Ahmad Abdullah Ravian
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- Apr 30, 2011
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Highly Efficient GPS Trackers for US staff stationed in foreign countries:
The State Department is installing advanced, classified security systems in Pakistan, Iraq, Afghanistan and Yemen to monitor staff movements in those countries where moving among local populations remains dangerous, according to department budget and contract documents obtained by Washington Post.
The Blue Force Tracker System uses a small transmitter mounted on a vehicle, an aircraft or an individual that sends continuous signals to a Global Positioning System satellite and back to a computer in a secure command post. The command post computer shows precise locations within a 10-foot radius of tracked individuals, vehicles or aircraft on ever-changing map displays.
A $15 million classified facility to hold the tracking system is being assembled on the US Embassy grounds in Islamabad. An advertisement posted in June by Olgoonik Development seeks a security specialist to work there for the Blue Force Tracker program.
The Pakistan system is designed to maximize visualization of designated assets traveling and conducting operations in hostile or hazardous areas, according to the advertisement. One job of the specialist is to track and report all off-compound embassy travelers to the [State Department] regional security officer .?.?. using the BFT-ONE [Blue Force Tracker] system.
This critical technology provides department personnel with the confidence to travel into highly dangerous areas, knowing there is an over-watch and a reaction capability to help them at the push of a button, according to a State Department fiscal 2012 budget document presented to Congress. About $9.4 million was being sought to support the tracking system in Iraq next year.
No State Department official would discuss the systems on the record. A department spokesman, speaking on the condition of anonymity because security issues were involved, said: The State Department uses all available options, including technology, to ensure the safety of our personnel. For reasons of operational security, we do not comment on what technologies the department employs, nor in which countries these technologies may be used.
The State Department is installing advanced, classified security systems in Pakistan, Iraq, Afghanistan and Yemen to monitor staff movements in those countries where moving among local populations remains dangerous, according to department budget and contract documents obtained by Washington Post.
The Blue Force Tracker System uses a small transmitter mounted on a vehicle, an aircraft or an individual that sends continuous signals to a Global Positioning System satellite and back to a computer in a secure command post. The command post computer shows precise locations within a 10-foot radius of tracked individuals, vehicles or aircraft on ever-changing map displays.
A $15 million classified facility to hold the tracking system is being assembled on the US Embassy grounds in Islamabad. An advertisement posted in June by Olgoonik Development seeks a security specialist to work there for the Blue Force Tracker program.
The Pakistan system is designed to maximize visualization of designated assets traveling and conducting operations in hostile or hazardous areas, according to the advertisement. One job of the specialist is to track and report all off-compound embassy travelers to the [State Department] regional security officer .?.?. using the BFT-ONE [Blue Force Tracker] system.
This critical technology provides department personnel with the confidence to travel into highly dangerous areas, knowing there is an over-watch and a reaction capability to help them at the push of a button, according to a State Department fiscal 2012 budget document presented to Congress. About $9.4 million was being sought to support the tracking system in Iraq next year.
No State Department official would discuss the systems on the record. A department spokesman, speaking on the condition of anonymity because security issues were involved, said: The State Department uses all available options, including technology, to ensure the safety of our personnel. For reasons of operational security, we do not comment on what technologies the department employs, nor in which countries these technologies may be used.