Friday, December 12, 2025

Guard Keeping Streets Safe, Protecting Federal Property, Say DOW Leaders

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U.S. War Department: News
Guard Keeping Streets Safe, Protecting Federal Property, Say DOW Leaders
Dec. 11, 2025 |  By David Vergun

War Department leaders provided an update during a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing in Washington today on the National Guard's mobilization and responsibilities in supporting homeland defense. 

Currently, the National Guard is deployed under both Title 10 and Title 32 authorities, providing support for missions, including federal protection in California, Illinois and Oregon, support to federal law enforcement in Tennessee and restoring law and order in Washington, said Mark R. Ditlevson, principal deputy assistant secretary of war for homeland defense and Americas security affairs.

 

Ditlevson noted that the department is committed to ensuring all National Guardsmen are properly trained and equipped for these missions.  

"We emphasize de-escalation techniques, respect for civil liberties and adherence to the rules for the use of force. We also work closely with state governments and other federal agencies to ensure a coordinated and effective response to domestic challenges," he said.  

In addition to transparency and accountability in all activities, Ditlevson said providing peace of mind is also critical. 

"Americans must know that they can walk home at night, that they can take their children to the playground, that they can exist without fear of being attacked," he said.

 

War Department Principal Deputy General Counsel Charles L. Young III said the overarching concern is to ensure that communities remain safe places where citizens can enjoy their constitutionally protected rights in peace and where federal officers can perform their valid federal functions without fear of physical harm.

Air Force Gen. Gregory M. Guillot, commander of North American Aerospace Defense Command and U.S. Northern Command, said that every service member participating in federal protection missions is thoroughly trained on their authorities and limitations.  

"It is essential that everyone involved in this mission understands precisely what they are authorized to do, but perhaps more importantly, what they are authorized not to do," he said.

 

Title 10 troops are prohibited from conducting traditional law enforcement activities, including arrest, seizure, search or evidence collection in connection with the enforcement of laws, Guillot said, adding that their mission is to take reasonable measures to prevent the destruction of federal property and protect federal personnel from harm. 

"Service members may temporarily restrain civilians, conduct cursory searches or take other similar measures to ensure safety of the persons on the property," he said. 

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This email was sent to sajanram1986.channel@blogger.com using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: U.S. Department of War
1400 Defense Pentagon Washington, DC 20301-1400

Army Experts Team With European Partners on Arctic Nutrition Research

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U.S. War Department: News
Army Experts Team With European Partners on Arctic Nutrition Research
Dec. 11, 2025 |  By Katie Lange

As the U.S. military and its adversaries shift focus to the Arctic, working with partner nations in cold-weather regions to make sure our warfighters can survive those extremes has never been more important.

Over the past decade, the U.S. Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine's Military Nutrition Division has collaborated with the Norwegian Defense Research Establishment, known as FFI, to conduct research on nutrition that service members need to be productive in extreme cold.

One of the division's primary roles is to go into the field with warfighters during operations and training activities to better understand their physiological requirements. Since Norwegian military personnel often train in the Arctic, USARIEM researchers have, on several occasions, joined FFI on those missions to collect data.

"We've been there to study energy demands and warfighter eating behavior," said Dr. James McClung, the Military Nutrition Division chief. ", there's a significant reduction in the physiological cue to eat, even though adequate nutrition is required."

Over the course of more than a decade, an MND team conducted four studies in the Arctic on warfighter nutritional health "to better understand individual differences, whether those be sex, body composition or other factors on energy metabolism in the cold," McClung said.

In 2013, MND and FFI researchers evaluated the physical and biological functions of various volunteer warfighters. They followed that in 2015, 2022 and 2025 with studies that required soldiers to test various prototypes of supplemental snack bars; a few of the studies were conducted within the Arctic Circle.

"During these training exercises, they move very far on skis carrying a lot of weight," said Dr. Emily Howard, an MND nutrition physiologist who took part in the Norway studies. "The best part … is seeing the things we study here being implemented in person. You can actually see what they're consuming in that environment, how they're consuming it and gaining some additional insight."

If researchers observed various effects on the soldiers, such as negative energy balance — when a person can't eat enough to maintain their performance — they worked to adjust the nutrition in the rations they were receiving to overcome those problems.

The research, which has been years in the making, helped to inform a more energy-dense ration known as the close combat assault ration, which recently replaced the first strike ration for U.S. combat troops.

FFI researchers have also joined MND experts in studies at the labs in Natick, Massachusetts.

"It's been a very productive collaboration, one that allows us to answer really important questions for the warfighter," Howard said.

Dietary Supplements

The division has also worked with partner nations on dietary supplement research after NATO formed a research task group in 2021 to study their use in military personnel across the U.S., France, the United Kingdom and Slovenia.

"One of the primary findings is that dietary supplement use is greater in military personnel as compared to civilians," McClung said. "In fact, across the nations, on average, more than 60% of warfighters utilize dietary supplements."

According to the study, service members' reasons for using dietary supplements were also different than civilians, with military personnel mostly using them for recovery and to maintain physical and cognitive performance and body composition standards.

"Items like protein and amino acids are very popular , whereas in civilian communities, the use of multivitamin-type supplements for health and well-being are more common," McClung said.

In the U.S., dietary supplements aren't regulated in the same way as pharmaceuticals, so there's no system for determining whether the ingredients on a product label are actually in the product. To better protect warfighters from harmful substances, the War Department has a dietary supplement and substance program called Operation Supplement Safety. The program recommends third-party certification, which verifies the contents of dietary supplements to ensure the labels match what's in the product and that it's free of contaminants.

McClung said USARIEM also developed a survey tool that the NATO community has agreed to use once it's translated across nations. It will help share data as they work to better understand dietary supplement use.

Standardizing Physiological Requirements

USARIEM is also part of a NATO agreement to standardize warfighter physiological requirements across its nations. The agreement is akin to a cross-nation version of the departmentwide Army Regulation 40-25, which outlines nutrition requirements for combat rations and garrison feeding. It allows U.S. meals, ready-to-eat rations and other rations to be used by partner nations during NATO activities, and vice versa.

McClung noted that there's been discussion with NATO partners about using a product like the performance readiness bar to limit stress fractures in new recruits.

"Stress fractures are very common injuries in basic combat training and can result in injury to 7 to 20% of our recruits," he said. "NATO partner nations also experience elevated rates of stress fracture during basic combat training."

A standardization agreement is also under development for garrison feeding, which, during NATO operations, is often provided by the host nation. However, cultural differences can mean that warfighters may not always like the food they're being provided, which can lead them to consume less energy than what's required to perform appropriately.

"These types of standardization agreements are really critical in that we're assuring we can provide … the nutritional requirements of our American and partner warfighters," McClung said. "We continue to meet on a regular basis to incorporate new research findings into the requirements."

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This email was sent to sajanram1986.channel@blogger.com using GovDelivery Communications Cloud on behalf of: U.S. Department of War
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Thursday, December 11, 2025

Alert: Venezuela’s National Guard linked to killings, torture and repression, UN probe finds

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Alert 11 December 2025
Venezuela's National Guard linked to killings, torture and repression, UN probe finds
[UN News photo]

Venezuela's Bolivarian National Guard (GNB) has been implicated in a decade-long pattern of killings, arbitrary detentions, torture and sexual violence targeting protesters and opponents of President Nicolás Maduro, according to a new report from UN-appointed investigators on Thursday.  

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