Intelligence

Why America’s Trillion-Dollar War on Terrorism Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram. Foreign Policy.

Excerpt: In April 2014, the hip-hop mogul Russell Simmons was on a yacht cruising in the Caribbean when he tweeted about the 276 girls kidnapped by the terrorist group Boko Haram from a secondary school in Chibok, northeastern Nigeria. The hashtag he copied lit a matchstick that inflamed the world. Politicians and celebrities followed suit …

Why America’s Trillion-Dollar War on Terrorism Couldn’t Defeat Boko Haram. Foreign Policy. Read More »

France to start using algorithms to detect terrorists — but are algorithms that good? ZME Science.

Excerpt: Extremists “are using less and less phone lines and more and more internet connections,” said French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin at a recent press conference. It makes a lot of sense: for one, everyone’s using less phone lines and more internet connections, and in addition, internet conversations can be harder to track down than …

France to start using algorithms to detect terrorists — but are algorithms that good? ZME Science. Read More »

Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan: Is China in its Crosshairs? Jamestown Foundation.

Excerpt: “On April 21, a car packed with explosives detonated in the parking lot of the Serena Hotel in Quetta, the capital of Pakistan’s restive Baluchistan province. Five people were killed and another twelve were injured in the attack (Dawn, April 21). Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) claimed responsibility for the deadly explosion (The News, April 23). …

Tehreek-e-Taliban Pakistan: Is China in its Crosshairs? Jamestown Foundation. Read More »

Japan should join Five Eyes intelligence network, says ambassador. The Sydney Morning Herald.

Excerpt: “Japan is making progress toward joining the Anglophone world’s post-war spying network known as Five Eyes, according to Japan’s ambassador to Australia. “I am very much optimistic about the near future,” said Shingo Yamagami, who took up his post in December, 2020. He said he “would like to see this idea become reality in …

Japan should join Five Eyes intelligence network, says ambassador. The Sydney Morning Herald. Read More »

Data mining would help SIS counter-terrorism effort despite public ‘reticence’ – report. RNZ.

Excerpt: “A newly released report shows faster and wider harvesting of data about people was identified as a priority for bolstering counter-terrorism efforts. The 135-page report about how the Security Intelligence Service (SIS) performed prior to the mosque attacks warned “data mining” may not go down well with the public but said the service should …

Data mining would help SIS counter-terrorism effort despite public ‘reticence’ – report. RNZ. Read More »

Arab interior ministers approve expert group to monitor terrorist threats. Arab News.

Excerpt: “LONDON: Arab interior ministers approved the establishment of a group of experts to monitor, analyze and exchange information on terrorist threats, as tensions in the region continue to pose a security risk. Interior Minister Prince Abdul Aziz bin Saud bin Naif led the Saudi Arabia delegation at the 38th session of the Council of …

Arab interior ministers approve expert group to monitor terrorist threats. Arab News. Read More »

CTCB State of Play No. 7: Anti-Scenes and Theodore Kaczynski . . . Based.

This week in history, on 1st March 1562, the Massacre of Vassy took place, beginning 36 years of the French Wars of Religion and use of the word ‘massacre’ as we know it. Symbolic politico-religious spaces and furious, mass casualty
attacks against defenceless (often worshipping) civilians characterised this period. Like many historic uprisings, what preceded such incidents in England and France were creeping cultural-religious restrictions imposed by the nation
state. For the persecuted, co-existence looked increasingly unlikely and the choice seemed to be system destruction, doom, or departure.

Funnily enough, the 1st of March was also the day Pioneer Missionary Hudson Taylor landed in Shanghai in 1854. Taylor popularised the approach of missionaries living and dressing like the people they seek to evangelise.
Community-building efforts by a church in modern Virginia also relied on a nuanced understanding of populations to achieve growth (Ponder, 2021).

CTCB State of Play Newsletter No. 7 explores political violence as a human behavioural pattern: In cults, culture, and scene-making materials. The role of authority figures, often those deemed to have special knowledge or morality,
features prominently. Public figures and cleverly publicised texts can catalyse and cohere widespread dissatisfaction and aggression into movements against a defined evil.

Historic incidents of terrorism and suicide extremism are able to violate the status quo of societies and initiate a restructuring of relations and authority. This means chaos for the incumbent or dominant culture, and manifest dreams
of progress for the oppressed. As the saying goes, “Blood makes the grass grow greener,” yielding a bountiful harvest for survival.

The anti-scenic effect of an abnormally violent event for most leads to a sense that: This is not Paris (Saint Medard riot, Applebaum, 2015), this is not America (Capitol incident in Carlin, 2021), and this is not New Zealand
(post-Tarrant, picture in Thorpe, 2019). For some, it may be a call to “March Forth”.

We hope you enjoy the March fifth issue, and have provided a summary and some extras for the material recommended in Theme 1, as the panel discussion is quite long.

Credit to Christianity Today for the service ‘Today in Christian History’

Porter, D. (2021, February 23). Reading While Not Black. Christianity Today.

CTCB State of Play No. 6: Gaps, Flat World, Weak States, and the Fog of War

This week’s CTCB State of Play Newsletter No 6 addresses hybrid power arrangements, opportunistic criminal activity in areas of reduced state sovereignty, and societal and police paramilitarisation. Soft power initiatives, diffused social hierarchies, and security voids seem to be contributing to the phenomenon of cultural militarisation and citizen militia formation. It is interesting to note …

CTCB State of Play No. 6: Gaps, Flat World, Weak States, and the Fog of War Read More »

CTCB Industry Trends: Stakeholder Conflict

Security-By-Design – Stakeholder Conflict Resolution In our interview with a land transport security manager, the project design phase was identified as their most difficult work issue. The sheer number of parties involved in a contemporary building project, as well as the uncertainty surrounding human threats, can make it difficult for an appointed professional to get …

CTCB Industry Trends: Stakeholder Conflict Read More »