Introduction. In Memoriam of 4 Little Girls, CAGE CODE 987T7 publishes this FRAGO to etiologize America’s electromagnetic spectrum (EMS)-to-digital divide disaster, to expose America’s learned helplessness to defend against White Supremacy Racism, and to supplement “The United Independent Compensatory Code/System/Concept: A Compensatory Counter-Racist Codified Word Guide. |
CONTROLLED UNCLASSIFIED INFORMATION
OPERATION SEGREGATED AIRMINDEDNESS
CUI/CSAF FRAGO/001/
LINE 1 – DATE AND TIME – DTG 180001Z APR 22
LINE 2 – UNIT – Chief of Staff of the Air Force (CSAF)
LINE 3 – FRAGO # – 001 to CSAF Action Order A
LINE 4 – REFERENCES – See Annex A
LINE 5 – TIME ZONE – Romeo (EST UTC/GMT-4 hours)
LINE 6 – TASK ORGANIZATION – Total Force Associations (TFAS)
LINE 7 – SITUATION –
A. ENEMY SITUATION
1) Friendly Force Information Requirement (FFIR). Quoted by the Heavyweight Boxing Champion of the World, Nation of Islam Associate Minister, and anti-racism advocate
Muhammad Ali “[I]n war, some people attack by the air, some attack by the land, some attack by the water, some are secret service men, some are spies.”
For example, equipped with one Secret Servicemen John C. Babcock-and-Allan Pinkerton-prepared geographic map of the civil war battlespace, America’s father of aerial reconnaissance Thaddeus S.C. Lowe telegraphed the following FFIR from his telegraph-equipped aerostat balloon (the “Enterprise”) to President Abraham Lincoln back at the White House: “This observation point commands an area nearly 50 miles in diameter” (Nga.mil, 2022), demonstrating segregated airmindedness in aeronautics in support of America.
Lowe’s successful ascent aloft America’s Eastern Theater of Operations operations demonstrated airpower’s capability to seize, retain and exploit a relative position of advantage to fulfill President Lincoln’s Intent: To save the Union—not to free chattel slaves who had been categorically segregated from weaponized capabilities since America’s birth of chattel slavery.
Segregating Freedmen from America’s first-ever AF TENCAP of Air-and-EMS Superiority set the leadership azimuth for RMVE airmindedness. What follows has segregated understanding of 1) Bapbomb as retaliation for Rev. Dr. Erskine Faush, Sr.’s counter-EMS standoff with former telegrapher Eugene “Bull” Connor during the Birmingham Campaign, 2) Juneteenth celebratory behavior as a form of PTSS; 3) Alabama’s failure to compensate Bapbomb survivor Sarah Rudolph Collins, and 4) why a single nonwhite competitor competed in America’s inaugural international drone competition.
2) Racially/Ethnically Motivated Violent Extremism (RMVE). English satirist Johnathan Swift observed that “vision is the art of seeing what is invisible.” Applying such vision to etiological research on White Supremacy Racism and Post-Traumatic Slave Syndrome (PTSS) conducted by Drs. Frances Cress Welsing and Dr. Joy DeGruy, respectively, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Subcommittee on Intelligence and Counterterrorism and the Innovation, Technology, and Education Center (NCITE) reported that transnational RMVE is the most lethal domestic violent extremist threat in the United States. However, the scope of such reporting failed to address ‘Airmindedness’ — ‘The Airman’s [Psycho-Sociotechnical] Perspective’ of RMVE lethality per USAF Basic Doctrine Vol. 1, 2015. Examples include RMVE Airmindedness aloft the National Mall on June 18, 1861; aloft Black Wall Street on May 31, 1921; aloft the Birmingham Campaign on April 3, 1963; aloft Bapbomb on September 15, 1963; and aloft America’s inaugural transnational drone competition 7–17 July at the 2022 World Games.
3) Operation Segregated Airmindedness (OSA). Historically led by American Civil War segregationists who classified themselves as white, White Supremacy Racism constitutes a local social construct and global system dynamic that aims by ‘Airmindedness’ to avert their genetic annihilation by non-white people (black, brown, red, and yellow), whose melanin genetically dominates their genetically recessive gene. Complementing this history and the etiologies of White Supremacy Racism and PTSS, historian Gary W. Gallagher (2011) exhorted that “the [American] Civil War is really the most important thing to understand about U.S. History; if you don’t come to terms with that you have no chance of understanding much of anything else.” Within this fragmentary order (FRAGO), “anything else” equates to OSA, a speculative operation spanning America’s shibboleth “Segregation today, segregation tomorrow, and segregation forever!” exhorted by former U.S. Army Air Force Airman George C. Wallace turned host of the U.S. Intelligence Community’s clandestine Operation Paperclip to America’s “segregation yesterday” in denying U.S. Colored Troops (USCT) access to its first-ever Air Force Tactical Exploitation of National Capabilities (AF TENCAP) intrinsic in electromagnetic spectrum (EMS) Superiority and Air Superiority technologies developed during the Civil War by America’s father of aerial intelligence Thaddeus S.C. Lowe.
4) ‘Airmindedness’ in White Supremacy Racism. Characterized by “Jim Crow” apartheid patterns of perception, symbol formations, logic, thought, action, speech, and emotional responses, and conducted concurrently across time and space in nine people activities: economics, education, entertainment, labor, law, politics, religion, sex, and war, which includes the competition continuum of airmindedness in psychological warfare (PSYWAR). Due to ‘Air Superiority’— a degree of air control that segregates ‘Air Supremacy’ from ‘Air Parity’ and dominates the air domain without prohibitive interference from an opponent — no American has been killed in action save three by enemy Air Superiority during the Korean War (1950–1953). However, the polemicist among American descendants of Black Wall Street in Tulsa, Oklahoma, from May 31–Jun 1, 1921, may beg to differ.
5) America’s Digital Divide Disaster. Informed by Airmindedness, America’s digital divide
disaster during the Great Power Competition, her de jure segregation of U.S. Colored Troops (USCT) from both Air Superiority and Electromagnetic Spectrum Superiority during the American Civil War, and her de facto segregation of the cowan Captain Ed Dwight from the Dispensation of America’s first-ever Ancient, Free and Accepted Mason[ic] (AF&AM) Lodge on the Moon during 33° Kenneth S. Kleinknecht’s reign as NASA’s Apollo Program Manager, OSA adapts the concept of Air Superiority to transnational racially/ethnically motivated violent extremism (RMVE) for the purpose of self-defense and public safety of non-white people.
6) OSA in U.S. Intelligence Tradecraft and Counterterrorism. Examples of OSA include but are not limited to 1) America’s “segregation yesterday” of her USCT from American ‘Air Superiority’ and ‘EMS Superiority’ intrinsic in Lowe’s first-ever fielding of his telegraph-equipped balloon the Enterprise; 2) a former U.S. Army Air Force Airman George C. Wallace turned host of America’s clandestine Operation Paperclip and Governor of Alabama’s rallying cry “segregation today, segregation tomorrow, and segregation forever” 3) Captain Ed Dwight’s segregation from 33° Freemason Kenneth S. Kleinknecht’s Apollo Program during the 1960s Space Race; 4) Michigan neo-Nazi leader of ‘The Base’ Justen Watkin exploiting home-based, high-speed Internet capabilities during America’s digital divide disaster to prepare for race war; 5) two former Civil Air Patrol Airmen, Elias Irizarry and Elliot Bishai, chanting “CIVIL WAR II!” as they attacked the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021; 6) Not one single a black person competed in America’s inaugural international drone competition during the 2022 World Games; 7) 76.5% of African Americans from access to ICT and 81.1% from access to high-speed Internet at home (Governing.com, 2022); and 8) Jane Hu’s (2011) media critique, ““Airmindedness” is a term that used to be everywhere and now it’s nowhere.”
In contrast, Airmindedness is everywhere when observed through the Airman’s Perspective of a Birmingham Bapbomb and F5-tornado survivor turned U.S. Air Force-trained Security Forces Specialist (3POX1) turned Prince Hall Affiliated Freemason; a Command Post Controller (1C3X1) turned Army Space Program Office-trained Field Engineer, and an FAA-licensed drone pilot turned U.S. Air Force Civil Air Patrol-trained Senior Member. Airmindedness is ageless in the sacred text of Genesis 2:7, Isiah 14:14; Ephesians 2:2; intrinsic in the ancient allegory of Daedalus the master craftsman of heavier-than-air flight; inherent in the leadership legacy of Freemason General Henry H. “Hap” Arnold, and inalienable to the advice and sociological imaginations of Dr. Neely Fuller Jr. (2016) and Dr. Cress-Welsing’s (2010) “If you do not understand White Supremacy Racism, what it is, and exactly how it works, everything else that you think you understand will only confuse you.”
7) Freedmen’s Sputnik Syndrome: Both Heuristic and Harbinger of Learned Helplessness. According to military philosopher and strategist Sun Szu “If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles.” Informed by U.S.-federalized Chattel Slavery and Dr. Joy DeGruy’s etiology of PTSS, it is strikingly visible in OSA’s de jure segregation of USCT from America’s first-ever AF TENCAP of both EMS and Air Superiority during the American Civil War. Such segregation suggests that America’s digital divide disaster is not only America’s competition continuum of war but both a Civil War heuristic of learned helplessness and a harbinger of America’s digital divide. Therefore, the term “Freedmen’s Sputnik Syndrome” is coined to exact America’s segregation of USCT from her first-ever Advanced Technology demonstration (ATD) of Air- and EMS Superiority and her fear induced by Sputnik 1.
8) Manifest Destiny. Thaddeus S.C. Lowe once collected a scrap of silk from an aerial reconnaissance balloon used by the Confederate States of America (CSA). This once-airborne scrap of silk suggests that Alabama is not only organized, trained, and equipped to unpack Columbia’s silk balloon dress depicted in the George A. Crofutt-commissioned 1872 painting
American Progress but armed to the teeth with airpower lessons learned to inform H.R. 40 with airminded reparations.
9) “Hogged” Airmindedness as “Segregated Airmindedness”. Paraphrasing the father of the U.S. Air Force Col. Billy Mitchell (1925), the FAA-licensed civil defense drone pilot knows as much about hogging airmindedness from non-whites during the American Civil War “as a hog does about skating.”
10) Post-Traumatic Slave Syndrome (PTSS). The same RMVE airmindedness that segregated America’s Freedmen from the Enterprise is the same that segregates 1) Juneteenth behavior from being sociotechnically understood and medically diagnosed as PTSS; 2) Bapbomb behavior from being sociotechnically understood as reprisal for Rev. Dr. Erskine Faush, Sr.’s counter-EMS standoff with former telegrapher “Bull” Connor during the Birmingham Campaign for economic inclusion in the Appalachian Highway Development System (AHDS), 3) compensation from Bapbomb survivor Sarah Rudolph Collins, 4) 76.5% of nonwhites from access to ICT at home, and 5) 81.1% of nonwhites from access to high-speed Internet at home (Governing.com, 2022).
B. FRIENDLY SITUATION
1) CSAF’s “Accelerate Change or Lose Strategy. CSAF General Charles Q. Brown empowered Airmen and Guardians to use his “Accelerate Change or Lose” strategy to challenge the status quo to make necessary changes in our Air Force today so we are ready for tomorrow.
C. ATTACH OR DET – CAGE Code 987T7 (DetroitDroners.com).
LINE 8 – MISSION – To etiologize America’s EMS-to-digital divide disaster as a means of averting RMVE’s exploitation of America’s learned helplessness.
LINE 9 – EXECUTION – Michigan’s Civil Air Patrol Wing is adopting a “Whole Community Approach to Emergency Management in Aerospace Education” per ref (h).
CJCS INTENT: To close America’s digital divide.
CSAF INTENT: To accelerate change across the Air Force.
CAP NHQ/CC INTENT: Innovate/explore new ways to provide relevant solutions per Goal #3 of NHQ STRAT PLAN 2022-2026.
CONR-1AF/AFNORTH INTENT: Defend the Homeland, Support the People and our Partners One mission, four mission sets.
A. CONCEPT – TBD
B. MOVEMENT AND MANEUVER TASKS – TBD
C. SUSTAINMENT TASKS – TBD
D. INSTRUCTIONS – NHQ Cyber Ops POC is Colonel Brett Dolnick (bdolnick@capnhq.gov). Contact National Cyber Mission Support Deputy Director Lt Col Bryan Pettigrew (bpettigrew@cap.gov); (571) 969-5894 to fill Assistant Deputy for Cyber Operations – Defensive Measures position. Contact your unit and MIWG ES Training Officer Lt Col Cerny (sheilacerny@gmail.com); (810) 531-3750 to participate in future training and/or exercises.
1. CCIR – TBD
2. RISK MGT – CAP Operational Security (OPSEC) Training.
3. DECEPTION – TBD
4. PRIORITIES – The CAP-USAF Incident Commander (IC) is delegated overall responsibility for prioritizing and setting objectives to deploy on-hand cyber defense assets to optimize mission.
5. TIMELINE – TBD
6. REHEARSALS – TBD
7. ORDERS GRP MTG – TBD
8. EARLIEST MVMT TIME – TBD
LINE 10 – SERVICE AND SUPPORT – The Logistics Section Chief shall lead the sustainment of cyber defense resources, as required.
A. SPECIAL EQUIPMENT – COVID-19 Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), as required.
B. TRANSPORTATION – TBD
LINE 11 – COMMAND AND SIGNAL –
A. COMMAND – Michigan Incident Commander is Governor Whitmore. Michigan CAP-USAF Incident Commander (IC) is MIWG Director of Operations (Lt Col Robert Bowden). Deputy IC is MIWG Director of Emergency Services (Lt Col Sherwood).
B. SIGNAL – CAP’s National Operations Center (NOC) can be reached 24/7 via voice: 888-211-1812 ext. 300, Fax: 800-555-7902, or email: opscenter@capnhq.gov. Normal duty hours are from 0730 to 1630 hours Central Time, Mon thru Fri. The voice phone rolls over to a duty officer after 1630 hours. After 1630 hours, follow-up emails with a voice call. MIWG Director of Communications (Lt Col Wyant) will activate systems required to receive ATOs from NHQ, execute ATOs, and reply and release aircrews upon mission completion. Communicators, operations officers, and mission pilots/aircrews will coordinate ATO receipt and relay to aircrews, who will execute ATOs and respond via HF radio capabilities.
LINE 12 – ACKNOWLEDGE –
LINE 13 – CDR NAME/RANK – Lt Col Robert Bowden
LINE 14 – NARRATIVE – Disclaimer: Conclusions and opinions expressed in this document are those of the author cultivated in the freedom of expression and academic environment of Air University. They do not reflect the official position of the U.S. Government, Department of Defense, the Civil Air Patrol, the United States Air Force, or the Air University.
LINE 15 – AUTHENTICATION –
OPERATION SEGREGATED AIRMINDEDNESS
Controlled by: CAP/DO
CUI Categories: EMGT & OPSEC
Distribution/Limited Dissemination Control: CAP & FEDCON
POC: Ken Hardy, (313) 731-8441; detroitdroners@aol.com
Page Break
ANNEX A
a) National Planning System (NPS), February 2016
b) National Emergency Communications Plan (NECP), 2019
c) NTAS Bulletin 22-0207 w/ FMI 2-22.9, Open-Source Intelligence (OSINT), 5 Dec 06
d) CRS Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance for Great Power Competition, 04 Jun 20
e) Homeland Security Exercise and Evaluation Program (HSEEP), January 2020
f) NIST TN 1754, Technical Guidance for Configuration Mgt of HSEEP Simulations, 2012
g) NIST SP 800-150, Guide to Cyber Threat Information Sharing, Oct 2016
h) FDOC 104-008-1, A Whole Community Approach to Emergency Management, 01 Dec 11
i) 14 CFR Part 107, Small Unmanned Air Systems (sUAS)
j) NFPA 2400 Standards for sUAS Used for Public Safety Operations, 2019
k) SecDef Guidance for the Domestic Use of sUAS in U.S. National Airspace, 18 Aug 18
l) OSS FM No. 3, Simple Sabotage Field Manual, 17 Jan 44
m) DoD Electromagnetic Spectrum (EMS) Superiority Strategy, 2019
n) GAO-21-64: Addressing DoD Electromagnetic Spectrum Ops Issues in Superiority, 2020
o) DoD Strategy for Operations in the Information Environment, June 2016
p) DoDD 3025.18, Defense Support of Civil Authorities (DSCA), 29 Dec 10
q) DoDI 5200.48, Controlled Unclassified Information (CUI), 5 Oct 21
r) DoDD 5240.01, DoD Intelligence Activities, 27 Aug 07
s) DISA Instruction 630-230-30, Defense Message System (DMS), 6 Aug 14
t) FM 34-54, Technical Intelligence (TECHINT), 30 Jan 98
u) FM 6-0, Commander and Staff Organization and Operation
v) MIL-STD-973, Military Standard Configuration Management, 17 Apr 92
w) Joint Concept for Integrated Campaigning, 16 Mar 18
x) OPSMAN for the Joint Capabilities Integration and Development System (JCIDS), 31 Aug 18
y) Joint All-Domain Command and Control (JADC2), 21 Jan 22
z) CJCSM 3150.02B, Global Status of Resources and Training System (GSORTS), 25 Mar 11
aa) CJCSM 3150.05D, Joint Reporting System Situation Monitoring, 31 Jan 2011
bb) CJCSM 3150.07E, Joint Reporting Structure for Cyberspace Operations, 8 Nov 13
cc) CJCSI 3265.02, Joint Command and Control Systems Training Management, 10 Oct 14
dd) CJCSI 6241.04D, Policy and Procedures for Management and Use of USMTF, 12 Jan 21
ee) USNORTHCOM Instruction 10-100, Operation Security (OPSEC), 7 Feb 13
ff) USNORTHCOM CONPLAN 3501-08, DSCA, 16 May 08
gg) CONR, 1AF and AFNORTH FY 2012-2023 Strategy, 09 Aug 12
hh) JP 1-02, DoD Dictionary of Military and Associated Terms, 12 Apr 01
ii) Joint Doctrine Note 1-19, Competition Continuum, 03 Jun 19
jj) JP 2-01.3, Joint Intelligence Preparation of the Operational Environment, 16 Jun 09
kk) JP 3-09.3, Close Air Support, 25 Nov 14
ll) JP 3-28, Defense Support to Civil Authorities (DSCA), 29 Oct 18
mm) JP 3-30, Joint Air Operations, 25 Jul 19
nn) JP 3-31, C2 for Joint Land Operations, 24 Feb 14
oo) JP 3-56.1, C2 for Joint Air Land Operations, 14 Nov 94
pp) JP 3-57, Civil-Military Operation, 9 Jul 18
qq) JP 4-0, Joint Logistics, 04 Feb 19
rr) JP 4-10, Operational Contract Support (OCS), 04 Mar 19
ss) CSAF Action Orders to Accelerate Change Across Air Force, 31 Aug 21
tt) CSAF Air Superiority 2030 Flight Plan, May 2016
uu) AFDD 1, Air Force Basic Doctrine, Organization, and Command, 14 Oct 21
vv) AFDD 1-1, Leadership and Force Development, 08 Nov 11
ww) AFI 10-201, Force Readiness Reporting, 22 Dec 20
xx) AFI 10-206, Operational Reporting, 06 Sep 11
yy) AFMAN 10-206, Operational Reporting, 18 Jun 18
zz) AFI 10-207, Command and Control, 04 Apr 08
aaa) AFMAN 10-207, Command and Control, 11 Apr 18
bbb) AFI 10-702, Military Information Support Operations (MISO), 07 Jun 11
ccc) AFI 10-801, Defense Support of Civil Authorities, 29 Jan 20
ddd) AFI 10-2501, AFEM Program Planning and Operations, 17 Jun 21
eee) AFI 10-2701, Organization and Function of the Civil Air Patrol, 29 Jul 05
fff) AFMAN 11-502, Small Unmanned Aircraft Systems [sUAS], 29 Jul 19
ggg) AFDP 2-0 Global ISR Operations 29 Jan 15
hhh) AFDP 3-05, Special Operations Forces within the Competition Continuum, 01 Feb 20
iii) AFDP 3-13, Military Information Support Operations (MISO), 28 Apr 16
jjj) AFTTP 3-2.64, MTTP for the Tactical Employment of UAS, 22 Jan 15
kkk) AFTTP 3-2.41, Multi-Service TTPs for Operation Contract Support 16 Dec 21
lll) AFAM 36-2234, Instructional System Development (ISD), 01 Nov 93
mmm) AFDD 4-0, Combat Support, 23 Mar 05
nnn) AFI 51-303, Intellectual Property, 22 Jun 18
ppp) AFI 65-503, US Air Force Cost and Planning Factor, 13 Jul 18
qqq) AFI 71-101, Special Investigation, 02 Jul 19
rrr) AFI 90-1001, Total Force Associations (TFAs), 22 Jun 20
sss) USAF Career Field Education and Training Plan (CFETP) 1C3X1, C2 Operations, Sep 2022
ttt) USAF CFETP 3DXXX, Cyberspace Support, 28 Dec 20
uuu) CAP-USAF 2022-2026 National Strategic Plan (NSP)
vvv) CAP-USAF OPLAN ISO FEMA National/Regional Major Event, 13 Jun 19
www) CAP-USAFI 10-2701, Civil Air Patrol Operations and Training, 3 Aug 07
xxx) CAPR 100-1, Radio Communications Management, 6 Apr 16
yyy) CAPR 100-3, Radiotelephone Operator (RATELO), 06 Apr 16
zzz) CAPR 70-1U, CAP sUAS Flight Management, 6 Aug 19 (DRAFT)
aaaa) CAP Mission Small Unmanned Aircraft Systems (sUAS) Task Guide, July 2019
bbbb) Specialty Qualification Training Record (SQTR) for UAS Technician, 26 Jul 19
cccc) Specialty Qualification Training Record (SQTR) for UAS Pilot, 26 Jul 19
dddd) ADP 1-0, The Army, 31 Jul 19
eeee) ADP 1-01, Doctrine Primer, 31 Jul 19
ffff) ADRP 1-03, The Army Universal Task List, 02 Oct 15
gggg) ADP 2-0, Intelligence, 31 Jul 19
hhhh) ADRP 2-0, Intelligence, 31 Aug 12
iiii) ATP 2-01.3, Intelligence Preparation of the Battlefield/Battlespace, Nov 2014
jjjj) ART 2.1.1.1 Perform Indications and Warnings
kkkk) ART 2.2.1.3 Evaluate the Threat
llll) ADP 3-0, Operations, 31 Jul 19
mmmm) ADRP 3-0, Operations, 31 Jul 19
nnnn) ARDP 4-0, Sustainment, 31 Jul 12
oooo) ARDP 5-0, The Operations Process, 31 Jul 12
pppp) ARDP 6-0, Mission Command, 17 May 12
qqqq) ATP 6-0.5, Command Post Organization and Operations, Mar 2017