Category: Military Intelligence

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Peacekeeping is one of the UN’s most valuable tools to support global peace and security: UK statement on Peacekeeping Operations

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Statement by Ambassador James Kariuki at the Special Committee on Peacekeeping Operations (C-34).

    2022 to 2024 Sunak Conservative government“>

    This was published under the 2022 to 2024 Sunak Conservative government

    Peacekeeping is one of the UN’s most valuable tools to support global peace and security, including by preventing conflicts from escalating and creating space for political solutions. However, the nature of conflict is evolving and so must our approaches to addressing them.

    I will make three points.

    First, this year marks the 25th anniversary of UN Security Council Resolution 1325, which recognised the vital role women play in supporting peace and security.

    To promote this agenda, the UK is proud to serve as co-chair of the Elsie Initiative for 2025, advancing the full, equal, and meaningful participation of women in peacekeeping, which, in turn, enhances the operational effectiveness of missions.

    We also recognise the critical role that peace operations can play in countering conflict-related sexual violence. We should ensure that peacekeepers are equipped with comprehensive training to help them prevent and respond to the growing threat of sexual and gender-based violence.

    We also need to ensure the highest standards in peace operations. This requires a zero-tolerance approach to sexual exploitation and abuse with stronger mechanisms to respond to instances where it occurs.

    Second, peacekeeping depends on strong cooperation between the UN and Member States, including host countries and regional partners. We should continue enhancing collaboration and partnerships, including with regional organisations, in order to give missions the best chance of success. Security Council resolution 2719, enabling AU-led peace operations to access UN-assessed contributions, was an important step. And the UK supports the use of 2719 for the AU Support and Stabilization Mission in Somalia.

    We should also continue to challenge restrictions on the freedom of movement of missions, and violations of the Status of Forces Agreements which make mandates harder to deliver and undermine the protection of civilians.

    Third, peacekeeping in 2025 remains a dangerous activity. I pay tribute to the 61 UN peacekeepers who lost their lives in 2024 and four so far in 2025. Attacks on UN peacekeepers are absolutely unacceptable and may constitute war crimes. 

    We particularly note the work and bravery of MONUSCO peacekeepers currently serving in Eastern DRC. They have worked tirelessly, and under great pressure, to deliver their mandate, especially the protection of civilians, in the face of M23’s takeover of Goma with support from the Rwandan Defence Forces.

    To safeguard missions, we need robust contingency plans, intelligence capabilities, effective strategic communications, and measures to counter misinformation and disinformation. Peacekeepers should be equipped with the tools they need.

    To conclude, the United Kingdom underscores its support for UN peacekeeping. We remain committed to working with partners to strengthen peacekeeping’s effectiveness and to ensure it can adapt to new challenges. We look forward to constructive discussions over the coming weeks and to agreeing a report which will help steer the work of the UN and its Member States over the coming year.

    Thank you.

    Updates to this page

    Published 18 February 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: NAVIKA SAGAR PARIKRAMA II INSV TARINI REACHES PORT STANLEY – THE THIRD PORT OF CALL

    Source: Government of India

    Posted On: 18 FEB 2025 7:31PM by PIB Delhi

    The Indian Naval Sailing Vessel (INSV) Tarini entered Port Stanley at about 0515 h IST on 18 Feb 25 thus completing the third and most challenging phase of Navika Sagar Parikrama II, a pioneering expedition showcasing the resilience, courage, and skill of the Indian Navy’s women officers. This marks a significant milestone in the vessel’s journey of circumnavigating the globe. During the phase the vessel experienced three cyclones, while passing through Point Nemo, known as the Oceanic Pole of Inaccessibility. They also passed through the treacherous waters of Drake Passage before crossing the Cape Horn. 

    The Navika Sagar Parikrama initiative underscores the Indian Navy’s commitment to gender empowerment and maritime excellence. The expedition, crewed by two women officers, aims to promote ocean sailing, self-reliance, and India’s rich maritime heritage. Their experiences serve as an inspiration for young aspirants, encouraging greater participation of women in maritime and defence sectors.

    INSV Tarini embarked on its ambitious journey from Goa, India, navigating challenging sea conditions across the Indian, Atlantic, and Pacific Oceans. The vessel’s safe arrival at Port Stanley is a demonstration of India’s growing maritime reach and commitment to fostering global goodwill through Naval diplomacy.

    The team is expected to engage in interactions with the local community, sharing insights about their voyage and India’s Naval traditions.

    Following its stop in Port Stanley, INSV Tarini will continue its expedition, sailing through to Cape Town before returning to India. The expedition reinforces the spirit of adventure, resilience, and India’s commitment to enhancing global maritime cooperation.

    *****

    VM/SPS                                                                                                        42/25

    (Release ID: 2104466) Visitor Counter : 20

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI USA: NASA Sets Launch Coverage for Missions Studying Cosmic Origins, Sun

    Source: NASA

    NASA will provide live coverage of prelaunch and launch activities for SPHEREx (Spectro-Photometer for the History of the Universe, Epoch of Reionization and Ices Explorer), the agency’s newest space telescope. This will lift off with another NASA mission, Polarimeter to Unify the Corona and Heliosphere, or PUNCH, which will study the Sun’s solar wind.
    The launch window opens at 10:09 p.m. EST (7:09 p.m. PST) Thursday, Feb. 27, for the SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket that will lift off from Space Launch Complex 4 East at Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. Watch coverage on NASA+. Learn how to watch NASA content through a variety of platforms, including social media.
    The SPHEREx mission will improve our understanding of how the universe evolved and search for key ingredients for life in our galaxy.
    The four small spacecraft that comprise PUNCH will observe the Sun’s corona as it transitions into solar wind.
    The deadline for media accreditation for in-person coverage of this launch has passed. NASA’s media credentialing policy is available online. For questions about media accreditation, please email: ksc-media-accreditat@mail.nasa.gov.
    NASA’s mission coverage is as follows (all times Eastern and subject to change based on real-time operations):
    Tuesday, Feb. 25
    2 p.m. – SPHEREx and PUNCH Science Overview News Conference

    Shawn Domagal-Goldman, acting director, Astrophysics Division, NASA Headquarters
    Joe Westlake, director, Heliophysics Division, NASA Headquarters
    Nicholeen Viall, PUNCH Mission Scientist, NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
    Rachel Akeson, SPHEREx science data center lead, Caltech/IPAC
    Phil Korngut, SPHEREx instrument scientist, Caltech

    The news conference will stream on NASA+. Media may ask questions in person or via phone. Limited auditorium space will be available for in-person participation. For the dial-in number and passcode, media should contact the NASA Kennedy newsroom no later than one hour before the start of the event at ksc-newsroom@mail.nasa.gov.
    Wednesday, Feb. 26
    3:30 p.m. – SPHEREx and PUNCH Prelaunch News Conference

    Mark Clampin, acting deputy associate administrator, Science Mission Directorate, NASA Headquarters
    David Cheney, PUNCH program executive, NASA Headquarters
    James Fanson, SPHEREx project manager, NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory
    Denton Gibson, launch director, NASA’s Launch Services Program
    Julianna Scheiman, director, NASA Science Missions, SpaceX
    U.S. Air Force 1st Lt. Ina Park, 30th Operations Support Squadron launch weather officer

    Coverage of the prelaunch news conference will stream live on NASA+.
    Media may ask questions in person and via phone. Limited auditorium space will be available for in-person participation. For the dial-in number and passcode, media should contact the Kennedy newsroom no later than one hour before the start of the event at ksc-newsroom@mail.nasa.gov.
    Thursday, Feb. 27
    12 p.m. – SPHEREx and PUNCH Launch Preview will stream live on NASA+.
    9:15 p.m. – Launch coverage begins on NASA+.
    10:09 p.m. – Launch window opens.
    Audio Only Coverage
    Audio only of the launch coverage will be carried on the NASA “V” circuits, which may be accessed by dialing 321-867-1220, or -1240. On launch day, “mission audio,” countdown activities without NASA+ media launch commentary, will be carried on 321-867-7135.
    NASA Website Launch Coverage
    Launch day coverage of the mission will be available on the agency’s website. Coverage will include links to live streaming and blog updates beginning no earlier than 9:15 p.m., Feb. 27, as the countdown milestones occur. On-demand streaming video and photos of the launch will be available shortly after liftoff.
    For questions about countdown coverage, contact the Kennedy newsroom at 321-867-2468. Follow countdown coverage on the SPHEREx blog.
    Attend the Launch Virtually
    Members of the public can register to attend this launch virtually. NASA’s virtual guest program for this mission also includes curated launch resources, notifications about related opportunities or changes, and a stamp for the NASA virtual guest passport following launch.
    Watch, Engage on Social Media
    You can also stay connected by following and tagging these accounts:
    X: @NASA, @NASAJPL, @NASAUnivese, @NASASun, @NASAKennedy, @NASA_LSP
    Facebook: NASA, NASAJPL, NASA Universe, NASASunScience, NASA’s Launch Services Program
    Instagram: @NASA, @NASAKennedy, @NASAJPL, @NASAUnivese
    For more information about these missions, visit:

    SPHEREx

    PUNCH

    -end-
    Alise Fisher – SPHERExHeadquarters, Washington202-617-4977alise.m.fisher@nasa.gov
    Sarah Frazier – PUNCHGoddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.202-853-7191sarah.frazier@nasa.gov
    Laura AguiarKennedy Space Center, Florida321-593-6245laura.aquiar@nasa.gov

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: First ever Inter-Command Conference on Musculoskeletal Rehab & Sports Injury held at Army Hospital (Research & Referral)

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Posted On: 18 FEB 2025 7:07PM by PIB Delhi

    The first ever Inter-Command Conference on Musculoskeletal Rehab & Sports Injury was hosted at Army Hospital (Research & Referral), Delhi Cantt by  Department of Sports Medicine and Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation. The theme of the conference was global best practices and advancements in muscluosketal rehab and sports injury and was attended by more than 200 national delegates and 39 speakers from various commands and renounced civil institute like AIIMS Delhi, AIIMS Patna, Safdarjung Hospital, Lady Harding Medical College, Fortis hospital(Mohali), KGMU( Lucknow).

    During the inauguration ceremony, Director General Armed Forces and Medical Services Surg Vice Admiral Arti Sarin highlighted the need of rehabilitation and pain management and interdisciplinary approach to ensure holistic rehabilitation and patient satisfaction. She also mentioned that continuous academic and research-oriented evidence-based approach along with optimal skill enhancement and utilization of technology driven musculosketal rehab and management option will remain the corner stone to achieve holistic health.

    Director & Commandant of Army Hospital Research and Referral and Chief Patron of Armed Forces Physiatry ANS Sports Injury Conference 2025 (AFPSICON 25) Lt Gen Shankar Narayan emphasized during his welcome note that exchange of knowledge and acquisition of technical as well as soft skill in the field of sports medicine and rehabilitation is the need of the hour and Army Hospital Research and Referral will take the leadership to bring the specialists and institutes across the country to introspect and identify the best solution suitable for India.

    The conference was also attended by Air Marshal M.S Shridhar, DCIDS (Medical Services) Air marshal Sandeep Dherja, DGMS (AIR) & Dr. R k Shrivastava, former Director General Health Services and former head of Medical Council of India  among many other distinguished delegates.

    ****

    SR/Anand

    (Release ID: 2104451) Visitor Counter : 109

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI Asia-Pac: Underwater Archaeology Wing Begins Explorations In Dwarka

    Source: Government of India (2)

    Underwater Archaeology Wing Begins Explorations In Dwarka

    Archaeological Survey of India Initiates Underwater Explorations in Dwarka Waters

    With three women archaeologits, it is an inclusive show of women strength in the field

    Posted On: 18 FEB 2025 6:00PM by PIB Delhi

    A team of five archaeologists from the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), led by Prof. Alok Tripathi, Additional Director-General (Archaeology) has commenced groundbreaking underwater explorations off the coast of Dwarka. The team, which also includes H.K. Nayak, Director (Excavations and Explorations), Dr. Aparajita Sharma, Assistant Superintending Archaeologist, Ms. Poonam Vind, and Rajkumari Barbina, has selected an area near the Gomati Creek for initial investigations.

    For the first time in ASI, this team comprising a significant number of women archaeologists and the most numbers of archaeologists actively participating in underwater investigations.

    This underwater exploration is part of the renewed Underwater Archaeology Wing (UAW) of ASI, which has recently been revived to undertake offshore surveys and investigations in Dwarka and Bet Dwarka (Gujarat). The UAW has been at the forefront of underwater archaeological research since the 1980s. Since 2001, the wing is conducting explorations at sites such as Bangaram Island (Lakshadweep), Mahabalipuram (Tamil Nadu), Dwarka (Gujarat), Loktak Lake (Manipur), and Elephanta Island (Maharashtra). Archaeologists of UAW have also collaborated with the Indian Navy (IN) and other government organizations for the study and protection of underwater cultural heritage.

    Earlier the Underwater Archaeology Wing had carried-out offshore and onshore excavations at Dwarka from 2005 to 2007. The coastal areas were examined during low tide where sculptures and stone anchors were discovered. Based on those explorations, underwater excavations were carried out.

    The current underwater investigations mark a significant step in ASI’s mission to safeguard India’s rich underwater cultural heritage.

     

    ***

    Sunil Kumar Tiwari

    pibculture[at]gmail[dot]com

    (Release ID: 2104411) Visitor Counter : 48

    MIL OSI Asia Pacific News

  • MIL-OSI: AI Unlimited Group Strengthens Leadership and Market Position with S-1 Filing and Strategic Board Appointments

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    LOS ANGELES, Feb. 18, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — AI Unlimited Group, Inc. (AIUG) has taken a significant step forward in its corporate evolution with the lodgment of its S-1 registration statement, marking the transition from early-stage growth to an acceleration phase backed by institutional capital. As part of this pivotal milestone, the company has strengthened its leadership structure with the appointment of seasoned industry veterans to its Nominee Board of Directors, reinforcing AIUG’s commitment to operational excellence, technology leadership, and market expansion.

    AI Unlimited Group operates at the intersection of artificial intelligence and financial services, delivering innovative solutions across liability management, wealth automation, travel financing, and receivables optimization. The company’s sophisticated AI-driven platforms address critical inefficiencies in global financial markets, providing scalable and high-impact solutions for consumers and businesses alike.

    Strengthening Governance with World-Class Leadership
    AI Unlimited Group is pleased to announce the nomination of Al Weiss, Lisa Licht, and Maj. Gen. (Ret) Alberto C. Rosende to its Board of Directors to support Founder and CEO, Trent McKendrick. These accomplished executives bring a wealth of experience across global financial services, operations, technology, and corporate strategy.

    Al Weiss, former President of Worldwide Operations at Disney Parks & Resorts, managed a $10 billion portfolio and led the expansion of Disney’s global assets. His extensive expertise in large-scale operations, strategic planning, and brand stewardship will contribute to AIUG’s long-term vision and execution strategy.

    Lisa Licht, a brand and digital transformation expert, has held executive roles at Live Nation, Yahoo, and 20th Century Fox, where she successfully implemented strategies that drove revenue growth and digital engagement. Her leadership will be instrumental in positioning AIUG’s technology platforms for market leadership.

    Maj. Gen. (Ret) Alberto C. Rosende, a decorated U.S. Army veteran and payments industry executive, brings over three decades of experience in financial risk management at Visa and American Express. His insights will support AIUG’s financial infrastructure, security, and regulatory compliance framework.

    AI Unlimited Group uses SOTA AI models across its apps, providing unmatched personalization, efficiency, and insights for users in finance, travel, and debt management.

    Positioned for Expansion in High-Growth Markets
    AI Unlimited Group’s portfolio comprises four advanced AI-driven platforms:

    – Lever – AI-powered student loan optimization and liability management

    – NestEgg – AI-driven automated investing and retirement solutions

    – Travl.App – AI-enhanced travel planning, savings, and financing

    – Resolve Debt – AI-first accounts receivable and debt recovery automation

    Travl.App: Launching Q1 2025 to Revolutionize Travel Finance
    Travl.App is AI Unlimited Group’s latest innovation in travel planning and financial management, designed to remove financial barriers and enhance the way users plan, book, and save for their trips. By leveraging advanced AI-powered insights, Travl.App provides tailored itineraries, cost-saving strategies, and seamless financing options, ensuring a personalized and intuitive travel experience. Helping, 74% of millennials who struggle to save towards travel, making up 29 million unfulfilled vacations!

    Ike Pyun, SVP of Travl.App, added: Travl.App is not just another travel platform—it’s a personalized travel experience and AI-powered travel assistant designed to empower users to plan and book smarter while managing their budgets and providing digital savings wallets. Our goal is to make travel financially seamless by integrating intelligent savings strategies, personalized recommendations, and flexible financing solutions that meet the evolving needs of modern travelers.”

    Set to launch in Q1 2025, Travl.App integrates real-time pricing data, predictive travel trends, and flexible buy-now-pay-later (BNPL) financing to make travel more accessible and financially manageable for a global audience.

    Strategic Underwriting Partnership with The Benchmark Company
    AI Unlimited Group has engaged The Benchmark Company as the lead underwriter for its Nasdaq public offering, reinforcing institutional confidence in its strategic direction, growth trajectory, and market opportunity. Benchmark’s deep expertise in capital markets will support AIUG’s scalability, investor relations, and long-term shareholder value creation.

    CEO and SVP Statements
    Trent McKendrick, Founder and CEO of AI Unlimited Group, commented:

    “Filing our S-1 registration is a landmark moment for AI Unlimited Group as we transition from an early-stage innovator to a high-growth enterprise. With our expanded leadership team and strategic partnerships, we are building an unparalleled ecosystem that combines AI-driven financial technology with scalable market solutions. We remain steadfast in our mission to revolutionize financial independence through automation, ensuring we provide long-term value for our investors and stakeholders.”

    A Defining Moment in AI-Driven Financial Technology
    With the S-1 registration now filed, AI Unlimited Group is embarking on the next stage of its corporate journey. Backed by a strong leadership team, cutting-edge AI infrastructure, and a robust market opportunity, the company is well-positioned to drive innovation, expand its platform offerings, and maximize shareholder returns.

    Investor Relations Contact:

    TraDigital IR
    John McNamara
    917-658-2602
    John@tradigitalir.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI USA: Health Net Federal Services, LLC and Centene Corporation Agree to Pay Over $11 Million to Resolve False Claims Act Liability for Cybersecurity Violations

    Source: US State of North Dakota

    Note: View the settlement agreement here. 

    Health Net Federal Services Inc. (HNFS) of Rancho Cordova, California and its corporate parent, St. Louis-based Centene Corporation, have agreed to pay $11,253,400 to resolve claims that HNFS falsely certified compliance with cybersecurity requirements in a contract with the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) to administer the Defense Health Agency’s (DHA) TRICARE health benefits program for servicemembers and their families. In 2016, Centene acquired all of the issued and outstanding shares of Health Net Inc., HNFS’s corporate parent, and assumed the liabilities of HNFS.

    “Companies that hold sensitive government information, including sensitive information of the nation’s servicemembers and their families, must meet their contractual obligations to protect it,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Brett A. Shumate, head of the Justice Department’s Civil Division. “We will continue to pursue knowing violations of cybersecurity requirements by federal contractors and grantees to protect Americans’ privacy and economic and national security.”

    “Safeguarding sensitive government information, particularly when it relates to the health and well-being of millions of service members and their families, is of paramount importance,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Michele Beckwith for the Eastern District of California. “When HNFS failed to uphold its cybersecurity obligations, it didn’t just breach its contract with the government, it breached its duty to the people who sacrifice so much in defense of our nation.”

    “This settlement reflects the significance of protecting TRICARE, and the service members and their families who depend on the health care program, from risks of exploitation,” said Cyber Field Office Special Agent in Charge Kenneth DeChellis of the Defense Criminal Investigative Service (DCIS), the law enforcement arm of the DoD Office of Inspector General. “DCIS will not be deterred from investigating contractors that fail to comply with federal cybersecurity requirements and risk exposing protected information vulnerable to criminal hackers. The U.S. taxpayers who fund these government contracts expect no less.”

    The settlement resolves allegations that, between 2015 and 2018, HNFS failed to meet certain cybersecurity controls and falsely certified compliance with them in annual reports to DHA that were required under its contract to administer the TRICARE program. The United States alleged that HNFS failed to timely scan for known vulnerabilities and to remedy security flaws on its networks and systems, in accordance with its System Security Plan and the response times HNFS had established. Furthermore, the United States alleged HNFS ignored reports from third-party security auditors and its internal audit department of cybersecurity risks on HNFS’ networks and systems related to asset management; access controls; configuration settings; firewalls; end-of-life hardware and software in use; patch management (i.e., installing critical security updates released by vendors to counter known threats); vulnerability scanning; and password policies.

    The Civil Division’s Commercial Litigation Branch (Fraud Section) and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of California handled the matter, with assistance from DoD’s Office of Inspector General, including the DCIS, Cyber Field Office Western Region and the Inspector General’s Office of Audits, Cyberspace Operations Directorate, and DoD’s Defense Contract Management Agency, Defense Industrial Base Cybersecurity Assessment Center.

    Trial Attorneys Christopher Wilson, Laura Hill, and Jonathan Thrope of the Civil Division’s Fraud Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven Tennyson for the Eastern District of California represented the United States in this matter.

    The claims asserted against defendants are allegations only; there has been no determination of liability.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Security: Health Net Federal Services, LLC and Centene Corporation Agree to Pay Over $11 Million to Resolve False Claims Act Liability for Cybersecurity Violations

    Source: United States Attorneys General

    Note: View the settlement agreement here

    Health Net Federal Services Inc. (HNFS) of Rancho Cordova, California and its corporate parent, St. Louis-based Centene Corporation, have agreed to pay $11,253,400 to resolve claims that HNFS falsely certified compliance with cybersecurity requirements in a contract with the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) to administer the Defense Health Agency’s (DHA) TRICARE health benefits program for servicemembers and their families. In 2016, Centene acquired all of the issued and outstanding shares of Health Net Inc., HNFS’s corporate parent, and assumed the liabilities of HNFS.

    “Companies that hold sensitive government information, including sensitive information of the nation’s servicemembers and their families, must meet their contractual obligations to protect it,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Brett A. Shumate, head of the Justice Department’s Civil Division. “We will continue to pursue knowing violations of cybersecurity requirements by federal contractors and grantees to protect Americans’ privacy and economic and national security.”

    “Safeguarding sensitive government information, particularly when it relates to the health and well-being of millions of service members and their families, is of paramount importance,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Michele Beckwith for the Eastern District of California. “When HNFS failed to uphold its cybersecurity obligations, it didn’t just breach its contract with the government, it breached its duty to the people who sacrifice so much in defense of our nation.”

    “This settlement reflects the significance of protecting TRICARE, and the service members and their families who depend on the health care program, from risks of exploitation,” said Cyber Field Office Special Agent in Charge Kenneth DeChellis of the Defense Criminal Investigative Service (DCIS), the law enforcement arm of the DoD Office of Inspector General. “DCIS will not be deterred from investigating contractors that fail to comply with federal cybersecurity requirements and risk exposing protected information vulnerable to criminal hackers. The U.S. taxpayers who fund these government contracts expect no less.”

    The settlement resolves allegations that, between 2015 and 2018, HNFS failed to meet certain cybersecurity controls and falsely certified compliance with them in annual reports to DHA that were required under its contract to administer the TRICARE program. The United States alleged that HNFS failed to timely scan for known vulnerabilities and to remedy security flaws on its networks and systems, in accordance with its System Security Plan and the response times HNFS had established. Furthermore, the United States alleged HNFS ignored reports from third-party security auditors and its internal audit department of cybersecurity risks on HNFS’ networks and systems related to asset management; access controls; configuration settings; firewalls; end-of-life hardware and software in use; patch management (i.e., installing critical security updates released by vendors to counter known threats); vulnerability scanning; and password policies.

    The Civil Division’s Commercial Litigation Branch (Fraud Section) and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of California handled the matter, with assistance from DoD’s Office of Inspector General, including the DCIS, Cyber Field Office Western Region and the Inspector General’s Office of Audits, Cyberspace Operations Directorate, and DoD’s Defense Contract Management Agency, Defense Industrial Base Cybersecurity Assessment Center.

    Trial Attorneys Christopher Wilson, Laura Hill, and Jonathan Thrope of the Civil Division’s Fraud Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven Tennyson for the Eastern District of California represented the United States in this matter.

    The claims asserted against defendants are allegations only; there has been no determination of liability.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune earns reverification as a Level III Trauma Center

    Source: United States Navy (Medical)

    Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune (NMCCL) has earned reverification as a Level III Trauma Center by the American College of Surgeons’ Committee on Trauma (ACS).

    The ACS Verification, Review, and Consultation Program helps hospitals to evaluate and improve trauma care by providing an objective, external review of a trauma center’s resources and performance in program features such as readiness, resources, patient and care among other components.

    “The certification or verification is good for three years, and it’s a pretty rigorous process that examines all the standards set by the American College of Surgeons, which is the governing body of trauma centers in the United States,” said Cmdr. Ryan Schutt, trauma medical director for NMMCL. “Receiving the verification means that NMCCL is meeting the metrics that ACS considers the gold standard for how to run a trauma system in the United States.”

    Since the original designation as a Level III Trauma Center in 2018, making NMCCL the first Navy military treatment facility in the nation to provide trauma care to a local community, NMCCL continues to make positive contributions in the military and civilian communities. Since last verification cycle in 2022, the NMCCL Trauma Center has recorded more than 5,000 trauma activations, receiving patients from Onslow County and five adjacent counties.

    “If you look at when we first became a verified in 2018, I think probably two-thirds of our trauma [cases] were coming from on base. Then, as our system has grown and we’ve kind of gained the trust of the public and the [Emergency Medical Service] systems; that’s basically flipped where now probably over 70% of our trauma cases come from off base.”

    ACS Trauma Quality Programs aim to improve quality of care for the patient by setting standards that define the structures and processes of care, measuring patient outcomes through risk-adjusted benchmarking, promoting best practices, and adhering to performance improvement principles.

    To receive certification, NMCCL has to adhere to the Committee on Trauma’s standards for measuring trauma center success like risk-adjusted benchmarking, promotion of best practices, and adherence to improvement principles.

    ACS also looks at the development and implementation of programs that support injury prevention and ensure optimal patient outcomes across the continuum of care. For The NMCCL Trauma Center, the impact on the non-Department of Defense community is not just in trauma patient care but trauma and injury prevention.

    “On base we are talking to Marines about weapons safety, vehicle safety, motorcycle safety, and drinking and driving,” said Schutt. “Off base, we do events like Stop the Bleed campaigns, which is teaching the public how to use tourniquets, car seat safety for new and expectant mothers and fall prevention for the elderly.”

    Since the trauma center’s inception, trauma nurses and corpsmen have instructed more than 8600 community members on Stop the Bleed techniques.

    Naval Medical Center Camp Lejeune has provided more than 80 years of dedicated, passionate care for warfighters and beneficiaries at Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Video: Debris Removal

    Source: United States of America – Federal Government Departments (video statements)

    Crews are out in LA County clearing debris and ash from properties that were burned by the recent wildfires. The Environmental Protection Agency continues to clear hazardous household materials from impacted properties, and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is coming right behind them to remove concrete, metal, trees, and ash from the properties. This service is free, but you must submit a Right of Entry form to participate. You can do that online at recovery.lacounty.gov or by calling 844-347-3332. The deadline to opt in is March 31, 2025.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gy5l92RhjxA

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI Security: Timothy A. Ferguson Named Assistant Director of the Criminal Justice Information Services Division

    Source: Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI Crime News (b)

    The Federal Bureau of Investigation has named Timothy A. Ferguson as the assistant director of the Criminal Justice Information Services Division in Clarksburg, West Virginia. Mr. Ferguson has served as the acting assistant director of the CJIS Division since April 2024.

    Mr. Ferguson joined the FBI as a special agent in 2002 and was assigned to the Dayton Resident Agency under the Cincinnati Field Office in Ohio, where he primarily worked criminal investigations with the Southern Ohio Safe Streets Task Force. He was promoted to supervisory senior resident agent in 2011.

    In 2015, Mr. Ferguson was promoted to assistant section chief of the Violent Crime and Gang Section in the Criminal Investigative Division at FBI Headquarters in Washington, D.C. He oversaw the division’s Safe Streets and Gang Unit, Violent Crime Unit, and Indian Country Crime Unit.

    Mr. Ferguson moved to the Springfield Field Office in Illinois in 2018 to serve as the assistant special agent in charge of the Criminal Branch. In 2020, he returned to FBI Headquarters as the section chief of the Field Operations Section and the Digital Forensics and Analytics Section in the Operational Technology Division.

    In 2023, Mr. Ferguson was promoted to deputy assistant director of the CJIS Division, responsible for the FBI’s National Threat Operations Center and the National Instant Criminal Background Check System Section.

    During his FBI career, Mr. Ferguson has served as a crisis negotiator, a SWAT Team operator, a medic, an adjunct faculty member, and a Behavioral Analysis Unit coordinator.

    Prior to joining the FBI, Mr. Ferguson served in the U.S. Army. He earned a bachelor’s degree in English from Welsh College in Nashville, Tennessee, and a master’s degree in behavioral science from Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI USA: Ahead of Confirmation Hearing, Warren Lays Out Concerns with Deputy Defense Secretary Nominee Stephen Feinberg

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for Massachusetts – Elizabeth Warren
    February 18, 2025
    As former head of private equity firm Cerberus, Feinberg drove Massachusetts’ Steward hospital into the ground, would have significant financial conflicts of interest 
    “Your track record at Cerberus includes mismanagement, profiteering, and little relevant government experience. You have put profits at the center of your work when the Deputy Secretary role requires that you put the Department and its people at the center.” 
    Text of Letter (PDF)
    Washington, D.C. – Ahead of his confirmation hearing before the Senate Armed Services Committee (SASC), U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Ranking Member of the SASC Subcommittee on Personnel, wrote to Mr. Stephen Feinberg, nominee for Deputy Secretary of the Department of Defense (DoD), pressing him to explain his “serious conflicts of interest” and his track record of mismanagement. 
    As Deputy Secretary of Defense, Mr. Feinberg will need to be able to manage the building, support the workforce, and “(e)nsure Department-wide capability and resources across all functions to carry out the strategic plan of the DoD in support of national security objectives.” Upon his nomination, President Trump regarded him as “(a)n extremely successful businessman.” However, as the former head of private equity firm Cerberus Capital Management, Mr. Feinberg reportedly ran several companies, including Chrysler, into the ground. 
    “I am concerned that your track record as a private equity executive shows you lack the skills and demonstrated experience needed to manage and execute the scale of reforms necessary at the Department of Defense,” wrote Senator Warren. 
    In Massachusetts, residents have had first-hand experience with the damage caused by Cerberus’ private equity model. Cerberus bought into Massachusetts’ Caritas Christi hospital system, in 2010, investing $246 million, rechristening it as Steward, and leaving Dr. Ralph de la Torre in charge as CEO. In 2020, Cerberus began to exit by transferring its ownership stake and then, over a six-year period, straddled Steward with over a billion dollars in liabilities – while Cerberus executives profited handsomely, receiving $800 million in profits. Unable to handle the massive debt load, Steward went bankrupt last year – resulting in the closure of two hospitals in the Commonwealth. 
    Mr. Feinberg is estimated to own about 75% of Cerberus, which holds large investments in companies that do business with DoD. These investments have included everything from a company testing hypersonic missile technology to an open-source internet scrapping company. They have also included companies that have defrauded the U.S. government. DynCorp, a private military contractor Cerberus previously owned, was sued by the Department of Justice for intentionally overcharging the Department of State while doing a contract overseas. The letter finds Cerberus has investments in at least 7 companies that do at least $15.9 billion in business with the DoD.
    “These holdings would pose a conflict of interest between your duty as Deputy Secretary to advance the Department’s national security interests and your personal interest in delivering profits for the defense companies in which you or Cerberus have invested,” said Senator Warren. 
    The Deputy Secretary is supposed to help ensure international law is followed, including protecting civilians from harm. However, the New York Times, found that “(f)our Saudis who participated in the 2018 killing of the Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi received paramilitary training” from a company owned by Cerberus. 
    “If the Deputy Secretary has shown disregard for those laws, that will undermine the faith in these laws for the entire organization,” wrote Senator Warren. 
    Senator Warren also questioned Mr. Feinberg’s qualifications to manage the Department. Beyond a lengthy business and political relationship with President Trump, Mr. Feinberg lacks military experience to lead the Department. Mr. Feinberg participated in the Army Reserve Officers’ Training Corps (ROTC) while studying at Princeton University, but left the program before graduating. 
    “Without Department of Defense knowledge or experience in government leadership, I have doubts about your qualifications and how your past has prepared you to take on a role such as Deputy Secretary of Defense,” concluded Senator Warren. 
    Given Mr. Feinberg’s severe conflicts of interest, record of mismanagement and profiteering, and lack of relevant government experience, Senator Warren asked Mr. Feinberg to respond to questions about several areas of concern with his record, including his experience with private equity, potential ties to human rights violations, history of defrauding the federal government, and vision for managing a key part of the federal workforce by February 24, 2025. 

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Hoeven Outlines National Security, Counter-UAS Opportunities in Grand Forks to Air Force Vice Chief of Staff

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for North Dakota John Hoeven

    02.15.25

    Project ULTRA Contract Expansion Expected in Coming Weeks

    GRAND FORKS, N.D. – Senator John Hoeven outlined to Gen. James Slife, Air Force Vice Chief of Staff, opportunities to leverage the Grand Forks region’s expertise in unmanned aerial systems (UAS) to enhance national security and address the increasing risks from the misuse of drone technology. In particular, Hoeven highlighted:

    • His efforts to secure an increased contract ceiling for Project ULTRA, which is expected in the coming weeks.
      • Hoeven has been working to increase the size and scope of Project ULTRA to support counter-UAS technology development.
      • Project ULTRA can serve as a bridge between an existing DoD contracting vehicle and new counter-UAS capabilities being developed in the private sector.
    • The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) unfiltered radar data feed, which is in the process of being linked with the Northern Plains UAS Test Site.
      • Once completed, it will use the feed to enhance efforts to detect, identify and track malicious UAS.
      • Between Project ULTRA and the FAA radar data, Grand Forks will be uniquely positioned to develop methods for protecting domestic U.S. military bases against potential UAS threats.
    • Efforts to bring a future intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance (ISR) mission to Grand Forks Air Force Base.
      • As a member of the Senate Defense Appropriations Committee, Hoeven is working to ensure the military has sufficient ISR capacity to support warfighters across the globe.
      • The senator is advancing both airborne and space-based missions as opportunities to expand ISR operations in Grand Forks.

    “The Grand Forks region offers capabilities and capacity, unlike anywhere else, to address emerging national defense concerns. That includes protecting against the malicious use of drones, as well as leveraging the Grand Forks Air Force base’s longstanding excellence in ISR and its newfound leadership in satellite operations to ensure we have adequate intelligence operations, whether in the air or space, to meet the needs of our military across the globe,” said Hoeven. “Having General Slife here in North Dakota presents a great opportunity to make the case for utilizing our state’s expertise in UAS. With Project ULTRA receiving a contract increase in the coming weeks and the unfiltered FAA radar data feed nearly ready to go, we have the pieces in place to meet these critical military needs.”

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI USA: Hoeven at MAFB with Air Force Vice Chief of Staff to Secure Support for Upgraded Cruise Missile Facilities, Concurrent Construction of Sentinel Program

    US Senate News:

    Source: United States Senator for North Dakota John Hoeven

    02.15.25

    MINOT, N.D. – Senator John Hoeven and Gen. James Slife, Air Force Vice Chief of Staff, today reviewed efforts to modernize the dual-nuclear mission at Minot Air Force Base. Hoeven and Slife toured the base’s facilities and met with local and military leaders to discuss and see firsthand the importance of:

    • Accelerating the development of the Sentinel program, and concurrently constructing facilities at all three missile bases to keep the programs on track and reduce costs.
    • Investing in upgrades to the base’s Weapons Storage Area and mission planning facilities to ensure the base can operate the new Long Range Standoff (LRSO) cruise missile. The Air Force expects to operate the new missile in the early 2030s.

    “Minot Air Force Base is the only dual nuclear base in the nation,” said Hoeven. “We’ve made important investments in upgrading and modernizing our nuclear forces and we appreciate General Slife visiting Minot Air Force Base to see the importance of these projects firsthand. Our nuclear forces are a vital deterrent to our adversaries and we need to keep our modernization efforts moving forward. That’s why we made a strong case for the Air Force to budget for upgraded facilities that will ensure Minot can operate the next nuclear cruise missile as soon as it is fully developed. At the same time, we continue making the case for the Air Force to keep the Sentinel program on track by concurrently building infrastructure at Minot and the other two missile bases. This will help reduce costs on this vital defense asset.”

    As a member of the Senate Defense Appropriations Committee, Hoeven has been working to:

    • Accelerate the schedule for deploying the Sentinel by:
      • Identifying additional cost savings to address increased construction costs.
      • Pushing for concurrent construction of facilities at all three missile bases with officials at the Department of Defense (DoD) and Northrop Grumman.
    • Secure the Air Force’s commitment to budget and begin work on facilities for the LRSO carried on the B-52.
      • Hoeven authored a provision in the Fiscal Year (FY) 2025 Military Construction bill to help ensure Minot has the facilities needed to operate and maintain the new LRSO missile, which will be carried on the B-52, as soon as the weapon is ready to enter service.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Economics: Microsoft announces latest investment in Europe, $700M for computing capacity in Poland

    Source: Microsoft

    Headline: Microsoft announces latest investment in Europe, $700M for computing capacity in Poland

    This morning, I stood in Warsaw with Poland’s Prime Minister, Donald Tusk, and announced Microsoft’s latest cloud and AI infrastructure investment in Europe. Building on our initial billion-dollar investment to launch a Polish cloud region in 2023, I announced that Microsoft will spend another $700 million by the middle of next year to expand our computing capacity in the country. And we will deepen our work with Polish National Defense to strengthen Poland’s cybersecurity, including by working together on the development of AI competencies and emerging digital technologies, including new AI and quantum breakthroughs. 

    This marks the latest critical step for Microsoft’s business, economic, and political relationships in Poland – and in Europe as a whole.  

    During the past 16 months, we have announced more than $20 billion in AI and cloud infrastructure investments that represent an important part of our datacenter expansion across 15 European countries. Today’s investment in Poland builds on the integrated supply chain we are building with manufacturers across the EU. It calls on suppliers that are manufacturing critical components not only in Poland but in Italy, France, Germany, Finland, Ireland, and the United Kingdom. It also includes components manufactured and exported from Indiana in the United States. It’s the type of investment that creates jobs and fosters economic growth throughout Europe and across the Atlantic. 

    Promoting Trans-Atlantic Investment, Trade, and Economic Growth 

    The American technology sector is creating world-leading AI technology and is focused on being a trusted “partner of choice” around the world. And European policy leaders are focused on mobilizing more capital and increasing productivity by “closing the innovation gap.” Even in a time of fragmenting geopolitics, today’s announcement illustrates that these two technology ambitions are more aligned than divergent.  

    In multiple ways, our investment in Poland puts both these goals into practice. It demonstrates how vastly the technology sector has changed since I first joined Microsoft as an employee in Paris more than 31 years ago. While we develop and provide world-leading technology products and services globally, we now support these with enormous national investments in infrastructure and large numbers of local employees. More than ever, technology requires coordinated investments that connect countries and span oceans. 

    Sustained Technology Support During a Decade of Crises 

    Equally important, technology has become a lynchpin for national needs in times of crisis. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has aptly put recent history in perspective. As she highlighted, Europe faces a competitiveness challenge that comes as the third crisis of the 2020s, after the pandemic and the war in Ukraine.  

    It’s worth reflecting on the critical role of technology in helping to support the responses needed for each of these crises. 

    Five years ago this month, the first pandemic in a century literally started to shut doors around the world. At Microsoft, our employees and partners used new video and productivity technology like Teams to keep the economy moving forward in every corner of Europe. In just days, businesses, schools, universities, hospitals, and governments sustain their operations by moving online.  

    Two years later, the Russian military invaded Ukraine. At Microsoft, we helped move Ukraine’s critical data and technology services to our datacenters across Europe, ensuring their continued operation outside the range of cruise missile and air attacks. And like several other technology companies, we immediately helped Ukraine’s officials and citizens defend their nation from Russian cyberattacks. As a company, we provided more than $250 million of free technology and financial assistance. And we have sustained this substantial support to this day. 

    As Europe now launches a new “competitiveness compass,” technology will again play an indispensable role. Especially as working-age populations shrink and aging populations expand, economic growth and prosperity will depend more than ever on new technology. Productivity growth will require it. And the competitiveness of Europe’s many great industries and companies, large and small, will depend on their ability to hone their ongoing leadership in critical scientific domains and put their data to work. Across the continent, European institutions will need to harness the power of AI and the cloud. 

    A Strong Foundation for Europe’s AI Transition 

    AI is rapidly becoming what economists call a General Purpose Technology, or GPT. In contrast to single-purpose technologies, GPTs boost innovation and productivity across the entire economy. Throughout history, transformative GPTs like ironworking, electricity, machine tooling, computer chips, and software have not only driven economic growth but sparked new discoveries and inventions, changing the way we live and work.  

    The good news is that the foundation for Europe’s AI transition is already being laid. Industry leaders are investing tens of billions to construct state-of-the-art infrastructure to help Europe access, adopt, and innovate on the world’s most advanced cloud and AI technology. And companies like Microsoft are developing and offering innovative AI tools and vital services that are ready for use by every sector of every European economy.  

    As a company, we are developing and operating our AI infrastructure and platform services with a constant focus on Europe’s needs. This is one reason we announced our AI Access Principles in Barcelona a year ago. These eleven principles govern our operations and are designed to ensure that Microsoft’s AI infrastructure is accessible, open, and available on fair terms to the entire European economy.  

    As we’ve put these principles into practice, we’ve recognized the vital role of open-source software and AI models for European researchers, start-ups, businesses, and governments. We’ve launched the Azure AI Foundry, a platform designed to help developers build, run, and optimize AI-driven applications. The Foundry supports flexible choices and now supports more than 1,800 AI models, from OpenAI’s o3-mini to open-source models like Llama, Mistral, and others, all giving Europe the tools it needs to stay competitive in the fast-moving AI landscape. European developers can then use our Models as a Service offering to distribute their products instantly to our datacenters around the world, so customers can call on them for AI-powered applications. 

    We also recognize that technology innovation requires investments in people. That’s why we’re investing in our AI Skilling Initiative across Europe. We’re partnering with government, education, industry, and civil society to help bring AI skills to users, developers, and organizational leaders. Through our strategic partnerships, we have already helped to skill 2.9 million Europeans and are on track to engage 8 million people by the end of the year. 

    Technology Collaboration Built on Interdependence 

    We readily recognize that European leaders sometimes worry about becoming overly dependent on American technology. We appreciate that such questions are both natural and legitimate. We take them seriously and work hard to address them, including by understanding European values, supporting European needs, and adapting to European rules.  

    Along the way, we often point to a second technology dimension that too easily is overlooked. The reality is that this dependence runs both ways.  

    As a company, we’re pouring tens of billions of dollars of investment into acquiring land, constructing massive buildings, bringing additional electricity to the grid, and installing the world’s most advanced computing, networking, liquid cooling, and other technology.  

    These datacenters are not built on wheels.  

    Once constructed, these billions of dollars in infrastructure are permanent and subject to local laws, regulations, and governments. Time inevitably brings changes. It’s imperative as a company that we constantly remain focused on earning and sustaining our “license to operate” within each country. With datacenters, this starts with each local community and runs up to officials with EU-wide responsibilities. Our economic dependence on Europe runs deep. 

    As Microsoft celebrates its 50th birthday less than two months from now, we look back at more than four decades of European presence and support. As a company, we’ve seen many things change. And we ourselves have changed. We’ve put down deep roots, with employees and families in communities and countries across the continent.  

    But even amid constant change, one thing has been constant. Our support for Europe has been not only steady but steadfast.  

    MIL OSI Economics

  • MIL-OSI Security: Defense News: U.S. Navy EOD Conducts Arctic Warfare Exercise ‘Arctic Specialist’ with NATO Allies in Norway

    Source: United States Navy

    Arctic Specialist is an annual Norway-hosted multinational joint EOD and expeditionary mine countermeasures (ExMCM) exercise providing training at the platoon and squad level and the development of land and maritime EOD tactics, techniques and procedures (TTPs) in a cold-weather environment. Allied forces from Denmark, Norway, and Sweden trained alongside U.S. forces at this year’s event.

    “Arctic Specialist represents one of the premier exercises where Thunderstealers hone our cold weather survival, EOD, and diving skills,” said Cmdr. John Kennedy, Commander, Task Group (CTG) 68.1 (EODMU 8). “The opportunity to train alongside such capable Allies builds confidence in our ability to deploy to the Arctic region and sustain combat operations.”

    According to the Department of Defense’s 2024 Arctic Strategy, “Major geopolitical changes are driving the need for this new strategic approach to the Arctic, including Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, the accession of Finland and Sweden to the NATO Alliance, increasing collaboration between the People’s Republic of China (PRC) and Russia, and the accelerating impacts of climate change. This increasingly accessible region is becoming a venue for strategic competition, and the United States must stand ready to meet the challenge alongside Allies and partners.”

    While arctic strategy and presence is a growing priority for the U.S. military, training for arctic warfare with our Allies in the high north is not a new initiative for U.S. Navy EOD. In 1986, Norway began hosting an annual “EOD Ex”, which in 2012 became Arctic Specialist.

    “This is my 14th year participating at this exercise. The value of it, beyond working together on realistic scenarios and exchanging knowledge and TTPs, is getting to know other nations. Learning cultural respect and traditions, their working methods, the ‘do’s and don’ts’. Whatever the operation is going to be, it is important to get to know your Allies on a deep level,” said a Lieutenant Commander Operations Officer of Norwegian Naval EOD Command.

    The exercise has continued to provide an excellent training ground for EOD operators to hone their skills and operate in a uniquely challenging environment alongside NATO Allies and partners. Unique to this year’s exercise was the participation of Sweden, NATO’s newest member, for the first time.

    Participation in such exercises will enable our EOD and diving forces to increase warfighting skills in arctic conditions, use lessons learned from past engagements, and provide opportunities to learn from our Allies’ extensive cold weather operating experience.

    During the 11-day exercise, EOD and MCM forces exchanged knowledge for countering regional and global security threats. A multinational Tactical Operations Center (TOC) was established to provide command and control, intelligence, and advanced communications for all participating units.

    Beyond in-depth training on cold weather survival techniques, the exercise included live demolition for mine countermeasure diving, conventional munition disposal, limpet mine response, historical ordnance disposal operations (HODOPS), and chemical and homemade explosive (HME) response. All training was designed with an emphasis on integrated multinational operations at the tactical level in preparation for major combat operations.

    EODMU 8’s MCM Company Commander, Lt. Andrew Lewis, said, “Forward deploying our team to Norway has been critical to our development of warfighting skills in arctic conditions. Through working with our peers from Denmark, Sweden, and Norway—subject matter experts who live and operate in this environment year-round—we have gained a new understanding of and respect for the difficult conditions we could face while operating in the Arctic. Exercises like Arctic Specialist allow us to continue improving our knowledge, skills, and tactics by conducting increasingly complex and high-end missions, and to build lasting bonds with our Allies.”

    As the arctic security environment evolves, training, exercising, and operating in the Arctic will improve U.S. Navy EOD’s operational effectiveness by familiarizing the expeditionary Force with the unique and demanding operating environments of the European Arctic region. By exercising alongside Arctic Allies, the Force continues to improve interoperability and gains regional expertise.

    “This exercise is designed for the operators. The focus is ground level training, developing the skills of the EOD technicians, and everyone getting stronger,” said a Lieutenant from Norwegian Naval EOD Command.

    Before AS kicked off, a platoon of U.S. Navy EOD operators from EODMU 8 and Norwegian Navy EOD clearance divers from Minedykker Kommandoen (Norwegian Naval EOD Command) completed a 2-week winter warfare training in Hovden, Norway, focused on arctic mobility and survivability.

    The winter warfare course consisted of academic training, gear preparation, cross country, back country, and downhill skiing instruction, ski training with heavy rucksack, cold weather injury treatment and prevention, improvised shelter building, camp set up, proper clothing loadout, avalanche safety training, cold weather demolition, small arms shooting on skis, and freezing water response.

    “The value to the guys was immeasurable. Most of them started off the training without ever having skied and some never having seen snow in their lives. We went from that, to being able to self-sustain for 96 hours in the brutal, non-forgiving Norwegian wilderness in 6 feet of snow, transiting roughly 20 kilometers through the mountains, on back country skis, while wearing 70 lb. rucks,” said Explosive Ordnance Disposal Senior Chief Karl Sowinski, EODMU 8 ExMCM Company senior enlisted leader and lead exercise planner. “The cost of ending up out there alone, without the proper gear and training, is death. Out of all the environments we operate in, the Arctic is the only one that is actively trying to kill you 24/7.”

    The team did a cold-water plunge in a freezing river, where they had to function under extreme stress and cold shock. Surrounded by snow and ice, they fully submerged in the icy water, then worked through their cold response by controlling their breathing and responding to a series of questions to demonstrate mental acuity before exiting the water, donning dry clothing, and rewarming.

    “The critical takeaway of this exercise was the integration and interoperability. During the winter warfare portion, prior to Arctic Specialist, the U.S. EOD operators looked to us for our expertise in Arctic survival techniques. During Arctic Specialist, we [Norwegian EOD] looked to the U.S., Sweden, and Denmark teams for new technology or methods that we may not currently use,” said a platoon commander from Norwegian Naval EOD Command. “When we work with our Allied peers, the most valuable part is the group dynamic and becoming a team. We bond on both a personal level and as a military team, making us stronger for future engagements.”

    Continuing to exercise presence in the high north through training and operations will enhance deterrence by demonstrating combat-credible capabilities and the ability to respond rapidly to threats in the Arctic and elsewhere around the globe.

    U.S. Navy EOD stands ready to protect U.S. interests from explosive threats in the face of new challenges and an evolving security environment.

    CTF-68 commands all naval expeditionary combat forces in the U.S. European Command and U.S. Africa Command areas of responsibility in direct support of U.S. Naval Forces Europe -Africa, and U.S. 6th Fleet.

    U.S. 6th Fleet conducts the full spectrum of joint and naval operations, often in concert with allied, joint, and inter-agency partners, in order to advance U.S. national interests and security and stability in Europe and Africa.

    For additional news about U.S. Navy EOD, visit https://www.dvidshub.net/unit/EODG-2.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Defense News: US, Japan Conduct Combined Operations

    Source: United States Navy

    “Combined operations are a testament to our nations’ shared commitment: ensuring we are able to fly, sail, and operate safely and responsibly, wherever international law allows,” said Capt. Justin Harts, Commander, Destroyer Squadron (DESRON) 15. “The experience our US destroyers gain from operating alongside our allies and partners is invaluable, and we take any opportunity to do so.”

    Operations included dynamic maneuvering and communications drills during this multi-lateral exercise. We continue to integrate with partner nations to train, exercise and develop tactical interoperability.

    “Through these operations, we enhanced our tactical capability and interoperability with the U.S. Navy. We are closely collaborating together anytime at sea in order to contribute to regional stability, as well as a Free and Open Indo-Pacific,” CDR Shota TAKASHIRO, Commanding Officer, JS Asahi said.

    The U.S. Navy regularly operates alongside our allies in the Indo-Pacific region as a demonstration of our shared commitment to upholding international law. Combined operations such as this one provides valuable opportunities to train, exercise and develop tactical interoperability across allied navies in the Indo-Pacific.

    Dewey is forward-deployed and assigned to Destroyer Squadron (DESRON) 15, the Navy’s largest DESRON and the U.S. 7th Fleet’s principal surface force.

    U.S. 7th Fleet is the U.S. Navy’s largest forward-deployed numbered fleet, and routinely interacts and operates with allies and partners in preserving a free and open Indo-Pacific region.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Defense News: U.S. Navy Joins Multilateral Naval Exercise Komodo in Indonesia

    Source: United States Navy

    MNEK emphasizes multilateral maritime cooperation and disaster response protocols. The exercise takes place in conjunction with the International Maritime Security Symposium (IMSS), the largest international symposium organized by the Indonesian Navy. The theme of this year’s IMSS is “Addressing Maritime Security Challenges with Technology and Cooperation.”

    “I am proud of what the U.S. Pacific Fleet and our joint force can generate in terms of military power, our ability to synchronize in all domains, and do all of that with our allies and partners,” said Adm. Steve Koehler, commander, U.S. Pacific Fleet, during his presentation at the IMSS. “We will continue to be a reliable maritime partner for all like-minded nations and their citizens in support of a free and open Indo-Pacific. We do so with unity of purpose, and with a powerful and resolute force.”

    The Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS Dewey (DDG 105), as well as a P-8A Poseidon aircraft from Commander, Task Force 72, are representing U.S. Navy forces in the exercise.

    The theme for this year’s MNEK is “Maritime Partnership for Peace and Stability.” The theme is designed to encourage multinational naval forces coordination to strengthen Humanitarian Assistance and Disaster Relief (HA/DR), establish civil-military linkage, and enhance a mutual understanding and interoperability toward affected regions.

    During a six-day harbor phase, the exercise will include international military workshops on infrastructure repairs and emergency medical response, as well as community outreach and cultural exchanges. That will be followed by a sea phase, during which participating ships and aircraft will conduct coordinated maneuvering and search-and-rescue training.

    Komodo 2025 is the fifth iteration of the exercise, which was first held in 2014.

    Dewey operates under Destroyer Squadron (DESRON) 15, the U.S. Navy’s largest forward-deployed destroyer squadron and U.S. 7th Fleet’s principal surface force.

    U.S. 7th Fleet is the U.S. Navy’s largest forward-deployed numbered fleet, and routinely interacts and operates with allies and partners in preserving a free and open Indo-Pacific region.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI Security: Former Guatemalan Congressman sentenced to 18 years in federal prison for international drug trafficking violations in the Eastern District of Texas

    Source: Office of United States Attorneys

    PLANO, Texas – A former Guatemalan congressman has been sentenced to 18 years in federal prison for his role in an international drug trafficking conspiracy, announced Acting U.S. Attorney Abe McGlothin, Jr. of the Eastern District of Texas.

    Jose Armando Ubico Aguilar, 45, a former senior Republic of Guatemala official, pleaded guilty to ­­­­being involved in an international drug trafficking conspiracy and was sentenced to 216 months in federal prison by U.S. District Judge Michael Truncale on February 11, 2025.

    According to information presented in court, Ubico Aguilar served as an elected member of the Congress of the Republic of Guatemala from 2016 to 2024.  He also served as an elected Deputy and was the President of the National Defense Committee of the Congress of the Republic of Guatemala from 2018 to 2023. 

    “The sentencing of this corrupt Guatemalan official who brokered and facilitated cocaine shipments into the United States while betraying his country through his partnerships with known drug traffickers and other corrupt officials shows the commitment of the Eastern District of Texas United States Attorney’s Office to identify, disrupt, and dismantle Transnational Criminal Organizations,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Abe McGlothin, Jr.  “I am grateful to our law enforcement partners who worked tirelessly to ensure that Ubico Aguilar will no longer be allowed to hide behind his position of power.”

    “The sentencing of this corrupt official who brokered and facilitated cocaine shipments into the United States sends a message to Transnational Criminal Organizations across the world that they will be held responsible for the poison they distribute into the United States,” said Dallas DEA Special Agent in Charge Eduardo A. Chávez.  “This sentence reflects our continued resolve to partner with our international law-enforcement counterparts to fight greed, violence, and public corruption.”

    On March 3, 2021, a federal grand jury in the Eastern District of Texas indicted Ubico Aguilar charging him with federal drug trafficking violations.  In May 2024, Ubico Aguilar arrived in the United States and pleaded guilty.  During his plea hearing, Ubico Aguilar admitted his role in the conspiracy, including relaying drug-related information and U.S. currency to another Guatemalan official on behalf of an international drug trafficker. These actions resulted in the safe passage of at least 450 kilograms of cocaine through Guatemala for distribution in the United States.

    This effort is part of an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF) operation. OCDETF identifies, disrupts, and dismantles the highest-level criminal organizations that threaten the United States using a prosecutor-led, intelligence-driven, multi-agency approach.  Additional information about the OCDETF Program can be found at https://www.justice.gov/OCDETF.

    This case was investigated by the North Texas Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (“OCDETF”) Strike Force Group Two; the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration’s Dallas Division; the DEA’s Guatemala City Country Office and the DEA’s San Jose (Costa Rica) Country Office; the FBI’s Dallas Field Office; the Homeland Security Investigation’s Dallas and Guatemala Field Offices; the U.S. Marshals Service’s Dallas Field Office; and Customs and Border Protection’s San Diego Field Office. The Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs of the Department’s Criminal Division also provided significant assistance in securing the surrender of Ubico Aguilar.  

    This case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Christopher Eason.                                        

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI USA: Congress.gov New, Tip, and Top Featuring Improvements to the Congressional Globe – February 2025

    Source: US Global Legal Monitor

    In our last Congress.gov post, Emily announced that Statute Compilations are now available on Congress.gov. Today, we are excited to announce enhancements to the Congressional Globe on Congress.gov that continue the process of migrating the Globe from our legacy Century of Lawmaking site.

    The Globe is a predecessor to the Congressional Record and it covers the years 1833-1873, which means that it includes debates on many significant events in American history, including the Civil War and a portion of Reconstruction. You can locate the Congressional Globe by clicking on the browse page at the top of the screen, selecting a Congress between the 23rd – 42nd Congresses, and then taking a look under the heading “Debates of Congress.”

    The Globe is legacy data that is not yet full-text searchable, so it is a good idea to use the indexes for the volumes to locate what you are interested in. If you have a particular date in mind, you can also select “Browse by Date.” For instance, you could find congressional reactions to a significant Civil War battle by browsing any debates that took place shortly after the battle. I used the browse-by-date feature to locate a reaction to the first Battle of Bull Run by Rep. Wright.

    Map of the Battles of Bull Run Near Manassas. Solomon Bamberger. (1861). World Digital Library, https://hdl.loc.gov/loc.wdl/wdl.2743

    Though the Globe is not yet full-text searchable, it is possible to search the page headings of the Globe by selecting “Congressional Record” in the dropdown menu on the Congress.gov homepage, typing in your search terms, and then at the bottom left-hand side of the results screen, clicking on the “Debates of Congress Edition” filter, and selecting “Congressional Globe.” Here is an example of search results concerning debates on the Civil War that have the page heading “Defense of the Union.”

    When you select a page you would like to read, you will see a page-turner that has controls at the top that allow you to jump to a certain page using a dropdown menu, turn the page using the arrow buttons, zoom in on the page using the + or – buttons, or download the page. Continuing with the Civil War and Reconstruction theme, this example demonstrates the page-turner with a speech beginning at the bottom, right-hand side of the page by Hiram Revels, the first African American senator who served as a senator from Mississippi from 1870 to 1871.

    Hiram R. Revels of Miss. 1870. Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division, http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cwpbh.00554
    The page-turner display for the Congressional Globe on Congress.gov.

    Do you have ideas on how to continue to improve the presentation of the Congressional Globe on Congress.gov? Send us your feedback.

    Enhancements

    Enhancement – Congressional Globe

    Congress.gov Tip

    Congress.gov has several two-minute tip videos available on topics ranging from how to set up email alerts, how to locate a bill, how to use search terms and filters, and how to locate appropriations resources on Congress.gov.

    Most-Viewed Bills

    The most-viewed bills for the week of February 9, 2025 are below.

    1. H.R.899 [119th] To terminate the Department of Education.
    2. H.R.86 [119th] NOSHA Act
    3. H.R.722 [119th] To implement equal protection under the 14th article of amendment to the Constitution for the right to life of each born and preborn human person.
    4. H.R.55 [119th] To repeal the National Voter Registration Act of 1993.
    5. H.R.8281 [118th] SAVE Act
    6. S.5 [119th] Laken Riley Act
    7. H.R.25 [119th] FairTax Act of 2025
    8. H.Res.59 [119th] Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives that the sermon given by the Right Reverend Mariann Edgar Budde at the National Prayer Service on January 21st, 2025, at the National Cathedral was a display of political activism and condemning its distorted message.
    9.

    Subscribe to In Custodia Legis – it’s free! – to receive interesting posts drawn from the Law Library of Congress’s vast collections and our staff’s expertise in U.S., foreign, and international law.

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Russia: Young heroes learn to save: VSKS held a master class for children of SVO veterans at the State Institution of Humanities

    Translartion. Region: Russians Fedetion –

    Source: State University of Management – Official website of the State –

    On February 18, 2025, in the Moscow city branch of the All-Russian Student Rescue Corps, located on the territory of the State University of Management, as part of the celebration of Defender of the Fatherland Day, a master class was held for children of veterans of the special military operation.

    This initiative is an important element of social support for the families of military personnel participating in the Special Military Operations, and has received the support of the Moscow City Branch of the United Russia Party.

    The master class was attended by the Vice-Rector of the State University of Management Pavel Pavlovsky and the Moscow City Duma deputy, head of the Moscow City Branch of the VSKS Maxim Dzhetygenov.

    “Today we pay tribute to the defenders of our Fatherland. To the soldiers who laid down their lives for the Motherland and its people, to the living participants in military conflicts and the heroes fighting today! Today, the children of our heroes will interactively learn how to use primary fire extinguishing equipment, try to work with emergency rescue tools, provide first aid and, as part of a team, try to save a conditional “teddy bear” from a labyrinth. We will introduce the children to safety culture and rescue skills in more detail. We are grateful to the State University of Management and the Moscow City Branch of the United Russia Party for their assistance in holding the event,” Maxim Dzhetygenov, head of the Moscow City Branch of VSKS, opened the event.

    “From the very beginning of the SVO, the rector of the GUU Vladimir Stroyev sets one key task for the university: “Everything for the front, everything for Victory.” And active assistance to our soldiers is one of the key areas of our work. We implement retraining programs for soldiers who were seriously wounded at the front, we support universities in historical territories, we implement the “University Shifts” project, within the framework of which children from the DPR, LPR and the Kherson region come to us at the GUU for the holidays. And this is in addition to participating in the project initiated by the guys from the VSKS, which is called “GUU – SVOim” and is aimed at providing frontline units and civilians in the border area with the necessary products and technical equipment. Our partners for two years now have been the All-Russian public movement “Veterans of Russia”, so organizing an event for children of SVO participants is a logical continuation of activities in the chosen direction. We want the soldiers defending the Motherland at the front to clearly know that there is someone in the rear who will take care of their families and their children, because children are our wealth!” said Pavel Pavlovsky, Vice-Rector of the State University of Management.

    A total of 30 children of SVO veterans took part in the master class, who happily donned real firefighter clothes and fought against simulated fires, learned how to use various primary fire extinguishing equipment, tried to play Jenga using rescue tools, and in the end, as a united team, rescued a simulated victim from an inflatable labyrinth and provided him with first aid.

    The State University of Management is proud of its fighters of the All-Russian Student Rescue Corps, who never stand aside and help the residents of the Kursk region to endure temporary hardships, eliminate the consequences of inhuman terrorist attacks, clean the Black Sea coast from oil products and are always ready to share their experience and skills. They are

    Subscribe to the TG channel “Our GUU” Date of publication: 02/18/2025

    Please note: This information is raw content directly from the source of the information. It is exactly what the source states and does not reflect the position of MIL-OSI or its clients.

    MIL OSI Russia News

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: UK summons Rwandan High Commissioner following advances by Rwandan Defence Force and M23 in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    The Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office has summoned the Rwandan High Commissioner today (18 February) following advances made by the Rwandan Defence Force and M23 in eastern DRC.

    An FCDO spokesperson said:

    “The UK strongly condemns the advances of the Rwandan Defence Force and M23 in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

    “These advances constitute an unacceptable violation of DRC’s sovereignty and territorial integrity. The Government of Rwanda must immediately withdraw all Rwanda Defence Force troops from Congolese territory.

    “We urge Rwanda to immediately cease all hostilities and return to dialogue through African-led peace processes.”

    Media enquiries

    Email newsdesk@fcdo.gov.uk

    Telephone 020 7008 3100

    Contact the FCDO Communication Team via email (monitored 24 hours a day) in the first instance, and we will respond as soon as possible.

    Updates to this page

    Published 18 February 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI USA: St. Louis District 837 Readies For Upcoming Boeing Defense Negotiations

    Source: US GOIAM Union

    IAM District 837’s negotiating committee recently completed a negotiation preparation program ahead of upcoming contract talks with Boeing Defense in St. Louis. The week-long training covered essential skills, such as drafting contract language, presenting proposals, assessing the company’s strengths and weaknesses, and exploring various bargaining strategies. Aerospace Coordinators Bobby Barnwell, Stephen Jordan, and Instructor Jeff McLeod supported the program. 

    In June 2025, approximately 3,200 IAM District 837 members will begin contract negotiations with Boeing Defense. These members work across Boeing facilities in St. Charles, Mo., St. Louis, and Mascoutah, Ill. 

    The 2022 contract agreement included significant improvements: 

    • An average of a 14% general wage increase over three years, in addition to cost-of-living adjustments.
    • No changes to existing comprehensive health insurance plans.
    • Elimination of the two-tier wage system.
    • Boosts auto progression rate from 50 to 65 cents per hour twice a year.
    • Lead pay and second shift premium increases.
    • Sick, parental, and funeral leave improvements.

    “Our focus is on protecting and improving the livelihoods of IAM Union members at Boeing Defense in St. Louis,” said IAM International President Brian Bryant. “The negotiation prep program gives members the strategic tools to negotiate at the table with confidence.”

    “Our members deserve a contract that reflects their hard work and dedication,” said IAM Midwest Territory General Vice President Sam Cicinelli. “This program ensures we’re ready to fight for fair wages, benefits, and working conditions.”

    “As the landscape of collective bargaining continues to evolve, it’s crucial that we stay prepared with innovative and strategic approaches,” said IAM District 837 President and Directing Business Representative Boelling. “I appreciate the staff, instructors, and technical team at the Winpisinger Center for organizing this valuable in-person training.”

    Share and Follow:

    MIL OSI USA News

  • MIL-OSI Global: Why the British army is so unprepared to send troops to Ukraine

    Source: The Conversation – UK – By Kenton White, Lecturer in Strategic Studies and International Relations, University of Reading

    Martin Hibberd/Shutterstock

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer has said that Britain is “ready and willing to contribute to security guarantees to Ukraine by putting our own troops on the ground if necessary”.

    While reports suggest these would be “peacekeeping” forces, the reality is that true peacekeepers must be impartial. British troops placed to support Ukraine could certainly be seen as “partial”. And the positioning of British forces in Ukraine would fit the Russian narrative that casts Nato as the aggressor.

    Ukraine is not a member of Nato, but the goal of Nato membership is enshrined in its constitution. British forces involved in any sort of fighting in Ukraine would not enable article 5, which states that each member will regard an attack on any other member as an attack on themselves and assist it, to be invoked. Additionally, US defence secretary Pete Hegseth said last week that European troops deployed to Ukraine should not be covered under article 5.

    The weakness with Starmer’s idea is that Britain does not have the wherewithal to provide enough troops, supplies and weapons to act as a real deterrent. This isn’t too dissimilar from the state of British forces when faced with war in Europe more than a century ago.

    In 1914 Lord Kitchener, then secretary of state for war, speaking of the cabinet’s decision to go to war in Europe, thundered, “Did they remember, when they went headlong into a war like this, that they were without an army, and without any preparation to equip one?”

    Small numbers would be nothing more than a “speed-bump” against a large attack, as the British Expeditionary Force was in 1914 and again in 1940. Poor preparation, small numbers and limited equipment meant their deployment was more an indication of Britain’s support, rather than real capability to fight a long war against a peer enemy.

    Britain is again in this position. Years of spending cuts have removed the ability of British forces to prosecute a war against a peer adversary for an extended time. The number of troops has fallen from 100,000 full-time trained personnel in 2000, to approximately 70,000 today.




    Read more:
    US says European security no longer its primary focus – the shift has been years in the making


    Britain also does not have the capacity to manufacture at the levels required for a modern war. Much will be needed for immediate capital investment, such as manufacturing capacity for arms and ammunition. Longer-term investment will be required for arms production, as will the reinstatement of supporting infrastructure, such as airfields and storage facilities abandoned after the end of the cold war, both within Britain and across Europe.

    There is no solution to the immediate problem except increasing the money available for defence. But Britain, and many other Nato members, have been unwilling to increase spending on defence, even though the current capabilities have been run down to such an extent that European nations cannot field a capable force.

    Defence spending

    US president Donald Trump has called for Nato countries to up their defence spending to 5% of GDP from the current Nato target of 2%. This would be very difficult to achieve in Britain’s current financial situation without spending cuts elsewhere.

    While it has been reported that defence chiefs are pushing for a rise to 2.65% of GDP, Starmer indicated he would resist pressure to increase spending above 2.5%.

    The last time the UK spent more than 5% of its GDP on defence was in the height of the cold war. The current international situation has already begun to shift into two distinct blocs similar to the east-west split between 1945 and 1991. However, the bipolar balance of the cold war has been replaced with an increasing instability, as displayed by Russian aggression in Georgia and Ukraine.

    Replacing lost capacity is almost always more expensive than maintaining it. Had the governments of past decades maintained the capabilities of the armed forces, the overall cost would most likely have been lower than the amount the nation will now have to invest to obtain the same level of defence.

    Each defence review since 1957 has led to cuts to the defence budget in real terms. Reductions in the military budget continue because, previously, nothing presented a sufficient sub-nuclear threat to the nation deemed significant enough to reverse them. Those cuts are now so deep that the nation is on the edge of being unable to defend itself, let alone project military power abroad in any significant capacity.

    The prime minister wrote: “We have got to show we are truly serious about our own defence and bearing our own burden.” This assertion is quickly undermined by the indication that he won’t increase spending anytime soon.

    None of the western members of Nato have shown any willingness to significantly increase their defence spending. Great Britain expects to spend £56.4 billion for 2024-25, amounting to approximately 2.3% of GDP. But this includes £0.65 billion in pensions and benefits, and £0.22 billion in “arms-length bodies” that do not contribute to the defence establishment in any practical terms.

    Britain and Nato have had clear warning since 2014 to correct the deficiencies of their defences. All have chosen to ignore the developing threat from Russia. The impression is that not only are we hoping for the best, but we are planning for the best too.

    Lord Tedder, chief of the air staff after the second world war, wrote, “It is at the outset of war that time is the supreme factor.” Three years into the war in Ukraine, and it is clear that Nato missed the opportunity to strengthen its defences in the early stages. It now faces a significant increase in defence spending simply to make up the shortfall from previous decades.

    Kenton White does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

    ref. Why the British army is so unprepared to send troops to Ukraine – https://theconversation.com/why-the-british-army-is-so-unprepared-to-send-troops-to-ukraine-250123

    MIL OSI – Global Reports

  • MIL-OSI: IndyKite Launches AI Control Suite to Redefine AI Security

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 18, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — IndyKite, a pioneer in data trust and AI enablement, today announced the launch of its AI Control Suite, a comprehensive set of capabilities designed to secure and govern AI-driven data operations.

    With this launch, IndyKite builds on its data trust and control platform capabilities, to bring three new products to market:

    • RagProtect ensures that only authorized users and applications can access specific data during the retrieval process.
    • AgentControl provides contextual, fine-grained authorization for agentic AI.
    • TrustScore allows the enterprise to score the risk of their data for trusted use in authorization decisions and query parameters.

    This new suite empowers enterprises to confidently harness AI while mitigating risks associated with data misuse and unauthorized data access.

    The introduction of the AI Control Suite represents a significant leap forward in enabling trust and secure control in AI-powered systems. With a focus on delivering fine-grained data control, contextual data governance, and secure data mobilization, IndyKite addresses some of the most pressing challenges enterprises face as they scale AI initiatives.

    “AI is transforming industries at an unprecedented pace, but enterprises need tools that provide not just innovation but also control and trust,” said Lasse Andresen, CEO of IndyKite. “With the AI Control Suite, we’re equipping businesses with the ability to secure data workflows, govern AI operations, and unlock the full potential of AI while safeguarding their most critical assets.”

    Andresen is former CEO and co-founder of ForgeRock, an identity and access management (IAM) solution provider and led the company through the startup phase to become an industry leader, with a $2.8 billion valuation at IPO. He is also a former CTO of Sun Microsystems.

    Driving innovation and trust in the AI era

    Enterprises increasingly recognize the need for robust control mechanisms in AI adoption, and IndyKite’s solutions uniquely combine advanced data governance, trust, and enablement to provide this foundation. With its identity-powered approach, IndyKite enables organizations to mobilize data securely and in compliance with regulatory requirements, delivering more efficient operations and bringing smarter, contextually-relevant products and applications to market.

    With the IndyKite Platform, businesses can use data across the following use cases:

    • Data capture and pipelines: Capturing both structured and unstructured data from across the organization and partner network. Surfacing full understanding of data lineage, driving confidence in its use, traceability and auditability.
    • Protecting retrieval-augmented generation (RAG): Providing fine-grained authorization to secure data access in the correct context, preventing unauthorized use and data leaks during AI driven interactions.
    • Agentic access control: Providing fine-grained authorization to AI agents, preventing unauthorized data access in autonomous workflows.
    • Proactive Prompt Defense: Real-time validation, entitlement checks, and threat detection at the prompt level to prevent unauthorized access, and data leakage before execution.
    • Governing data for AI use: Delivering unparalleled data quality and trust with provenance and specialized metadata, driving compliant use of data and enabling organizations to use AI with confidence.

    Industry Reaction

    The launch of the AI Control Suite has already garnered interest from enterprise leaders seeking to align their AI strategies with effective security and governance requirements.

    Emil Eifrem, CEO and founder of Neo4j said, “AI’s success depends on trust—trust in data, governance, and security. Enterprises need solutions that not only accelerate AI but ensure its responsible use by securing and mobilizing high-quality data at scale.”

    IndyKite recently joined Project CAMARA, a Linux Foundation open source community addressing telco industry API interoperability, and partnered with Deutsche Telekom to provide richer services to customers. It also has acquired 3Edges, a relationship-based dynamic authorization tool that authorizes access based on relationships between subjects, objects and actions, via graph database technology.

    About IndyKite

    IndyKite is transforming enterprise data management with identity-centric, graph-powered solutions that enable organizations to build trust in their data and AI systems. By delivering enhanced data visibility, governance, and control, IndyKite empowers enterprises to unlock the value of their data for secure and innovative applications.

    The company has raised a total of $10.5 million in pre-seed and seed financing. Investors include Alliance Ventures, Molten Ventures and SpeedInvest. Advisors to the company include Scott McNealy, Sun Microsystems co-founder.

    For more information, visit www.indykite.com.

    Media Contact

    Madi Olivé
    UPRAISE Marketing + Public Relations for IndyKite
    415.397.7600, indykite@upraisepr.com

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Video: A COMMITTMENT like no other! | U.S. Army

    Source: US Army (video statements)

    About the U.S. Army:

    The Army Mission – our purpose – remains constant: To deploy, fight and win our nation’s wars by providing ready, prompt & sustained land dominance by Army forces across the full spectrum of conflict as part of the joint force.

    Interested in joining the U.S. Army?
    Visit: spr.ly/6001igl5L

    Connect with the U.S. Army online:
    Web: https://www.army.mil
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/USarmy/
    X: https://www.twitter.com/USArmy
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/usarmy/
    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/us-army
    #USArmy #Soldiers #Military #Committment

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sBCEuM6LcuE

    MIL OSI Video

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: New Themed Competition: Innovations in dermal protection against liquid chemicals

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    DASA, MOD and the Home Office are seeking proposals that will address the problem of providing dermal protection against liquid chemical contamination.

    • DASA has launched a new Themed Competition: Innovations in dermal protection against liquid chemicals
    • This competition is funded by the Ministry of Defence (MOD) and the Home Office
    • The total possible funding available for this competition is £2.6 million (excluding VAT)
    • Competition closes midday on Tuesday 15th April 2025 (GMT)

    The Defence and Security Accelerator (DASA) is pleased to launch a new Themed Competition called ‘Innovations in dermal protection against liquid chemicals’. Run on behalf of the Ministry of Defence (MOD) and the Home Office, this competition is seeking proposals that will address the challenge of developing a solution to the problem of providing dermal protection against liquid chemical contamination. We are interested in treatments, fabric design, novel constructions or any other approach that prevents the penetration of low surface tension liquids.

    Although being run on behalf of the UK government there is significant potential for solutions developed to be exploited internationally. 

    Read the full competition document to learn more.

    Key dates and funding

    This competition has two challenges. The total possible funding available for this competition for both challenges is £2.6 million (excluding VAT) across the total two year duration. We anticipate funding up to 10 proposals for each challenge.

    The deadline to submit a proposal is midday (GMT) on Tuesday 15 April 2025. Submit via the DASA Online Submission Service.

    Do you have a relevant solution? Read the full competition document and submit a proposal.

    Background: why we need innovation in this area

    Traditionally, dermal liquid protection has been provided by an air permeable, two-layer system, comprising an outer fabric – which controls the initial liquid interaction with the surface – and a carbon layer to absorb any vapours which penetrate the outer layer. It is the combination of these two layers which enables the wearer to operate in a CBRN (chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear) environment without incurring the associated physiological burden of an air impermeable garment.

    Changes in legislation (e.g. REACH) over recent years are constraining the methods available to defence and security for providing dermal protection against low surface tension liquids (such as chemical warfare agents (CWAs). Due to these changes we are seeking innovative methods for future dermal protection.

    Scope:

    The scope of this competition is technologies that provide wearable dermal protection against liquid chemical contamination. There are various means by which this could be achieved and we are interested in any scientific and technological approaches that have the potential to deliver dermal protection against low surface tension liquids without the use of chemistries which are currently the subject of restriction proposals (e.g. under REACH, ECHA etc.).

    If this sounds like an area you have experience or expertise in, why not read the full competition document to find out more?

    Supporting events

    Dial in webinar

    Thursday 6 March 2025 – a dial-in session providing further detail on the problem space and a chance to ask questions in an open forum. If you would like to participate, please register on the Eventbrite page.

    One-to-one teleconference sessions

    Wednesday 12 March 2025 – a series of 15 minute one-to-one teleconference sessions, giving you the opportunity to ask specific technical questions to the competition team in a closed forum. Registration details for these sessions will be available the day after the launch webinar which is taking place on 6 March 2025. Please attend the webinar or reach out to your local Innovation Partner if you have more general questions on the DASA application process.

    Submit a proposal

    We’re looking for novel ideas that can help to develop the protective fabrics of the future – if you think you have an innovation to share, why not submit a proposal?

    Updates to this page

    Published 18 February 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom

  • MIL-OSI: ManTech Names John Lossing Vice President of Industry Compliance

    Source: GlobeNewswire (MIL-OSI)

    HERNDON, Va., Feb. 18, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — ManTech, a leading provider of AI and mission-focused technology solutions, has named John Lossing as Vice President of Industry Compliance, serving as lead liaison with the Defense Contract Audit Agency (DCAA) and Defense Contract Management Agency (DCMA).

    “For more than 25 years, John Lossing has demonstrated his outstanding performance in compliance management, government contract accounting, business ethics and regulatory compliance,” said Jay Romyn, ManTech Chief Accounting Officer. “His proven experience with DCAA and DCMA, the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) and Department of Defense FAR Supplement (DFARs) and Business Systems compliance make him ideal for this position with ManTech.”

    Prior to joining ManTech, Lossing served as Vice President – Compliance at Health Net Federal Services, where he managed regulatory compliance and business ethics program activities. He also led regulatory compliance at Northrop Grumman and Mission Essential, and government accounting at General Dynamics.

    Lossing earned his BS degree in Business Administration – Management Information Systems from the University of New Haven, West Haven, CT.

    About ManTech  
    ManTech provides mission-focused technology solutions and services for U.S. Defense, Intelligence and Federal Civilian agencies. In business for more than 56 years, we are a leading provider of AI solutions that power full-spectrum cyber, data collection & analytics, enterprise IT, high-end engineering and software application development solutions that support national and homeland security. Additional information on ManTech can be found at www.mantech.com.

    Media Contact: 
    Jim Crawford 
    ManTech 
    Executive Director, External Communications 
    (M) 703-498-7315 
    James.Crawford2@ManTech.com  

    A photo accompanying this announcement is available at https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/aeb17f39-a034-4d2c-99b7-e4fe6c7140b7

    The MIL Network

  • MIL-OSI Security: Navy Dental Clinic Educates Base Children on Cavity Prevention

    Source: United States Navy (Medical)

    The Naval Health Clinic Lemoore’s Dental Clinic is taking proactive steps to combat childhood dental problems. The team is visiting two local schools onboard Naval Air Station Lemoore during the month of February to provide preventive dental care through community outreach.

    Active duty dentists and hospital corpsmen that specialize in dental assisting will visit Admiral Akers School on Feb. 13 and Neutra Elementary on Feb. 20, delivering oral health education to students from preschool through third grade.

    “Dental caries, commonly known as cavities or tooth decay, is a common chronic disease among children,” said Lt. Hannah Mills, a NHCL dentist and this year’s clinic program coordinator. “Teaching children about their teeth, a healthy diet, and how to keep their teeth clean will help set them up for success via prevention.”

    During these sessions, Navy dental professionals will educate young students about proper dental care, healthy eating habits, and oral hygiene techniques. Students will also receive a toothbrush and toothpaste during the visits.

    “Our goal is to promote dental health,” Mills explained. “By interacting directly with students in a fun, energetic way, we can make a lasting impact on their oral health habits.”

    These dental presentations specifically target elementary-age children, recognizing the importance of establishing good dental habits early in life. This education is an investment in the children of active duty service members and their oral health with the aim of reducing future dental health issues through preventive education.

    NHCL’s community outreach exemplifies the Navy’s commitment to supporting military families and promoting health awareness within the base community.

    MIL Security OSI

  • MIL-OSI United Kingdom: Defence Secretary’s speech on Defence Reform

    Source: United Kingdom – Executive Government & Departments

    Transcript of the Defence Secretary’s address on defence reform at the Institute for Government.

    Good morning, everyone. Thank you for being here and thank you for hosting us today.

    The Institute for Government, in my book, plays a really important role in Westminster. It helps hold Ministers to account for what we say we’re going to do as part of that bigger mission to securing this country a better government for Britain.

    I must say, when I confirmed this event a few weeks ago, I wouldn’t have expected such interest in MOD reform, and I’m really grateful for the level of this attendance and presence, both in the room and online.

    But I guess the pace of the geopolitical change which you were referring to Hannah, and what we’re seeing right now confirms what I would argue is the need for change within defence too.

    As I said on my first day as Secretary of State in the department, when I came through the doors, I’m a Defence Secretary that’s more interested in getting results and global opportunities than headlines, and I guess I’m delivering on that promise, making a speech on defence reform right in the middle of parliamentary recess.

    However, the headlines, the wider headlines, and the decisions that we make right now over the coming weeks will not only define the outcome of the conflict in Ukraine, but the security of our world for a generation to come, and the nature of government means dealing with these challenges.

    In my view, the test of leadership, of political leadership isn’t just about managing the immediate, it’s also about reforming for the future.

    We’re in a new era of threat that demands a new era for defence and in the middle of everything else, last week, the new Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth in the US and I,  made time to discuss the aims we share on defence reform.

    This government, our new Labour government, was elected on a mandating one word: change.

    We govern on an instruction in one word: deliver.

    And as a new government, we’re delivering for defence.

    Over these first seven months, we stepped up and speeded up support for Ukraine. We’ve increased defence spending this year by nearly £3 billion, and we’ll set the path to spending 2.5% of GDP in the Spring.

    We’ve launched a new Defence Industrial Strategy. We secured a deal to buy back 36,000 military homes to improve conditions for personnel and get better value for the taxpayer.

    We’ve given the men and women of our armed forces the biggest pay increase for more than 20 years. We signed the landmark Trinity House agreement with the Germany.

    We’ve already progressed the Armed Forces Commissioner bill through the House of Commons to give a strong independent voice to improve service life.

    We have in the MOD two major change programmes both launched within the first month of government.

    One, the Strategic Defence Review. Two, our Defence Reform program. Each is essential for the other. The Defence Review will reinforce the imperative for Defence Reform. Defence reform is the foundation for being able to implement the Defence Review and for discharging what is our first duty in government.

    Exactly a year ago, actually, in February, I gave a speech at Policy Exchange on defence reform in which I outlined, and I said then the need to create a strong defence centre capable of leading Britain meeting the increasing threats we face.

    And in a little noticed section of the Labour Party manifesto at the July election, we pledged specific reforms and said strengthening our defences requires stronger leadership, clearer accountability, faster delivery, less waste and better value for money.

    By the end of July, I put in place a new team, new leadership, and weekly meeting meetings with me to drive our defence reform programme.

    And today, I wanted to offer an update on where we’ve got to and where we are going in the months ahead.

    One of the really special things about this job, the special things about this special job are the deeply impressive men and women I meet every day, from the submariners coming home from weeks undersea, to apprentices on Derby’s nuclear reaction production lines, to the NATO HQ team with people in the MOD building that last week pulled together the Ukraine led contact group meeting of 46 nations in the room at one week’s notice.

    Extraordinary people doing extraordinary things within a system that very often doesn’t work in the way that we need it to, for an increasingly dangerous world, work in the way that we need it to, to provide our armed forces with what they need to deter, to fight and to win.

    First, underpinning it all is the absence of clear, consistent accountability, central to the effectiveness of any organisation. Yet I have been in too many meetings when I ask who’s leading this? Who’s responsible for getting this done? And no one is able to give me a single, clear answer.

    Second, while everyone agrees that defence spending needs to increase, it’s not just how much you spend, but it’s how well you spend it. And we’re simply not securing the value for money our armed forces, our economy needs for every defence panel.

    We duplicate even the most central tasks. For example, we have eleven separate finance functions, two and a half thousand people doing the same activity in different places, in different ways. And third defence is mired in process and procedure. We’ve added complexity where simplicity is needed.

    Procurement, we’ve got a situation where we employ eleven checkers for every one decision maker. So, no wonder it takes an average six years for a large programme simply to get onto contract.

    So today, I’m here to declare that investment in defence will be matched by reform.

    First, we’re introducing clear points of accountability at every level within UK defence, starting at the top with four new senior leaders, four leaders who report to me as Defence Secretary and my ministerial team at the central point of accountability to the British people and to the British public.

    The Chief of the Defence Staff, who, for the first time since this role was created, now commands the service chiefs and will be the head of newly established Military Strategic Headquarters, responsible for force design and war planning across our integrated force.

    The Permanent Secretary, our principal accounting officer, who will run a leaner, more agile Department of State with more policy muscle to lead arguments across Whitehall and with allies, we’ll revamp senior roles to elevate those into policymakers with broad portfolios and powerful mandates.

    Third, our new Armaments Director, who will fix procurement and drive growth. I’ll come back to the detail of the National Armaments Director in a moment.

    Fourthly, our Chief of Defence Nuclear, who will continue to lead and deliver the national Nuclear Enterprise within the recently established ring fence and freedoms.

    This new quad will lead a defence which is more concentrated on warfighting, readiness and on deterrence.

    They’ll shift the approach as an organisation, which too often has been obsessed with process, to one focus on outcomes, in which information flows quickly, accountabilities are clear, and results are demanding. This new quad will be up and running from the 31st of March.

    On finance will match our new accountabilities, making hardware that manages money better to secure better value for money, for the taxpayer, better outcomes for the armed forces.

    [Political reference removed]

    Instead of the ten current top line budget holders, there will be four new budget holders, one for each of this new quad. We will introduce three new centrally determined financial budgets, each with ministerial oversight, readiness, operations, investment.

    The new readiness budget will hold the chiefs of the services to account for how they run their day-to-day spending. This will be done by the Chief of Defence Staff through our new Military Strategic Headquarters. The Military Strategic Headquarters will be responsible for the new operations budget, unencumbered by the excess bureaucracy and the lack of clarity that characterises the way the defence is organised now, and ministers will direct those priorities.

    And then finally, our new National Armaments Director will run the single new investment budget, bringing together eight separate procurement budgets across the organisation into one.

    This will help cut waste, reduce duplication, it will help ensure that we are buying better what our front-line forces need. In turn, the Armaments Director will acquire owning capabilities which are affordable within the budgets set by Ministers.

    These budgets, as with the quad, will have Initial Operating Capability from the end next month, 31st March.

    Our new National Armaments Director will fundamentally change how defence works partner with industry, how the defence becomes the engine for driving economic growth.

    So sitting alongside the Permanent Secretary, the Chief of Defence Staff, then executing £20 billion-plus budget to build sustain our national arsenal, because at this time, we must rearm Britain, and I see this as a new FTSE 100 company within the MOD tasked, if you like, with getting the very best capabilities needed into the hands of our frontline forces.

    Delivering on our Defence Industrial Strategy to create more defence jobs, more defence apprenticeships in every region and nation across the UK. Tasked with driving British exports up and wider, tasked with receiving responsibility for the entire end to end acquisition system for the MOD.

    They will save the taxpayer at least £10 billion over the next decade, savings that we would reinvest directly into Britain’s defence. Our interim National Armaments Director will be in post by the end of next month, recruitment for a permanent candidate is already underway.

    In conclusion, the world is changing. Defence is changing. Our reform programme represents the biggest shake up of UK defence for over 50 years.

    Let me say this. This is a government whose commitment to defence is unshakeable. It’s the foundation for our Plan for Change, for the delivery of our government’s missions, we will match sustained investment with serious reform.

    It will mean, growing the economy. It will mean a more muscular defence for a more dangerous world. It will mean, Britain, which is secure, at home, and strong abroad.

    Updates to this page

    Published 18 February 2025

    MIL OSI United Kingdom