TODAY’S TOP 5
(Navy Times) The Pentagon is dispatching its ready-duty flattop in the Asia-Pacific region and three escort ships to provide relief and support to the typhoon-stricken Philippines, the U.S. Pacific Fleet said Monday evening.
2. Texas and 5 Other States Resist Processing Benefits for Gay Couples
(New York Times) While a majority of states ban same-sex marriages, most are not fighting the new policy. But Pentagon officials say that in addition to Texas, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Oklahoma and West Virginia have balked. Each has cited a conflict with state laws that do not recognize same-sex marriages.
3. Commentary: Force Strategy into Budget Talks
(George "Chip" Pickett) As we once again struggle with defense strategy, why not make some major changes? First, put the military more prominently in charge. Second, use the budget process with a twist.
4. What Does Nasiruddin Haqqani’s Death Mean?
(Defense One) A gunman riding a motorbike on Monday outside a bread store near Islamabad, Pakistan, shot dead Nasiruddin Haqqani, the son of notorious Afghan warlord Jalaluddin Haqqani and a fundraiser for terrorism in the region. His death is sending shockwaves through the country.
5. Sen. Jim Inhofe's son dies in plane crash near Owasso
(KOCO, Oklahoma City)A source close to Sen. Jim Inhofe has confirmed that his son, Dr. Perry Inhofe, was on board a plane that crashed near Owasso, Okla. on Sunday. Perry Inhofe was killed in the crash.
ARMY
(Late Show) Odierno discusses the capture of Saddam Hussein and how his son was wounded in Iraq.
(Army Times) The Army has called a check fire on purchases of its popular precision mortar as it targets a new program of record.
Rescued Polish officer scheduled to attend presentation of Polish award to fallen Fort Drum soldier
(Watertown Daily Times, NY) A 10th Mountain Division soldier will be posthumously awarded the Gold Medal of the Polish Armed Forces during a ceremony today at the Polish consulate in New York City.
NAVY
(C4ISR & Networks) The Navy is developing an aggressive plan to close scores of data centers and move its military data to secure commercial facilities.
Bagpiping mid pays his respects at Arlington Cemetery
(Scoop Deck) Here, Midshipman 1st Class Kieran Simonson plays bagpipes in Section 60 of the cemetery, the resting place for many service members killed since 2001. The officer-in-training said he never had played there before, and wanted to seize the opportunity on such an appropriate day.
AIR FORCE
(Air Force Times) Some of the Air Force’s next generation of unmanned aerial vehicle pilots are likely to learn their skills from fellow cadets at the Air Force Academy.
Residents roaring over Air Force Academy's low, loud flights
(The Gazette, Co.) The Air Force Academy is hoping to quiet neighborhood concerns over airplane noise from its cadet training programs.
Grandson finally gets recognition for bomber crews held as POWs
(Air Force Times) The stigma of those who’d crash-landed in territories such as Switzerland and Sweden persisted despite military investigations that disproved it. Some were later refused medical benefits and decorations for their imprisonment.
USAF places order for additional RQ-4 Global Hawk UAVs
(airforce-technology.com) Northrop Grumman has received an advance procurement contract from the US Air Force (USAF) in preparation for production of additional RQ-4 Global Hawk unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) and associated sensors. Board review defends Capitol Police response to Navy Yard shooting
(The Hill) A report released Friday defended the U.S. Capitol Police (USCP) response to the Washington Navy Yard shooting that left 12 people dead in September.
MARINE CORPS
(Marine Corps Times) The number of Marines and sailors deployed to assist with the humanitarian crisis in the Philippines tripled to 270 following Friday’s Super Typhoon Haiyan, which officials now believe killed 10,000 or more people and left hundreds of thousands homeless.
Vietnam veteran who helped build Marine Corps museum now subject of new biography
(Washington Post) Brig. Gen. William “Wild Bill” Weise retired from active duty in the U.S. Marine Corps in 1982, having seen some of the heaviest action of the Vietnam War, and he stopped working in 1992. Sort of.
Happy birthday, Marines! New insights on the legendary Chesty Puller
(Marine Corps Times) Virtually every Marine knows about the towering warrior who took on guerrillas in Haiti and Nicaragua and fought valiantly in some of the bloodiest battles of World War II and Korea, but what was he really like? Marine Corps Times spoke with retired Brig. Gen. Mike Downs, Puller’s son-in-law, about the man behind the legend.
DEFENSE DEPARTMENT
(Associated Press) Suicides across the military have dropped by more than 22 percent this year, defense officials said, amid an array of new programs targeting what the Defense Department calls an epidemic. More service members died from suicide last year than in the war in Afghanistan during that same period.
Automatic spending cuts would bite more in 2014
(Associated Press) A failure of the talks, led by House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis., and his Senate counterpart, Patty Murray, D-Wash., would mean that agencies that have thus far withstood the harshest effects of the across-the-board cuts in 2013 would get hit with a second round of cuts that'll feel a lot worse than the first.
CONGRESS
(CBS News) The Senate Intelligence Committee last week advanced a plan to make the next National Security Agency chief subject to Senate confirmation, a move designed to increase transparency and accountability within the NSA in the wake of the Edward Snowden leaks.
GOP lawmaker: Europe can help curb NSA
(The Hill) Rep. James Sensenbrenner Jr. (R-Wis.) on Monday asked the European Parliament to work with the United States on finding a balance between liberty and security.
Sex assaults prompt two bills to overhaul Article 32 hearings
(Military Times) Congress is facing two competing proposals to reform pretrial hearings to make the process less invasive for sexual assault victims.
Congress seems to be done legislating for the year
(Politico) It’s just mid-November, but it’s quickly becoming a reality: Washington could be mostly done making laws for the year.
ASIA-PACIFIC
(Defense News) China’s JL-2 submarine-launched ballistic missile could reach IOC later this year, according to an early draft of the report by the US-China Economic and Security Review Commission.
Japan Military Holds Missile Drills On Pacific Gateway
(AFP) Japanese troops are practicing surface-to-ship missile drills on Okinawa as part of 18-day war game to strengthen its ability to protect remote territory, as a row with China over the sovereignty of some islands continues to rattle nerves.
North Korea executes 80, some for minor offenses, newspaper says
(Los Angeles Times) North Korea staged gruesome public executions of 80 people this month, some for offenses as minor as watching South Korean entertainment videos or being found in possession of a Bible, a South Korean newspaper reported Monday.
RUSSIA
(Aviation Week) Russia is making new nuclear delivery systems a national priority, with a new ballistic-missile submarine class and missile in production; continued deliveries of a modern, road-mobile ICBM; and reports of a new silo-based heavyweight weapon.
AFGHANISTAN
(Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty) The Afghan Taliban is urging members of an upcoming grand council not to approve a security pact between the United States and the government of President Hamid Karzai.
Kinzinger: Thousands of U.S. troops will be needed on ground after 2014 drawdown
(Chicago Tribune) After a visit to Afghanistan, Rep. Adam Kinzinger said he supports the drawdown of U.S. forces at the end of 2014 but believes 9,000 to 10,000 U.S. troops will be needed on the ground afterward.
MIDDLE EAST
(Michael Yon) While the Syrian government uses heavy weapons, many opposition fighters scramble for ammunition and to invent homemade cannons, large catapults, and giant slingshots that launch grapefruit-sized grenades.
Syria rebels recruit at refugee camp
(Associated Press) In a makeshift mosque in a trailer in this sprawling camp for Syrian refugees, a preacher appeals to worshippers to join their countrymen in the fight to topple President Bashar Assad. In another corner of the Zaatari camp, two men draped in the Syrian rebel flag call on refugees through loudspeakers to sign up for military training.
After Near Miss on Iran, Kerry Says Diplomacy Is Still the Right Path
(New York Times) Secretary of State John Kerry came up a few disputed words short of closing a landmark nuclear deal with Iran on Sunday in Geneva. Now he is defending the diplomacy that led to that near miss against a rising chorus of critics at home and abroad.
BENGHAZI
(Mother Jones)60 Minutes correspondent Lara Logan apologized on Sunday for her discredited October 27 report, which hinged on a bogus "eyewitness" account of the attacks on the US embassy in Benghazi. The mea culpa followed revelations that Logan's main source, security consultant Dylan Davies wasn't on the scene at all, according to an account he gave the FBI. He'd also told his then-employer, the British security contractor Blue Mountain, that he had never reached the compound.
VETERANS
(Military Times) Representatives of about 600 schools responded to our Best for Vets: Colleges 2014 survey comprising 150 questions that delved into school operations in unprecedented detail. The results show that many more schools are tracking the academic success of their military and veteran students — but the majority still do not.
Which big companies are the best at hiring veterans?
(Washington Post) Your soda and your dishwasher are helping to put military veterans to work. Your iPhone? Not as much.
John ‘Bud’ Hawk: WWII Medal of Honor recipient dies at 89
(Los Angeles Times) At 19, John “Bud” Hawk had been in the Army a little more than a year when German tanks started blasting away at his machine-gun unit in a Normandy apple orchard.
HISTORY
(New York Times) Manfred went on to become the three-term mayor of Stuttgart, in southwestern Germany. He became a liberal voice in postwar West Germany, supporting the rights of immigrants, backing civil liberties and strengthening the city’s Jewish population.
OPINION
(Barry Lando) I recall the number of times during my thirty years as a producer with 60 Minutes when I only narrowly missed being caught in the same kind of devastating, career-shattering trap.
MISS YOUR DoD EARLY BIRD? |
The Pentagon has suspended the Early Bird. We're creating our own version of the long-trusted roundup of top defense news to make sure you don't miss a thing. |