The Post-Everything Future of 5GW
Posted: 21 August 2011 12:09 AM   [ Ignore ]
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Big ups to Wes Unruh for hipping me to an article that’s a year old but hit my brainpan like Starfish Prime:

http://securitydebrief.com/2010/09/29/fifth-generation-warfare-a-growing-concept/

The article is not worth reprinting in full. The author’s bio, on the other hand, very much is:

Steven Bucci writes about cybersecurity, modern warfare and the interagency process, particularly as it involves defending U.S. interests domestically. Bucci formerly served as Deputy Assistant Secretary for Homeland Defense at the Department of Defense and also served for 28 years in the U.S. Army. He is currently IBM’s Issue Lead for cybersecurity.

The article is about the threat of 5GW. At first I thought it was a lazy treatment of the topic by someone who didn’t have the time to research it, then it hit me: I wasn’t reading an essay, I was reading ad copy. This guy is actually selling 5GW, as well as hyping for a loose think tank called the 5GW Eductational Institute.
http://www.5gwinstitute.com/

Here’s where things get quotable:

The 5GW Educational Institute is truly one of just a few groups studying the idea of “Generational Warfare.” They are on the cutting edge of a new (and hopefully effective) way to address the challenges our nation faces. They are attempting to be the thought leaders on the topic of 5GW and make the case that the United States is at a moment of transitioning from traditional and separated disciplines in the national security space to the world of highly integrated, multifaceted and sophisticated 5GW.

Our enemies have figured this out already. They are agile, innovative and will try whatever works. We tend to still have an industrial-age methodology. We preach agility, net-centric operations and a legion of other buzz words, but then return to our comfortable traditional corners.

Horseshit. Pentagon Red Teams routinely outperform Al Qaeda, and it’s not like I’m some super-patriot, that’s just an obvious fact. 99% of domestic terrorism post-9/11 has been FBI entrapment, not actual 4GW teams formulating and executing plans.

Let’s be real: I’m no cheerleader for the military industrial complex, but their enemies have not figured out shit, except perhaps that the US military is running on an un-sustainable business plan and their Full Spectrum Dominance is about to hit some brick walls in less than a decade. That doesn’t mean they are 5GW ninjas with telepathic insights, it means they read US media, which has been publishing detailed information about that problem for decades now.

Nobody is touching the US in terms of force projection, so with “Cyberwar” testing poorly with the body politic, I can see the next threat being 5GW. Can you imagine Paul Wolfowitz shilling before Congress and saying “five gee double you” with a straight face, hundreds of times? You won’t have to in about 18 months. Gears are already turning.

I was joking with Wes that I could see 5GW becoming “the critical theory of the warrior class”—which is to say, a culture that produces complex essays that say nothing at all. I didn’t realize how dire that was until I thought about a climate where 5GW is normal conversation: invisible warfare taken for granted. This completely negates the need for manufacturing an enemy, or creating opposition to control—you can simply declare natural disasters and industrial disasters as “5GW attacks.” Explaining the concept becomes part of the news cycle and everyone on the bus is explaining it to each other for the rest of your life.

It’s late and I could explain this better—I will be back to do exactly that.

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Posted: 22 August 2011 09:59 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 1 ]
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“The critical theory of the warrior class” - perfect. The two fall under the same category for me: interesting when, after the horshit is filtered out, taken as pragmatic operational possibilities, nigh-useless when taken as explanatory models or “theory”. Warfare psychoanalysis. Combat theology. Complexity fan-fic.

It’ll need some better ad copy to sell, though. “5GW” is unappealing, because it implies a lot of history. “What are the other generations of warfare? Blah blah blah.” Super-Empowered Individuals is a better one. More immediate, more frightening. Sounds like supervillany, which isn’t a hard sell with the glut of comic book blockbusters these days. Maybe drop the “-empowered” aspect, sounds too positive, too friendly and, well, empowered. Replace it with something menacing and jargon-technical.

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Posted: 22 August 2011 01:03 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 2 ]
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I’ve seen “rogue actors” used as a shorthand for SEI. The meme of the “lone wolf” has always been popular with the media as an explanatory totem, and now we’ve got a fully fleshed-out pop culture exemplar of exactly that in Anders Breivik the Templar.

breivik_manifesto.jpg

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Posted: 22 August 2011 01:10 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 3 ]
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Rogue actors is a good one. Autonomous actors, maybe sovereign agents. Yeah… I could pitch a budget to Congress with those. Lone wolf is probably better suited to media and public speaking rhetoric, but works too.

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Posted: 05 September 2011 08:35 PM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 4 ]
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WE CALLED IT.

Lo: http://news.yahoo.com/lone-wolf-terror-seen-biggest-threat-040044845.html

“Lone wolf” terror seen as biggest threat

HAMBURG, Germany (AP) — After 9/11, it was the men who went to radicalized mosques or terror boot camps who were seen as the biggest terror threat. Today, that picture’s changed: Authorities are increasingly focusing on the lone wolf living next door, radicalized on the Internet — and plotting strikes in a vacuum.

The March fatal shooting of two American airmen in Frankfurt by a Kosovo Albanian. The attempted backpack bombing on Fort Hood, Texas, apparently inspired by the deadly 2009 assault on the U.S. base. The foiled attack on Fort Dix, N.J., by a tiny cell of homegrown terrorists.

These Islamic terror plots share something in common with Anders Behring Breivik, the Norway killer who hated Muslims. They are the work of extremists who are confoundingly difficult to track because they hardly leave a trace.

In today’s transformed security landscape, authorities and experts say, the 9/11 plotters would surely have been caught.

It’s widely believed that these days there’s no way a cell involving 19 hijackers and an extensive support network could have plotted attacks in a Hamburg mosque, trained in terrorist camps in Afghanistan, and took flight lessons in the United States without being picked up by countertenor operations.

And President Barack Obama said in a CNN interview on Aug. 16 that a “lone wolf” terror attack in the U.S. is more likely than a major coordinated effort like the Sept. 11 attacks.

Western authorities have infiltrated major jihadist groups, planting moles, eavesdropping on chatter, keeping tabs on radical mosques, and carrying out regular terror sweeps. Some say the tough measures have eroded civil liberties.

But lone wolves or small homegrown cells that blend into the general population present a more slippery challenge.

“The biggest threats are people working alone or in very small groups,” a senior German intelligence official told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.

“So it’s not important whether we have 40 or 50 or 60 followers of the jihad (under observation) ... that doesn’t really make much of a difference. The question is are there some that we don’t know but who are planning it?”

Modern technology is also making things harder for authorities.

As extremists adapt to the anti-terror crackdown, they have taken more advantage of the Internet to cloak their communications and recruit new attackers.

“Before, people were recruited in mosques where you’d hear speeches — Finsbury Park or Baker Street. Then that totally stopped. Today, there is not a single case where group members weren’t recruited on the Internet,” French anti-terrorism judge Marc Trevidic told the AP.

“The ability to self-indoctrinate online is a big concern, because not being in a group complicates our task of surveillance,” he said. A terrorist group, he said, “is easier to monitor, moves around and has meetings.”

That’s what led to the first successful attack on German soil by an Islamic extremist, in which a 21-year-old Kosovo Albanian allegedly gunned down two American airmen outside the Frankfurt airport in March.

Arid Uka, a 21-year-old Kosovo Albanian who grew up in Frankfurt is accused of opening fire at the city’s airport on a busload of U.S. airmen on their way to Afghanistan, killing two and injuring two others.

According to the indictment, Uka was radicalized over time by jihadist propaganda he saw on the Internet, and the night before the act had watched a video that purported to show American atrocities in Afghanistan; it was actually a clip from a film. The investigation turned up no connections with any terrorist organization.

“He was a single person acting alone radicalized through jihadi Internet propaganda,” prosecutors’ spokesman Marcus Koehler told the AP at the time of the indictment. “That shows, in the opinion of the federal prosecutors office, how dangerous jihadist propaganda on the Internet is.”

In recent years, al-Qaida and other terrorist organizations have been increasingly targeting people like Uka — using radicals who grew up in Western countries to make videos in their native languages urging people in their home or adoptive countries to take up jihad.

A series of German-language videos were posted on the Internet before 2009 elections in Germany promising attacks — which never happened — and U.S.-born cleric Anwar al-Awlaki’s sermons have turned up on the computers of nearly every homegrown terror suspect in the United States.

Al-Awlaki allegedly exchanged e-mails with the U.S. Army psychiatrist accused of carrying out the 2009 shootings at the Fort Hood military base in Texas. Prosecutors also say an al-Awlaki sermon on jihad was among the materials — including videos of beheadings — found on the computers of five men convicted in December of plotting attacks on the Fort Dix military base in New Jersey.

“It was from 2003 to 2008 that we saw this rise in power of the tool of the Internet: first as propaganda, then to send messages and do recruiting,” said the French judge, Trevidic.

Now, he said, “everything is done on the Internet, with more and more sophisticated methods, and we’ve had the possible difficulty because we were dealing with a young generation that understands the Internet by heart.”

Last month, another U.S. serviceman was arrested for plotting a solo attack on Fort Hood — this time with a backpack stashed with explosives. Pfc. Naser Abdo was caught only when a Texas gun shop clerk alerted authorities after finding the suspect acting strangely in his store.

In the 2007 Fort Dix case, wiretaps helped authorities find out about the deadly plot to attack the base. Suspects Mohamad Shnewer, Serdar Tatar, and brothers Dritan, Eljvir and Shain Duka, were convicted in December 2008 of conspiring to kill U.S. military personnel.

Terrorists have also been exploiting voice-over-Internet systems like Skype — which are much more difficult for authorities to track, the German intelligence official said.

“It’s easier to follow someone to find out which flat they are meeting in, than to find out information in the jungle of passwords and voice-over-Internet technical communication,” he said.

In the three-day 2008 siege in Mumbai, India, that killed 166 people, the attackers’ handlers eschewed conventional phones for voice-over-Internet telephone services, according to authorities.

The gunmen also examined the layout and landscape of the city using images from Google Earth, which provides satellite photos for much of the planet over the Internet.

But when the attacker is acting alone there is no communication to pick up at all. In the Norway attack, Anders Behring Breivik has claimed to belong to a shadowy group of modern-day crusaders against Islam, with cells all over Europe, but prosecutors have said all signs are that he acted alone.

“The biggest threat today ... is the lone wolf, the lone bomber like we saw in Oslo,” said Rolf Tophoven, director of the Essen-based Institute for Terrorism Research and Security Policy. “If you radicalize yourself in your own house, in your own workroom, then nobody can control you.”

But even Breivik would have done things that could have alerted authorities, the German official said.

“It’s more difficult to find out about those people but of course we are not really helpless so we can still find them, even if it is a lone
wolf,” he said.

“If you look at Norway you still have a trail — he had to get the explosives, he had to get the weapon, he had to train with the weapon, he had to get the explosives into the city.

“So even if a terrorist is alone he needs some logistical preparation so we have to be more aware of those tracks, and the Internet is one of them, one of the most important.”

So many lies...just a holographic clusterfuck of disinformation.

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Posted: 30 October 2011 11:40 AM   [ Ignore ]   [ # 5 ]
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Fucking lol. You guys did call it. Well done.

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