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INTELLIGENCE SUPPORT TO
COMBATING TERRORISM
1 FEBRUARY - 18 FEBRUARY 2012
ADMINISTRATIVE INFORMATION
SECURITY
Students will be issued badges upon arrival for in-processing. Please wear your badges at all times
while in the Defense Intelligence Agency Headquarters (DIA HQ). When you leave the DIA HQ, remove your badge. Please bring your Common Access Card (CAC) with you to Hawaii.
Cellular phones are not allowed beyond the entrance doors of the building. You must secure all electronic devices in a lock box before proceeding to the classroom. Do not bring computer equipment
(laptops, floppy discs, CDs, flash memory media, etc.) into the building.
PARKING AND SHUTTLE BUSES
Reserved parking spaces will be made available for guest speakers. Students will be provided
transportation to and from lodging on Joint Base Anacostia-Bolling, as well as transportation while
in Hawaii.
STUDENT SERVICES
The telephone number for incoming messages is (202) 231-1869. Voice mail at this number will be
checked several times daily and messages delivered to students. Students will be provided access
to a phone, fax, and copier. Smoking is prohibited in the building; however, a designated smoking
area is available outside of the cafeteria.
Sincerely
TE
LL I GENCE
UN
I V ERS I TY
T I O NA L
NA
IN
1962
ABOUT THE UNIVERSITY SEAL
The polestar denotes the Universitys international reach and the worldwide scope of intelligence.
The rose compass is symbolic of the convergence of all types of intelligence from all sources,
emphasizing the basic mission to collect, check and make available information about a present
or possible enemy; each cardinal direction signifies revealing light, security and wisdom, conveying
authority and control. The Coat of Arms recalls the Universitys history and commitment to the
education of the Intelligence Community. Gold is for the worth of reliable intelligence. The black
armillary sphere surrounded by an oak wreath with acorns signifies thoroughness, tenacity of
purpose and success in accomplishments. Black refers to authority, secrecy, wardenship and refers
to the basic mission of the organizational requirement of reliable intelligence. Bluebird is the color
associated to military intelligence in the Department of Defense. The three arrows reflect the Armed
Services participation in Joint Intelligence education. The lamp with flame embodies the eternal
enlightenment and knowledge that supports lifelong learning, teaching and research missions. The
scroll upon the torse alludes to the primary intelligence functions: collection, analysis, production
and dissemination of intelligence information. The sixteen stars represent the members of the
Intelligence Community. The motto, SCIENTIA EST LUX LUCIS, translates to KNOWLEDGE IS
ENLIGHTENMENT in English.
OUR MISSION
Prepare intelligence professionals, both military and civilian through education and research, to work
with skill and dedication in identifying and effectively integrating foreign, military, and domestic intelligence in defense of the homeland and of the U.S. interests abroad.
Place high priority on education and research to meet the combat and peacetime intelligence needs
of the Department of Defense. Enhance the competence of intelligence professionals attending NIU
through a variety of academic and educational programs, which include granting intelligence undergraduate and graduate degrees, and undertaking and disseminating intelligence research in the
furtherance of those programs, and establishing and enforcing appropriate learning standards.
Act as the DoD primary point of contact for academic outreach regarding intelligence matters. Contribute to the educational and professional career development of military and Federal civilian personnel who are pursuing careers in intelligence, defense policy and programs, homeland defense,
or homeland security.
Continue the expansion of degree-program offerings, international programs, research, and academic outreach to federal, public, and private colleges and universities.
AGENDA
Badging Day
ID Card Issue/Windshield tour of base
0930-1000
1000-1030
Welcome Address
Dr. David Ellison, President
National Intelligence University
1030-1100
Break
1100-1145
1145-1300
1300-1400
1400-1430
Break
1430-1600
Keynote Address
Lieutenant General Michael Flynn, U.S. Army
Assistant Director of National Intelligence for Partner Engagement
Office of the Director of National Intelligence
1600-1630
1500-1600
APAN Overview
Ms. Elvia Cortes
1600-1630
Bus Pick-up
0845-0910
0910-0930
0930-1030
Capitol Tour
1030-1100
Travel to Monuments
1100-1230
Tour Monuments
1230-1245
1245-1400
1400-1415
1415-1700
1700-1730
1730-2100
2100-2130
Return to JBAB
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Administrative Overview
Mr. Larry Hiponia
Director, Center for International Engagement
0805-0930
Context of Terrorism
Mr. David Belt
National Intelligence University
0930-1000
Break
1000-1130
1130-1230
Lunch
1230-1400
1400-1430
Break
1430-1630
Administrative Remarks
Mr. Larry Hiponia
Director, Center for International Engagement
0805-0930
0930-1000
Break
1000-1130
1130-1230
Lunch
1230-1430
1430-1500
Break
1500-1630
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0800-0830
In-processing
0830-0900
0900-0940
0940-0950
Break
0950-1020
1020-1100
Break
1100-1130
Counterterrorism Roundtable
Shari Villarosa, Deputy Coordinator for Counterterrorism
Kent Morris, Office of Terrorism and Narcotics Analysis, INR
Steven Jones, Terrorism Analyst, Diplomatic Security
Dan Rosen, Bureau of Counterterrorism
1130-1240
1240-1315
1315-1530
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0800-0805
Administrative Remarks
Mr. Larry Hiponia
Director, Center for International Engagement
0805-0930
0930-0945
Break
0945-1230
1230-1330
Lunch
1330-1530
1530-1600
1000-1200
Island Tour
1200
1200-1500
1500-1700
1700
Arrive at Hotel
Depart hotel for Asia Pacific Center for Security Studies (APCSS)
0800-0830
In-processing
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0830-1030
1030-1045
Break
1045-1145
1200-1330
1345-1600
1430-1500
Break
1600
0800-0830
In-processing
0830- 0930
0930-1030
1030-1045
Break
1045-1200
1200-1330
1330-1400
1400-1430
In-processing
1430-1600
1600-1630
1630-1800
1800
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0800-0830
In-processing
0830-1130
JTTF Briefings
1130-1200
1200-1330
1330-1400
1400-1600
SOCPAC Briefings
1600
Return to hotel
Depart Hotel
0830-1030
1030-1100
Return to Hotel
1100-1230
1300-1600
1645
1700
0900-1030
1030-1200
1200-1230
Travel to NEX
1230-1430
NEX Visit
1430
Return to Hotel
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DAVID D. BELT
Faculty Member
National Intelligence University
Captain David Belt is a former career Navy Special Operations officer, now specializing in Islamrelated security issues. His last assignment in the military from 2005-2008 was at National Defense
Universitys Industrial College of the Armed Forces, Washington DC, where he served as Assistant
Professor, National Security Studies and Regional Security Studies (Middle East). He led the
colleges major three-day interagency exercise on the Syria-Iran-Hezbollah-Hamas axis, developed
and led the Universitys most requested elective, Containing Al-Qaedaism, and was invited to teach
at and co-lead several international conferences focused on this topic. His published work in this area
was honored by Europes Partnership for Peach Consortium with their Athena Award (second place)
for best strategy for years 2005-2006.
Captain Belts executive-level leadership included nine years in command ashore and afloat. From
2000 to 2004 he served as Commanding Officer of Indian Island, the militarys joint ordnance
mobilization weapons station on the West Coast, and concurrently as one of six voting members of
the Executive Steering Committee of the Board of Directors, Navy Region Northwestthe Navys
third largest fleet concentration area. From 1997 to 2000 he served as Officer in Charge of Atlantic
Ordnance Command, Charleston South Carolina, servicing ordnance arm of the Marine Corps and
Army maritime prepositioning forces. From 1994-1996 he served as Commanding Officer of USS
Safeguard (ARS-50), home-ported in Pearl Harbor, Hawaiithe Navys new class of deep-sea diving
and submarine rescue ships. From 1992-1994 he served 30 months as Executive Officer of USS
Beaufort (ATS-2), one of t he Navys three deep-sea diving and salvage ships, forward deployed in
Japan and deployed in support of the first Gulf Wars amphibious advance force, clearing mines from
the shallow approaches to Kuwait. Earlier, he conducted high-risk diving operations ranging from
Honduras to Nova Scotia, including making the dives to recover the Space Shuttle Challenger and
its astronaut crew.
Captain Belt is an international affairs PhD candidate at Virginia Techs National Capital Region
campus. He received his Master of Science in National Resource Strategy from the Industrial College
of the Armed Forces in 2005, and he graduate from the US Naval Academy, Annapolis Maryland, in
1982.
Captain Belt and his wife, Cynthia, are natives of Panama City, Florida, and currently reside in
Annapolis, Maryland. They have six children.
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(with 4 Oak Leaf Clusters), the NATO Service Medal, and several service and campaign ribbons.
Major General Flynn also has earned the Ranger Tab and Master Parachutist Badge, and the Joint
Staff Identification Badge.
Major General Flynn is married and has two grown sons and a grandson.
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JOHN WAHLQUIST
Colonel, USAF (Ret.)
Faculty Member, College of Strategic Intelligence
Colonel John Wahlquist teaches courses in globalization,
national security, and the Middle East and Islam. Earlier,
he served as Deputy to the President at the College, and
as Assistant Professor of Political Science at the U.S. Air
Force Academy (USAFA). He holds Masters degrees from
Josef Korbel School of International Studies, University
of Denver and Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy,
Tufts University; a Bachelors degree from the Air Force Academy; and an Associates degree of
Cochise College. He completed Arabic language study at the University of Jordan, Portland State
University, and the University of Utah. He is a certified Department of Defence interrogator and
strategic debriefer, and is the NIU liaison to the DNIs Intelligence Science Board Study on Educing
Information.
After his retirement from active duty in July 2002, Colonel Wahlquist was an Associate at Booz Allen
Hamilton, Inc. serving in Baghdad, Iraq as an intelligence analyst and debriefer for the Iraq Survey
Group, and doing strategic futures work at the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA). During
a significant portion of his 35-year military career he specialized in international security affairs and
intelligence with a regional emphasis on the Middle East and Africa. As Defense and Air Attach in
Oman, he supported combat operations in Afghanistan and conducted overt intelligence collection
activities. The Deputy Director of Intelligence at U.S. Central Command, he oversaw intellignece
support to all U.S. military operations in Southwest Asia and Northeast Africa. He also served as
Military Adviser to the U.S. Special Envoy in Mogadishu, Somalia during Operation Restore Hope,
and did successive tours in Washington, DC on the Air Staff and Joint Staff, providing policy advice
on Africa and the Middle East to senior military leaders. Earlier he spent two years in the Middle East,
first as a student at the University of Jordan and then as a U.N. Military Observer in Cairo, Egypt
and in Beirut, Lebanon during the Lebanese Civil War. Earning the aeronautical rating of Master
Navigator, he accumulated over 3,000 flying hours, primarily in the B-52.
His article, Enhancing Interrogation: Advancing a New Agenda was published in Parameters in
2009, and his edited book, Interrogation: World War II, Vietnam, and Iraq in 2008. Earlier in 2008,
Colonel Wahlquist received the DIA Award for Excellence and in 2007 the NDIC Robert D. Beland
Memorial Award for Excellence in Teaching. He received a 2004 Telly Award for the video, Geospatial
Intelligence, the Cornerstone of Information Dominance, that he co-produced for NGA. For his military
service, Colonel Wahlquist received the Defense Superior Service Medal (two awards), Legion of
Merit, and Bronze Start Medal (two awards) among other honors. Additional academic recognition
includes the Faculty Award for Professional Excellence, Postgraduate Intelligence Program for
Reserves, NDIC; Charles R. Coble, Jr. Memorial Award for Excellence in Reasearch in Political
Science and National Security Studies, USAFA; Hubert H. Humphrey Doctoral Fellowship in Arms
Control and Disarmaments, U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency; and Outstanding Military
Educator in Political Science, USAFA.
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YOUSSEF H. ABOUL-ENEIN
Adjunct Islamic Studies Chair
Industrial College of the Armed Forces
Youssef H. Aboul-Enein is a U.S. Navy Medical Service Corps Commander, Middle East Foreign
Area Officer, and is author of Militant Islamist Ideology: Understanding the Global Threat, published
by Naval Institute Press. He currently is Adjunct Military Professor and Islamic Studies Chair at
the Industrial College of the Armed Forces (ICAF). From 2006 to 2009, he served as a Senior
Counter-Terrorism Advisor, Warning Officer, and Instructor on Militant Islamist Ideology at the Joint
Intelligence Task Force for Combating Terrorism (JITF-CT) in Washington DC. In the Fall of 2010,
he returned to JITF-CT, after spending a year as a student at ICAF. He served as Country Director
for North Africa and Egypt, Assistant Country Director for the Arabian Gulf, and Special Advisor on
Islamist Militancy at the Office of the Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs from 2002
to 2006. At the Office of the Secretary of Defense, he helped prepare Defense Department officials
engage in ministerial level talks with their counterparts from Morocco to the Persian Gulf.
CDR Aboul-Enein has attended interagency working groups on Libyan disarmament, coordinating
the first Defense Ministry level bilateral talks with Algeria, arranging the freedom of 407 Moroccan
POWs held by the POLISARIO Front, and Saudi Energy Infrastructure Security. He has published
many articles on Islamist militancy, Arab affairs, and Middle East military tactics for Military Review,
the Infantry Journal, the Marine Corps Gazette, Small Wars Journal.com, and the Foreign Area
Officer Journal. CDR Aboul-Enein is author of Ayman Al-Zawahiri: The Ideologue of Modern Islamic
Militancy, and co-author of Islamic Rulings on Warfare, published by the Army War College in
October 2004.
CDR Aboul-Enein received a B.B.A from the University of Mississippi (Ole Miss), an M.B.A and
Masters in Health Services Administration from the University of Arkansas, an M.S. in Strategic
Intelligence from the National Defense Intelligence College (Now National Intelligence University),
and an M.S. in National Resource Strategy from the Industrial College of the Armed Forces. He also
obtained post-graduate diplomas from the Naval War College (non-resident) Command and Staff
College.
CDR Aboul-Eneins personal awards include the Army Commendation Medal presented by General
Tommy Franks, the Joint Service Achievement Medal, the Defense Meritorious Service Medal
awarded by the Secretary of Defense, and a citation from the NYPD-FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force,
among others.
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