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March 11th 06, 03:02 PM
From Aero-News.com
http://www.aero-news.net

NORAD Orders Deletion Of ADIZ Meeting Transcript
Were National Security Issues At Stake?

National security... or
outright censorship?

That is but one of the questions being asked in the wake of news
that the North American air defense command ordered the removal of
online transcripts of a public meeting on the Washington DC ADIZ
earlier this year.

The meeting, held January 18 at the Airport Marriott in Dulles,
VA, solicited public comments on the ADIZ's impact on area
businesses. The FAA made a transcript of the meeting available
shortly thereafter -- until Major General M. Scott Mayes, the head
of NORAD, ordered an internal review that flagged the transcript as
"problematic", according to CNET News, which led to its deletion
from the FAA site.

Comments made by one pilot at that meeting, in particular,
likely led to the move. Lt. Cmdr. Tom Bush, a Navy F-18 Hornet
pilot who also flies GA and who testified at the meeting as a
private pilot, pointed out how ineffectual the ADIZ actually is to
defending national security.

CNET reports that in his speech before the meeting, Bush
suggested the airspace restriction serves no purpose as a terrorist
could receive clearance to fly through the ADIZ towards Dulles
airport, then make a last-minute turn and be over downtown
Washington, DC inside of four minutes -- not nearly enough time to
scramble an F-16 to the scene.

"Freedom and security are polar opposites, and I am not willing
to give up my freedom for the sake of terrorists," Bush reportedly
said during the hearing, as reported by an aviation website.
Another pilot who was at the meeting told CNET that Bush also
reportedly commented that Americans defeated the British, tamed the
West, won two World Wars, put a man on the moon -- and, they should
start acting like it.

That didn't sit well with defense officials.

"There may be some operational security concerns with the time
line he laid out," NORAD media relations chief Michael Kucharek
said Thursday.

"There were some operational security concerns revealed by this
person who had knowledge but appeared as a public citizen, which we
think was out of line. The disclosure of that information could go
directly to national security concerns."

As a result of the NORAD inquest, all 369-pages of the
transcript have been replaced on the FAA website with messages
saying it is "presently unavailable" for download -- per the FAA's
request, it should be noted. (check for yourself here and here.)

In the wake of the transcript's removal, many are questioning
whether is latest incident of government censorship is truly over
national security concerns -- or if it's flagrant overreaction.
Many pilots noted representatives of several government entities,
including NORAD, sat on the advisory board during the ADIZ meeting
-- and stayed silent.

"The fact that TSA is
an out of control dysfunctional agency is a given, so it may be
just another example of their ongoing buffoonery," College Park
Airport manager Lee Schiek (pictured right) wrote in an e-mail
message to CNET. "On the other hand, this could be an attempt to
rewrite history to minimize the public record sentiment regarding
the ADIZ."

"In any event, since its inception, TSA has consistently
demonstrated their inability to do the right thing, and this latest
example should not go unchallenged," Schiek added.

Of course, this isn't the first time the Bush administration --
and those working under it -- have pulled information from the
public ostensibly over security concerns. In 2003, the US Army
pulled the plug on one of its Web sites after a report embarrassing
to the military appeared on it.

For its part in the affair, the FAA said Thursday the transcript
may be restored on the FAA site soon.

The transcript is currently being reviewed, "and no final
decisions have been made," FAA spokeswoman Laura Brown said. "I
think that you'll see virtually all of that reposted fairly
quickly."

Bob Noel
March 11th 06, 03:36 PM
In article >, wrote:

> From Aero-News.com
> http://www.aero-news.net
>
> NORAD Orders Deletion Of ADIZ Meeting Transcript
> Were National Security Issues At Stake?
>
> National security... or
> outright censorship?

Is it censorship to protect security interests?

Is it censorship to not publish weaknesses of security measures?

--
Bob Noel
Looking for a sig the
lawyers will hate

Orval Fairbairn
March 11th 06, 03:55 PM
In article >,
Bob Noel > wrote:

> In article >, wrote:
>
> > From Aero-News.com
> > http://www.aero-news.net
> >
> > NORAD Orders Deletion Of ADIZ Meeting Transcript
> > Were National Security Issues At Stake?
> >
> > National security... or
> > outright censorship?
>
> Is it censorship to protect security interests?
>
> Is it censorship to not publish weaknesses of security measures?


"The Emperor has no clothes!"

Bob Noel
March 11th 06, 05:32 PM
In article >,
".Blueskies." > wrote:

> >> National security... or
> >> outright censorship?
> >
> > Is it censorship to protect security interests?
> >
> > Is it censorship to not publish weaknesses of security measures?
>
> Yes...and yes...

wrong.

--
Bob Noel
Looking for a sig the
lawyers will hate

Dave Stadt
March 11th 06, 05:45 PM
"Bob Noel" > wrote in message
...
> In article >,
> wrote:
>
>> From Aero-News.com
>> http://www.aero-news.net
>>
>> NORAD Orders Deletion Of ADIZ Meeting Transcript
>> Were National Security Issues At Stake?
>>
>> National security... or
>> outright censorship?
>
> Is it censorship to protect security interests?
>
> Is it censorship to not publish weaknesses of security measures?
>
> --
> Bob Noel
> Looking for a sig the
> lawyers will hate

Anyone with an IQ over 5.4 can figure out the total ineffectivness of the
ADIZ. In this case it is censorship in an attempt to hide goverment
incompetence.

Dave Stadt
March 11th 06, 06:03 PM
"Orval Fairbairn" > wrote in message
...
> In article >,
> Bob Noel > wrote:
>
>> In article >,
>> wrote:
>>
>> > From Aero-News.com
>> > http://www.aero-news.net
>> >
>> > NORAD Orders Deletion Of ADIZ Meeting Transcript
>> > Were National Security Issues At Stake?
>> >
>> > National security... or
>> > outright censorship?
>>
>> Is it censorship to protect security interests?
>>
>> Is it censorship to not publish weaknesses of security measures?
>
>
> "The Emperor has no clothes!"

You are so right....Hans Christian Andersen was way ahed of his time. For
more insight into the US government go to http://hca.gilead.org.il/

Ron Wanttaja
March 11th 06, 06:06 PM
Don't see it as censorship of the news media. No one at the meeting was
prohibited from reporting on it, nor, apparently, was anyone else prevented from
recording the meeting and having their own transcript made. Any reporter
depending on a government-generated transcript instead of his own recording
isn't doing his job.

"Sunshine" laws and the like might have been violated in this case, but they
always include provisions for security concerns. By definition, information
revealing vulnerabilities in defense systems are secret.

Who *is* being censored, apparently, is the Navy Commander who spoke... but
restriction of active duty servicepeoples' first amendment rights is nothing
new.

Ron Wanttaja

Rip
March 11th 06, 08:37 PM
Dave Stadt wrote:
> "Bob Noel" > wrote in message
> ...
>
>>In article >,
>>wrote:
>>
>>
>>> From Aero-News.com
>>>http://www.aero-news.net
>>>
>>>NORAD Orders Deletion Of ADIZ Meeting Transcript
>>>Were National Security Issues At Stake?
>>>
>>>National security... or
>>>outright censorship?
>>
>>Is it censorship to protect security interests?
>>
>>Is it censorship to not publish weaknesses of security measures?
>>
>>--
>>Bob Noel
>>Looking for a sig the
>>lawyers will hate
>
>
> Anyone with an IQ over 5.4 can figure out the total ineffectivness of the
> ADIZ. In this case it is censorship in an attempt to hide goverment
> incompetence.
>
>
>
Plus, any idiot with a map, ruler, and pencil can easily come up with
the same 4 minute estimate from Dulles final approach to downtown DC.

Rip

March 11th 06, 09:05 PM
Rip > wrote:
> Dave Stadt wrote:
> > "Bob Noel" > wrote in message
> > ...
> >
> >>In article >,
> >>wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >>> From Aero-News.com
> >>>http://www.aero-news.net
> >>>
> >>>NORAD Orders Deletion Of ADIZ Meeting Transcript
> >>>Were National Security Issues At Stake?
> >>>
> >>>National security... or
> >>>outright censorship?
> >>
> >>Is it censorship to protect security interests?
> >>
> >>Is it censorship to not publish weaknesses of security measures?
> >>
> >>--
> >>Bob Noel
> >>Looking for a sig the
> >>lawyers will hate
> >
> >
> > Anyone with an IQ over 5.4 can figure out the total ineffectivness of the
> > ADIZ. In this case it is censorship in an attempt to hide goverment
> > incompetence.
> >
> >
> >
> Plus, any idiot with a map, ruler, and pencil can easily come up with
> the same 4 minute estimate from Dulles final approach to downtown DC.

> Rip

Such idiocy is hardly new; two examples:

During the Cold War, some "patriot" attempted to classify the Army's
peanut butter purchases to prevent the Soviet Union from figuring out
what the Army's strength was.

Only problem with that is the Army's troop strength is public record.

In an aerospace program I worked on, another "patriot" classified the
connectors used in a system to prevent "the enemy" from figuring out
what the system was used for.

Only problem with that was the connectors were commercial, off-the-shelf
and used in zillions of commercial and DOD applications.

--
Jim Pennino

Remove .spam.sux to reply.

Jim Logajan
March 11th 06, 11:49 PM
Bob Noel > wrote:
> In article >,
> ".Blueskies." > wrote:
>
>> >> National security... or
>> >> outright censorship?
>> >
>> > Is it censorship to protect security interests?
>> >
>> > Is it censorship to not publish weaknesses of security measures?
>>
>> Yes...and yes...
>
> wrong.

Blueskies is correct by one dictionary definition - "Censoring:
counterintelligence achieved by banning or deleting any information of
value to the enemy."

Roger
March 12th 06, 06:54 AM
On Sat, 11 Mar 2006 10:36:38 -0500, Bob Noel
> wrote:

>In article >, wrote:
>
>> From Aero-News.com
>> http://www.aero-news.net
>>
>> NORAD Orders Deletion Of ADIZ Meeting Transcript
>> Were National Security Issues At Stake?
>>
>> National security... or
>> outright censorship?
>
>Is it censorship to protect security interests?
>
>Is it censorship to not publish weaknesses of security measures?

IF and I emphasize the IF they did not say anything the average pilot
could not figure out for themselves or even the average ground dweller
with a few smarts.

Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member)
(N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair)
www.rogerhalstead.com

Ron Natalie
March 13th 06, 12:36 PM
Ron Wanttaja wrote:

> "Sunshine" laws and the like might have been violated in this case, but they
> always include provisions for security concerns. By definition, information
> revealing vulnerabilities in defense systems are secret.
>

Transcripts of gov't proccedings are always suspect. The daddy of them
all, the Congressional Record, is highly editted after the fact as a
matter of routine. We worked with a project a while back that proposed
capturing all the video of the procedings and the concurrent closed
captioning for a real record of the congressional procedings, but it
fell through (we did demo a prototype of the system).

Peter R.
March 14th 06, 08:28 PM
> wrote:

> "There were some operational security concerns revealed by this
> person who had knowledge but appeared as a public citizen, which we
> think was out of line. The disclosure of that information could go
> directly to national security concerns."

This unfortunate F-18 pilot will probably be relegated to flying a desk in
the Navy after pointing out what all of us on the civilian side of aviation
already know - namely that one could get an IFR clearance to a nearby
airport, turn at the last minute, then blah, blah, blah...

Any one of us on the civy side could have made the exact same comments.

--
Peter

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