Department of Defense Authorization for Appropriations for Fiscal Year 1996 and the Future Years Defense Program: Acquisition and technologyU.S. Government Printing Office, 2000 |
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Page 16
... organizations , sub - State actors , ethnic violence , tribal warfare , publicly or privately financed terrorism , and what forms of terrorism and what kinds of tools will be avail- able to the terrorists ? What kinds are available now ...
... organizations , sub - State actors , ethnic violence , tribal warfare , publicly or privately financed terrorism , and what forms of terrorism and what kinds of tools will be avail- able to the terrorists ? What kinds are available now ...
Page 23
... organizations conduct exercises to test new forms of surface combatants , like dreadnoughts and aircraft carriers , someone detonates a nuclear weapon , it is globally known ; it is not necessarily the case with these kinds of attacks ...
... organizations conduct exercises to test new forms of surface combatants , like dreadnoughts and aircraft carriers , someone detonates a nuclear weapon , it is globally known ; it is not necessarily the case with these kinds of attacks ...
Page 24
... organizations . Essen- tially , you are developing new tools to solve these emerging prob- lems , developing new processes to cope with them , and restructur- ing to execute those processes in an optimal way . Past instances of military ...
... organizations . Essen- tially , you are developing new tools to solve these emerging prob- lems , developing new processes to cope with them , and restructur- ing to execute those processes in an optimal way . Past instances of military ...
Page 26
... organizations , which , when combined with innovative operational con- cepts and associated new force elements , produces a discontinuous leap in military effectiveness , typically of an order of magnitude or greater . the employment of ...
... organizations , which , when combined with innovative operational con- cepts and associated new force elements , produces a discontinuous leap in military effectiveness , typically of an order of magnitude or greater . the employment of ...
Page 27
... organizations , terrorist groups , and even individual hackers to conduct electronic or information attacks , at great distance and with little prospect of detection . The United States is leading the world in transforming from an ...
... organizations , terrorist groups , and even individual hackers to conduct electronic or information attacks , at great distance and with little prospect of detection . The United States is leading the world in transforming from an ...
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Common terms and phrases
activities agencies Air Force aircraft areas Army assessment assets assistance attack biological warfare biological weapons budget capabilities Center Chairman challenge chemical cocaine Colombia combating terrorism Command Committee cooperation coordination counterdrug Critical Infrastructure Critical Infrastructure Protection cyber DARPA Department of Defense detection drug efforts emerging threats ensure equipment Federal fiscal year 2000 focus funding goal going Information Assurance Infrastructure Protection initiatives integrated intelligence interagency interdiction investment Joint law enforcement mass destruction ment million missile mission national security NIPC nology North Korea nuclear weapons Nunn-Lugar operations PAT ROBERTS percent personnel private sector problem production proliferation reduce requirements response Russian science and technology Secretary of Defense Senator BINGAMAN Senator ROBERTS sensors Soviet Soviet Union strategy subcommittee target teams tech terrorist Thank tion trafficking United vulnerabilities warfare warfighter weapons of mass
Popular passages
Page 44 - Certain national infrastructures are so vital that their incapacity or destruction would have a debilitating impact on the defense or economic security of the United States.
Page 136 - Train the Trainer" training for local first responder trainers including hazardous material (HAZMAT), firefighters, law enforcement, and emergency medical service personnel. Tabletop and functional "hands-on" exercises using chemical and biological scenarios further reinforce this training. A training equipment package is loaned to each city for their subsequent training use. To date, 51 cities have participated in the training with approximately 14,800 first responder trainers having been trained.
Page 126 - defensive measures used to reduce the vulnerability of individuals and property to terrorism.
Page 13 - Saturation ballistic missile attacks against littoral forces, ports, airfields, storage facilities, and staging areas could make it extremely costly to project US forces into a disputed theater, much less carry out operations to defeat a well-armed aggressor. Simply the threat of such enemy missile attacks might deter US and coalition partners from responding to aggression in the first instance.
Page 407 - Goal 1: Educate and enable America's youth to reject illegal drugs as well as alcohol and tobacco.
Page 63 - the capability to collect, process, and disseminate an uninterrupted flow of information while exploiting or denying an adversary's ability to do the same.
Page 37 - DOD organizations: the Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Command, Control, Communications, and Intelligence; and the Defense Intelligence Agency.
Page 134 - forward deployed all over America." When it comes to WMD response, the members of our National Guard and our other Reserve components are ideally suited for the mission. They live and work in more than four thousand communities nationwide. They are familiar with emergency response plans and procedures. And they often have close links with the fire, police, and emergency medical personnel who will be first on the scene. As a result, the Guard and Reserve comprise a highly effective source of trained...