fbpx
Wikipedia

National Center for Medical Intelligence

The National Center for Medical Intelligence (NCMI), formerly known as the Armed Forces Medical Intelligence Center, is a component of the United States Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) responsible for the production of medical intelligence and all-source intelligence on foreign health threats and other medical issues to protect U.S. interests worldwide.[6] Headquartered at Fort Detrick, Maryland, the center provides finished intelligence products to the Department of Defense, U.S. Intelligence Community, Five Eyes, NATO, allies and partners, as well as international health organizations and NGO's.[7]

National Center for Medical Intelligence
Seal of the NCMI
Agency overview
FormedApril 1, 1973; 51 years ago (1973-04-01) (as US Army Medical Intelligence and Information Agency (1973-82), Armed Forces Medical Intelligence Center (1982-2008), became National Center for Medical Intelligence in 2008)
Preceding agencies
TypeComponent of departmental agency (since 1992)
JurisdictionFederal agency operating in US, but analyzing foreign and domestic intelligence
HeadquartersFort Detrick, Frederick, Maryland, U.S.
39°26′7″N 77°25′45″W / 39.43528°N 77.42917°W / 39.43528; -77.42917
Employees100[1]-150[2][3]
Agency executives
Parent departmentUnited States Department of Defense (DIA also member of USIC)
Parent agencyDefense Intelligence Agency (DIA)

As of April 2020, NCMI is led by director Colonel R. Shane Day[4][5] and deputy director Christopher M. Strub.[5]

History edit

The NCMI traces its origins to the organization of a medical intelligence section in the Office of the Surgeon General of the United States Army during World War II. Prior to entry into the war, the Surgeon General established medical intelligence to support planning for the administration of military governments in U.S. Army occupied territories occupied by providing detailed guides for civil public health and sanitation conditions. As the prospect of United States entry into the war increased, the need for a full-time staff of medical intelligence analysts became apparent. During the war, medical intelligence products were part of formal war planning with the incorporation of health and sanitary data into War Department Strategic Surveys. The history and organization of the medical intelligence program in 1951 is described in detail Special Text, ST 8039–1, 1951, used at the Army Medical Service School.[8]

The US Army Medical Information and Intelligence Agency was organized at Walter Reed Army Medical Center (WRAMC) by WRAMC General Orders 62, 24 September 1956.[9] It was created by transferring personnel and files from the Medical Intelligence Division and the Reference Library of the Office the Surgeon General of the United States Army. Although both were abbreviated MIIA, this Medical Information and Intelligence Agency should not be confused with the Medical Intelligence and Information Agency which was organized effective 1 April 1973.

According to a historical summary from the Armed Forces Medical Intelligence Center, the Medical Information and Intelligence Agency was absorbed by DIA in 1962.[10] During the later Cold War, the medical intelligence division underwent several evolutions in size, structure and specific function. In the early 1970s, the division became victim of DoD downsizing initiatives after the Vietnam War.

On April 1, 1973, the Army Surgeon General again took sole responsibility for the medical intelligence function in the form of the US Army Medical Intelligence and Information Agency (USAMIIA or MIIA).[11] MIIA transferred to Fort Detrick in 1979 and was renamed as AFMIC in 1982 when it became a tri-service organization.[12] Congress mandated the permanent transfer of AFMIC to DIA in 1992 under the DoD Authorization Act.[13] As of January 1992, AFMIC became a DIA field production activity.

On July 2, 2008, AFMIC was formally redesignated as the NCMI in a ceremony at Ft. Detrick.[14] In 2010, the center received a facility expansion that added workspaces, conference and training rooms, and additional parking.[15]

Organization edit

The NCMI is led by a director, Col. R. Shane Day of the United States Air Force[16] as of April 2020.[4][5] The director is assisted by a deputy director, as of April 2020, Christopher M. Strub.[5] NCMI has a total of four major divisions, those being Infectious Disease, Environmental Health, Global Health Systems, and Medical Science and Technology.[2] The NCMI is organized into a support division and two substantive divisions—the Epidemiology and Environmental Health Division and the Medical Capabilities Division. Each substantive division is made up of two teams, the duties of which include:

Environmental Health

  • Identify and assess environmental risks that can degrade force health or effectiveness including chemical and microbial contamination of the environment, toxic industrial, chemical and radiation accidents, and environmental terrorism/warfare.
  • Assess the impact of foreign environmental health issues and trends on environmental security and national policy.

Epidemiology

  • Identify, assess, and report on infectious disease risks that can degrade mission effectiveness of deployed forces and/or cause long-term health implications.
  • Alert operational and policy customers to foreign disease outbreaks that have implications for national security and policy formulation, including homeland defense and deliberately introduced versus naturally occurring disease outbreaks.

Life Sciences and Biotechnology

  • Assess foreign basic and applied biomedical and biotechnological developments of military medical importance.
  • Assess foreign civilian and military pharmaceutical industry capabilities.
  • Assess foreign scientific and technological medical advances for defense against nuclear, biological and chemical warfare.
  • Prevent technological surprise.
  • Prevent proliferation of dual-use equipment and knowledge.

Medical Capabilities

  • Assess foreign military and civilian medical capabilities, including treatment facilities, medical personnel, emergency and disaster response, logistics, and medical/pharmaceutical industries.
  • Maintain and update an integrated data base on all medical treatment, training, pharmaceutical, and research and production facilities.

Director of NCMI edit

The directorship of NCMI was historically held "primarily by military officers;" only two civilians have ever occupied the position.[17] Past directors include medical doctor, former undercover CIA officer, and Air Force Colonel Dr. Anthony Rizzo, who held the position for eight years[18] before retiring in 2013;[19] and former Army doctor and NCMI infectious disease intelligence analyst Dr. Kathryn Morici, the center's first female and second civilian director,[17] who took office in February 2014 but was, by at least April 2021, replaced by R. Shane Day.[4][5]

There is also a deputy director of NCMI; Christopher M. Strub served or serves as Day's deputy.[5]

Directors of NCMI starting 2005 edit

The following is an incomplete list of NCMI directors starting in 2005. NCMI had one civilian/non-military director prior to 2005 and every director pre-2014 was male.[17]

Director Term of office
Col. Dr. Anthony Rizzo 2005 – 2013[19]
Dr. Kathryn Morici February 2014[17] – Before April 2020[4][5]
Col. Dr. R. Shane Day Before April 2020[4][5] – Unknown

Operations edit

A former NCMI director described its mission as "[predicting] what would be a threat to the United States;"[18] the Secretary of the Navy stated it as "to act as the focal point in the DoD for compiling, producing, and distributing finished intelligence on foreign military and civilian medical capabilities, medical intelligence products and assessments."[20] Customers range from operational and tactical commanders, preventive medicine personnel, and medical planners and researchers to the policymakers in the United States Department of Defense, the White House staff and other federal agencies. The mission grew during Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom.[21]

News reports indicated that NCMI produces medical intelligence analysis using intelligence products from other intelligence community agencies with a heavy emphasis on open-source intelligence, such as foreign newspaper reports and social media posts.[1][22] Former NCMI senior officer Denis Kaufman described the center's search through massive amounts of information as "like...looking for needles in a stack of needles."[1] The NCMI does not collect any intelligence of its own and its products primarily serve the US military[22] and commanders, policymakers, defense officials, and health officials such as the Secretary of Health and Human Services.[1]

While the US Central Intelligence Agency also has a medical intelligence unit, the NCMI is the primary organization for classified COVID-19 pandemic information and analysis.[22] The center is also the primary source of federal medical intelligence as a whole.[23]

NCMI's director is charged with acting as "the Medical Intelligence consultant to the Army, Navy, and Air Force Surgeons General. [He or she] briefs at the White House, to Congress, to the Homeland Security Committee, to the Director of National Intelligence and to the Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence."[18]

In a 2013 edition of The Intelligencer, a journal published by the Association of Former Intelligence Officers (AFIO), Johnathan D. Clemente stated the NCMI had approximately 150 employees (counting on-site analysts from other intelligence agencies),[2] the same number reported in 2008.[24] In 2020, AP News estimated the NCMI employs "at least 100 epidemiologists, virologists, chemical engineers, toxicologists, biologists and military medical expert[s] — all schooled in intelligence trade craft;"[1] also represented are "medical doctors, veterinarians and other experts with extensive operational medical experience from the military services."[22]

2020-2021 COVID-19 Pandemic edit

In April 2020, ABC News reported that the White House was warned of the impending COVID-19 pandemic in Wuhan, China, through a National Center for Medical Intelligence Report. In a rare public statement to ABC News, the Center denied this:

"As a matter of practice the National Center for Medical Intelligence does not comment publicly on specific intelligence matters. However, in the interest of transparency during this current public health crisis, we can confirm that media reporting about the existence/release of a National Center for Medical Intelligence Coronavirus-related product/assessment in November 2019 is not correct. No such NCMI product exists."[25]

The National Center for Medical Intelligence was thought to be part of the daily pandemic briefings of the White House:

"The value that NCMI brings is that it has access to information streams that the World Health Organization does not have, nor does the Centers for Disease Control or anyone else," said Denis Kaufman, a retired senior officer who worked at the NCMI. In normal times, the NCMI's primary customer is the U.S. military, which uses the information to monitor potential health threats to its forces abroad. But in the midst of a pandemic, NCMI analysis is likely a fixture in the president's daily intelligence briefing, officials say.[26]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Reichmann, Deb (April 16, 2020). "Medical intelligence sleuths tracked, warned of new virus". AP News. Retrieved July 6, 2021.
  2. ^ a b c Clemente, Jonathan (2013). "Medical Intelligence" (PDF). The Intelligencer (AFIO). 20: Unknown.
  3. ^ Buxbaum, Peter (July 7, 2008). "Military medical intelligence center gets a new name". Healthcare IT News. Retrieved August 18, 2021.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Margolin, Josh; Meek, James Gordon (April 8, 2020). "Intelligence report warned of coronavirus crisis as early as November: Sources". NBC News. Retrieved July 18, 2021.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Defense Intelligence Agency [@DefenseIntel] (April 16, 2020). "The mission of the National Center for Medical Intelligence" (Tweet). Retrieved July 18, 2021 – via Twitter.
  6. ^ DoD Instruction 6420.01, "National Center for Medical Intelligence (NCMI)", March 20, 2009
  7. ^ Matthew Watson: "DIA Establishes National Center for Medical Intelligence", http://www.upmc-biosecurity.org/website/biosecurity_briefing/archive/govt_response/2008-07-11-dianatlctrmedintell.html 2010-02-20 at the Wayback Machine, July 11, 2008.
  8. ^ Special Text, ST 8-30-1, Medical Intelligence, 1951
  9. ^ Medical Information and Intelligence Agency monthly report for the month ending 31 October 1956
  10. ^ Bolin, Robert; Clemente, Jonathan (1992). "Brief History of AFMIC (Total Manpower)". Department of Defense Military Intelligence. University of Nebraska Digital Commons. Retrieved August 18, 2021.
  11. ^ Armed Forces Medical Intelligence Center, Historical Data Card https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1169&context=usarmyresearch
  12. ^ Robert L. Bolin: Army Technical Intelligence Chronology, Chapter 4: Official Documents, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, Lincoln, Neb., 2000, online at http://unllib.unl.edu/Bolin_resources/TI/tech-int.html September 17, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, Version 7.05; Revised, March 22, 2005.
  13. ^ Jeffrey T. Richelson: The U.S. Intelligence Community, Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1999, p. 62.
  14. ^ Colonel Anthony M. Rizzo, Director, National Center for Medical Intelligence: "Meeting Emerging and Constantly Changing Health Threats with a Central Point of Information and Intelligence", Military Medical/CBRN Technology, 2008 Volume: 12 Issue: 5 (August), http://www.military-medical-technology.com/mmt-archives/24-mmt-2008-volume-12-issue-5/146-national-center-for-medical-intelligence.html August 11, 2019, at the Wayback Machine.
  15. ^ Megan Eckstein, News-Post Staff: "Medical Intelligence group adds much-needed office space at Fort Detrick", Frederick News-Post, http://www.fredericknewspost.com/archive/article_d81fa175-2de5-5109-830e-b71a5a534900.html?mode=jqm, Posted Nov 10, 2010.
  16. ^ "COLONEL (DR) R. SHANE DAY". airforcemedicine.af.mil. United States Air Force Medical Service. Retrieved July 18, 2021.
  17. ^ a b c d "Introducing Dr. Kathryn Morici, NCMI's new director". DIA Public Affairs. Defense Intelligence Agency. March 21, 2014. Retrieved July 6, 2021.
  18. ^ a b c "Dr. Anthony Rizzo: The Aging Pilot". US Sport Aviation Expo. US Sport Aviation Expo. June 25, 2018. Retrieved July 7, 2021.
  19. ^ a b "Starting a New Life: Retired Air Force Colonel is Now Biology Professor at Polk". Polk State College. Polk State College. November 8, 2013. Retrieved July 6, 2021.
  20. ^ Spencer, Richard V. (December 21, 2018). "NATIONAL CENTER FOR MEDICAL INTELLIGENCE (NCMI)" (PDF). Letter to Gregory J. Slavonic. Retrieved July 18, 2021.
  21. ^ Megan Eckstein: "Detrick soldiers steadily being sent to Middle East", Frederick News-Post, originally published January 17, 2010, http://www.fredericknewspost.com/sections/news/display.htm?storyid=100201 March 13, 2012, at the Wayback Machine.
  22. ^ a b c d Dilanian, Ken (March 13, 2020). "Spying on coronavirus: A little-known U.S. intel outfit has its most important mission yet". NBC News. Retrieved July 6, 2021.
  23. ^ Pellerin, Cheryl (October 10, 2012). "MEDICAL INTELLIGENCE CENTER MONITORS HEALTH THREATS". American Forces Press Service. Retrieved July 7, 2021.
  24. ^ Buxbaum, Peter (July 7, 2008). "Military medical intelligence center gets a new name". Healthcare IT News. Retrieved July 7, 2021.
  25. ^ "Intelligence report warned of coronavirus crisis as early as November: Sources". ABC News.
  26. ^ "How U.S. Spies predict pandemics like coronavirus". NBC News. March 13, 2020.

Further reading edit

  • Clemente, Jonathan (2013). "Medical Intelligence" (PDF). The Intelligencer (AFIO). 20: Unknown.
  • Denis C. Kaufman (2001). Medical Intelligence: A Theater Engagement Tool (Report). United States Army War College. Retrieved July 6, 2021.

External links edit

    national, center, medical, intelligence, ncmi, formerly, known, armed, forces, medical, intelligence, center, component, united, states, defense, intelligence, agency, responsible, production, medical, intelligence, source, intelligence, foreign, health, threa. The National Center for Medical Intelligence NCMI formerly known as the Armed Forces Medical Intelligence Center is a component of the United States Defense Intelligence Agency DIA responsible for the production of medical intelligence and all source intelligence on foreign health threats and other medical issues to protect U S interests worldwide 6 Headquartered at Fort Detrick Maryland the center provides finished intelligence products to the Department of Defense U S Intelligence Community Five Eyes NATO allies and partners as well as international health organizations and NGO s 7 National Center for Medical IntelligenceSeal of the NCMIAgency overviewFormedApril 1 1973 51 years ago 1973 04 01 as US Army Medical Intelligence and Information Agency 1973 82 Armed Forces Medical Intelligence Center 1982 2008 became National Center for Medical Intelligence in 2008 Preceding agenciesUS Army Medical Information and Intelligence Agency 1956 early 1970s Medical intelligence office under Army Surgeon General multiple names at least WWII 1956 TypeComponent of departmental agency since 1992 JurisdictionFederal agency operating in US but analyzing foreign and domestic intelligenceHeadquartersFort Detrick Frederick Maryland U S 39 26 7 N 77 25 45 W 39 43528 N 77 42917 W 39 43528 77 42917Employees100 1 150 2 3 Agency executivesCol R Shane Day Director 4 5 Christopher M Strub Deputy Director 4 5 Parent departmentUnited States Department of Defense DIA also member of USIC Parent agencyDefense Intelligence Agency DIA As of April 2020 NCMI is led by director Colonel R Shane Day 4 5 and deputy director Christopher M Strub 5 Contents 1 History 2 Organization 2 1 Director of NCMI 2 1 1 Directors of NCMI starting 2005 3 Operations 4 2020 2021 COVID 19 Pandemic 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory editThe NCMI traces its origins to the organization of a medical intelligence section in the Office of the Surgeon General of the United States Army during World War II Prior to entry into the war the Surgeon General established medical intelligence to support planning for the administration of military governments in U S Army occupied territories occupied by providing detailed guides for civil public health and sanitation conditions As the prospect of United States entry into the war increased the need for a full time staff of medical intelligence analysts became apparent During the war medical intelligence products were part of formal war planning with the incorporation of health and sanitary data into War Department Strategic Surveys The history and organization of the medical intelligence program in 1951 is described in detail Special Text ST 8039 1 1951 used at the Army Medical Service School 8 The US Army Medical Information and Intelligence Agency was organized at Walter Reed Army Medical Center WRAMC by WRAMC General Orders 62 24 September 1956 9 It was created by transferring personnel and files from the Medical Intelligence Division and the Reference Library of the Office the Surgeon General of the United States Army Although both were abbreviated MIIA this Medical Information and Intelligence Agency should not be confused with the Medical Intelligence and Information Agency which was organized effective 1 April 1973 According to a historical summary from the Armed Forces Medical Intelligence Center the Medical Information and Intelligence Agency was absorbed by DIA in 1962 10 During the later Cold War the medical intelligence division underwent several evolutions in size structure and specific function In the early 1970s the division became victim of DoD downsizing initiatives after the Vietnam War On April 1 1973 the Army Surgeon General again took sole responsibility for the medical intelligence function in the form of the US Army Medical Intelligence and Information Agency USAMIIA or MIIA 11 MIIA transferred to Fort Detrick in 1979 and was renamed as AFMIC in 1982 when it became a tri service organization 12 Congress mandated the permanent transfer of AFMIC to DIA in 1992 under the DoD Authorization Act 13 As of January 1992 AFMIC became a DIA field production activity On July 2 2008 AFMIC was formally redesignated as the NCMI in a ceremony at Ft Detrick 14 In 2010 the center received a facility expansion that added workspaces conference and training rooms and additional parking 15 Organization editThe NCMI is led by a director Col R Shane Day of the United States Air Force 16 as of April 2020 4 5 The director is assisted by a deputy director as of April 2020 Christopher M Strub 5 NCMI has a total of four major divisions those being Infectious Disease Environmental Health Global Health Systems and Medical Science and Technology 2 The NCMI is organized into a support division and two substantive divisions the Epidemiology and Environmental Health Division and the Medical Capabilities Division Each substantive division is made up of two teams the duties of which include Environmental Health Identify and assess environmental risks that can degrade force health or effectiveness including chemical and microbial contamination of the environment toxic industrial chemical and radiation accidents and environmental terrorism warfare Assess the impact of foreign environmental health issues and trends on environmental security and national policy Epidemiology Identify assess and report on infectious disease risks that can degrade mission effectiveness of deployed forces and or cause long term health implications Alert operational and policy customers to foreign disease outbreaks that have implications for national security and policy formulation including homeland defense and deliberately introduced versus naturally occurring disease outbreaks Life Sciences and Biotechnology Assess foreign basic and applied biomedical and biotechnological developments of military medical importance Assess foreign civilian and military pharmaceutical industry capabilities Assess foreign scientific and technological medical advances for defense against nuclear biological and chemical warfare Prevent technological surprise Prevent proliferation of dual use equipment and knowledge Medical Capabilities Assess foreign military and civilian medical capabilities including treatment facilities medical personnel emergency and disaster response logistics and medical pharmaceutical industries Maintain and update an integrated data base on all medical treatment training pharmaceutical and research and production facilities Director of NCMI edit The directorship of NCMI was historically held primarily by military officers only two civilians have ever occupied the position 17 Past directors include medical doctor former undercover CIA officer and Air Force Colonel Dr Anthony Rizzo who held the position for eight years 18 before retiring in 2013 19 and former Army doctor and NCMI infectious disease intelligence analyst Dr Kathryn Morici the center s first female and second civilian director 17 who took office in February 2014 but was by at least April 2021 replaced by R Shane Day 4 5 There is also a deputy director of NCMI Christopher M Strub served or serves as Day s deputy 5 Directors of NCMI starting 2005 edit The following is an incomplete list of NCMI directors starting in 2005 NCMI had one civilian non military director prior to 2005 and every director pre 2014 was male 17 Director Term of office Col Dr Anthony Rizzo 2005 2013 19 Dr Kathryn Morici February 2014 17 Before April 2020 4 5 Col Dr R Shane Day Before April 2020 4 5 UnknownOperations editA former NCMI director described its mission as predicting what would be a threat to the United States 18 the Secretary of the Navy stated it as to act as the focal point in the DoD for compiling producing and distributing finished intelligence on foreign military and civilian medical capabilities medical intelligence products and assessments 20 Customers range from operational and tactical commanders preventive medicine personnel and medical planners and researchers to the policymakers in the United States Department of Defense the White House staff and other federal agencies The mission grew during Operation Enduring Freedom and Operation Iraqi Freedom 21 News reports indicated that NCMI produces medical intelligence analysis using intelligence products from other intelligence community agencies with a heavy emphasis on open source intelligence such as foreign newspaper reports and social media posts 1 22 Former NCMI senior officer Denis Kaufman described the center s search through massive amounts of information as like looking for needles in a stack of needles 1 The NCMI does not collect any intelligence of its own and its products primarily serve the US military 22 and commanders policymakers defense officials and health officials such as the Secretary of Health and Human Services 1 While the US Central Intelligence Agency also has a medical intelligence unit the NCMI is the primary organization for classified COVID 19 pandemic information and analysis 22 The center is also the primary source of federal medical intelligence as a whole 23 NCMI s director is charged with acting as the Medical Intelligence consultant to the Army Navy and Air Force Surgeons General He or she briefs at the White House to Congress to the Homeland Security Committee to the Director of National Intelligence and to the Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence 18 In a 2013 edition of The Intelligencer a journal published by the Association of Former Intelligence Officers AFIO Johnathan D Clemente stated the NCMI had approximately 150 employees counting on site analysts from other intelligence agencies 2 the same number reported in 2008 24 In 2020 AP News estimated the NCMI employs at least 100 epidemiologists virologists chemical engineers toxicologists biologists and military medical expert s all schooled in intelligence trade craft 1 also represented are medical doctors veterinarians and other experts with extensive operational medical experience from the military services 22 2020 2021 COVID 19 Pandemic editIn April 2020 ABC News reported that the White House was warned of the impending COVID 19 pandemic in Wuhan China through a National Center for Medical Intelligence Report In a rare public statement to ABC News the Center denied this As a matter of practice the National Center for Medical Intelligence does not comment publicly on specific intelligence matters However in the interest of transparency during this current public health crisis we can confirm that media reporting about the existence release of a National Center for Medical Intelligence Coronavirus related product assessment in November 2019 is not correct No such NCMI product exists 25 The National Center for Medical Intelligence was thought to be part of the daily pandemic briefings of the White House The value that NCMI brings is that it has access to information streams that the World Health Organization does not have nor does the Centers for Disease Control or anyone else said Denis Kaufman a retired senior officer who worked at the NCMI In normal times the NCMI s primary customer is the U S military which uses the information to monitor potential health threats to its forces abroad But in the midst of a pandemic NCMI analysis is likely a fixture in the president s daily intelligence briefing officials say 26 See also editMedical intelligence Defense Intelligence AgencyReferences edit a b c d e Reichmann Deb April 16 2020 Medical intelligence sleuths tracked warned of new virus AP News Retrieved July 6 2021 a b c Clemente Jonathan 2013 Medical Intelligence PDF The Intelligencer AFIO 20 Unknown Buxbaum Peter July 7 2008 Military medical intelligence center gets a new name Healthcare IT News Retrieved August 18 2021 a b c d e f g Margolin Josh Meek James Gordon April 8 2020 Intelligence report warned of coronavirus crisis as early as November Sources NBC News Retrieved July 18 2021 a b c d e f g h i j Defense Intelligence Agency DefenseIntel April 16 2020 The mission of the National Center for Medical Intelligence Tweet Retrieved July 18 2021 via Twitter DoD Instruction 6420 01 National Center for Medical Intelligence NCMI March 20 2009 Matthew Watson DIA Establishes National Center for Medical Intelligence http www upmc biosecurity org website biosecurity briefing archive govt response 2008 07 11 dianatlctrmedintell html Archived 2010 02 20 at the Wayback Machine July 11 2008 Special Text ST 8 30 1 Medical Intelligence 1951 Medical Information and Intelligence Agency monthly report for the month ending 31 October 1956 Bolin Robert Clemente Jonathan 1992 Brief History of AFMIC Total Manpower Department of Defense Military Intelligence University of Nebraska Digital Commons Retrieved August 18 2021 Armed Forces Medical Intelligence Center Historical Data Card https digitalcommons unl edu cgi viewcontent cgi article 1169 amp context usarmyresearch Robert L Bolin Army Technical Intelligence Chronology Chapter 4 Official Documents University of Nebraska Lincoln Lincoln Neb 2000 online at http unllib unl edu Bolin resources TI tech int html Archived September 17 2017 at the Wayback Machine Version 7 05 Revised March 22 2005 Jeffrey T Richelson The U S Intelligence Community Boulder Colo Westview Press 1999 p 62 Colonel Anthony M Rizzo Director National Center for Medical Intelligence Meeting Emerging and Constantly Changing Health Threats with a Central Point of Information and Intelligence Military Medical CBRN Technology 2008 Volume 12 Issue 5 August http www military medical technology com mmt archives 24 mmt 2008 volume 12 issue 5 146 national center for medical intelligence html Archived August 11 2019 at the Wayback Machine Megan Eckstein News Post Staff Medical Intelligence group adds much needed office space at Fort Detrick Frederick News Post http www fredericknewspost com archive article d81fa175 2de5 5109 830e b71a5a534900 html mode jqm Posted Nov 10 2010 COLONEL DR R SHANE DAY airforcemedicine af mil United States Air Force Medical Service Retrieved July 18 2021 a b c d Introducing Dr Kathryn Morici NCMI s new director DIA Public Affairs Defense Intelligence Agency March 21 2014 Retrieved July 6 2021 a b c Dr Anthony Rizzo The Aging Pilot US Sport Aviation Expo US Sport Aviation Expo June 25 2018 Retrieved July 7 2021 a b Starting a New Life Retired Air Force Colonel is Now Biology Professor at Polk Polk State College Polk State College November 8 2013 Retrieved July 6 2021 Spencer Richard V December 21 2018 NATIONAL CENTER FOR MEDICAL INTELLIGENCE NCMI PDF Letter to Gregory J Slavonic Retrieved July 18 2021 Megan Eckstein Detrick soldiers steadily being sent to Middle East Frederick News Post originally published January 17 2010 http www fredericknewspost com sections news display htm storyid 100201 Archived March 13 2012 at the Wayback Machine a b c d Dilanian Ken March 13 2020 Spying on coronavirus A little known U S intel outfit has its most important mission yet NBC News Retrieved July 6 2021 Pellerin Cheryl October 10 2012 MEDICAL INTELLIGENCE CENTER MONITORS HEALTH THREATS American Forces Press Service Retrieved July 7 2021 Buxbaum Peter July 7 2008 Military medical intelligence center gets a new name Healthcare IT News Retrieved July 7 2021 Intelligence report warned of coronavirus crisis as early as November Sources ABC News How U S Spies predict pandemics like coronavirus NBC News March 13 2020 Further reading editLibrary resources about National Center for Medical Intelligence Resources in your library Resources in other libraries Clemente Jonathan 2013 Medical Intelligence PDF The Intelligencer AFIO 20 Unknown Denis C Kaufman 2001 Medical Intelligence A Theater Engagement Tool Report United States Army War College Retrieved July 6 2021 External links editNational Center for Medical Intelligence homepage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title National Center for Medical Intelligence amp oldid 1198454084, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

    article

    , read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.