Thursday, November 5, 2015

In security breach, Russian programmers wrote code for U.S. military communications systems! Obama sure is selling US DOWN THE RIVER!

In security breach, Russian programmers wrote code for U.S. military communications systems

A Pentagon contractor farmed its work out to cut-rate Russian computer programmers, sparking a four-year federal probe

By 

 

 Updated: 

The Pentagon was tipped off in 2011 by a longtime Army contractor that Russian computer programmers were helping to write computer software for sensitive U.S. military communications systems, setting in motion a four-year federal investigation that ended this week with a multimillion-dollar fine against two firms involved in the work.

The contractor, John C. Kingsley, said in court documents filed in the case that he discovered the Russians’ role after he was appointed to run one of the firms in 2010. He said the software they wrote had made it possible for the Pentagon’s communications systems to be infected with viruses.

Greed drove the contractor to employ the Russian programmers, he said in his March 2011 complaint, which was sealed until late last week. He said they worked for one-third the rate that American programmers with the requisite security clearances could command. His accusations were denied by the firms that did the programming work.

“On at least one occasion, numerous viruses were loaded onto the DISA [Defense Information Systems Agency] network as a result of code written by the Russian programmers and installed on servers in the DISA secure system,” Kingsley said in his complaint, filed under the federal False Claims Act in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., on March 18, 2011.

Asked to confirm that the Russians’ involvement in the software work led to the presence of viruses in the U.S. military’s communications systems, Alana Johnson, a spokeswoman for the Defense Information Systems Agency, declined to answer on the grounds that doing so could compromise the agency’s “national security posture.”

“It’s something that we take very seriously,” Johnson said in a telephone interview on Tuesday. “The Department of Defense’s posture on cybersecurity ultimately affects national security.”

Kingsley first told a Defense Information Systems Agency official on Jan. 10, 2011, that Russians had been doing computer programming for Massachusetts-based NetCracker Technology Corporation under a federal contract, through  an arrangement that corporate officials referred to as its “Back Office,” he said in his complaint. He said the work had been done in Moscow and elsewhere in Russia.

The DISA official confirmed that the practice of outsourcing the work to employees in Russia violated both the company’s contract and federal regulations that mandate only U.S. citizens with approved security clearances work on classified systems, Kingsley’s complaint said.

On Monday, NetCracker and the much larger Virginia-based Computer Sciences Corporation — which had subcontracted the work — agreed to pay a combined $12.75 million in civil penalties to close a four-year-long Justice Department investigation into the security breach. They each denied Kingsley’s accusations in settlement documents filed with the court.

The agency’s inspector general, Col. Bill Eger, who had investigated Kingsley’s allegations, said the case was a good example of how his office combats fraud. In  a separate statement released Monday, Channing D. Phillips, the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, said that “in addition to holding these two companies accountable for their contracting obligations, this settlement shows that the U.S. Attorney’s Office will take appropriate measures necessary to ensure the integrity of government communications systems.”

The $22 million contract the companies were working on dates from 2008, when the Pentagon first asked Computer Sciences Corporation to fortify and administer the computer networks of the Defense Information Systems Agency. The agency supports battlefield operations by running communication systems that enable soldiers, officers, and coalition partners to communicate in secret.

Computer Sciences Corporation collected a total of $1.5 billion from the Pentagon in fiscal year 2014, according to the Federal Procurement Data System. The work at the heart of this case was part of a $613 million contract between the Defense Information Systems Agency and the corporation. Netcracker, whose top executive has been on the cover of Forbes magazine and which has done direct work for the Air Force and the General Services Administration, worked as a subcontractor on the deal.

In his complaint, Kingsley asserted that Computer Sciences Corporation executives knew about Netcracker’s work in Russia.  But a corporation spokeswoman, in a written statement, denied it. “[Computer Sciences Corporation] believes it is as much a victim of NetCracker’s conduct as is our [Defense Information Systems Agency] customer and agreed to settle this case because the litigation costs outweigh those of the settlement,” Heather Williams wrote. “Security is of the utmost importance” to the corporation, she wrote.

Kingsley also said in his whistleblower complaint that when he questioned NetCracker’s general counsel about the propriety of the arrangement, the counsel assured him nothing was wrong. When he asked the company’s board of directors for permission to discuss the Russians’ participation with the Defense Information Systems Agency, his “requests were rebuffed,” he said in the complaint.

The next day, in an email to the board of directors at NetCracker Government Services, the company’s general counsel characterized Kingsley’s conversation with the government official as an “unscheduled, one-on-one meeting” that ended with a “vitriolic rampage” and left the Defense Information Systems Agency officer with the impression that Kingsley was a “lunatic,” according to Kingsley’s complaint. Kingsley said in his complaint that this description of the meeting was incorrect and intended to hurt Kingsley’s reputation with the company’s other board members.

Joanna Larivee, a spokeswoman for Netcracker, responded with a written statement that it “has cooperated fully with the Department of Justice throughout its review of this matter and explicitly denies liability for any wrongdoing. We have always taken responsible steps to ensure that best practices are deployed when managing client information and that NetCracker is compliant with the terms of our contracts. We have decided that it is in the best interest of all stakeholders to settle the matter.”

Of the total fines, NetCracker agreed to pay $11.4 million while the Computer Sciences Corporation agreed to pay $1.35 million. Under the False Claims Act, Kingsley’s share of the settlement is $2.3 million, according to the Justice Department.

Kingsley did not respond to a phone message left at his home in Fairfax, Virginia, on Tuesday. His lawyer, Paul Schleifman, said Kingsley spoke up about the Back Office in Russia because he was worried that it could harm national security. “[Kingsley] believes that his obligation is to the United States first,” Schleifman said, “not to his pocket.”

The settlement agreement leaves the door open for the Justice Department to pursue criminal charges based on Kingsley’s allegations. A Justice Department spokeswoman did not respond before deadline when asked whether any such charges are expected.

This story was co-published with the Daily Beast.

Latest intelligence on the world situation, updates on US military capabilities, news that affects Military retirees, and news that will probably never be reported by the "Liberal American Media!"

Military Newsletter
 
Latest intelligence on the world situation, updates on US military capabilities, news that affects Military retirees, 
and news that will probably never be reported by the "Liberal American Media!"
 
Edited by Lt Col Kent Vasby, USAF, Ret
 

 
 
Flush with victory, combative Erdogan demands Turkey constitution change
 
Flush with an election victory, Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan demanded constitutional change that he wants to gain sweeping powers, and vowed to "liquidate" Kurdish guerrillas in a defiant speech that gave no quarter to those hoping for conciliation.
 
 
 
 

 
 
Turkey Launches Airstrikes on Kurdish Militants in Northern Iraq
 
Turkish jets launched a new series of airstrikes on Kurdish militants in northern Iraq, the first indication that the government is pressing ahead with its military campaign against them as President Recep Tayyip Erdogan's allies in parliament prepare to reclaim one-party rule. 
 
 

 
 

Pentagon suspends troubled missile defense system at center of 'runaway blimp'
 
The Pentagon has suspended indefinitely an "operational exercise" of the troubled missile defense system called JLENS, whose giant, radar-carrying blimps were intended to help safeguard the skies over Washington. 
 
 
 

 
 
Closest Encounter Since 2006: Chinese Submarine Tailed US Aircraft Carrier
 
A Chinese sub stalked the USS Ronald Reagan in the Sea of Japan last month. 
 
 
 
 

 
 
U.S. Navy official eyes more Boeing F/A-18 fighter jet orders
 
The U.S. Navy on Tuesday underscored its desire to buy more Boeing Co F/A-18E/F Super Hornets in coming years to deal with higher-than-expected operational demands and past delays in the Lockheed Martin Corp F-35 fighter jet program. 
 
 

 
Thanks, Linda

Vladimir Putin continues the late education of Barack Obama
 
The big chief of the Russians has challenged the theology of the Church of Global Warming in advance of a convocation of nations this month in Paris to come up with ideas for monetizing a myth.
 
Vladimir Putin recognized opportunity, and boldly and without apology asserted dominion in the Middle East. Now he has challenged the fraud of global warming, or climate change, or whatever this weeks correct label might be.
 
 
   

 
 

Army: Young soldiers overestimate likely civilian pay
 
About 140,000 departing soldiers received Army transition services in the past year, but many of them may have unrealistic expectations of what they can earn in the civilian sector.
 
 
Young soldiers aren't the only ones overestimating their market value in the civilian world. I know a few retired E-9's and O-6's wondering what the heck happened during transition and why they had to settle for something... different...
 
140,000 out in the last year!!!!  Who's left?
 
 
 

 
 
 
The Marines' last stand - Thank God for the Marines
 
Its the last stand for the Marines, the last stand for reality, the last stand for the military to function as a cohesive war fighting organization and not a Santa Monica yoga class.
 
In America 180, everything is upside down. What kind of madcap lunatic asylum do we live in when the military has to ask for exemptions to keep women out of combat?
 
This is what happens when policy is being dictated by radicals whose idea of combat is elbowing for a place in line at the Bloomingdales lunch counter. This is what happens when the militarys leaders are gutless moral cowards.
 
The Navy surrendered its masculinity in 1991 after the Tailhook Affair and has evolved into the Love Boat with guns and fast planes. The Air Force disappeared over the horizon sometime in the late 90's. The Army is advertising their 37 year old Mommy Ranger and sucking down enough Kool Aid to clean out half the grocery stores and lemonade stands in America. The Pentagon has become a modern day Jonestown. 
 
 
 


Get 'em outta here!
 
 
Serbia and Croatia, in Rare Cooperation, Provide Trains for Migrants
 
 
 
 

 
Ukraine Warns It May Stop Buying Russian Gas Next Year
 
Ukrainian authorities said they will buy natural gas from Russia until the end of the year, but will purchase all Ukraine's gas from Europe in the first quarter of 2016 if Russia does not offer a competitive price. 
 
 
Now let's see!  Europe is getting its' gas from Russia, so..........
 
 
 
 

 
Forbes - The World's Most Powerful People 2015
 
 
Not surprised that Putin is #1. 
 
Obama is #3, behind Angela Merkle!
 
 
 
 

 
 
Wishful thinking by a flaming Liberal
 
Is There a Sunni Solution to ISIS?
 
David Ignatius calls for reconciliation among Iraqi Sunnis, Shiites, and Kurds. 
 
 
 


 
Want to tour a missile silo?
Thanks, Naomi
 
A few years from now, one of the nuclear launch centers where these workers, known as missileers, were stationed, will be open to visitors. The Air Force has been restoring the missile alert facility, called Quebec-01, as a Wyoming state historic site.
 
Editor went down in a Titan silo in Kansas back in the 70's.  The silo commander was a short little captain who scared the heck out of me with his swagger.  
 
 

 

And so it begins!
 
 
Couple seeks right to marry. 
 
The hitch? They're legally father and son
 
 
 


Office of Civil Rights says disguised boy has right to shower with girls
Thanks, Dave
 
Federal education authorities, staking out their firmest position yet on an increasingly contentious issue, found Monday that an Illinois school district violated anti-discrimination laws when it did not allow a transgender student who identifies as a girl and participates on a girls sports team to change and shower in the girls locker room without restrictions.
 
 
Unless "it" gets an erection?
 
html
 
 


Accuracy in reporting the Weather or this Winter is going to be record breaking Cold!
Thanks, George
 
It's late fall and the Indians on a remote reservation in South Dakota asked their new chief if the coming winter was going to be cold  or mild. 
  
 Since he was a chief in a modern society, he had never been taught the old secrets. When he looked at the sky, he couldn't tell what the winter was going to be like. 
  
 Nevertheless, to be on the safe side, he told his tribe that the winter was indeed going to be cold and that the members of the village should collect firewood to be prepared.
  
 But, being a practical leader, after several days, he got an idea. He went to the phone booth, called the National Weather Service and asked, 'Is the coming winter going to be cold?' 
  
 'It looks like this winter is going to be quite cold,' the meteorologist at the weather service responded. 
  
 So the chief went back to his people and told them to collect even more firewood in order to be prepared.
 
 A week later, he called the National Weather Service again. 'Does it still look like it is going to be a very cold winter?'  
 
 'Yes,' the man at National Weather Service again replied, 'it's going to be a very cold winter.'  
  
 The chief again went back to his people and ordered them to collect every scrap of firewood they could find. 
  
 Two weeks later, the chief called the National Weather Service again. 'Are you absolutely sure that the winter is going to be very cold?' 
  
 'Absolutely,' the man replied.  'It's looking more and more like it is going to be one of the coldest winters we've ever seen.'
  
 'How can you be so sure?' the chief asked. 
 
 The weatherman replied, 'The Indians are collecting a shitload of firewood!
 
 
 

 
CONFUSION IN THE USMC OVER OBAMA'S ORDERS
Thanks, Tom
 
Well, Obama signed the bill that allows gays to serve openly in the Military.  
 
No more don't ask don't tell. 
 
But what he has really done is cause confusion in the ranks that could easily cost Marine lives.  
 
This is what can now happen.  
 
You know that Marines are trained to immediately obey orders.  
 
So imagine .........You're a Marine in a combat situation; the enemy is firing at you, and running toward your position.  
 
The guy next to you is openly gay. 
 
Then your Squad Leader yells out .........."Shoot the cocksuckers!"  
 
Do you see the confusion here?  


"We Did What We Learned: Attacking Christians" Muslim Persecution of Christians, August 2015

Gatestone Institute


In this mailing:

"We Did What We Learned: Attacking Christians"
Muslim Persecution of Christians, August 2015

by Raymond Ibrahim  •  November 5, 2015 at 5:00 am

  • Western "mainstream media" and academia continued to exonerate Islam in deceptive op-eds, such as the Huffington Post's "ISIS Violates The Consensus Of Mainstream Islam By Persecuting Christians," by Qasim Rashid, a recipient of Saudi largesse, by way of Harvard University's Prince Alwaleed bin Talal Center.

  • A 12-year-old girl, raped by an Islamic State fighter, was told that "what he was about to do was not a sin" because she "practiced a religion other than Islam."

  • "In school I only learned about Islam. Parts of our teaching were about destroying Christianity. So we did what we learned, by attacking Christians ... Our teachers would tell us every time there was a new church in town and we were told to go and attack the people and destroy the church. So that is what we did." — Tofik, a former Muslim cleric who converted to Christianity.

Islamic State jihadists in the midst of destroying the ancient Mar Elian monastery in Syria.

Throughout the month of August, the Obama administration and the so-called mainstream media kept insisting that Islam does not promote the persecution of Christians -- all the while ignoring the direct testimonies of those who have undergone it.

According to Chaldean Archbishop Bashar Warda,

All the statements [by U.S. government and media] have not condemned strongly what damage it [persecution of Christians] is doing. What they are saying is just "This is not the true Islam. This is violating the picture of Islam." The issue for them is the image of Islam, but none of these statements speak about the victims, about what has been done to the victims, they are not even mentioned. And that is one of the questions our people have. [Author's emphasis].

Warda added that persecuted Christians are "being denied visas, while others who have participated [in the violence] or at least were silent, can go."

Continue Reading Article 

Palestinians, not Israelis, Need the Gospel of Peace

by Jagdish N. Singh  •  November 5, 2015 at 4:00 am

  • Palestinian leaders, including the Palestinian Authority, have done a lot to whip up this violence and little to stop it. They may refer to peace and co-existence on some diplomatic occasions, but they preach and practice non-stop hatred and violence against Israel and the Jews.

  • It would have been more helpful if President Mukherjee had stressed his gospel of peace in the Palestinian territories, not Israel. Ever since its creation in 1948, Israel has believed in peaceful co-existence with Palestine. The successive offers of peace from Jerusalem have always supported this policy.

  • In contrast, not only has the Palestinian leadership never believed in peaceful co-existence, but it has constantly indulged in racist incitement, and often violence, to try to eliminate Israel.

Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, speaking on PA television, September 16, 2015.

After a reception at the presidential palace in Israel in Mid-October, India's President, Pranab Mukherjee, said: "We are distressed at the recent violence [in the region]. India condemns all forms of terrorism. We have always advocated a peaceful resolution of all disputes." Later, the President told Israel's Leader of the Opposition, Isaac Herzog, "Violence is not a solution to any crisis. Violence achieves nothing but more violence. We in India believe in a principle of live and let live." What great new ideas!

Why, though, did President Mukherjee say so only in Israel? Apparently, he remained completely silent on the issue of terrorism when he visited the Palestinian Authority (PA) a day or two earlier. In Ramallah, he just reasserted India's position that New Delhi remained committed to the Palestinian cause, and supported a peaceful solution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Continue Reading Article 

Turkey: Where Ice Cream Can Be More Dangerous than Bombs

by Burak Bekdil  •  November 5, 2015 at 3:30 am

  • Turkey has detained more people for tweeting against the government than for being members of the Islamic State. — Sezgin Tanrikulu, a Kurd, and a leading opposition member of parliament.

  • "Why did you all go to eat ice cream after prayers?" — Police interrogator in Usak, Turkey.

Sometimes one small incident best tells how countries can go insane. The pro-government Islamist psyche in Turkey has no limits in defying logic and humanity.

Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu's native province, Konya, in central Anatolia, has traditionally been an Islamist stronghold -- before and after Turkey's ruling Islamist party, the Justice and Development Party (AKP), was founded in 2001. In parliamentary elections on June 7, AKP won 65% of the vote in Konya, compared to 40.7% it won on a national scale.

Continue Reading Article 

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