Today’s D Brief: Vaccines, compared; NSA/CYBERCOM split?; More Trump deference to Russia; Welcome, ‘guardians’; And a bit more. – Defense One

Posted: December 26, 2020 at 1:20 am

A second COVID vaccine has begun distribution. This ones made by Moderna, and STAT News has an informative side-by-side comparison with the Pfizer vaccine thats been going out for just over a week.

What they do, and dont do: Both vaccines seemed to reduce the risk of severe COVID disease. Its not yet known if either prevents asymptomatic infection with the SARS-CoV-2 virus. Nor is it known if vaccinated people can transmit the virus if they do become infected but dont show symptoms. Read on, here.

The coronavirus is mutating, as viruses do. A new faster-spreading variant has Britain locking down even harder, but scientists say it appears unlikely to change in ways that make the vaccines less effective.

The 7-day average of U.S. COVID deaths keeps setting records. Yesterday it hit 2,639, per the New York Times tracker one death every 33 seconds.

Help is on the way, President-elect Joe Biden said Sunday after lawmakers reportedly reached a deal on roughly $900 billion in coronavirus relief for Americans. The bill "provides an important downpayment on the investment we need in vaccine procurement and distribution," Biden said, but cautioned, "We need to scale up vaccine production and distribution and acquire tens of millions more doses."

Then what? "In our first 100 days, well be asking all Americans to mask up for 100 days," he continued. "Well have a plan to administer 100 million vaccine shots in 100 days and to get most schools open in the first 100 days. These are bold, but doable steps to contain the virus and get back to our lives."

The Biden White House also says it's planning a sort of public relations campaign for vaccines "to educate the American people in the efficacy and safety...so that we can all reap the benefits of their protection." More to that, here.

Trump Officials Deliver Plan to Split Up Cyber Command, NSA // Katie Bo Williams: An end to the dual hat arrangement has been debated for years but the timing raises questions. The plan requires Milley's certification to move ahead.

Space Force Troops Get a Name: Guardians // Marcus Weisgerber: VP Pence revealed the moniker for Trumps oft-teased newest military service branch to stand alongside soldiers, airmen, sailors, and Marines.

Defense One Radio, Ep. 83 // Defense One Staff : Interview with CENTCOMs Marine Gen. Frank McKenzie.

A Day of Deaths 25 Percent Higher Than Springs Worst / The COVID Tracking Project: For the second week in a row, more COVID-19 deaths were reported in the U.S. than at any other time in the pandemic.

How Were Building a 21st-Century Space Force // Gen. John W. Raymond is Chief of Space Operations, U.S. Space Force: Only by staying lean, agile, and tightly focused on our mission can we succeed in protecting the United States.

Pushing Billions in Arms Sales Is Not an Accomplishment // William D. Hartung: It matters to whom the weapons are flowing and how they will be used.

Welcome to this Monday edition of The D Brief from Ben Watson and Bradley Peniston. Send us tips from your community right here. And if youre not already subscribed to The D Brief, you can do that here. On this day in 1945, George Smith Patton Jr., passed away from pulmonary edema and congestive heart failure 13 days after an automobile accident in Germany paralyzed him from the neck down. He was 60 years old.

Trumps deference to Russia continues. Nearly a week after news broke about the large and historic cyber intrusion across multiple federal agencies, President Trump finally spoke up about it in a tweet on Saturday.The Cyber Hack is far greater in the Fake News Media than in actuality," Trump tweeted about the impact and damage, which has already entangled the State, Treasury, Energy, Homeland Security and Commerce Departments as well as the National Institutes of Health.A grave risk to the federal government is how DHSs Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency described it in a statement updated today.[I]t may be China, Trump tweeted Saturday, without even a suggestion of evidence. He went on to speculate again, without evidence that the cyber intrusions across the federal agencies might somehow be related to voting machines. Read the rest of that paranoid and virtually incomprehensible tweet, here.

Will feds selloff of 5G frequencies risk more airplane crashes? Maybe, say officials with the Federal Aviation Administration and the Department of Transportation, who are asking the Federal Communications Commission to halt the ongoing auction. And the Defense Department? Leaders, who are kinda just tuning in to this 5G wrinkle, are meeting today with counterparts at FAA and DOT to figure out the path forward, Defense News reports.

Lockheed Martin is acquiring rocket-maker Aerojet Rocketdyne Holdings for more than $4 billion, Lockheed announced Sunday. The two firms have been working together for some time already on several advanced systems across [LMTs] Aeronautics, Missiles and Fire Control and Space business areas, Lockheed said in its statement. More from Reuters, here.

The UAE and/or Saudi Arabia appear to be behind a cell phone hacking operation that spanned dozens of Middle Eastern journalists working for Qatar-based al-Jazeera, the Washington Post reports. That probable conclusion is from an alarming report by researchers with the Citizen Lab at the University of Torontos Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy.Apparently, victims didnt have to do anything to get hacked; and thats why researchers called the vulnerability a zero-click exploit.One big takeaway: All iOS device owners should immediately update to the latest version of the operating system. More here.

Russian opposition leader Alexey Navalny duped an FSB agent into confessing details of the poisoning operation that was supposed to kill him, CNN reports on the heels of their joint investigation into Russias attempts to kill Navalny.

Here are 15 ways the U.S. military says it will try to improve its racial diversity and inclusiveness, via a report commissioned in the wake of protests against police brutality this summer after the death of George Floyd:

The Secretary of the Air Force chaired the Board on Diversity and Inclusion, which also included the Senior Enlisted Advisor to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness, and Service members from each branch of the Military Services and the National Guard Bureau. The group reviewed industry best practices, and assessed pertinent data and reports when writing up its 15 recommendations.After reviewing the Board' s 15 recommendations, Acting Defense Secretary Chris Miller wrote in a department memo released Friday evening by the Pentagon, I am pleased to see such a methodical evaluation leading to the development of such rigorous actions to address diversity and inclusion. I expect all leaders to take an aggressive approach to embed diversity and inclusion practices into the core of our military culture...We must not accept-and must intentionally and proactively remove any barriers to an inclusive and diverse force and equitable treatment of every Service member.The first phase of post-report actions are expected by March 31, according to Millers reaction plan to each of the 15 recommendations. And that will involve

And the Pentagon must begin working on how to reduce extremist or hate group activity by March 31, with a plan of action and milestones to be spelled out by the end of June. That falls to the Pentagon's Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness and its Under Secretary for Intelligence and Security. For more on what lies ahead, see Acting SecDef Millers memo (PDF) in full, here.

And lastly today, Space Forcer troops got a collective name on Friday: guardians. As in soldiers, sailors, airmen, Marines, and guardians. Reports Defense Ones Marcus Weisgerber: The new name for militarys space professionals, announced on Friday by Vice President Mike Pence, may appear to be a play on the Marvel superhero film Guardians of the Galaxy. But Space Force officials said it was a callback to a 1983 motto.That didnt stop various Hollywood types associated with the movie from chipping in their two cents. Tweeted Clark Gregg, who plays S.H.I.E.L.D. agent Phil Coulson: My pet raccoon just got a draft notice. WTF.The new name was missing from the Chief of Space Operations oped published by The Atlantic on Sunday. Only by staying lean, agile, and tightly focused on our mission can we succeed in protecting the United States, wrote Gen. John W. Raymond. Read that, here.

Read more:
Today's D Brief: Vaccines, compared; NSA/CYBERCOM split?; More Trump deference to Russia; Welcome, 'guardians'; And a bit more. - Defense One

Related Posts