- Joined
- Jun 8, 2004
- Messages
- 54,899
- Reaction score
- 1,518
This brig is very close to where I work and live.
It's also the brig near where the two Egyptian students were arrested for carrying explosive devices in their car.
If you go to the link you can see an aerial picture of the brig.
Charleston, SC Latest Local News: Brig's future considered for detention of terror suspects
This facility is on the same base. I don't think would be a good idea to have the brig prisoners so close to it.
Charleston, SC Latest Business News: World Wide Watchers
It's also the brig near where the two Egyptian students were arrested for carrying explosive devices in their car.
Brig's future considered for detention of terror suspects
Graham against Navy facility holding suspects if Guantanamo shuts down
By Schuyler Kropf
The Post and Courier
Sunday, November 16, 2008
HANAHAN — The Navy Brig shouldn't be considered a detention site for terror suspects if President-elect Barack Obama gets his way and shuts down the operation at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, U.S. Sen. Lindsay Graham said.
Almost everything about the brig in Hanahan is wrong for holding terror detainees into the future, including its location near Lowcountry urban population areas, he said.
A more preferable site, he said, would be to start anew with a secure and isolated militarized "supermax" type prison, a highly secure facility where some of the most notorious are assigned.
"Let the military house these folks in a prison that is designed for the threat," Graham said during a telephone interview.
Graham's comments come as Obama transition advisers have begun look-ing at ways to close Guantanamo and move prosecution of terror suspects to the United States.
No alternative holding sites have definitely been identified, but the brig at the Charleston Naval Weapons Station could play a role.
U.S. Rep. Henry Brown, whose 1st Congressional District includes the brig, said determination of where to house Guantanamo's prisoners should not be made in private.
"Any decision to close the facility housing detainees at Guantanamo should only come after a full evaluation of alternate locations for these individuals," he said. "Site selection by the Department of Defense must include ample opportunity for community input and a full disclosure of potential risks."
Democratic U.S. Rep. Jim Clyburn declined to comment on speculation about the brig's future.
The brig's use as a suspected terrorist holding site first surfaced in June 2002 when authorities announced that accused "dirty bomber" Jose Padilla had been moved there. The disclosure came about a month after his arrest.
Two other terror detainees have since been held at the brig, including Saudi student Yaser Esam Hamdi, an American citizen picked up on the battlefield in Afghanistan; and Bradley University graduate Ali Saleh Kahlah al-Marri, a Qatari arrested in Illinois as an alleged al-Qaida associate.
Only al-Marri is still there.
While Graham is against the extended use of the brig, a local defense attorney who represents al-Marri said he sees nothing wrong with increasing the brig's mission. Charleston lawyer Andy Savage said the brig already has the reputation of being as secure as a supermax prison.
He also said the staff is highly professional, the security is beyond question and that any talk of escapes or other plots is "nonsense political fodder."
The Obama camp is considering ways for some detainees to be released while others would be charged in U.S. courts where they could receive constitutional rights and open trials, The Associated Press reported. The notion has drawn some early criticism from Democrats who oppose creating a new legal system and from Republicans who oppose bringing terrorism suspects to the U.S. mainland.
About 255 detainees are held at Guantanamo, some of whom could be repatriated. But one hurdle U.S. authorities faces is that detainees' home governments, in many cases, do not want them back.
If you go to the link you can see an aerial picture of the brig.
Charleston, SC Latest Local News: Brig's future considered for detention of terror suspects
This facility is on the same base. I don't think would be a good idea to have the brig prisoners so close to it.
You can see pictures at:World Wide Watchers
SPAWAR a hub of global military information
By John P. McDermott
The Post and Courier
Monday, September 15, 2008
HANAHAN — In a secured laboratory off Remount Road, engineers at the Space and Naval Warfare Systems Center Charleston fiddle with what resembles a long, rectangular Etch A Sketch screen. As Robert Regal twirls his finger on it in a circular motion, the slick surface springs to life in a kaleidoscope of colors.
He then taps the screen to pull up a digital map showing the real-time locations of dozens of vessels navigating the Atlantic Ocean. Pressing a thumb and a pinky on two of the icons, he instantly can see the exact coordinates and other details that the Navy might want to know in an instant, such as the best course a warship or submarine would need to take to rendezvous with — or intercept — another.
Borrowing "multitouch" screen technology for defense purposes is one of the myriad ways that SPAWAR, as it is known, is looking to bridge the gap between the Pentagon and the iPod. It also reflects a push by the electronic engineering command to come up with ever more creative ways to keep U.S. armed forces a step ahead of "the bad guys," said Philipp "Phil" Charles, the newly promoted top civilian executive at the Charleston center.
"The idea is not to get hung up on the technology but on the things that the technology lets you do in new ways," Charles said.
Partly because of the sensitive nature of its work and its cloistered location on the Charleston Naval Weapons Station, SPAWAR remains a local enigma. But among those in the region's defense contracting world, the high-tech command is widely viewed as the 21st-century version of the old Charleston Naval Base and Shipyard.
Unlike the shipyard, which had been drifting toward obsolescence for years before it was closed in 1996, SPAWAR Systems Center Charleston, and the demand for its high-tech know-how, is expanding.
"Our command is healthy, and we're growing," said Charles, whose title is technical director. "The area of business that we're in ... is a growth industry."
Lots of dollars
Explaining what SPAWAR does can be a challenge. In the simplest terms, it essentially is a government-sponsored information-technology outfit that adapts communication devices for the military. It was created by the Navy to provide sailors and Marines with every possible electronic advantage while in combat.
"We connect them, give them improved situational awareness and help them make better decisions, faster than the bad guys," Charles said.
SPAWAR differs from most federal agencies because of its status as a "working capital organization," meaning it receives no direct appropriations from Congress. Rather, the center competes with the private sector and other government agencies to win contracts and fund its annual operating budget.
SPAWAR's imprint on the region's economy is significant, with the latest estimate coming in at $2.3 billion annually. It employs 1,500 civilian government workers and boasts one of the highest concentrations of technology engineers in South Carolina. Much of its work is farmed out to private-sector defense contractors — the preferred term at SPAWAR is "industry partners" — that employ about 9,000-10,000 employees. The center also attracts about 6,000 out-of-town visitors every year.
"So there's a lot of dollars that come through this command and ... a lot of impact on the local economy," Charles said.
Indeed, more than $3.7 billion worth of contract work flowed through the Weapons Station facility during the 2007 fiscal year, up 37 percent from the previous year. This year, revenue is expected to surpass $4 billion, Charles said.
Much of the increased workload and revenue growth at SPAWAR is tied directly to the push to get the armed services to interact more closely — not only with each other but with numerous other agencies. In government-speak, it's known as "jointness," and it's an initiative that has intensified since the 9/11 terrorist attacks seven years ago.
While SPAWAR is at its core a naval organization, its mission "does not stop at the brow of the Navy ship," Charles said.
"We have to be able to operate with federal and national agencies, as well as local law enforcement. So jointness means a lot more than it used to," he said.
On a mission
But the increased emphasis on collaboration also creates technical challenges at SPAWAR's end as the sharing of information increases. Charles said one of his top goals is to make SPAWAR more nimble and break through what he calls the "transformation barrier" by getting a firmer grasp of the high-tech tools the new military will need to do its job efficiently and effectively.
"There's a greater need for agility and a greater need to do multiple simultaneous missions," he said. "And, therefore, ... to support all these simultaneous traditional and nontraditional missions, we can't keep building specialized boxes, specialized technology solutions, to support each and every problem."
To get to the next level, some engineers are being dispatched to ships and other military posts to observe, ask questions and seek recommendations. Also, SPAWAR has launched an in-house innovation program that offers technical employees time and funding to develop new ideas and boost their creativity quotient.
"Our young engineers love this," Charles said.
The work on iPod-like multitouch screens is another example of where SPAWAR is heading as it seek to meet the growing demands of an increasingly tech-reliant military, he said.
"It's not only how can we give them more bandwidth, faster computing power and more connectivity, but how can we enable them to do things in new ways ... and not limit the way they do things now, like a mouse with a single-focus point and click. Big, big opportunity there, in my mind," Charles said.
Charleston, SC Latest Business News: World Wide Watchers

"Rejoined their comrades in arms" suggests that they returned to their native countries.