stuttgart offers the operational advantage of being in the same time zone as many of Africom's African partners. "We are on the same daily rhythm," the general said.

In addition, he said, collocating Africom with U.S. European Command makes sense, promoting their tradition of working together as they share forces, resources and capabilities.

Ham also underscored the importance of Camp Lemonnier, Djibouti, the only permanent U.S. base in Africa. With about 2,000 U.S. personnel deployed there as part of Combined Joint Task Force Horn of Africa, many from the Army National Guard, it provides a stable platform for U.S. military operations in a critical part of the world, he said.

"It's a great strategic location," he told American Forces Press Service. "It facilitates not only our operations for U.S. Africa Command, but also U.S. Central Command and U.S. Transportation Command. It is a very key hub and important node for us, a good location that allows us to extend our reach in East Africa and partner with the countries of East Africa."

Ham said he recognizes concerns among some African countries about an increased U.S. presence on the continent, but emphasized that cost alone would preclude the United States from establishing more permanent bases there.

Meanwhile, a new initiative that Army Chief of Staff Gen. Ray Odierno announced last month could increase Africom's engagement opportunities with no uptick in permanent staffing.

The Army plans to implement a regionally aligned force concept next year to better support combatant commanders, Odierno said. Africom is expected to be the first to receive these rotational forces as part of the pilot program to begin next year, followed by U.S. Southern Command, U.S. Central Command and U.S. Pacific Command.

MARYLAND'S "STAR-SPANGLED SAILABRATION" JUNE 13-19



FROM:  U.S. NAVY
Navy's Environment And Energy Programs Sail To Inner Harbor For Baltimore Navy Week 
120605-N-KV696-071 BALTIMORE (June 5, 2012) Rear Adm. Gregory M. Nosal, commander of Carrier Strike Group Two, delivers remarks during a press conference at the Baltimore Inner Harbor. The press conference detailed events that will take place during the bicentennial of the War of 1812 and Maryland's "Star-Spangled Sailabration" from June 13-19. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Kiona Miller/Released)

From Chief of Naval Operations Energy and Environmental Readiness Division
BALTIMORE (NNS) -- The Navy's energy and environmental programs will be on display during Baltimore's Star-Spangled Sailabration and Navy Week activities from June 14-17.

The event is one of a series of activities planned to commemorate the War of 1812 bicentennial.

The Chief of Naval Operations Energy and Environmental Readiness Division (N45) will have an exhibit aboard USS San Antonio (LPD 17) in the Baltimore Inner Harbor June 14-15 and at Fort McHenry during the air show June 16-17.

Visitors to the N45 exhibits can learn about Navy initiatives such as marine mammal protection, waste management at sea, and energy conservation. The exhibit aboard San Antonio will highlight specific environmental systems on Navy ships, including a plastic waste processor disk.

Information on how the Navy manages waste at sea and on base, along with free copies of Currents, the Navy's energy and environmental magazine; posters; worksheets for kids, and other free educational materials will be available to the public. The Navy's environmental quality mascot, EQ Pelican, will provide free photo opportunities for families during the weekend events.

"The War of 1812 was the conflict in which the U.S. Navy came of age, serving notice to the world that it was a force to be reckoned with. In the two centuries since, the U.S. Navy has become the world's preeminent naval power, not only in combat capability, but also in commitment to protect the natural environment," said John Quinn, N45's acting director. "Baltimore Navy Week is a wonderful opportunity for Baltimore visitors to learn about our nation's naval heritage and to discover the many things their Navy does every day to protect and preserve the environment for future generations."



PENTAGON PRESS SECRETARY LITTLE ADDRESSES SYRIA, PAKISTAN


Photo Credit:  U.S. Department of Defense.
FROM:  AMERICAN FORCES PRESS SERVICE
Little Addresses Syria, Pakistan With Reporters
By Jim Garamone
WASHINGTON, June 12, 2012 - The violence in Syria is "deplorable and disgusting," and another indication that the Assad regime has to go, Pentagon Press Secretary George Little told reporters.

At his regularly scheduled news conference, Little said forces loyal to Bashar al-Assad are killing innocent Syrian civilians.

He called it a sign of desperation on the part of Syrian forces.
"They are lashing out, and they are lashing out in a violent and brutal way," he said. "And that is absolutely unacceptable."

International efforts led by United Nations envoy Kofi Annan are underway to find an end to the violence. Little suggested the solution is clear.

"I would reiterate, once again, that it's time for President Assad to step aside and for Syria to return to a country of greater peace and stability and a place where the Syrian people can determine their own future," he said.

Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta has said there is no silver bullet to ending the conflict, and today Little elaborated on what the secretary meant.

"We have a degree of violence that is intolerable, perpetrated by a relatively well-armed regime," Little said. "We have an array of opposition groups that are trying to push back on the regime. We know that the circumstances here are very difficult, and I think that's getting ... to what the secretary was alluding to."

Pakistan =also is causing concern among U.S. officials. American negotiators pulled out of talks with the Pakistani government on re-opening ground supply lines to Afghanistan, which Pakistan closed seven months ago. However, U.S. defense officials say this does not mean all conversations with Pakistan has ended.

"We continue to have dialogue on this issue," Little said. "Yes, the negotiating team is coming home for what we hope is a short period of time. We hope that the [ground lines of communication] are reopened soon, and we look forward to having our officials go back to Islamabad to seal the deal at some point in the near future."

Pakistan closed the land routes into Afghanistan after a NATO airstrike along the Afghan-Pakistan border in November mistakenly killed 24 Pakistani soldiers.
Little said many of the technical issues toward reopening the supply lines have been resolved.

"We have a few more to work through, and we believe we can get to 'yes' with the Pakistanis at the end of the day," he said. "And we hope that day comes sooner rather than later."

THE CV-22 OSPREY MOVING TROOPS




FROM:  U.S. AIR FORCE
HURLBURT FIELD, Fla. -- A CV-22 Osprey from the 8th Special Operations Squadron takes off after dropping a Deployed Aircraft Ground Response Element for simulated tactical evidence collection during the Emerald Warrior Exercise here, Feb. 3. The Osprey has a pay load of up to 24 Airmen making it ideal for infiltration of DAGRE teams. (U.S. Air Force photo/ Senior Airman Julianne Showalter)


Malian and Senegalese military forces rehearse infiltration and extraction maneuvers alongside special operations forces and European partner nation military forces with CV-22 Ospreys from the 8th Special Operations Squadron, Hurlburt Field, Fla., Nov. 12, 2008, as part of the joint training exercise Flintlock in Mali, Africa. (Photo by Sgt. Kieran Cuddihy)

U.S. FORCES IN AFGHANISTAN WILL LIMIT CLOSE-AIR SUPPORT BUT RETAIN RIGHT OF SELF-DEFENSE


Photo:  Commander of U.S. and NATO Forces In Afghanistan Gen. John R. Allen .  Credit:  U.S. Department of Defense



FROM:  AMERICAN FORCES PRESS SERVICE



U.S. Forces Will Retain Self-defense Capability in Afghanistan

By Jim Garamone
WASHINGTON, June 12, 2012 - U.S. military leaders will take extra steps to ensure innocent Afghan civilians are not killed or hurt in combat operations, but U.S. forces will retain the means of self-defense, Pentagon officials said here today.

Following a meeting with Afghan President Hamid Karzai, Marine Corps Gen. John R. Allen, the commander of U.S and NATO forces in Afghanistan, issued an order saying there would be no bombing of civilian homes except in cases of self-defense.

There have been a few instances of NATO aircraft bombing targets and causing the deaths of innocent civilians. "The number of events directed against civilian compounds is a very small percentage of events in which air-delivered munitions are used," Pentagon Press Secretary George Little said. "We do retain the right of self-defense in Afghanistan for force protection reasons. That's an inherent right, and we will retain that right."

At their regularly scheduled news conference, Little and Pentagon spokesman Navy Capt. John Kirby emphasized that NATO forces and Afghan leaders have agreed to limits on close-air support in the country. Coalition officials take seriously the prospect of civilian casualties, they said, and try to limit those to the extent possible.

"Our track record in Afghanistan is very good on this point," Little said.
"Let me make it clear, that when it comes to civilian casualties in Afghanistan, we care about trying to avoid them," he added. "Our enemies don't."

The Taliban and their terrorist allies intentionally inflict harm upon the civilian populations inside Afghanistan, Little said.

"They are responsible for the large majority of civilian casualties that occur in that country," he said.


ING BANK N.V. FORFEITS $619 MILLION FOR TRANSACTIONS WITH IRANIAN AND CUBAN ENTITIES


FROM:  U.S. DEPARMENT OF JUSTICE
Tuesday, June 12, 2012
ING Bank N.V. Agrees to Forfeit $619 Million for Illegal Transactions with Cuban and Iranian Entities

WASHINGTON – ING Bank N.V., a financial institution headquartered in Amsterdam, has agreed to forfeit $619 million to the Justice Department and the New York County District Attorney’s Office for conspiring to violate the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) and the Trading with the Enemy Act (TWEA) and for violating New York state laws by illegally moving billions of dollars through the U.S. financial system on behalf of sanctioned Cuban and Iranian entities.  The bank has also entered into a parallel settlement agreement with the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC).

The announcement was made by Lisa Monaco, Assistant Attorney General for National Security; Ronald C. Machen, U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia; Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Criminal Division; District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance Jr., of the New York County District Attorney’s Office; James W. McJunkin, Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI Washington Field Office; Richard Weber, Chief, Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Criminal Investigation; and Adam J. Szubin, Director of the Office of Foreign Assets Control.

A criminal information was filed today in federal court in the District of Columbia charging ING Bank N.V. with one count of knowingly and willfully conspiring to violate the IEEPA and TWEA.  ING Bank waived the federal indictment, agreed to the filing of the information and has accepted responsibility for its criminal conduct and that of its employees.  ING Bank agreed to forfeit $619 million as part of the deferred prosecution agreements reached with the Justice Department and the New York County District Attorney’s Office. ,

According to court documents, starting in the early 1990s and continuing until 2007, ING Bank violated U.S. and New York state laws by moving more than $2 billion illegally through the U.S. financial system – via more than 20,000 transactions – on behalf of Cuban and Iranian entities subject to U.S. economic sanctions.  ING Bank knowingly and willfully engaged in this criminal conduct, which caused unaffiliated U.S. financial institutions to process transactions that otherwise should have been rejected, blocked or stopped for investigation under regulations by OFAC relating to transactions involving sanctioned countries and parties.

“The fine announced today is the largest ever against a bank in connection with an investigation into U.S. sanctions violations and related offenses and underscores the national security implications of ING Bank’s criminal conduct.  For more than a decade, ING Bank helped provide state sponsors of terror and other sanctioned entities with access to the U.S. financial system, allowing them to move billions of dollars through U.S. banks for illicit purchases and other activities,” said Assistant Attorney General Monaco.  “I applaud the agents, analysts and prosecutors who for years pursued this case.”

“Banks that try to skirt U.S. sanctions laws undermine the integrity of our financial system and threaten our national security,” said U.S. Attorney Machen.  “When banks place their loyalty to sanctioned clients above their obligation to follow the law, we will hold them accountable.  On more than 20,000 occasions, ING intentionally manipulated financial and trade transactions to remove references to Iran, Cuba and other sanctioned countries and entities.  Today’s $619 million forfeiture – the largest ever – holds ING accountable for its wrongdoing.”

“For years, ING Bank blatantly violated U.S. laws governing transactions involving Cuba and Iran, and then used shell companies and other deceptive measures to cover up its criminal conduct,” said Assistant Attorney General Breuer.  “Today’s resolution reflects a strong collaboration among federal and state law enforcement partners to hold ING accountable.”

“Investigations of financial institutions, businesses and individuals who violate U.S. sanctions by misusing banks in New York are vitally important to national security and the integrity of our banking system,” said New York County District Attorney Vance.  “These cases give teeth to sanctions enforcement, send a strong message about the need for transparency in international banking and ultimately contribute to the fight against money laundering and terror financing.  I thank our federal partners for their cooperation and assistance in pursuing this investigation.”

“Today, ING Bank was held accountable for their illegal actions involving the movement of more than $2 billion through the U.S. financial system on behalf of Cuban and Iranian entities subject to U.S. economic sanctions,” said FBI Assistant Director in Charge McJunkin.  “Investigations of this type are complicated and demand significant time and dedication from agents, analysts and prosecutors.  In this case, their steadfast tenacity brought this case through to today’s result, and we will continue to pursue these matters in diligent fashion.”

“In today’s environment of increasingly sophisticated financial markets, it’s critical that global institutions follow U.S. law, including sanctions against other countries,” said IRS Criminal Investigation Chief Weber.  “The IRS is proud to share its world-renowned financial investigative expertise in this and other complex financial investigations.  Creating new strategies and models of cooperation among our law enforcement partners to ensure international financial compliance is a top-priority of the IRS.”

“Our sanctions laws reflect core U.S. national security and foreign policy interests and OFAC polices them aggressively.  Today's historic settlement should serve as a clear warning to anyone who would consider profiting by evading U.S. sanctions,” said OFAC Director Szubin.  “We commend our federal and state colleagues for their work on this important investigation.”

The Scheme
According to court documents, ING Bank committed its criminal conduct by, among other things, processing payments for ING Bank’s Cuban banking operations through its branch in Curaçao on behalf of Cuban customers without reference to the payments’ origin, and by providing U.S. dollar trade finance services to sanctioned entities through misleading payment messages, shell companies and the misuse of ING Bank’s internal suspense account.

Furthermore, ING Bank eliminated payment data that would have revealed the involvement of sanctioned countries and entities, including Cuba and Iran; advised sanctioned clients on how to conceal their involvement in U.S. dollar transactions; fabricated ING Bank endorsement stamps for two Cuban banks to fraudulently process U.S. dollar travelers’ checks; and threatened to punish certain employees if they failed to take specified steps to remove references to sanctioned entities in payment messages.
According to court documents, this conduct occurred in various business units in ING Bank’s wholesale banking division and in locations around the world with the knowledge, approval and encouragement of senior corporate managers and legal and compliance departments.  Over the years, several ING Bank employees raised concerns to management about the bank’s sanctions violations.  However, no action was taken.

For decades, the United States has employed sanctions and embargoes on Iran and Cuba.  Financial transactions conducted by wire on behalf of Iranian or Cuban financial institutions have been subject to these U.S. sanctions.  The TWEA prohibits U.S. persons from engaging in financial transactions involving or benefiting Cuba or Cuban nationals and prohibits attempts to evade or avoid these restrictions.  IEEPA makes it a crime to willfully attempt to commit, conspire to commit, or aid and abet in the commission of any violations of the Iranian Transaction Regulations, which prohibit the exportation of any services from the United States to Iran and any attempts to evade or avoid these restrictions.  IEEPA and TWEA regulations are administered by OFAC.

The Investigation
The Justice Department’s investigation into ING Bank arose out of ongoing investigations into the illegal export of goods from the United States to sanctioned countries, including Iran.  For instance, ING processed payments on behalf of one customer, Aviation Services International B.V. (ASI), a Dutch aviation company which was the subject of a U.S. Commerce Department-initiated criminal investigation, through the United States for trade services relating to the procurement by ASI of dual-use U.S. aviation parts for ASI’s Iranian clients.  The ING Bank investigation also resulted in part from a criminal referral from OFAC, which was conducting its own probe of ING Bank.

ING Bank’s forfeiture of $309.5 million to the United States and $309.5 million to the New York County District Attorney’s Office will settle forfeiture claims by the Department of Justice and the state of New York.  In light of the bank’s remedial actions to date and its willingness to acknowledge responsibility for its actions, the Department will recommend the dismissal of the information in 18 months, provided ING Bank fully cooperates with, and abides by, the terms of the deferred prosecution agreement.
OFAC’s settlement agreement with ING deems the bank’s obligations to pay a civil settlement amount of $619 million to be satisfied by its payment of an equal amount to the Justice Department and the state of New York.  OFAC’s settlement agreement further requires the bank to conduct a review of its policies and procedures and their implementation, taking a risk-based sampling of U.S. dollar payments, to ensure that its OFAC compliance program is functioning effectively to detect, correct and report apparent sanctions violations to OFAC.

The case was prosecuted by Trial Attorney Jonathan C. Poling of the Justice Department’s National Security Division; Assistant U.S. Attorneys Ann H. Petalas and George P. Varghese, of the National Security Section of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia; and Trial Attorney Matthew Klecka of the Criminal Division’s Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering Section.

The case was investigated by the FBI’s Washington Field Office and the IRS-Criminal Investigation’s Washington Field Division, with assistance from the Treasury Department’s OFAC and the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security.

The Department of Justice expressed its gratitude to Executive Assistant District Attorney, Chief of Investigation Division Adam Kaufmann; and Assistant District Attorneys Sally Pritchard and Garrett Lynch of the New York County District Attorney’s Office, Major Economic Crimes Bureau.

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