On Thursday, May 18 the Cranston East auditorium was packed with supportive and proud family and friends of the 34th JROTC Corp of Cadets. The event was overseen by COL (Retired) Jason Lafferty, …
temporary, provisional or permanent but likely to provide his commander access to the joint worldwide intelligence communication system, the dod uses. i will say one of the things that dod looking at this issue on the civilian side, when we talk about agencies like the c.i.a. and the n.s.a. and the f.b.i., you have to go through and be polygraphed. insider threat protocols to limit these things. not so easy on the d.o.d. side where you see young men and women because they are helping provide access across the military at the unit level, some of those insider threat precautions that would prevent this aren t in place. probably need to be in place. an overcomprehensive review of how on the d.o.d. side we re sharing information and who is getting access to this tssci most sensitive information is
with three different regional commanders last week, now russia has put a commander in with great experience from syria. and alexander is now basically in charge of all of this. he can show how it should go and force commanders to comply with that. sounds like he has a pretty vicious reputation. it is ruffling. you see that in syria. how that city was leveled. you will not see any change in the way the russian tactics go. you will see the change of forces and activities in this region. one difference we saw last week with regards to the ukrainian way of doing business, generally tactical. generally you are fighting for short range and actually in the unit level. there is a small oil refinery