. Earth Science News .
Coalition Cell Develops Actionable Intelligence To Fight The Terror Of Piracy

Canadian and Japanese officers work alongside each other at the Coalition Intelligence Fusion Cell at the U.S. 5th Fleet headquarters in Bahrain, where a new approach to global pirates hot spots and other transgressors is seeing the power of the matrix deployed. DoD photo by Jim Garamone.
by Jim Garamone
for American Forces Press Service
Manama, Bahrain (AFPS) Apr 28, 2006
Since Sept. 11, 2001, Americans have grown more familiar with the term "actionable intelligence," the type used to track, kill or capture terrorists The Coalition Intelligence Fusion Cell here seeks to give ships of combined task forces the intelligence they can act upon to keep the sea lanes safe for merchants, travelers and fishermen.

"Right now the cell consists of 16 personnel from nine nations," said cell chief Navy Capt. Paul Becker. "Over the past year, 11 different nations have been represented, and we expect more to participate as we go along."

These nations contribute to the maritime aspect of the war on terror providing ships and supplies on the high seas.

Cell representatives from partner nations provide analysis to give the warfighters actionable intelligence on terrorists or other illicit network activities on the seas of the Middle East.

The situation in the region, which covers the seas from the southern border of Africa's Kenya to Pakistan's border with India, is complex and nuanced, Becker said. To do the intelligence job correctly, "takes partnerships, takes pressure and it takes persistence of analysis," he said.

The intelligence "users" are the commanders of the coalition task forces afloat in the region. These include Combined Task Force 150, commanded by Pakistani Navy Rear Adm. Shahid Iqbal, and CTF 152, commanded by U.S. Navy Rear Adm. Michael Miller.

CTF 150 is responsible for operations in the Gulf of Oman, Gulf of Aden, the Red Sea, parts of the Indian Ocean, and the North Arabian Sea, while CTF 152 patrols the central and southern Persian Gulf.

"This is a melting pot of intelligence, and then it is disseminated to the users," Becker said. The fusion aspect of the cell combines all types of intelligence, including imagery, human, signal and even the open-source variety.

Becker drew an analogy on how the intelligence is packaged. "(News) reporters cross-reference sources and put together a story," Becker said. "When we do the same in the intelligence business, it is called fusion."

Intelligence users can also request specific information from the cell. The two-way street is a healthy dialogue, the captain said.

"Officers and petty officers producing intelligence for intelligence's sake does no good," Becker said. "It has to be honed for what the warfighter needs."

A special classified network open to allied nations allows the cell to safely communicate across the area of operations with all allied ships.

The cell works around the clock, and the watch-standers communicate in English. In the cell, a U.S. Navy Reservist works alongside an Italian officer, while at another workstation German, Canadian and French officers work side by side.

The officers and petty officers are used to working together from past experiences. The NATO experience has been particularly helpful, said cell deputy commander Dutch Navy Lt. Cmdr. Leon Scheffer.

"It helps in respect to being used to working in a multinational environment," he said. "But then again, the nations are different, the (area of operations) is different, but the work we have done together in the coalition environments helps."

Scheffer said it has been interesting to him to be an embedded officer in the U.S. Navy's 5th Fleet headquarters. "The Dutch navy is small, and we don't have all the functionalities that you have," he said. "Also, everything here is an operation. It's real. What I have enjoyed the most is at the end of the day, you can make a difference here."

Related Links
Modern Piracy: A TerraDaily Special Report

Somali Piracy A Menace To Aid Relief
Washington (UPI) Apr 20, 2006
The United States has not struck a deal with Somalia to conduct anti-piracy patrols off its coast U.S. officials said Tuesday, dismissing a claim by the Somali prime minister, who has repeatedly called for help as attacks hinder humanitarian aid deliveries to the drought-plagued region.







  • Bush Contributed To Extent Of Katrina Aftermath Says Senator Lieberman
  • Humanitarian Aid Readied For Russian Quake Region
  • Repeat Of US 1906 Quake Would Kill Thousands, Cost Billions
  • San Francisco Quake And Fire Revolutionized Insurance World

  • Canada To Adopt US Climate Change Policies
  • Northern China Braces For More Sandstorms
  • Red And Blue Fight To Be Greenest
  • Canada's Commitment On Kyoto Protocol Is Lacklustre

  • China Successfully Launches Remote Sensing Satellite
  • Geoinformation From Space Sharpens Population Density Maps
  • Israeli EO Bird EROS-B Safely In Orbit
  • SAIC Acquires Geo-Spatial Technologies

  • Chinese Oil Safari Hits Nigeria
  • Milestone Achieved in the Development of Biological Fuel Cells
  • World Bank Plans To Boost Clean Energy In Developing Countries
  • Renewables Still Struggling To Seize Big Share Of Energy Market

  • AIDS Cocktail Could Be Soon Down To Just One Pill
  • China Reports 18th Human Case Of Bird Flu
  • A Research Revolution Helping To Cure More Diseases
  • World Bank Steps Up Malaria-Control Effort

  • Coding for arthropods Adds That Special Something
  • Natural Selection At Single Gene Demonstrated
  • Founding Chimp At Reserve Could Have Turned Killer
  • Indonesia Wants Hundreds More Orangutans Returned By Thailand

  • A Radioactive Wildlife Reserve In Chernobyl's No-Go Zone
  • Czech Minister Tells Germany To Collect Rubbish Or Pay For Removal
  • Turkish Resort Pump Tons Of Wastewater Into Aegean Sea
  • Pollution Threat From China A 'Far Eastern Chernobyl'

  • Kennewick Man Skeletal Find May Revolutionalize Americas History
  • Is Fetal Farming The Next Debate About Medicine In The 21st Century
  • Falungong Calls On Russia To Denounce Organ Trade In China
  • Scientists Work On Bionic Arm For Amputees

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement