Anonymous ID: 85abf8 July 7, 2024, 8:19 a.m. No.21154316   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4322

Commander, CNMF

Maj. Gen. Lorna M. Mahlock, USMC

https://www.cybercom.mil/About/Leadership/Bio-Display/Article/3205739/commander-cnmf

 

Major General Lorna Mahlock assumed her current duties as Commander, Cyber National Mission Force in January 2024.

 

Prior to her current assignment, she served as the National Security Agency’s (NSA) Cybersecurity Directorate, Deputy Director for Combat Support, as the Assistant Deputy Commandant for Information, Director, Command, Control Communications and Computers (C4), and as the Chief Information Officer (CIO) for the Marine Corps.

 

Born in Kingston, Jamaica, she immigrated to Brooklyn, New York and enlisted in the Marine Corps. She was selected for the Marine Corps Enlisted Commissioning Education Program, graduated from Marquette University and was commissioned in December 1991.

 

MajGen Mahlock is a certified Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Tower Local Controller and Marine Aviation Weapons and Tactics Instructor. She has commanded and led at various levels globally and in combat including: Air Traffic Control Detachment Commander; 1st Stinger Battery; Marine Corps Instructional Management School; G3 Future Operations 1st Marine Aircraft Wing; Operation SOUTHERN OVERWATCH and IRAQI FREEDOM 01; IRAQI FREEDOM 02; Marine Air Command and Control Systems Experimental; Commanding Officer – IRAQI FREEDOM 08; Headquarters European Command; Marine Corps Office of Legislative Affairs; Deputy Director of Operations, Plans Policy and Operations, (PP&O) Headquarters United States Marine Corps.

 

She holds Master’s degrees from the University of Oklahoma at Norman, the Naval War College, the U.S. Army War College, and a Master’s Certificate in Information Operations from the Naval Post Graduate School. She is also a graduate of the United Kingdom Defense College Higher Command and Staff, with Executive Certificates from MIT and Harvard.

 

Major General Mahlock’s personal awards include the Legion of Merit, Defense Meritorious Service Medal, Meritorious Service Medal, Joint Service Commendation Medal, Joint Service Achievement Medal, Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal, Navy and Marine Corps Achievement Medal and Good Conduct Medal.

 

MajGen Mahlock and her husband are the proud parents of three children.

 

>>21154261

Anonymous ID: 85abf8 July 7, 2024, 9:02 a.m. No.21154465   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4489 >>4635 >>4670 >>4777

History's most evil experiments: From Josef Mengele sewing twins together and Japan's 'plague bombs', to sending Soviet soldiers through an atomic blast-zone and the CIA's LSD mind control tests

 

Throughout the 20th century, the world's biggest powers inflicted horrific pain on their own citizens in the form of mass human experimentation. Less than 100 years ago Nazi Germany, Imperial Japan, the Soviet Union and the United States were all conducting experiments, each with their own sick motivation. Here, MailOnline looks at some of the most horrifying mass human experiments carried out in the 20th century.

 

MK-Ultra

While the previous examples may suggest that human experimentation is a horror confined to totalitarian regimes, that was not the case with MK-Ultra - a top-secret, illegal programme undertaken by the American Central Intelligence Service (CIA). The objective of the programme was to develop procedures and drugs that could be used in interrogations to weaken suspects and force confessions out of them through brainwashing and psychological torture.

 

This was after the CIA had become convinced that the communists had discovered a drug that would allow them to control human minds - and so the American agency set about testing its own drug that could be weaponized against enemies.

 

MK-Ultra began in 1953 and ran for an astonishing two decades until 1973, but only came to light in 1975 when it was revealed by the Church Committee of the United States Congress and Gerald Ford's commission on CIA activities. Until then, however, the public was blissfully unaware of the shocking experiments going on in the name of national security, in which US and Canadian citizens were illegally used as the CIA's unwitting test subjects.

 

  • CIA chemist Sidney Gottlieb, who headed up the agency's secret MK-ULTRA program, is seen in 1973 - the year the project was shut down after 20 years

 

US interests in drug-related interrogation experiments actually began around a decade before the start of the MK-Ultra programme, in 1943. Then, the Office of Strategic Services began developing a 'truth drug' that would produce 'uninhibited truthfulness'.

 

It has been argued that these American operations were the 'continuation' of Nazi experiments carried out on victims of the Holocaust, in which German doctors aimed to develop a truth serum which would 'eliminate the will' of a suspect. To back up this argument, American historian Stephen Kinzer - who extensively studied the programme - cited the several German scientists who were hired by the US as part of the aforementioned Operation Paperclip.

 

In 1947, the US Navy initiated Project CHATTER, which saw the testing of the drug LSD on human subjects, and in 1950 the CIA initiated a series of interrogation projects involving human subjects. This began with the launch of Project Bluebird in 1950, renamed to Project Artichoke in 1951 - the objective of which was to test whether a person could be made to carry out an involuntary attempted assassination.

 

This was the predecessor of the MK Ultra programme, which began in 1953. On April 13, 1953, CIA chemist Sidney Gottlieb became America's mind control czar. He was handed permission to 'launch and conduct experiments at will.' The project was given a new cryptonym - MK- ULTRA - and under that dark umbrella a myriad of gruesome 'subprojects' were launched. The scope of the project was broad, and its activities were carried out under the guise of research across 80 institutions aside from the military. These included colleges, universities, hospitals, prisons, and pharmaceutical companies.

 

Gottlieb headed up the project, and some of his research was covertly funded by universities and research centres, Kinzer said. Others were conducted in American prisons and detention centres across Japan, Germany and the Philippines. Kinzer's research found subjects endured psychological torture ranging from electroshock 'therapy' to high doses of LSD.

 

'Gottlieb wanted to create a way to seize control of people's minds, and he realised it was a two-part process,' Kinzer told NPR in 2019. 'First, you had to blast away the existing mind. Second, you had to find a way to insert a new mind into that resulting void. 'We didn't get too far on number two, but he did a lot of work on number one.'

 

(continued)

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13588831/Historys-evil-experiments-Nazis-Imperial-Japan-Soviet-Union-CIA.html