Sunday 29 January 2017

Joshua Tree Report: January 29th, 2017

This is the Joshua Tree Report for January 29th, 2017.

General Data

The temperature in Cody is 44° Fahrenheit and the weather is partly cloudy. The temperature in Kirkwall is 6° centigrade and the weather is sunny. The temperature in Muscat is 27° centigrade and the weather is sunny. A barrel of crude oil is selling at $53.17, and $1.254 currently exchanges for £1. (I appear to have gotten this calculation wrong in previous weeks.) This week's geospatial image is Hermaness Hill on the isle of Unst, Shetland.

In the News

Here are a few of this week's top stories.

  • The changing face of cyber espionage (Politico)
  • Trump Staffers Are Reportedly Using Private Email Accounts (Gizmodo)
  • President Trump is still using his “old, unsecured Android phone” (Ars Technica)
  • The New Arab–Israeli Alliance (World Affairs Journal)
  • Libya Islamists lose key Benghazi district (BBC)
  • Suspected Emirati spy killed in Libya's Tripoli (al Jazeera)
  • Pakistan test-fires long-range Ababeel missile (UPI)
  • New Zealand rodeo turns to men dressed as sheep (BBC)
  • Saddleworth Moor mystery body identified (BBC)
  • Boxing clever: The firms based in shipping containers (BBC)
  • Don’t Shred Your Credibility for Your Tribe (National Review)
  • Memo to Media: It’s Not about You (National Review)

    Top Podcasts

    Due to extenuating circumstances, I did not listen to any podcasts this week.

    Course Report

    ENG 199: I read 3 chapters from Arabian Sands by Wilfred Thesiger.
    PAC 130: Due to extenuating circumstances, PAC 130 was cancelled this week.
    BA 480: Due to extenuating circumstances, BA 480 was cancelled this week.
    HST 406 (O): I expanded my master timeline of the First World War.
    REL 199: I accomplished nothing.

    Quote of the Week
    "Don't you know yet? It is your light that lights the worlds."
    - Rumi
  • Sunday 22 January 2017

    Joshua Tree Report: January 22nd, 2017

    This is the Joshua Tree Report for January 22nd, 2017.

    General Data

    The temperature in Cody is 28° Fahrenheit and the weather is fair. The temperature in Kirkwall is 4° centigrade and the weather is cloudy. The temperature in Muscat is 30° centigrade and the weather is clear. A barrel of crude oil is selling at $53.22, and $0.80 currently exchanges for £1. This week's geospatial image is the al Sulayyil ballistic missile base in Saudi Arabia.

    In the News

    Here are a few of this week's top stories.

  • CIA releases 13 million declassified documents online (BBC)
  • Who’s winning the cyber war? The squirrels, of course (Ars Technica)
  • Erik Prince’s Mercenaries Are Bombing Libya (War is Boring)
  • John McCain Has a Big-League Defense Buildup, Too. New White-Paper Released. (Small Wars Journal)
  • ‘Afghan girl’ Sharbat Gula in quest for new life (BBC)
  • Why thousands of Iranians are fighting in Syria (al Jazeera)
  • Newly discovered Mac malware found in the wild also works well on Linux (Ars Technica)
  • EU says Lithuania can use funds for border surveillance, not fences (AFP)
  • The Soviet Union and China Almost Started World War III (War is Boring)

    Top Podcasts

    These were my favorite podcasts from this week.

  • Inside Hillary Clinton's social media campaign for the White House (The Guardian)
  • Ron Brownstein: Clinton didn’t lose because of the white working class (The Ezra Klein Show)
  • Haven of Safety: U.S. Internment of German Sailors, 1914-1917 (The MacArthur Memorial)

    Course Report

    My courses suffered this week due to unforeseen events, but I should be back on track next week.

    ENG 199: I read half a chapter from Arabian Sands by Wilfred Thesiger.
    PAC 130: An injury prevented me from undertaking this course during the week ending today.
    BA 480: I did no reading in The Design and Evaluation of Physical Protection Systems by Mary Lynn Garcia.
    HST 406 (O): I completed the four remaining chapters in The Life of a Regiment, Vol. IV by Cyril Falls.
    REL 199: I read Zechariah 8 through 10.

    Quote of the Week
    "The desert had already claimed me, though I did not know it yet."
    - Wilfred Thesiger, Arabian Sands
  • Thursday 19 January 2017

    The 2017 Course Plan

    It wouldn't be a new year without an overly ambitious and needlessly complex plan for various accomplishments and self-improvements. This year, I'm taking a slightly different approach. Some of the best advice I ever got, which I've basically never followed, came from some of my seniors during my short-lived and ill-fated tenure as a Naval ROTC midshipman. We were told that if we wanted to accomplish or improve upon something, we should treat it as if it was an actual course that we were getting credit for. So, for example, if you needed to improve your score on the physical fitness test, you could schedule three hours per week for running, or what have you. So, I'm going to try to follow that system this year. One of three things shall happen:

    1) I'll accomplish everything, because I'll be so motivated and organized.
    2) I'll basically accomplish none of it, because it's way too ambitious and complex.
    3) I'll accomplish some of it, but gaff of on other stuff and basically not even touch it.

    Option #3 is probably the most likely outcome, but hopefully I can at least use some organization to push myself closer to Option #1 than to Option #2. So, what's on the agenda? Well, let's start with the stuff that I want to accomplish.
    1) Read a bunch of books for leisure: some familiar, and some new stuff;
    2) pass the U.S. Navy Physical Readiness Test, or something comparable;
    3) attain my PSP, Network+, and CISSP certifications, pursuant to my goal of moving home;
    4) complete the manuscript for my book about the Orcadian Gordon Highlanders of the Great War;
    5) get confirmed as a Roman Catholic prior to my upcoming wedding;
    6) pass an Arabic language proficiency exam;
    7) build HARDAC, and "authorize it" in accordance with the NIST Risk Management Framework;
    8) complete an article on a topic relating to Middle Eastern security;
    9) complete an article or two about the Dhofar Rebellion;
    10) read some of the books on strategy that I didn't get around to reading during grad school;
    11) complete a course of instruction, probably self-administered, in geospatial information systems (GIS), and complete some projects to that end; and
    12) read some of the books I was supposed to have read for prior courses I've taken in Middle Eastern history, and complete a manuscript on the topic of Islamic law.
    So, I've organized these objectives into twelve "courses", based on courses from the various institutions of higher learning that I've either attended, or considered attending.
    01. ENG 199 General Literary Studies
    02. PAC 130 Conditioning
    03. BA 480 Information Systems Security
    04. HST 406 Orcadian Gordon Highlanders of the Great War
    05. REL 199 Introduction to Roman Catholicism
    06. ARAB 101/102/103 First Year Arabic
    07. CS 406 Projects in Information Technology Management
    08. PI5502 Middle Eastern Security
    09. HST 406 The Dhofar Rebellion
    10. PI5001 Remedial Advanced Strategy
    11. GIS/GEOG 151 Introduction to Open Source Geospatial Intelligence
    12. HST 387/388 Remedial Islamic Civilization
    One of the things about a class load like this is that you're not enrolled in twelve courses all at once. (Actually, if you figure that the leisure reading, physical exercise, and Arabic language stuff spans more than just one "quarter", it's actually a total of about twenty "courses".) So, I've put together a schedule in which I'll spend three months on each "class", and be "enrolled" in five of them per quarter.


    I've put plans like this together in the past, and I've always found it difficult to motivate myself to actually execute them. Hopefully, 2017 will be different. I'll try to post more specifics as the year unfolds.

    Sunday 15 January 2017

    Joshua Tree Report: January 15th, 2017

    This is the Joshua Tree Report for January 15th, 2017.

    General Data

    The temperature in Cody is 27° Fahrenheit and the weather is fair. The temperature in Kirkwall is 5° centigrade and the weather is rainy. The temperature in Muscat is 24° centigrade and the weather is clear. A barrel of crude oil is selling at $52.37, and $0.83 currently exchanges for £1. This week's geospatial image is a geometric formation in the Saudi sector of the Empty Quarter that I presume has something to do with mineral exploration.

    In the News

    Here are a few of this week's top stories.

  • Bonfire of the Intelligence Vanities (Wall Street Journal)
  • Pakistan test-fires first nuclear-capable submarine cruise missile (AFP)
  • Iran, Mattis, and the Real Threat to U.S. Strategic Interests in the Middle East (CSIS)
  • US navy fired 'warning shots' at Iranian patrol boats (al Jazeera)
  • Obama ends special immigration policy for Cubans (al Jazeera)
  • KKK members leave Klan after befriending black musician (al Jazeera)
  • Norway Is Killing FM Radio Tomorrow (Gizmodo)
  • Gangman style: Fighting for survival on the streets of North Korea (BBC)
  • Squirrels have stolen over 40 candy bars from Toronto store (BBC)
  • Antarctic chic (BBC)

    Top Podcasts

    These were my favorite podcasts from this week.

  • IQ2: Blame the Elites for the Trump Phenomenon: This was a pretty interesting Intelligence Squared U.S. debate.
  • Radiolab: Bringing Gamma Back: Radiolab did a fascinating episode on potential treatments for Alzheimer's.
  • He’s Just Not That Into You: Trump, Intel, and the American Presidency: This dialogue between a number of intelligence and national security pundits will be useful for anyone who's concerned with the apparently contentious relationship that's shaping up between President-Elect Trump and the American intelligence community.
  • Episode 230 - SOFREP Writer Coriolanus: Coriolanus discusses some of the current shortfalls of the American intelligence community, and efforts that Lieutenant General Flynn made toward addressing some of them while heading the DIA.
  • Victor Davis Hanson: What Kind of Threat is Russia?: The Hoover Institution's Victor Davis Hanson offers his perspective on the American relationship with Russia, particularly respective of recent events.

    Course Report

    ENG 199: I read three chapters from Arabian Sands by Wilfred Thesiger.
    PAC 130: I did some deliberate stretching exercises on Monday, walked to work on Thursday.
    BA 480: I finished a long, tedious chapter in The Design and Evaluation of Physical Protection Systems by Mary Lynn Garcia.
    HST 406 (O): I read five chapters from The Life of a Regiment, Vol. IV by Cyril Falls, and researched the Romanian Campaign for my master Great War timeline.
    REL 199: I read Zechariah 3 through Zechariah 7, which still counts for nothing.

    Quote of the Week
    "[During the Third Battle of Ypres in 1917] Private G.I. McIntosh, armed with a revolver and a single grenade, waded across the stream under fire, worked his way from shell-hole to shell-hole, killed two gunners and wounded a third. He then picked up two light machine guns and carried them back into the British lines. For this action of conspicuous gallantry Private McIntosh was awarded the Victoria Cross."
    Cyril Falls, The Life of a Regiment, Vol. IV, pp. 157
  • Sunday 8 January 2017

    Joshua Tree Report: January 8th, 2017

    This is the Joshua Tree Report for January 8th, 2017.

    General Data

    The temperature in Cody is 21° Fahrenheit and the weather is fair. The temperature in Kirkwall is 8° centigrade and the weather is windy. The temperature in Muscat is 18° centigrade and the weather is clear. A barrel of crude oil is selling at $53.99, and $0.81 currently exchanges for £1. This week's geospatial image is the Musandam Fjords in northern Oman.

    In the News

    Here are a few of this week's top stories.
  • White House fails to make case that Russian hackers tampered with election (Ars Technica)
  • U.S. Intelligence Got the Wrong Cyber Bear (Bloomberg)
  • The FBI Never Asked For Access To Hacked Computer Servers (BuzzFeed News)
  • FBI Says the Democratic Party Wouldn't Let Agents See the Hacked Email Servers (Wired)
  • Emails were leaked, not hacked (Baltimore Sun)
  • How Did the Houthis Manage to Lob a Ballistic Missile at Mecca? (War is Boring)
  • Taiwan politician's funeral features 50 pole dancers (BBC)

    Top Podcasts

    These were my favorite podcasts from this week.

  • Comics Manifest #064: You Can See Opportunities That No One Else Can With David Malki!: I love Malki(!)'s comic, Wondermark, but the highlight of this podcast was hearing Malki(!)'s recollection of his Kickstarter campaign.
  • The Sci-Fi Christian: Episode 531: We’re Done with Rogue One: I saw Rogue One. It was okay. I disliked a lot of the things that the guys at The Sci-Fi Christian (and the slightly more colorful crowd at Red Letter Media) disliked about the film.
  • The National Archives: Defeating the Zeppelins: This was part of my continuing effort to become an expert in the First World War. I found this podcast pretty enlightening, even though the Zeppelin war is well outside my own personal bailiwick.
  • SpyCast: Able Archer 83: An Interview with Nate Jones: Able Archer 83 was a NATO exercise that almost led to nuclear war. The interview with FOIA superhero Nate Jones was pretty fascinating for a student of strategic nuclear doctrine.
  • SOFREP Radio Episode 013 - Dishonorable Action Figure Therapy: This is an early episode of SOFREP Radio from 2012. The podcast leaves some things to be desired; the reason I found it entertaining is the political commentary (albeit from laymen) from prior to the 2012 election, and one guy suggests (pretty vehemently, actually) that elections should be put online because the technology to make the process secure existed in 2012. Given the bulk of this week's news items and the continuing controversy about the 2016 election, I found this highly amusing.

    Course Report

    ENG 199: I read a few pages from The Worst Journey in the World by Apsley Cherry-Garrard.
    PAC 130: I did some deliberate stretching on Thursday night, and again on Sunday night.
    BA 480: I read a few pages from The Design and Evaluation of Physical Protection Systems by Mary Lynn Garcia.
    HST 406 (O): I read five chapters from Life of a Regiment, Vol. IV by Cyril Falls, and did some work on various aspects of my master spreadsheet for the project.
    REL 199: I read four chapters in Esther and Zechariah, which counts for absolutely nothing. But, the term is young, and tomorrow commences a new week.

    Quote of the Week
    "In Pakistan's case, when I first got there [in 2001], and landed in Islamabad, I had a great little map, and it showed what I was gonna do, showed a little ship out in the ocean and an arrow going to Afghanistan, and this sort of thing. And I walked in to see our ambassador there, I'd landed at midnight, walked into her office about eight o'clock in the morning, and she said, 'Who the hell are you and what are you doing in my country?' and I thought, 'This isn't going to go so well.' So I said, 'Well, Madame Ambassador, my name's Jim Mattis. I'm gonna take about a thousand of my best friends up in Afghanistan and kill some people.' And she said, 'Really, General?' And I said, 'Yes, ma'am.' She said, 'Well, sit down, I think I can help you.'"
    - General James N. Mattis, USMC (Ret.), 2014
  • Wednesday 4 January 2017

    Adventures in Arabian OSGEOINT

    In 2016, I found a couple of items of interest using open source GIS resources.

    In July, while researching an article about the Dhofar Rebellion, I was reminded by a South African source about a 1972 cross-border raid into South Yemen. The incident is listed as having taken place in "Sinau". I had some difficulty finding any reference to Sinau, save for a 1985 article in The Spectator. I was beginning to believe that the incident might have been apocryphal, but ended up finding this site, which matches the description of the raid site and is spelled "سناو" (which apparently shares its name with a site in Oman - ironic!). This was definitely one of those times when knowing how to read Arabic text was of critical importance.


    In August, I was reminiscing about my first full day in Oman back in 2012. After taking me to a couple of sites of interest, I asked my taxi driver to take me to see something interesting. He took me to this little village that's fed by one of Oman's famous aflaj, ancient canals. He told me about the hot water, and told me to try to keep my feet in it as long as I could while he went up to the village mosque to pray. I don't think I even made it a full minute, the water was so hot. I knew approximately where it was, but I'd lost track of it, so I went back and tried to find it. I ended up being successful - it's right here, the village of al Hamaam/الحمام. That made me wish that I'd had the forethought to take a few photos while I was there. As it turns out, someone uploaded their own travel photo to Panoramio. Very cool.




    My goal of spending 2016 developing my GIS skills ended up being mostly a bust. I have a plan for late 2017 that may end up giving me a chance to play catch-up. Regardless, I'll probably spend plenty of time exploring satellite images in 2017, so stay tuned for more cool discoveries.