Blog
Chem-bio conference proceedings, 2000
By Russ Kick at 3 July, 2008, 5:13 am
From the DTIC archives comes this 635-page “Proceedings of the Joint Conference on Point Detection for Chemical and Biological Defense (1st) Held in Williamsburg, Virginia on October 23-27, 2000.” (Click on the link “Handle / proxy Url” to download the whole PDF doc.)
Read More >>Chinese torture techniques used at Gitmo: chart
By Russ Kick at 2 July, 2008, 10:42 am
————
From the New York Times:
The military trainers who came to Guantánamo Bay in December 2002 based an entire interrogation class on a chart showing the effects of “coercive management techniques” for possible use on prisoners, including “sleep deprivation,” “prolonged constraint,” and “exposure.”
What the trainers did not say, and may not have known, was that their chart had been copied verbatim from a 1957 Air Force study of Chinese Communist techniques used during the Korean War to obtain confessions, many of them false, from American prisoners. …
The only change made in the chart presented at Guantánamo was to drop its original title: “Communist Coercive Methods for Eliciting Individual Compliance.”
The chart from the 1957 article on communist torture:
Full article “Communist Attempts to Elicit False Confessions From the Air Force Prisoners of War” [PDF @ NYT]
————————-
Read More >>National Military Strategy for Cyberspace Operations, December 2006
By Russ Kick at 2 July, 2008, 4:38 am
The Pentagon recently posted this to a subpage of their FOIA area:
The National Military Strategy for Cyberspace Operations, December 2006
Read More >>FBI destroying irreplaceable historical records
By Russ Kick at 1 July, 2008, 5:19 am
Those of us who file FOIA requests with the FBI on a regular basis have run into this inexcusable situation. It’s great to see an article in Slate shine a spotlight on it.
Read More >>How an obscure FBI rule is ensuring the destruction of irreplaceable historical records.
By Alex Heard
… At the time, I was new to the weird science of FOIA requesting, so I didn’t know the FBI was allowed to destroy files routinely. Dismayed, I looked into how the Records Retention Plan works, with help from several generous FOIA experts. What they described sounded more like a Records Destruction Plan, since it allows the FBI to discard roughly 80 percent of its files at any given time.
15,000 more Iraq detainees by year-end (in addition to the 60,000 so far)
By Russ Kick at 1 July, 2008, 4:24 am
According to the Army, the US is planning to imprison 15,000 more “detainees” in Iraq over the next six months. (60,000 people have been detained so far.)
These little-known figures were revealed in a military contract that was flagged by Sharon Weinberger of Wired’s Danger Room blog. (However, they aren’t the focus of the post, which is titled “Strangest Iraq Contract Yet: Store Detainee Property.”) So far the media have completely ignored these revelations.
Future directions for non-lethal weapons
By Russ Kick at 1 July, 2008, 4:02 am
In early June, the military’s Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Directorate posted a presolicitation for contractors that lays out the exact directions that nonlethal weapons research will be taking. (Also available here.)
General applied research focus areas in their relative priority of interest to the JNLWD include:
A. Non-lethal vessel stopping at extended range
B. Clear a space without entry
C. Non-lethally divert an aircraft in the air or stop and/or disable an aircraft on the ground
D. Individual and crowd behavior in environments where less than lethal force is an option
E. Human effects/effectiveness and safety thresholds of selected NL stimuli
F. Stimulating academic institutions, both civilian and DoD Academies, in the research and development of NLW concepts. This includes supporting short-term academic challenges and competitions related to NLW development.
G. Advanced materials and NL payloads
Read More >>
Back online and feeling fine
By Russ Kick at 1 July, 2008, 3:59 am
{UPDATE July 3, 2008: This post refers to the original structure of the relaunched site, but it’s now been consolidated so that everything new shows up on the front page. So please just ignore this post.}
The Memory Hole is back in a new incarnation. You’ll find two parts - the blog (which you’re reading now) and the main site, an archive of documents pried loose from officialdom.
To find out more about The Memory Hole 2.0, check out this article from the main site.
Read More >>
![[del.icio.us]](http://www.thememoryhole.org/wp-content/plugins/bookmarkify/delicious.png)
![[Digg]](http://www.thememoryhole.org/wp-content/plugins/bookmarkify/digg.png)
![[Reddit]](http://www.thememoryhole.org/wp-content/plugins/bookmarkify/reddit.png)
![[Technorati]](http://www.thememoryhole.org/wp-content/plugins/bookmarkify/technorati.png)
![[Email]](http://www.thememoryhole.org/wp-content/plugins/bookmarkify/email.png)


