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Pulling the electronical plug on former 'allies'

Many programs which are used in computer systems in weapons, ships, planes, tanks, satellites etc. lately all get a build-in 'emergency brake'. Via GPS satellites in space, the command can be transmitted to anywhere on earth, to stop. And the computer systems just go 'dead'.
FPF - 22-10-2007 - Forty years ago the CIA ordered the design for the completion of a satellite system for secret and encrypted communication with agents. Code-named Pyramider, the system at that time also employed frequency hopping. This provided the agent with large "safe areas" in cities, where the signals could be hidden among random urban radio and other transmissions. To give an example of what than already also could be done: via the Pyramider system an agent was capable of reducing aircraft interception in remote areas to a radius of twenty nautical miles.*

And at that time in Vietnam, in the bar on the 7th floor of the journalist's hotel Caravelle in Saigon, I got some good information and a story from some 'RayBans', when some secret service people who uniformly wore those sunglasses, and which probably had been gulping down quite some Mekong whisky, explained to me what already could be done. One of them from his attachι briefcase picked up something which looked like a big GPS receiver, and said that he could make bombs explode in say Amsterdam, Cape Town or New York, via the Pyramider satellite. He'd just have to have the right orders and commands from his superiors.

Or they could for instance be at the CIA's headquarters in Langley, Virginia, and at the same time - to give some nasty examples from the present time 'false flag' operations by the CIA c.s. - bombs would go off in Madrid or on Bali, in London, or on 9/11 for the 'inside job' of the 3 World Trade Center buildings, the Mexican Congress* or whatever and wherever. ''It's like a remote control on your TV,'' they said, ''you just push the 'command' button and, there you go! You're not even near the place of the bombing, so you have a hell of an alibi. And, as usual, the others can be blamed, that's what we pay all those compliant journalists in the media for."

MACHURIAN CANDIDATES AND THE 'ZERO OPTION'

During the ten years I worked in the Mideast, among other massacres covering 'Desert Storm', I often heard people speak about another, less electronic 'Zero option'. Palestinians and others that sometimes were trained in - what they thought were 'Jihad camps' - upon leaving were equipped with hand grenades or bombs to execute attacks. Little did they know they were 'Manchurian candidates' on their way to the cemetery, and involuntarely martyrdom. The problem showed to be the fact, that those timers on the bombs and the ignition on the - mostly fragmentation - hand grenades which were very powerful, had a so called 'Zero option': when the pin is pulled on a normal handgrenade, it will allow the thrower 7 to 8 seconds before it explodes. Those didn't. The specially made handgrenades exploded the very second the timer was activated or the hand grenade's pin was pulled. It gave the attackers zero seconds to escape, hence the name. They immediately were killed themselves and went to their forefathers. In the mainstream media it than was described as a 'suicide attack' or 'a botched attempt'.*

But the 'Zero option' is modified, and nowadays the whole system has been modernised and so much perfectioned that all those hightech systems in any kind of modified computer, and wherever they may be, can be ordered to stop when on electronic command 'the plug is pulled'. It means that jet fighters, bombers and other planes would fall out of the air or couldn't start. Anything working on electricity, like computers and even their back-up systems, are bypassed and become instantly obsolete. But there are not many who know what electronic systems and programs, where and in what, have been programmed the 'Zero option' way.

DR. STRANGELOVE AND EMP

Many years ago, on the island of Oahu in Hawaii, I met a swedish 'Dr. Strangelove' who for the US government was experimenting with electro magnetic pulses (EMP's). This specialist, who with US made gear constructed the electronic overhead projectors in the swedish-made jet fighters Viggen and JAS-Gripen, said that blocking the electronic systems would have the same effect as the experiment with a nuclear EMP a long time ago had shown in Hawaii. Not only the computers, but the cars, elevators and everything else running on electricity and computers in the area stopped. Even if this "Starfish Prime" experiment concerned an explosion 800 miles away from the Hawaiian islands.

Because, like Pyramider 40 years ago, the experiments with the EMP 'Zero option' also started in the 1960's: "Because of lack of data, the effects of an EMP were not fully known until 1962. At this time, the United States was conducting a series of high-altitude atmospheric tests, code named "Fishbowl." The nuclear explosion, "Starfish Prime," which was detonated in the Pacific Ocean 800 miles from Hawaii, caused an EMP that disrupted radio stations and electrical equipment throughout Hawaii.

Consequently, in 1963, the United States and the Soviet Union signed the 'Atmospheric Test Ban Treaty' to counter the considerable threat posed by EMP's. (But that treaty, like all other earlier by the US signed and sealed agreements and conventions is forgotten now, according to the US junta. - HR) Unfortunately, the destructive potential of an EMP increases everyday as society becomes ever more technological because of an escalating dependence on electronics. Although EMP is unlikely to harm most people, it could harm those with pacemakers or other implanted electronic devices.

An Air Force spokesman, who describes this effect as similar to a lightning strike, points out that electronics systems can be protected by placing them in metal enclosures called 'Faraday Cages' that divert any impinging electromagnetic energy directly to the ground. Foreign military analysts say this reassuring explanation is incomplete.* Meaning that it is not true.

MORE DR STRANGELOVE NEWS: US MADE 'RODS FROM GOD'?

"Rods from God" is another so called 'evolution' of a 1980s program. Basically, it consists of orbiting platforms stocked with metal tungsten rods around 6.1 meters long (20 feet) and 30 cm (one foot) in diameter that could be satellite-guided to targets anywhere on the earth within minutes, for the rods would move at over 11,000 km/hr (6,835 mph). The people, or whatever is targeted, having a 'Zero option' too.

This weapon exploits kinetic energy to cause an explosion the same magnitude of that of an earth-penetrating nuclear weapon, but with no radioactive fall-out. The system would function due to two satellites, one of which would work as a communications platform, while the other would contain an arsenal of tungsten rods. Each of the satellites would be seven meters long (23 feet) and its diameter would be approximately 30 cm (one foot). However, serious problems would arise if the Pentagon begins the operational phase - especially from a financial perspective. Some studies maintain that Rods from God could be fully operational in ten years.

The targets of the rods would be much more restricted than those of 'Global Strike'. Their main targets remains ballistic missiles stockpiled in hardened sites, or orbital devices and satellite systems deployed by other powers -- according to the counter-space operation doctrine. 'Rods from God' can, however, be employed to strike targets in desert areas - be they hardened sites or concentrated hostile forces. Its devastating striking power does not allow such a weapon to be used for other missions, if unsustainable collateral damage is to be avoided.

The road to space weaponization is hazardous. The current U.S. administration appears confident that it can handle the issue successfully. As usual, when a new category of weapons sees the light, it is not clear whether newcomers will suffer from perpetual disadvantage.

DESIGNED TO PROTECT THE COUNTRY

If other powers succeed in implementing low-cost orbital instruments that could endanger Washington's sophisticated space weapons, the U.S. could rapidly find itself in need of financing hyper-expensive programs designed to protect the country - a situation which could make the Pentagon regret having opened the space front to begin with. Especially now when Bush for US 'interests' has claimed the whole universe, signing another mad declaration. *

The secret present programming of computer systems in some weaponry etc. to be sold or given to 'allies' - which in the future (as so often) may turn their anger and revenge against the US/UK military-industrial-complex - and become a nasty 'blowback' - is seen as necessary and a strategic technical advantage by the warmongers.

So when planes fall like leafs out of the air, surface to air missiles go haywire or satellites stop or disappear in space, when tanks or missiles and communications don't function anymore, one of the reasons might be the new Pyramider's command: to stop it.

That command should immediately be given to the bellicose and criminal US/UK bunch too.

So they and their war crimes collaborators can be jailed for their global war crimes.

Forever...


HENK RUYSSENAARS


* BUSH SIGNS AGAIN AND CLAIMS THE WEALTH OF THE WHOLE UNIVERSE - 'US' now also is short for: 'Usurping Space' - One year ago - Url.:  http://beirut.indymedia.org/ar/2006/10/5758.shtml

* EMP - Electro Magnetic Pulse - Url.:  http://www.unitedstatesaction.com/emp-terror.htm

* FISHBOWL - NUCLEAR 'ELECTRO MMAGNETIC PULSE' TEST HAWAII - Url.:  link to images.google.com

* TWO ISRAELIS ARRESTED WITH BOMBS IN THE MEXICAN CONGRESS - Mexican newspaper front page with story of the arrested Mossad agents - Url.: 216.177.7.126/mex.html

* BRITISH BOMBS AND THE 'ZERO OPTION' - Url.:  http://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2005/07/318411.html

* PYRAMIDER - SEE ROBERT LINDSEY, 'THE FALCON AND THE SNOWMAN' - New York: Simon & Schuster, 1979, page 218.

* HR IS CO-AUTHOR OF THE BOOK 'TECHNO-BANDITS', published in 1984 by Houghton Miflin Company - Boston, MA - ISBN 91-7738-064-9

* US MILITARIZES SPACE: GLOBAL STRIKE & MORE 'RODS FROM GOD' - Url.:  http://www.apfn.net/messageboard/08-19-05/discussion.cgi.70.html

* GEORGE BUSH II - SPEAKING ABOUT THE US/UK JUNTA'S GLOBAL ATROCITIES: "Truth of the matter is, there's people who disagree with the decisions I've made all over the world. But that's what happens when you make decisions." - Quoted by one of the US/UK junta's worst propaganda sewers, CNN.

* THE US IS A 'CRIMOCRACY' - Christopher Bollyn: "This is how the U.S. government, which I call a "crimocracy" works. It is a government of criminals, by criminals, and for criminals. It is the source of the corruption which is responsible for the United States being in such dire straits." - Url.:  http://www.rumormillnews.com/cgi-bin/forum.cgi?read=110673

* THE STATE OF OUR WORLD IN RELATED LINKS - Url.:  http://tinyurl.com/2ncumy

* "MINDS ARE LIKE PARACHUTES, THEY ONLY FUNCTION WHEN THEY ARE OPEN" - SIR JAMES DEWAR

* FPF-COPYRIGHT NOTICE - In accordance with Title 17 U. S. C. Section 107 - any copyrighted work in this message is distributed by the Foreign Press Foundation under fair use, without profit or payment, to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the information. Url.:  http://tinyurl.com/3z3r6

FOREIGN PRESS FOUNDATION
Editor: Henk Ruyssenaars
 http://tinyurl.com/2au2fj
The Netherlands
 fpf@chello.nl

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homepage: homepage: http://tinyurl.com/2au2fj


The US build in 'kill switches' 18.Nov.2007 06:04

FPF-HR fwd.: New York Times fpf@chello.nl

The Kill Switch: US Secrets & Pakistan's nukes

Quote: "In addition, the Pakistanis were suspicious that any American-made technology in their warheads could include a secret "kill switch," enabling the Americans to turn off their weapons."

FPF comment: No more questions, your honor!

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Published - November 18, 2007

U.S. Secretly Aids Pakistan in Guarding Nuclear Arms

By David E Sanger and William J. Broad

WASHINGTON, Nov. 17 — Over the past six years, the Bush administration has spent almost $100 million on a highly classified program to help Gen. Pervez Musharraf, Pakistan's president, secure his country's nuclear weapons, according to current and former senior administration officials.

But with the future of that country's leadership in doubt, debate is intensifying about whether Washington has done enough to help protect the warheads and laboratories, and whether Pakistan's reluctance to reveal critical details about its arsenal has undercut the effectiveness of the continuing security effort.

The aid, buried in secret portions of the federal budget, paid for the training of Pakistani personnel in the United States and the construction of a nuclear security training center in Pakistan, a facility that American officials say is nowhere near completion, even though it was supposed to be in operation this year.

A raft of equipment — from helicopters to night-vision goggles to nuclear detection equipment — was given to Pakistan to help secure its nuclear material, its warheads, and the laboratories that were the site of the worst known case of nuclear proliferation in the atomic age.

While American officials say that they believe the arsenal is safe at the moment, and that they take at face value Pakistani assurances that security is vastly improved, in many cases the Pakistani government has been reluctant to show American officials how or where the gear is actually used.

That is because the Pakistanis do not want to reveal the locations of their weapons or the amount or type of new bomb-grade fuel the country is now producing.

The American program was created after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, when the Bush administration debated whether to share with Pakistan one of the crown jewels of American nuclear protection technology, known as "permissive action links," or PALS, a system used to keep a weapon from detonating without proper codes and authorizations.

In the end, despite past federal aid to France and Russia on delicate points of nuclear security, the administration decided that it could not share the system with the Pakistanis because of legal restrictions.

In addition, the Pakistanis were suspicious that any American-made technology in their warheads could include a secret "kill switch," enabling the Americans to turn off their weapons.

While many nuclear experts in the federal government favored offering the PALS system because they considered Pakistan's arsenal among the world's most vulnerable to terrorist groups, some administration officials feared that sharing the technology would teach Pakistan too much about American weaponry. The same concern kept the Clinton administration from sharing the technology with China in the early 1990s.

The New York Times has known details of the secret program for more than three years, based on interviews with a range of American officials and nuclear experts, some of whom were concerned that Pakistan's arsenal remained vulnerable. The newspaper agreed to delay publication of the article after considering a request from the Bush administration, which argued that premature disclosure could hurt the effort to secure the weapons.

Since then, some elements of the program have been discussed in the Pakistani news media and in a presentation late last year by the leader of Pakistan's nuclear safety effort, Lt. Gen. Khalid Kidwai, who acknowledged receiving "international" help as he sought to assure Washington that all of the holes in Pakistan's nuclear security infrastructure had been sealed.

The Times told the administration last week that it was reopening its examination of the program in light of those disclosures and the current instability in Pakistan. Early this week, the White House withdrew its request that publication be withheld, though it was unwilling to discuss details of the program.

In recent days, American officials have expressed confidence that Pakistan's nuclear arsenal is well secured. "I don't see any indication right now that security of those weapons is in jeopardy, but clearly we are very watchful, as we should be," Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, told a Pentagon news conference on Thursday.

Admiral Mullen's carefully chosen words, a senior administration official said, were based on two separate intelligence assessments issued this month that had been summarized in briefings to Mr. Bush. Both concluded that Pakistan's nuclear arsenal was safe under current conditions, and one also looked at laboratories and came to the same conclusion.

Still, the Pakistani government's reluctance to provide access has limited efforts to assess the situation. In particular, some American experts say they have less ability to look into the nuclear laboratories where highly enriched uranium is produced — including the laboratory named for Abdul Qadeer Khan, the man who sold Pakistan's nuclear technology to Iran, North Korea and Libya.

The secret program was designed by the Energy Department and the State Department, and it drew heavily from the effort over the past decade to secure nuclear weapons, stockpiles and materials in Russia and other former Soviet states. Much of the money for Pakistan was spent on physical security, like fencing and surveillance systems, and equipment for tracking nuclear material if it left secure areas.

But while Pakistan is formally considered a "major non-NATO ally," the program has been hindered by a deep suspicion among Pakistan's military that the secret goal of the United States was to gather intelligence about how to locate and, if necessary, disable Pakistan's arsenal, which is the pride of the country.

"Everything has taken far longer than it should," a former official involved in the program said in a recent interview, "and you are never sure what you really accomplished."

So far, the amount the United States has spent on the classified nuclear security program, less than $100 million, amounts to slightly less than one percent of the roughly $10 billion in known American aid to Pakistan since the Sept. 11 attacks. Most of that money has gone for assistance in counterterrorism activities against the Taliban and Al Qaeda.

The debate over sharing nuclear security technology began just before then-Secretary of State Colin L. Powell was sent to Islamabad after the Sept. 11 attacks, as the United States was preparing to invade Afghanistan.

"There were a lot of people who feared that once we headed into Afghanistan, the Taliban would be looking for these weapons," said a senior official who was involved. But a legal analysis found that aiding Pakistan's nuclear weapons program — even if it was just with protective gear — would violate both international and American law.

General Musharraf, in his memoir, "In the Line of Fire," published last year, did not discuss any equipment, training or technology offered then, but wrote: "We were put under immense pressure by the United States regarding our nuclear and missile arsenal. The Americans' concerns were based on two grounds. First, at this time they were not very sure of my job security, and they dreaded the possibility that an extremist successor government might get its hands on our strategic nuclear arsenal. Second, they doubted our ability to safeguard our assets."

General Musharraf was more specific in an interview two years ago for a Times documentary, "Nuclear Jihad: Can Terrorists Get the Bomb?" Asked about the equipment and training provided by Washington, he said, "Frankly, I really don't know the details." But he added: "This is an extremely sensitive matter in Pakistan. We don't allow any foreign intrusion in our facilities. But, at the same time, we guarantee that the custodial arrangements that we brought about and implemented are already the best in the world."

Now that concern about General Musharraf's ability to remain in power has been rekindled, so has the debate inside and outside the Bush administration about how much the program accomplished, and what it left unaccomplished. A second phase of the program, which would provide more equipment, helicopters and safety devices, is already being discussed in the administration, but its dimensions have not been determined.

Harold M. Agnew, a former director of the Los Alamos weapons laboratory, which designed most of the United States' nuclear arms, argued that recent federal reluctance to share warhead security technology was making the world more dangerous.

"Lawyers say it's classified," Dr. Agnew said in an interview. "That's nonsense. We should share this technology. Anybody who joins the club should be helped to get this."

"Whether it's India or Pakistan or China or Iran," he added, "the most important thing is that you want to make sure there is no unauthorized use. You want to make sure that the guys who have their hands on the weapons can't use them without proper authorization."

In the past, officials say, the United States has shared ideas — but not technologies — about how to make the safeguards that lie at the heart of American weapons security. The system hinges on what is essentially a switch in the firing circuit that requires the would-be user to enter a numeric code that starts a timer for the weapon's arming and detonation.

Most switches disable themselves if the sequence of numbers entered turns out to be incorrect in a fixed number of tries, much like a bank ATM does. In some cases, the disabled link sets off a small explosion in the warhead to render it useless. Delicate design details involve how to bury the link deep inside a weapon to keep terrorists or enemies from disabling the safeguard.

The most famous case of nuclear idea sharing involves France. Starting in the early 1970s, the United States government began a series of highly secretive discussions with French scientists to help them improve the country's warheads.

A potential impediment to such sharing was the 1968 Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, which bars cooperation between nations on weapons technology.

To get around such legal prohibitions, Washington came up with a system of "negative guidance," sometimes called "20 questions," as detailed in a 1989 article in Foreign Policy. The system let United States scientists listen to French descriptions of warhead approaches and give guidance about whether the French were on the right track.

Nuclear experts say sharing also took place after the cold war when the United States worried about the security of Russian nuclear arms and facilities. In that case, both countries declassified warhead information to expedite the transfer of safety and security information, according to federal nuclear scientists.

But in the case of China, which has possessed nuclear weapons since the 1960s and is a signatory to the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, the Clinton administration decided that sharing PALS would be too risky. Experts inside the administration feared the technology would improve the Chinese warheads, and could give the Chinese insights into how American systems worked.

Officials said Washington debated sharing security techniques with Pakistan on at least two occasions — right after it detonated its first nuclear arms in 1998, and after the terrorist attack on the United States in 2001.

The debates pitted atomic scientists who favored technical sharing against federal officials at such places as the State Department who ruled that the transfers were illegal under the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and under United States law.

In the 1998 case, the Clinton administration still hoped it could roll back Pakistan's nuclear program, forcing it to give up the weapons it had developed. That hope, never seen as very realistic, has been entirely given up by the Bush administration.

The nuclear proliferation conducted by Mr. Khan, the Pakistani metallurgist who built a huge network to spread Pakistani technology, convinced the Pakistanis that they needed better protections.

"Among the places in the world that we have to make sure we have done the maximum we can do, Pakistan is at the top of the list," said John E. McLaughlin, who served as deputy director of the Central Intelligence Agency at the time, and played a crucial role in the intelligence collection that led to Mr. Khan's downfall.

"I am confident of two things," he added. "That the Pakistanis are very serious about securing this material, but also that someone in Pakistan is very intent on getting their hands on it." - [and end]

THE KILL SWITCH - Source - New York Times - 18 November 2007 - Url.: New York Times - - 18-11-2007 - Print - Url.:  http://tinyurl.com/3yapbj