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Search - 2004 Complete Guide to the Defense Intellignce Agency (DIA): Declassified Intelligence Reports, Agency Overview, History, Origination Documents: Bonus 9/11 Commission Report and Coverage
2004 Complete Guide to the Defense Intellignce Agency Declassified Intelligence Reports Agency Overview History Origination Documents Bonus 9/11 Commission Report and Coverage - DIA Author:U.S. Government This electronic book on CD-ROM provides a comprehensive collection of official government documents and reports on the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA). The Defense Intelligence Agency is a Department of Defense combat support agency and an important member of the United States Intelligence Community. With over 7000 military and civilian employ... more »ees worldwide, DIA is a major producer and manager of foreign military intelligence. It provides military intelligence to warfighters, defense policymakers and force planners, in the Department of Defense and the Intelligence Community, in support of U.S. military planning and operations and weapon systems acquisition. Department of Defense (DoD) Combat Support Agency. DIA is headquartered at the Pentagon, Arlington, Virginia, with major operational activities at the Defense Intelligence Analysis Center (DIAC), Washington, DC, the Armed Forces Medical Intelligence Center (AFMIC), Frederick, Maryland, and the Missile and Space Intelligence Center (MSIC), Huntsville, Alabama. DIA accomplishes its mission from the headquarters base and more than a hundred sites around the globe. Situated in locations such as U.S. embassies, combatant commands, intelligence production centers, and Intelligence Community offices, DIA personnel serve as defense attaches, liaison officers, analysts, administrative staff, and logistics personnel. The Director, DIA is responsible for providing all-source intelligence analysis and collection management support to the Secretary of Defense and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and serves as an advisor on military intelligence issues. DIA obtains and reports information through its field sites worldwide and the Defense Attache System; operates the Defense Human Intelligence (HUMINT) Service; coordinates and facilitates measurement and signature intelligence (MASINT) activities, manages and plans collection from specialized technical sources, and develops future collection systems and operations; provides timely all-source intelligence analysis on priority intelligence needs; manages secure DoD intelligence networks and establishes policies, procedures, and standards for defense intelligence information technology; provides intelligence education and training; and coordinates required intelligence support for the Secretary of Defense, Joint Chiefs of Staff, combatant commanders, and joint task forces. Material includes: DIA Strategic Plan for 2004-2009; History; Military Art Collection; DIA At the Creation, Origination Documents; Handbook of the Chinese People?s Liberation Army; UFO sightings; North Korea Country Handbook; Poisonous Snakes of Europe; Joint Military Intelligence College Defense and Intelligence Abbreviations and Acronyms 1997; Small-caliber Ammunition Identification Guides; Paraphysics Research and Development in the Warsaw Pact (prepared by the USAF Systems Command); Soviet and Czechoslovakian Parapsychology Research; USSR Controlled Offensive Behavior; Global Threats and Challenges. Other documents include: Joint Chiefs of Staff Guide 5260, Antiterrorism Personal Protection Guide, A Self-Help Guide to Antiterrorism ? "This guide is designed to assist in making you and your family less vulnerable to terrorists. You should become familiar with its contents and incorporate those protective measures that are applicable to your particular situation. Moreover, ensure every member of your family is made aware of this valuable information so they can help protect themselves as well. Terrorism is an indiscriminate act that strikes in varying forms of threats and violence. Terrorists generate fear through intimidation, coercion and acts of violence such as hijackings, bombings or kidnappings. As past and more recent events have shown, however, terrorists have reached new levels of organization, sophistication and violence -- their tactics and techniques are always changing and will continue to be a challenge to predict and neutralize. Accordingly« less