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Why Can’t U.S. Intelligence Spell?

One of the more sensational aspects of the Northwest Airlines Flight 253 review is that Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab’s name was inconsistently spelled by State

Jul 31, 2020
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One of the more sensational aspects of the Northwest Airlines Flight 253 review is that Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab’s name was inconsistently spelled by State Department officials after the would-be bomber’s father informed officials at the U.S. Embassy in Abuja about his son’s increasing radicalism. According to the White House review conducted by counterterrorism adviser John Brennan, that “initially resulted in State Department believing he did not have a valid U.S. visa.” But, as you can read from Josh Roginand from me, even if everyone spelled his name the exact same way throughout the intelligence process, it still wouldn’t have resulted in him being kept off Flight 253, because the evidentiary standards for pulling his visa or moving him onto the no-fly list were too great. President Obama said yesterday that’s going to change.
Cable news may continue to run wild with a vivid but ultimately trivial fact. Such is life. But Noah Shachtman, Wired’s gizmo majordomo, is right to gripethat whatever software program used by the government to standardize foreign names is unacceptably weak.
This is a problem that commercial software firms largely solved years ago. (Try typing “Noa Schactmann” into Google, and see what comes up.) How it could persist in the CT community, I just don’t understand.
So come on people! This is a money-making opportunity for a minimally competent defense tech corporation. We don’t really need correcttransliterations, we need consistentones. Couldn’t there be a program that imports a name to a database in the language/alphabet-of-origin and tracks English permutations of the transliteration?
Dexter Cooke

Dexter Cooke

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Dexter Cooke is an economist, marketing strategist, and orthopedic surgeon with over 20 years of experience crafting compelling narratives that resonate worldwide. He holds a Journalism degree from Columbia University, an Economics background from Yale University, and a medical degree with a postdoctoral fellowship in orthopedic medicine from the Medical University of South Carolina. Dexter’s insights into media, economics, and marketing shine through his prolific contributions to respected publications and advisory roles for influential organizations. As an orthopedic surgeon specializing in minimally invasive knee replacement surgery and laparoscopic procedures, Dexter prioritizes patient care above all. Outside his professional pursuits, Dexter enjoys collecting vintage watches, studying ancient civilizations, learning about astronomy, and participating in charity runs.
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