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Celebrating the Past, Present and Future of Navy Cryptology

Approved for Release by NSA on 12-01-2011: The Fall of the Shah of Iran: A Chaotic Approach

Executive Summary:

This paper argues that the U.S. intelligence community failed to anticipate the 1979 fall of the Shah of Iran because it relied on a narrow rational actor model that equated Iran’s stability with the Shah’s personal authority, ignoring deeper social, religious, economic, and military fractures. By contrast, applying principles of chaos theory and self-organizing criticality reveals Iran in the 1970s as a metastable system marked by weak cohesion, escalating conflict energy, sensitivity to small triggering events, and nonlinear dynamics. Seemingly minor incidents—such as protests, political debates over arms sales, or the growing influence of Ruhollah Khomeini—interacted in unpredictable ways that amplified instability and ultimately led to regime collapse. While chaos theory would not have predicted the precise timing of the Shah’s departure, it would have highlighted structural vulnerabilities and warned policymakers that Iran was approaching critical instability, allowing for better-informed strategic adjustments.

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NSGA Anchorage Disestablished, February 28, 1998

Established in May 1946, U.S. Naval Security Group Activity (NSGA) Cape Chiniak, Alaska relocated to Elmendorf AFB, near Anchorage on April 11, 1966 establishing NSGA Anchorage.  The communications facility located included an operations building located outside of the the AN/FLR-9 Circularly Disposed Antenna Array (CDAA), also known as a Wullenweber antenna array. NSGA Anchorage continued operations for the next 32 years and on February 28, 1998 the command was disestablished.

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Remembering  CTC Melvin Douglas Smith, KIA, USS Liberty

Remembering  CTC Melvin Douglas Smith
February 27, 1938 – June 8, 1967

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Why I Spent Over 23 Years in the Navy.

It was 1989. I was a CTR2 on my first Western Pacific deployment, stationed at NSGA Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, serving as a direct support operator. I received TAD orders to report to USS ENTERPRISE (CVN-65), homeported in Alameda, California. The Enterprise was 26 years old, and this would be the “Big E’s” final deployment — a round-the-world cruise before heading to the Philadelphia Naval Shipyard for decommissioning. Hence the patch: “Final Voyage.”

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Letter Writing Campaign

Letters are now arriving from the Honorable John C. Phelan, Secretary of the Navy, regarding the naming of a ship after Senior Chief Kent. According to the SECNAV, “Please be assured that your suggestion has been formally received. It will be given full and earnest consideration as I consider the names of ships in construction and select the names for the next generation of naval ships.”

Many thanks to Capt. Mike Lambert for spearheading this effort!!

It’s still not too late to write a letter Here Secretary John Phelan’s address:


JOHN PHELAN
Office of the Secretary of the Navy
1000 Navy Pentagon, Room 4D652
Washington, DC 20350-1000

OTD 1960: USS Tridton (SSRN/SSN 586) Made History

On February 24, 1960, USS Triton (SSRN/SSN-586) made history as the first submarine to circumnavigate the globe entirely submerged. Commanded by Captain Edward L. “Ned” Beach, Jr., the groundbreaking mission demonstrated the endurance and strategic capability of the nuclear-powered submarine force. CTMC William Hadley was among the crew members on this historic deployment.

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