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At Threat to National Security; Improper Document Shredding

The next time you stand by the office paper shredder absentmindedly feeding outdated or sensitive documents through, keep in mind that insufficient document shredding was a key factor in one of the largest US hostage crises in history.


In November of 1979 fifty two US citizens were taken hostage after a group of angry students took over the US Embassy in Iran. Although the student’s (calling themselves Muslim Student Followers of the Imam’s Line) initial plan was to hold the hostages for only a few days, a week max, the US hostages were finally released on January 20, 1981, 444 days later.


What was the reason for the prolonged captivity? Insufficient document shredding. Really. After the recently fallen Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, was allowed into the United States for cancer treatment, 300 to 500 angry Iranian students stormed the US embassy in Tehran, convinced that the embassy was a center of opposition to the new government and “Satan’s den of espionage.”


Shortly after taking over the building, radical revolutionary students reconstructed and displayed confidential documents that U.S. diplomats and office personnel had frantically shredded as they were being invaded. This rushed document shredding job proved disastrous, as is helped strengthen radical Iranian claims that the U.S. was working in conjunction with Iranian moderates to destabilize the new regime. The Iranian regime later published the recovered documents in a series of books called “Documents from the US espionage Den”.


Another notorious disaster fueled by incompetent document shredding was the 2001 Enron accountancy scandal. Much of the incriminating evidence in the Enron scandal was gathered from shredded documents, as many of the documents in the Enron accountancy scandal were fed through the shredder the wrong way (parallel rather than perpendicular to the shredder blades) making them easier to reassemble.


Since these incidences of major breaches in security, whether the outcomes were positive or negative, there is a high demand for more secure methods of sensitive document shredding. Following the Iranian hostage crisis of 1979 the U.S. government has employed document shredding techniques including pulverizing, pulping, and chemical decomposition.


Many companies and offices no longer handle their own document shredding with common office paper shredders that have proven to be so unreliable. Instead of risking having their shredding documents stolen and reconstructed, making all kinds of sensitive and private information available, many companies choose to outsource their document shredding to shredding services.


These companies either shred on-site, with mobile shredder trucks or have off-site shredding facilities. All shredded paper is then sent to a paper mill where the material is recycled and turned back into paper. This gives the peace of mind of knowing that all confidential material stays confidential, with no risk of unauthorized eyes finding and publicizing your companies’ or your clients’ private information.

Document shredding (http://www.nwwcom.com/records.shred.php) is a security measure designed to keep sensitive material private. The author Art Gib is a freelance writer.

The National Security Agency

National Security
Image taken on 2006-02-18 12:40:47 by @mjb.

Barack Obama’s “Civilian National Security Force part 2: “The Mandatory Service”


*I do not own any of the songs, images, or videos used in thi video* This part 2 of my video about Barack Obama’s idea for a gestapo style “Civilian National Security Force” In this video I discuss how he and his chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, want to enforc a mandatory service in this “Civilian National Security Force”. They want to make everyone,male and female, between the ages of 18-25 go hrough 3 moths of “civil defense training” we cannot allow our fellow citizens to be forced into fighting in yet another needless war to fatten their wallets. Long Live the Rebellion! -Deo Vindice

2007 National Security Medal (English Version) Part 1


2007 National Security Medal (English Version) Part 1

Palestine – United Nations Security Council Flirts With Racist Fantasyland

“All these attacks prove that settlers are dangerous and that it’s impossible to live with them. If these settlers are allowed to stay, that would mean more friction and confrontation. Peace can be achieved only if Israel withdraws to the last centimetre of the Palestinian territories occupied in 1967” – Ahmed Qurei , Head of Palestinian Authority Negotiating Team – Jerusalem Post – 13 December 2008

This call to remove every Jew living in the West Bank – 500000 men, women and children – was accepted in total silence by the United Nations. No urgent meeting of the General Assembly or any of its Human Rights Committees was called to condemn this racial vilification of Jews by a former Prime Minister of the Palestinian Authority and its chief negotiator with Israel.

One remembers how fervently world leaders correctly argued that you couldn’t blame all Moslems for the terrorist actions of those few who hijack Islam and commit horrible atrocities worldwide in the name of Allah.

No similar statements were heard from those same leaders this week condemning Mr Queri for calling for the removal of those 500000 Jews because of the misguided actions of a few.

Collective punishment – not to be tolerated for Gazan Arabs – was perfectly acceptable when it involved West Bank Jews.

Indeed the UN Security Council met just three days after Mr. Qurei’s outrageous statement –yet raised not one word of protest or censure at his highly offensive and hate-ridden remarks.

Instead it passed Resolution 1850 (2008) by 14 votes to 0 – with Libya abstaining – declaring “its support for the negotiations initiated at Annapolis on 27 November 2007 and its commitment to the irreversibility of the bilateral negotiations“ and called “on both parties to fulfil their obligations under the Performance-Based Roadmap, as stated in their Annapolis Joint Understanding and refrain from any steps that could undermine confidence or prejudice the outcome of negotiations.”

One could not imagine a more destructive statement designed to undermine confidence or to prejudice the outcome of the Annapolis negotiations than that delivered by Mr. Qurei.

His demand defiantly flies in the face of the written commitment given by President Bush to Israel’s Prime Minister Ariel Sharon on 14 April 2004 – forming an integral part of the Roadmap negotiating process under the auspices of the Quartet – America, Russia, the European Union and the United Nations.

In that letter President Bush stated:

“As part of a final peace settlement, Israel must have secure and recognized borders, which should emerge from negotiations between the parties in accordance with UNSC Resolutions 242 and 338. In light of new realities on the ground, including already existing major Israeli populations centers, it is unrealistic to expect that the outcome of final status negotiations will be a full and complete return to the armistice lines of 1949, and all previous efforts to negotiate a two-state solution have reached the same conclusion. It is realistic to expect that any final status agreement will only be achieved on the basis of mutually agreed changes that reflect these realities. “

In declaring its support for the Annapolis negotiations the Security Council conveniently ignored the basis on which those negotiations were undertaken by Israel as expressed in these clear and unambiguous terms by its Prime Minister – Ehud Olmert – at the opening of the Annapolis conference:

“The negotiations will be based on previous agreements between us, U.N. Security Council Resolutions 242 and 338, the road map and the April 14, 2004 letter of President Bush to the Prime Minister of Israel.”

All the international players sitting in the Security Council – including outgoing US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice – were surely aware that Mr Qurei’s statement sounded the death knell for the Annapolis negotiations and signalled the end of any hope for a successful outcome of those negotiations.

Yet instead of condemning Mr Qurei’s statement – or demanding its retraction – Ms. Rice had the effrontery to tell the Security Council that Israeli and Palestinian negotiators:

“had made the choice to defeat an ideology of hatred with one of hope”

The only conclusion that one can draw from the Security Council’s extraordinary conduct in totally ignoring Mr Qurei’s statement is its unwillingness to face up to the fact that Annapolis is finished, President Bush’s dream has turned into a nightmare and the Quartet’s strategy in backing President Bush’s Roadmap has exposed it as totally impotent in having any influence to determine the allocation of sovereignty in the West Bank between Jews and Arabs.

The Security Council by its silence has offered encouragement to those Jew haters like Mr Qurei who for the last 130 years have opposed Jews having any right to live in their biblical homeland – the West Bank – or indeed within any part of the 23% of Palestine designated by the League of Nations Mandate for Palestine and article 80 of the United Nations Charter as the site for the reconstitution of the Jewish National Home.

In doing nothing to disavow the Arabs from pursuing their long standing enmity and racial hatred of the Jews, the Security Council has ignored a whole body of international law on the issue and given comfort to the long held Arab view that everything done since the creation of the Mandate in 1920 is deemed null and void.

“Jews out” is indeed a call that is still alive and kicking in the Middle East.

This racist fantasyland has been given a considerable boost by the Security Council’s flirtation with – and failure to unequivocally repudiate – Mr Qurei’s remarks when endorsing Resolution 1850. United Nations efforts to eliminate all forms of racism worldwide have been seriously compromised.

RIP President Bush’s Performance –Based Roadmap. RIP Annapolis. RIP the United Nations.

David Singer is a foundation member of the International Analysts Network established in 2007 and the Convenor of Jordan is Palestine International established in 1979 which advocates the division of sovereignty of the West Bank and Gaza between Egypt, Jordan and Israel.

National Security Adviser Jones Visits India Before Obama’s November Trip

National Security Adviser Jones Visits India Before Obama’s November Trip
U.S. National Security Adviser General Jim Jones is traveling to India this week to prepare for a visit by President Barack Obama in November.

Read more on Bloomberg

National security involves more than securing borders

Erickson Column: National security involves more than securing borders

Jerry Erickson
Published: October 14, 2009

 

By now you’ve heard about Hosam Maher Husein Smadi. He’s the 19-year-old who was arrested on charges of attempting to blow up a Dallas skyscraper. The plan was uncovered when the F.B.I. became suspicious of Mr. Smadi.

As the N.Y Times reported on October 12, 2009, Mr. Smadi’s plan unraveled in 2008:

“But by the spring of 2008, he caught the attention of the F.B.I. by posting incendiary remarks about wanting to kill Americans on Jihadist Web sites. Over the summer, he met with agents posing as members of Al Qaeda and planned to bomb the Fountain Place office building in downtown Dallas, according to an indictment unsealed on Thursday.

His arrest on terrorism charges came after he parked a truck that he had been told was carrying explosives in the building’s underground garage, according to court documents.”

So, good work on the part of the F.B.I. However, what is also troubling about this case is the fact that Mr. Smadi apparently entered the U.S. on a tourist visa and had overstayed. Specifically, he had come to the United States from Jordan in early 2007 on a six-month tourist visa according to immigration officials. When he entered, he would have been given a date by which he was required to leave the U.S. The fact is that he failed to leave as required. Despite the fact that he overstayed, and that his visa had expired, this didn’t set off any type of process or alarm with immigration officials. Unfortunately, the simple fact is that despite the fact that we are more than 8 years post 9/11, the U.S. still doesn’t have a system to verify that foreigner travelers have left the U.S. as and when required.

As you can imagine, as the facts surrounding Mr. Smadi’s case have been revealed, there is now a rising chorus in Congress for Department of Homeland Security to develop an electronic exit monitoring system. Representative Lamar Smith of Texas, the senior Republican on the House Judiciary Committee, said the Smadi case “points to a real need for an entry and exit system if we are serious about reducing illegal immigration.”

Senator Charles E. Schumer, Democrat of New York and chairman of the Judiciary Committee’s sub-committee on immigration, said he would try to steer money from the economic stimulus program to build an exit monitoring system.

 

 

As all of us have seen when traveling, U.S. security has definitely been stepped up post 9/11. However, it is a huge gap in the entry/exit system that there are no biometric inspections, and/or process or system that would allow officials to monitor when travelers have left the U.S.

Officials have advised that establishing and implementing a monitoring program will be very expensive. Assuming this is the case, if we’re going to allow people into the U.S., we must be able to develop a system that effectively tracks when they leave. This is particularly so if the Obama administration is realistic about getting support for an immigration overhaul.

As to the particulars concerning Mr. Smadi, his ability to assimilate into U.S. life after overstaying is not a pretty picture.  After he decided he wasn’t leaving the U.S. as required, he was able to enroll in a high school, obtain a California identification card, secure employment with separate employers in two states, rent an apartment and a home, and purchase a gun and ammunition. Let’s just agree that there were no controls in place to see what Mr. Smadi was up to and leave it at that.

Mr. Smadi’s case is a clear reminder that there are people who would like to inflict more damage to the U.S. similar to that of 9/11. Having effective border security is obviously very important in the overall scheme of providing protection from those who would do us harm. However, it’s also critical to be able to monitor those who are allowed into the U.S. and then take timely and appropriate steps if they choose to overstay. Congress should immediately take up the issue of electronic monitoring and develop and implement a plan that addresses a problem that should have been dealt with years ago.

 

Jerry Erickson is the managing partner of Szabo, Zelnick, & Erickson, P.C. (www.szelaw.com), in Woodbridge, Virginia.  He is the senior attorney in the firm’s Business Immigration Section. He has practiced law for over 20 years and represents clients in numerous complex areas of immigration law. He can be reached at jerickson@szelaw.com or (703) 494-7171.

 

The above information is provided for informational purposes only.  The information should not be construed as legal advice and does not constitute an engagement of the Szabo, Zelnick & Erickson, P.C. law firm or establish an attorney-client relationship with any of its attorneys.  An attorney-client relationship with our firm is only created by signing a written agreement with our firm.

 

At Szabo, Zelnick and Erickson we approach everyday with the mindset that legal solutions don’t just happen by chance. Every case is unique and to achieve the best result a personal approach is required. Carefully analyzing the nuances of each case is not what should happen, but what must happen. The practice of law requires creative and precise legal representation and it has been this focus and mindset that has allowed us to proactively advise clients for over 30 years.

If you’re looking for legal counsel you can trust, we recommend that you contact our office and experience a distinct difference in legal representation.

the guitar necklace

Obama Delivers Address on National Security, Torture, Gitmo


more at cnn.com President Barack Obama, May 21, 2009

National Security Presidential Directive 51


Careful With That Axe, Eugene

Essential Home Security.

Home Security Segment Hot As Crime And Unemployment Rise. Very Little Competition In This E-book Space. See Great Affiliate Video-graphics-text Support: Http://www.homesecurityinsider.com/affiliates.html . Professionally Written, Illustrated, 106 Pages.
Essential Home Security.