Agency (NSA), monitors and screens all telephone, telegraph, computer modem, radio, television, cellular, microwave, and satellite communications, and electromagnetic fields “of interest” around the world, and orchestrates information-control and cover-up activities related to UFO secrecy and surveillance of extra-terrestrial operations, Fort Meade, MD.
National Reconnaissance
Office (NRO), controls and collects information from global spy satellites, monitors UFO traffic entering and leaving Earth’s atmosphere, coordinates firing of energy beam weapons from orbiting Star Wars satellites at selected human ground and airborne targets and selectively at extra-terrestrial craft, Pentagon basement and Dulles Airport area, VA.
National Reconnaissance
Organization (NRO) (aka MJ-TF), the military/intelligence operations arm of the PI-40 Subcommittee, conducts surveillance, interdiction, capture and confiscation of UFOs and their extra-terrestrial occupants for intelligence
Northrop still in the IT game even with divestiture
Northrop Grumman’s decision to sell off its IT services business sent me down memory lane, which got me thinking about how much the market has changed and how in some ways it stays the same.
Within my first couple weeks at Washington Technology in 1996, I tagged along to a previously arranged briefing at BDM International. In the room was CEO Phil Odeen and a couple other executives, including Bill Hoover and Todd Stottlemyer.
One year later, TRW Inc. announced it was acquiring BDM for $1 billion. TRW had its ups and downs for a few years. In 2002, Northrop saw an opportunity and made an offer that eventually became a hostile takeover of the company. To add a little intrigue, Northrop made its bid just as TRW’s chairman, president and CEO at the time in David Cote resigned to go to Honeywell.
As the U.S. continues to fortify its defense budget, you may wish to invest in the defense industry's most promising stocks. Here's what the landscape looks like.
Army to rethink awards for $800M engineering contract
It appears that a group of small businesses may have had a point in their complaint that the Army reneged on a pledge to include small business winners on the $800 million TEIS IV contract.
The solicitation included clear indications of the Army’s desire to pick at least two small businesses as primes on the Total Engineering and Integration Services contract. But the service only made awards to the three incumbents from TEIS III General Dynamics IT, NCI Information Systems and Science Applications International Corp.
MC Dean, TekSynap Corp. and IAP Worldwide Services then filed protests with the Government Accountability Office. A fourth company apparently filed an agency-level protest as well.