Better Late Than Never Dept.

It’s fitting that as Army Maj. Nidal Hasan faces his first major pre-trial hearing today, the Pentagon is seeking a way to prevent future soldiers from killing their own.

“Each time we see an incident like a soldier in good mental health becoming homicidal or suicidal, or an innocent insider becoming malicious, we wonder why we didn’t see it coming,” the Pentagon’s Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency says. “When we look through the evidence after the fact, we often find a trail – sometimes even an `obvious’ one. The question is can we pick up the trail before the fact giving us time to intervene and prevent an incident?”

By poring through terra-bytes of data looking for clues highlighting unusual behavior, the Pentagon’s goal is to tease out evil-doers before they do evil, Wired’s Danger Room blog reports. DARPA is holding an “industry day” at the wonderfully-named Systems Planning Corp. a couple of subway stops from the Pentagon, to flesh out the possibilities. No charge for attendees, and lunch will be served.

If the Pentagon can perfect this “Anomaly Detection at Multiple Scales (ADAMS)” technology, just consider the future applications. If it works on wayward soldiers, maybe it’ll work on wayward countries — and nip conflicts in the bud. If it can predict losers, it can predict winners. The office NCAA pool may never be the same.

Related Topics: fort hood shooting, nidal hasan, terrorism, National Security
  • Latest on Battleland

    Army photo / Sgt. Michael J. MacLeod

    Humpin’ It…And Jammin’ It…

    Reuters

    China’s ‘Security Dilemma’ Risks Arms Race in Asia

    TOKYO – A shooting war with China may not be inevitable, but a dangerous arms escalation seems a dead certainty. That’s the take from a rare public discussion here this week among naval experts from Japan, the U.S. and China.

    Chris Hondros / Getty Images

    Mental Ills Top Reason U.S. Troops Now Hospitalized

    Four of the top five non-combat medical conditions sending troops to the hospital in 2011 were mental ailments, the Pentagon reports:

  • http://phd9.blogspot.com Paul Dirks

    I’m sure it will work like a charm. No false positives whatsoever. Piece of cake!

  • destor23

    Mark Thompson seems to have a very credulous enthusiasm for anything military people say. To write about DARPA without even throwing a nod to the obvious civil rights and liberties implications is pretty amazing.

    In the U.S. we have a few important principals. One is that you’re innocent until proven guilty. Part of that is that to be proven guilty to have to have, you know, committeed a crime. We actually don’t use the NAACP standard for this kind of thing.

  • destor23

    Okay, I didn’t sleep enough last night. NAACP standard was supposed to be NCAA Pool standard. I am really embarassed about that.

  • textee

    After forty years, the Washington/New York/American press corps continues to portray the United States military as a collection of psychotic, enraged, delusional and suicidal murderers, wife beaters, drug addicts and torturers. Snnnnooooooooooozzzzzzzzze.

  • http://phd9.blogspot.com Paul Dirks

    The same Mark Thomson who today is extolling the virtues of a military data-mining program, was quoted yesterday as saying “If something can go wrong in war, it will.” and “snafu — “situation normal, all fouled up” — is a U.S. military term”

    I OTOH think the phrase “Boys with Toys” sums up both sides of the equation.

  • afguy

    Yep. Better analytic technology will always be the answer.
    .
    Of course, one MIGHT actually consider reducing the unbearable stress on the members that bring on these breakdowns, rather than just trying to flag and identify the individual right before they crack.
    .
    You know, to get that last little bit of productive activity out of that resource.

  • afguy

    Give it a rest, textee.
    .
    They aren’t machines, either.

  • nflfoghorn

    Waiting for Ben Jealous to predict that #12 seed Shirley Sherrod will upset #1 Duke.

  • apr2563

    Stop fighting unending, unnecessary wars and the military mental health will drastically improve. Spend more money on taking care of our veterans and their families and less on war. Their mental health will improve.

  • herby002

    “If the Pentagon can perfect this “Anomaly Detection at Multiple Scales (ADAMS)” technology, just consider the future applications. If it works on wayward soldiers, maybe it’ll work on wayward countries — and nip conflicts in the bud. If it can predict losers, it can predict winners. The office NCAA pool may never be the same.”

    I may be wrong, but I think I detect sarcasm in this article.

  • robertlaity

    Hasan is not someone who is “innocent” and somehow just lost it. Hasan is a Jihadist. I understand he worked in Obama’s campaign/administraion at one time. Obama is a Muslim. It is all part of the Islamic agenda of “Dar-el-Salaam” with Obama’s complicity.Muslims soldiers should NOT serve in the US Military. Their so called “Religion” extremely conflicts with the oath to the constitution that they take when they are inducted.

  • robertlaity

    Obama is a Muslim:
    http://www.flix.co.il/tapuz/showVideo.asp?m=2449529

    Obama is a radical muslim:

    Obama has committed treason:
    18USC,Part 1,Chapter 115,Sec.2381

    Obama is NOT the “President”:
    http://www.thepostemail.com/2010/08/17/there-is-no-president-obama/

blog comments powered by Disqus