Appendix 1 Department of Defense Investigative Liaisons for Law
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Load more
Recommended publications
-
Status Report to Congress: the Renovation of the Pentagon, 18Th Edition, March 1, 2008, (Covers CY 2007)
Description of document: Status Report to Congress: The Renovation of the Pentagon, 18th Edition, March 1, 2008, (Covers CY 2007) Requested date: 03-June-2008 Released date: 23-June-2008 Posted date: 23-June-2008 Title of Document A Status Report to Congress The Renovation of the Pentagon Date/date range of document: CY 2007 Source of document: Pentagon Renovation & Construction Program Office 100 Boundary Channel Drive, Arlington, VA 22201 E-mail: [email protected] The governmentattic.org web site (“the site”) is noncommercial and free to the public. The site and materials made available on the site, such as this file, are for reference only. The governmentattic.org web site and its principals have made every effort to make this information as complete and as accurate as possible, however, there may be mistakes and omissions, both typographical and in content. The governmentattic.org web site and its principals shall have neither liability nor responsibility to any person or entity with respect to any loss or damage caused, or alleged to have been caused, directly or indirectly, by the information provided on the governmentattic.org web site or in this file. From: "Hutchins, Lea CTR WHS/PENREN/PARSONS" <[email protected]> Date: 2008/06/23 Mon AM 08:52:17 CDT Subject: RE: 2008 Pentagon Renovation Report You will find the Report attached. Thank you. Lea Hutchins -----Original Message----- Posted At: Tuesday, June 03, 2008 9:43 PM Posted To: Renovation (PenRen) Conversation: 2008 Pentagon Renovation Report Subject: 2008 Pentagon Renovation Report Dear Sirs: I am a civilian citizen. -
USHMM Finding
http://collections.ushmm.org Contact [email protected] for further information about this collection RG‐15.151 Archives of the Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw Legacy of Chaim Finkelsztejn Years: 1939‐2002 Sygn. S/346 Inventory by Martyna Rusiniak Warsaw Draft translation 1 http://collections.ushmm.org http://collections.ushmm.org Contact [email protected] for further information about this collection Legacy of Chaim Finkelsztejn Years: 1936‐2002 History of the archival collection The Legacy of Chaim Finkelsztejn is a collection of documents found at the ZIH after the author's death, having been handed down by his wife. We have here a number of letters, mostly from war times. In addition, the legacy contains a large number of periodicals, mostly in Yiddish, collected after the war. Once arranged and classified, the collection contains 178 archival units which, I think, I arranged according to the author's wishes. Chaim Finkelsztejn's legacy encompasses materials from the years 1936 through 2002. The arrangement work resulted in the creation of six thematic groups. Group I consists of documents dealing mainly with Chaim Finkelsztejn. Group II consists of correspondence which was divided into war and post‐war correspondence, as well as private one: with family and friends; and official one. Group III encompasses memoirs, notations, projects, works being prepared during the period from the 1940's to the sixties of the twentieth century: those are fragments of Chaim Finkelsztejn's biography, typewritten articles about "Haynt" periodical, about Ilja Schorz . Group IV consists of books, brochures, periodicals, press clippings regarding Chaim Finkelsztejn or written by him. -
Operation Sunrise: America’S OSS, Swiss Intelligence, and the German Surrender 1945
Operation Sunrise: America’s OSS, Swiss Intelligence, and the German Surrender 1945 by Stephen P. Halbrook* Operation Sunrise was a cooperative effort of American and Swiss intelligence services which led to the unconditional surrender of the German Wehrmacht forces in Northern Italy and Western Austria on May 2, 1945. General Heinrich von Vietinghoff, Commander-in- Chief of the Southwest Command and of Army Group C, surrendered nearly a million soldiers, the strongest remaining German force. This was the first great surrender of German forces to the Allies, and became a strong impetus for the final Allied victory over Nazi Germany on May 8, Victory in Europe (VE) Day. Operation Sunrise helped to nip in the bud Nazi aspirations for guerilla resistance in an Alpine redoubt. Sunrise, sometimes referred to as “Crossword,” has special significance today beyond the sixtieth anniversary of the German surrender. Despite Switzerland’s formal neutrality, Swiss intelligence agents aggressively facilitated American efforts to end the war. Ironically, the efforts of key U.S. intelligence agents on the ground to orchestrate the surrender were hampered and almost scuttled by leaders in Washington to appease Joseph Stalin, who wished to delay the surrender in the West so that Soviet forces could grab more territory in the East. *This paper was originally presented at the conference Sunrise ‘05, Locarno, Switzerland, May 2, 2005, and was published in “Operation Sunrise.” Atti del convegno internazionale (Locarno, 2 maggio 2005), a cura di Marino Viganò - Dominic M. Pedrazzini (Lugano 2006), pp. 103-30. The conference was held to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the surrender of German forces in northern Italy. -
ED Recommendation Template
Executive Director’s Recommendation Commission Meeting: July 9, 2015 PROJECT NCPC FILE NUMBER Final Master Plan MP45 Arlington National Cemetery NCPC MAP FILE NUMBER Arlington County, Virginia 1.61(05.00)44034 SUBMITTED BY APPLICANT’S REQUEST United States Department of Defense Approval of final master plan Department of the Army PROPOSED ACTION REVIEW AUTHORITY Approve as requested Advisory per 40 U.S.C. § 8722(a) and (b)(1) ACTION ITEM TYPE Consent Calendar PROJECT SUMMARY The Department of the Army submitted a Final Real Property Master Plan for Arlington National Cemetery (ANC). ANC is a 624-acre cemetery located in Arlington County, Virginia surrounded by major roadways, Joint Base Myer-Henderson Hall (JBM-HH), the Pentagon Reservation, developed areas of Arlington County, and lands under the jurisdiction of the National Park Service. According to the Army, the ANC will exhaust the remaining capacity for interments for eligible veterans within ten years without any expansion. This Final Master Plan contains a number of major initiatives, including a major expansion, to extend the burial capacity of ANC beyond the 2037 planning horizon. KEY INFORMATION • Established in 1864, Arlington National Cemeteries is one of the oldest military cemeteries in the country. • In 2013, ANC expanded with the addition of the Navy Annex site, which is now known as the Southern Expansion. This site is bounded on the south by Interstate 395, on the north by Southgate Road, on the west by the Foxcroft Heights neighborhood and the Virginia Department of Transportation (VDOT) Maintenance Yard, and on the east by Route 27. • If the Navy Annex site had not been added to Arlington National Cemetery, the remaining capacity for interments for eligible veterans would be exhausted for niche spaces by 2024 and 2025 for in-ground spaces. -
79 Stat. ] Public Law 89-188-Sept. 16, 1965 793
79 STAT. ] PUBLIC LAW 89-188-SEPT. 16, 1965 793 Public Law 89-188 AIM APT September 16, 1Q65 ^^^^^^ [H. R. 10775] To authorize certain eoiistruotion at military installations, and for other purposes. Be it enacted hy the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled^ stmction^Aia°hori- zation Act, 1966. TITLE I SEC. 101. The Secretary of the Army may establish or develop ^""^y- military installations and facilities by acquiring, constructing, con verting, rehabilitating, or installing permanent or temporary public vv^orks, including site preparations, appurtenances, utilities and equip ment for the following projects: INSIDE THE UNITED STATES CONTINENTAL UNITED STATES, LESS ARMY MATERIEL COMMAND (First Army) Fort Devens, Massachusetts: Hospital facilities and troop housing, $11,008,000. Fort Dix, New Jersey: Maintenance facilities, medical facilities, and troop housing, $17,948,000. Federal Office Building, Brooklyn, New York: Administrative facilities, $636,000. _ United States Military Academy, West Point, New York: Hospital facilities, troop housing and community facilities, and utilities, $18,089,000. (Second Army) Fort Belvoir, Virginia: Training facilities, and hospital facilities, $2,296,000. East Coast Radio Transmitter Station, Woodbridge, Virginia: Utilities, $211,000. Fort Eustis, Virginia: Utilities, $158,000. Fort Knox, Kentucky: Training facilities, maintenance facilities, troop housing, and community facilities, $15,422,000. Fort Lee, Virginia: Community facilities, $700,000. Fort Meade, Maryland: Ground improvements, $550,000. Fort Monroe, Virginia: Administrative facilities, $4,950,000. Vint Hill Farms, Virginia: Maintenance facilities, troop housing and utilities, $1,029,000. (Third Army) Fort Benning, Georgia: Maintenance facilities, troop housing and utilities, $5,325,000. -
Hunter Army Airfield
IMPACTS Deployment Guide Hunter Army Airfield ESPO Winter 2019-2020 Live Document: Last Updated 1/7/2020 Introduction Welcome to Hunter Army Airfield (Hunter AAF). This orientation package was created to help you become familiar with the area and to answer some of the questions you may have when you arrive. If you have questions regarding the contents of this package, please do not hesitate to contact a member of the ESPO team. Table of Contents Background 2 Hunter Army Airfield 2 Savannah, Georgia 2 Climate and Weather 2 Arrival and Badging Information 2 Before Arrival 2 Directions 3 Arrival at Hunter 3 Image 1: Aerial view of Hangar 7901, Montgomery Gate, and the Residence Inn. 3 Image 3: Aerial view of parking at Hangar 7901 4 Information on Lodging 4 Lab & Office Information 4 Network 4 Office Equipment 5 Image 3: Forecast briefing area at Hunter. 5 Shipping/Storage 5 Shipments to Hunter Army Airfield 5 Safety 6 Lab, Hangar, & Ramp Safety 6 Emergency Services 6 Other Important Contacts 7 Mission Information 7 Mission Schedule 7 Reporting & Archiving 7 1 Background Hunter Army Airfield The city of Savannah transformed 900 acres of forest, pasture and swamp into the Savannah Municipal Airport in 1929. It was not until 1940 that the airport was renamed Hunter Municipal Airfield after the Savannah native and WWI pilot Lieutenant Colonel Frank O’Driscoll Hunter. This airfield served as an operational training unit during WWII and after. Savannah, Georgia Savannah was founded as a British colonial capital in 1733 and is the oldest city in Georgia. -
Operation Sunrise: America's OSS, Swiss Intelligence, and the German Surrender 1945
Swiss American Historical Society Review Volume 52 Number 1 Article 3 2-2016 Operation Sunrise: America's OSS, Swiss Intelligence, and the German Surrender 1945 Stephen P. Halbrook Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/sahs_review Part of the European History Commons, and the European Languages and Societies Commons Recommended Citation Halbrook, Stephen P. (2016) "Operation Sunrise: America's OSS, Swiss Intelligence, and the German Surrender 1945," Swiss American Historical Society Review: Vol. 52 : No. 1 , Article 3. Available at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/sahs_review/vol52/iss1/3 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Swiss American Historical Society Review by an authorized editor of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. Halbrook: Operation Sunrise Operation Sunrise: America's OSS, Swiss Intelligence, and the German Surrender 1945 by Stephen P. Halbrook* Operation Sunrise was a cooperative effort of American and Swiss intelligence services which led to the unconditional surrender of the German Wehrmacht forces in Northern Italy and Western Austria on May 2, 1945. General Heinrich von Yietinghoff, Commander-in Chief of the Southwest Command and of Army Group C, surrendered nearly a million soldiers, the strongest remaining German force. This was the first great surrender of German forces to the Allies, and became a strong impetus for the final Allied victory over Nazi Germany on May 8, Victory in Europe (YE) Day. Operation Sunrise helped to nip in the bud Nazi aspirations for guerilla resistance in an Alpine redoubt. -
THE OLD BOYS the American Elite and the Origins of the CIA
THE OLD B OYS The American Elite and the Origins of the CIA BURTON HERSH Expanded, unexpurgated, and with an updated preface INTRODUCTION THE OLD BOYS The American Elite and the Origins of the CIA In 1961 I was a kid attempting to break into magazine free-lancing. The Bay of Pigs debacle had barely overtaken the Kennedy administration, and through a well-intentioned friend I finagled an audience with the highly regarded progressive Carey McWilliams, long since the rock and senior brain around The Nation of that era. McWilliams’s editorial office was small, I remember, with an ink-blotched, chipped-up desk that looked as if it had been dragged into an alley behind some principal’s office somewhere and rescued by liberals from the Department of Sani- tation. The plaster was grey, and crazed into cracks in a great many places, and smeared with a formless crescent behind where McWilliams tilted back his creaky oak chair and impatiently rubbed his scalp against the wall while hashing up story ideas. Amidst all this atmosphere, McWilliams came right to the point. What with the end of the Eisenhower administration and the Cuban misadventure, the CIA was accessible for the first time. The moment was ripe to dig out a full-length exposé of the Agency, until recently seemingly untouchable. The Allen Dulles era was mani- festly at an end. How about starting in for the magazine with that assignment? There could be no guarantee, but the magazine would probably pay expenses up to thirty dollars. At that time of my life I had no experience of any kind with investigative jour- nalism, a single friend with a couch in the entire D.C. -
Ms. Tamara G. Payne Deputy Garrison Commander for ASA Fort Eustis U.S
Biography Department of the Army Ms. Tamara G. Payne Deputy Garrison Commander for ASA Fort Eustis U.S. Army Installation Management Command Joint Base Langley - Eustis, VA Ms. Tamara Payne serves as the Deputy Garrison Commander of ASA Fort Eustis, part of the Joint Base Langley- Eustis command. She is responsible for providing leadership and management of installation service delivery, performance management, business planning, and analysis on a joint base community servicing Army, Air Force and Navy servicemen and women, civilians their families and the surrounding communities. Prior to this assignment, Ms. Payne served as the IMCOM Training, Deputy Chief, Plans and Ops, Chief of Analysis and Integration and the IMCOM Central Region Installation Support lead for two of the largest installations in the Army, Fort Bliss and White Sands Missile Range, the largest Army Reserve Installation of Fort Hunter Liggett and Reserve Forces Training Area Parks. She was also dual hatted as the Chief of Plans Analysis and Integration and Transformation Office at USAG Ansbach, where she planned and led installation restructure and receipt of the Army’s first rotational aviation brigade. She has stood up and led two transformation offices, responsible for integration and planning of installation and mission initiatives in support of region-wide efforts such as the Aviation Restructure Initiative, Camp Humphreys Transformation and Yongsan Relocation Program. Throughout her civilian career she provided installation governance, transformation, strategic planning and integrated support to Soldiers, Civilians and their families at eight (8) installations across four (4) regions. She served in the United States Army as an intelligence analyst primarily focused on Persian Area studies and crypto-linguistics. -
Annual Report
Annual ReportFiscal Year 2012 About The Children’s Village Founded in 1851, The Children's Village is a charitable organization that specializes in working with the most vulnerable children and families in the New York metropolitan region. The Children’s Village reaches thousands of children, teens and families through a variety of innovative community-based and residential programs. The Village was named Agency of the Year by the Alliance for Children and Families, is approved by the Better Business Bureau, and this year was re-accredited by The Council on Accreditation. Administrative Office and New York City Office Bronx Office Residential Campus 2090 Adam Clayton 400 E. Fordham Road One Echo Hills Powell Blvd. Bronx, NY 10468 Dobbs Ferry, NY 10522 New York, NY 10027 718-220-4700 914-693-0600 212-932-9009 www.childrensvillage.org To volunteer, donate, or get involved visit our website or follow CV1851 on www.childrensvillage.org Your support helped keep more than 10,000 children safe Meet Some of the People You Helped to Succeed and families together this past year. On behalf of all of Deanna - No Longer Homeless them, thank you! Children need love and unconditional belonging, and family is where that Deanna is bright, cheerful, and optimistic. Although, after lis- happens best. Our goal in everything we do is to strengthen those important tening to the story of her relatively short life, one wonders relationships and, when that fails, create new loving families and sustain them how she maintains her positive outlook. In a short time, for the future. Our work has expanded in recent years, but everything we do Deanna lost her mother to suicide, was abandoned by her continues to be about keeping children safe and families together! father, and kicked out by her grandparents. -
AMC Powerpoint Presentation Template
NEWCOMERS WELCOME DFMWR/ACS Relocation Readiness Program USAG FORT RUCKER MISSION AND VISION MISSION: To take care of Soldiers, Family Members, and Civilians and set the conditions for Mission success. 2 0 1 8 VISION: Fort Rucker is the DOD Standard for infrastructure quality; is the provider of consistent, quality services that are a force multiplier in supported organizations' mission accomplishment, and materially enhance Soldier and Family well-being and readiness. ARMY VALUES: Loyalty: Bear true faith and allegiance to the US Constitution, the Army, your unit and other Soldiers Duty: Fulfill your obligations Respect: Treat people as they should be treated Selfless Service: Put the welfare of the Nation, The Army and your subordinates before your own Honor: Live up to all the Army Values Integrity: Do what’s right, legally and morally Personal Courage: Face fear, danger, or adversity (physical or moral) POC : / 334-255-3161/ 2 of 89 MAY 2020_V1 FORT RUCKER ORGANIZATIONS Tenant Tenant Public/Private USAACE Commands Organizations Partners CR ACL CHR Mobile C USASA MEP C A Dist COE M D LAH C ATSCOM / 164th st DFA 1 AB TAOG JAG S DENTA C NEC 23rd FTS CI th 110 D AB LR C USAAR L NC OA Det 2/B/2- MIC AFC 228th Avn C WOC C Camp Shelby, MS 177th AR Bde JB Langley-Eustis Eglin AFB, FL Fort Rucker, AL` 128th Avn Bde 7th SF Group Fort Huachuca, AZ 2-13th Avn Regt POC : / 334-255-3161/ 3 of 89 MAY 2020_V1 LIVE WORK PLAY Total Acreage:62,855 (includes 1,454 leased) 5 Access Control Points 2 Visitor Control Centers Post Exchange Commissary Medical, Dental, & VA Clinics Veterinary Clinic 2 Dependent Schools 2 Dining Facilities 3 Chapels Post Theater Divot’s, The Landing Zone, Mother Rucker’s, Coffee Zones 2 Physical Fitness Centers Mini CDC Child, Youth, Teen Centers Center Library 20-Lane Bowling Center 27-Hole Golf Course 640-Acre Lake Tholocco 23 Cabins (inc Wounded Warrior Retreat) 1476 Family Housing Units (RCI) 624 Privatized Army Lodging Rooms In the Works: Edmund W. -
BIOGRAPHICAL DATA BOO KK Class 2019-2 10-21 June 2019 National Defense University
BBIIOOGGRRAAPPHHIICCAALL DDAATTAA BBOOOOKK Class 2019-2 10-21 June 2019 National Defense University NDU PRESIDENT NDU VICE PRESIDENT Vice Admiral Fritz Roegge, USN 16th President Vice Admiral Fritz Roegge is an honors graduate of the University of Minnesota with a Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering and was commissioned through the Reserve Officers' Training Corps program. He earned a Master of Science in Engineering Management from the Catholic University of America and a Master of Arts with highest distinction in National Security and Strategic Studies from the Naval War College. He was a fellow of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Seminar XXI program. VADM Fritz Roegge, NDU President (Photo His sea tours include USS Whale (SSN 638), USS by NDU AV) Florida (SSBN 728) (Blue), USS Key West (SSN 722) and command of USS Connecticut (SSN 22). His major command tour was as commodore of Submarine Squadron 22 with additional duty as commanding officer, Naval Support Activity La Maddalena, Italy. Ashore, he has served on the staffs of both the Atlantic and the Pacific Submarine Force commanders, on the staff of the director of Naval Nuclear Propulsion, on the Navy staff in the Assessments Division (N81) and the Military Personnel Plans and Policy Division (N13), in the Secretary of the Navy's Office of Legislative Affairs at the U. S, House of Representatives, as the head of the Submarine and Nuclear Power Distribution Division (PERS 42) at the Navy Personnel Command, and as an assistant deputy director on the Joint Staff in both the Strategy and Policy (J5) and the Regional Operations (J33) Directorates.