Friday, August 24, 2012

2 Donate 2 "Peace Keeper Space Organization"



Peacekeeper Space Organization needs you the people of the world to help create a brighter future for everyone you are who we work for and we are calling upon you to help make this dream we are fighting for a reality. Thank You!




Sunday, August 19, 2012

The Air Force’s Mystery "SPACE WEAPON" Lands After a Year in Orbit


The Air Force's shadowy mini-Space Shuttle, the X-37B, spent over a year traveling around our planet. What was it down? We don't know—it's a secret. But now that it's finally landed, it's time for some questions.

Despite more or less copying the design of of the Space Shuttle, the X-37 is completely robotic, guiding itself through the vacuum without human piloting and using barely any fuel in the process. It has room for a cargo payload—cited as space for "experiemnts"—but this is the Air Force, not NASA. If the Pentagon wants a robot that can fly through space for 469 days in a row carrying a payload, it's not going to be doing zero-gravity experiments on any colonies and corn cobs—and don't forget, Russia is building its own. Speculation around the Roboshuttle's true mission ranges from space-based nuke launches to foreign satellite destruction.


As it stands now, the X-37B isn't itself going to be seeing any action—but it could certainly be boosting the way for a next generation of space weapons (and the next one takes off this fall). We can be sure there won't be pretty landing footage of the real weapon the X-37B births.

Video: Secret Space Plane Shatters Orbital Record as Chinese Rival Looms

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

SECRET WAR IN SPACE NASA COVERUP??



Is there a secret war in space? There are respectable scientists who believe something is wrong with the objects filmed by NASA. What is the sudden streak of light that miss the object in space?

"If you're a skeptic it is easy to brush off. But if you are open-minded and you see this, then there is something weird about it", says Dr. Mark Carlotto.

Dr. Mark Carlotto has 20 years of experience conducting visual image processing for scientific research.

This is what he and others had to say when viewing some of the footage taken by astronauts in space.

"I studied it extensively over maybe a two year period at least."says Jack Kasher, Ph.D , Professor of Physics at University of Nebraska at Omaha who worked for nearly ten years in the research development in the Star Wars defence system for the upper atmosphere.


His analysis concluded that the UFO filmed by NASA cannot be explained as a natural phenomenon.

"These are not videos taken by someone in their backyard."

These are taken aboard U.S. spacecraft. so the integrity of the data cannot be questioned.

NASA's explanation is that what we are looking at here are ice particles around the shuttle, but if you look at it more carefully it doesn't make any sense.

If there was a thruster firing, when a thrusters firing occurs the orientation of the spacecraft should change, very slightly, but we don't see any change in the apparent motion of the stars.

"This indicates the attitude of the shuttle has not changed from the thruster firing," says Dr. Mark Carlotto.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

BANGLADESH (Highest Troops personnel 2 various UN Peacekeeping Operations)



BANGLADESH contributed the highest number of troops with 10,855 personnel (Military and law enforcement) to various UN Peacekeeping Operations worldwide. Once a peace treaty has been negotiated, the parties involved might ask the United Nations for a peacekeeping force to oversee various elements of the agreed upon plan.

This is often done because a group controlled by the United Nations is less likely to follow the interests of any one party, since it itself is controlled by many groups, namely the 15-member Security Council and the intentionally diverse United Nations Secretariat.

If the Security Council approves the creation of a mission, then the Department of Peacekeeping Operations begins planning for the necessary elements. At this point, the senior leadership team is selected. The department will then seek contributions from member nations. Since the UN has no standing force or supplies, it must form ad hoc coalitions for every task undertaken.Doing so results in both the possibility of failure to form a suitable force, and a general slowdown in procurement once the operation is in the field. Romeo Dallaire, force commander in Rwanda during the Rwandan Genocide there, described the problems this poses by comparison to more traditional military deployments:


"He told me the UN was a 'pull' system, not a 'push' system like I had been used to with NATO, because the UN had absolutely no pool of resources to draw on. You had to make a request for everything you needed, and then you had to wait while that request was analyzed...For instance, soldiers everywhere have to eat and drink. In a push system, food and water for the number of soldiers deployed is automatically supplied. In a pull system, you have to ask for those rations, and no common sense seems to ever apply." (Shake Hands With the Devil,Dallaire, pp. 99-100)

Department of Peacekeeping Operations


The Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO) is a department of the United Nations which is charged with the planning, preparation, management and direction of UN peacekeeping operations.

The DPKO traces its roots to 1948 with the creation of the UNMOGIP and UNTSO. Up to the late 1980s, peacekeeping missions were operated by six officials in the United Nations Office of Special Political Affairs, which was headed first by Brian Urquhart and then Marrack Goulding. From the beginning, peacekeeping operations operated with a clear doctrine that applied to its traditional or classical peacekeeping operations for inter-state ceasefires: peacekeepers did not take sides or discharge firearms, save in self-defense, or meddle in politics.

The official DPKO was created in 1992 when Boutros Boutros-Ghali took office as Secretary-General of the United Nations; its creation was one of his first decisions. Goulding became under-secretary-general (or USG) for peacekeeping with Kofi Annan appointed as his deputy. The role of the DPKO, however, wasn't clarified until June 1992, when Boutrous-Ghali issued a plan to strengthen the UN's capacity for preventative diplomacy and peacekeeping, entitled An Agenda for Peace.

The bulk of peacekeeping operations funding is appropriated much like the general budget, but permanent members of the Security Council are required to pay a larger share, and all states are free to contribute additional funding, equipment, or other services to missions of their respective choices.

As of 2010, DPKO leads 16 different missions in Africa, the Caribbean, the Middle East, Americas, Europe and Asia. Serving in these missions are over 100,000 uniformed and civilian personnel. Total approved annual expenses are over US $5 billion for the period July 2006 to June 2007.

United Nations Peacekeeping (U think U Know But U Have No Idea)


Peacekeeping by the United Nations is a role held by the Department of Peacekeeping Operations as "a unique and dynamic instrument developed by the Organization as a way to help countries torn by conflict create the conditions for lasting peace". It is distinguished from both peacebuilding and peacemaking.

Peacekeepers monitor and observe peace processes in post-conflict areas and assist ex-combatants in implementing the peace agreements they may have signed. Such assistance comes in many forms, including confidence-building measures, power-sharing arrangements, electoral support, strengthening the rule of law, and economic and social development.

Accordingly UN peacekeepers (often referred to as Blue Beret because of their light blue berets or helmets) can include soldiers, police officers, and civilian personnel.

The United Nations Charter gives the United Nations Security Council the power and responsibility to take collective action to maintain international peace and security. For this reason, the international community usually looks to the Security Council to authorize peacekeeping operations.

Most of these operations are established and implemented by the United Nations itself, with troops serving under UN operational control.

Hervé Ladsous has served as the head of the Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO) since 2 September 2011. DPKO's highest level doctrine document, entitled "United Nations Peacekeeping Operations: Principles and Guidelines" was issued in 2008.