viernes, 4 de mayo de 2018



Friday, May 4, 2018
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Best Of: China Ramps Up Navy to Challenge U.S. Dominance




Photo: Keith Tsuji/Getty Images

According to CNBC, sources “with direct knowledge of U.S. intelligence reports” say China has installed long-range anti-ship and surface-to-air missiles on three of its artificial islands in the region—and the deployment in just the past 30 days.

In our Friday ‘Best of’ series, we lay out the big picture for you by bringing you Expert Cipher Brief analysis on China’s considerable progress in developing advanced naval and force projection capabilities:
  • As part of its ambitious strategy to evolve into a leading global power by 2050, China has spent considerable resources upgrading its naval capabilities. Through such undertakings, China has significantly enhanced its force projection in East Asia, where it has staked claim to disputed islands and waters as a means of expanding its sovereignty and procuring additional resources.
     
  • China has used its enhanced naval capabilities to project maritime power in East Asia at the expense of U.S. strategic interests and the territorial integrity of U.S. regional allies. Through its naval might, China has laid claim to various disputed outposts in the South and East China Seas and threatens the freedom of navigation in these contested waterways.
     
  • China’s commitment to boosting its naval capacity represents a growing challenge to U.S. naval supremacy in the Pacific Ocean and beyond. Although the U.S. government has worked to formulate a strategy to ensure that its Navy maintains its competitive advantage on the high seas, China’s rapidly evolving naval capabilities present an alarming cause for concern.
Read more on China’s developing naval and force projection capabilities.


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Opinion: Banning Transgender Soldiers Will Damage National Security



Today’s column is written by “Jenny Hall,” the pseudonym of an active duty officer of the CIA. “Jenny” argues that a return to the enforcement of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” would be disastrous for the U.S. military and intelligence community:
  • “‘Who is a Homo?’ ponders an internal CIA document written in 1980 to help investigators identify and purge gay CIA officers. ‘The homosexual is a complex, intelligent, interesting, and mixed-up individual,’ the document warns. ‘He may not consider himself queer,” and “may accept his psychological deviation from the normal.’”
     
  • “On March 23rd, the Department of Defense (DOD) released a 44-page defense of a revised ban on transgender military service after the courts froze the original ban tweeted by the President last July. Its authors rely on a familiar script to justify discrimination. They should know that decades do not remove the stain.”
     
  • “So how did DOD go so terribly astray? The unnamed and uncredentialed authors have yet to defend their work in public, and it is obvious why. They ignored the American Psychiatric Association’s determination that gender dysphoria is not a mental disorder… They misrepresented the medical literature to make damning judgments about all trans recruits, calling them suicide risks, prone to high costs, and unable to deploy… They mis-cited studies to manufacture doubt in the medical benefits of gender transition.”
Read Jenny's argument for continued LGBT service in the armed forces and intel community.




Your Weekly Intelligence Gossip



It's Friday...and we're here to catch you up on all the intel gossip and rumors you missed throughout the week.

From this week's Dead Drop:
  • RUSSIA ATTACKS NATO (CAFETERIA): Putin’s mouthpiece, Sputnik News, served up a story over the weekend headlined: “Forget Russia: NATO Officials Say Bad Canteen Food Among Alliance’s Big Problems.” It is good to know that Sputnik is worried about the quality of the cuisine in Brussels. According to the article, officials at NATO say the chow at their new $1.23 B headquarters is so bad the caterers “could end up in The Hague.” Sputnik’s source was Politico.eu which quoted an official as saying the cafeteria contractor is “…the Blackwater of the catering world.” Man, that must be some gross grub.

Newsletter by Cipher Brief Content Manager Brian Garrett-Glaser. Please send comments to POV@thecipherbrief.com, and questions to info@thecipherbrief.com.


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