This page will contain external links about news24, as they become available.

News24

To meet Wikipedia's quality standards, this article or section may require cleanup.
See rationale on the talk page, or replace this tag with a more specific message. Editing help is available.
(Tagged January 2006)

News24 is South Africa-based online news service providing information on current events and culture.

News24 is accessible via the web at www.news24.com, and on DStv Channel 59.

Ananzi, MWeb, Moneymax and SuperSport, among others, have all chosen News24 as a preferred content partner.

News24 also hosts Afrikaans web sites for Beeld, Die Burger, Volksblad, Sake and the Naspers Afrikaans portal website NetAfrikaans.com, making it the largest supplier of Afrikaans news content. It also hosts web sites for Sunday newspapers Rapport and City Press and a number of Media24 community newspapers.

News24 is operated by Media24 Digital, and is a full member of the Online Publishers Association (OPA).


This page about news24 includes information from a Wikipedia article.
Additional articles about news24
News stories about news24
External links for news24
Videos for news24
Wikis about news24
Discussion Groups about news24
Blogs about news24
Images of news24

News24 is operated by Media24 Digital, and is a full member of the Online Publishers Association (OPA). It is also destroyed in the movie Independence Day, though not shown. It also hosts web sites for Sunday newspapers Rapport and City Press and a number of Media24 community newspapers. In the episode "A Matter of Time", the nearest secure phone above Stargate Command is at "NORAD, main level", which appears to be sub-level 2. News24 also hosts Afrikaans web sites for Beeld, Die Burger, Volksblad, Sake and the Naspers Afrikaans portal website NetAfrikaans.com, making it the largest supplier of Afrikaans news content. NORAD is mentioned occasionally as being above the Stargate, housed in sub-level 28. Ananzi, MWeb, Moneymax and SuperSport, among others, have all chosen News24 as a preferred content partner. Cheyenne Mountain is featured prominently in the television show Stargate SG-1, as it is the location for the fictional Stargate Command.

News24 is accessible via the web at www.news24.com, and on DStv Channel 59. The movie is often used in support of nuclear disarmament, but is also one of the first movies to shed light on the culture of computer hacking. News24 is South Africa-based online news service providing information on current events and culture. Barry Corbin played a fictional NORAD commanding officer, General Jack Beringer. Cheyenne Mountain was one of the settings of the 1983 motion picture WarGames, starring Matthew Broderick as a teenager that hacked NORAD's main computer and almost started a nuclear war (more precisely referred to as "global thermonuclear war" in the movie). Furthermore, the Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2 computer game features an in-game video of a call to NORAD from the President.

NORAD is also featured in Tom Clancy's novel The Sum of All Fears and its associated film. [3]. This has become a tradition ever since 1955. This tradition started when a local Sears store in Colorado misprinted the phone number and kids, who thought they were calling Santa, called NORAD instead.

2005 marked the 50th time of NORAD tracking Santa. NORAD comes to public attention at Christmas, when it "tracks" Santa Claus on his journey around the world delivering toys for the world's children. NORAD oversees Operation Noble Eagle using Fighter aircraft Combat Air Patrols (CAP) under command of First Air Force and Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) E-3 Sentry Aircraft under command of the 552nd Air Control Wing. After the events of September 11, 2001, the NORAD mission evolved to include monitoring of all aircraft flying in the interior of the United States.

However none of the proposed OTH-B radars are currently in operation. The Cheyenne Mountain site was also upgraded. But the DEW line sites were still replaced, in a scaled-back fashion by the North Warning System radars between 1986 and 1995. To avoid cutbacks, from 1989 NORAD operations expanded to cover counter-drug operations—such as tracking small-engine aircraft.

At the end of the Cold War NORAD reassessed its mission. These recommendations were accepted by the governments in 1985, there was also the formation of a new United States Space Command in September 1985 as an adjunct but not a component of NORAD. There followed significant reductions in the air defense system until the 1980s when following the 1979 Joint US-Canada Air Defense Study (JUSCADS) the need for the modernization of air defenses was accepted—the DEW Line was to be replaced with an improved arctic radar line called the North Warning System (NWS); there was to be the deployment of Over-the-Horizon Backscatter (OTH-B) radar; the assignment of more advanced fighters to NORAD, and the greater use of Airborne Warning and Control System (AWACS) aircraft from Tinker AFB, OK or Elmendorf AFB, AK. By the early 1970s, the acceptance of MAD led to a cut in the air defense budget and the repositioning of NORAD's mission to ensuring the integrity of air space during peacetime.

But there was increased effort to protect against a ICBM attack—two underground operations centers were set up, the main one inside Cheyenne Mountain, and an alternate at North Bay, Ontario. From 1963 the Air Force was reduced and sections of the now-obsolete radar system were shut down. The extension of NORAD's mission into space led to a name change to the North American Aerospace Defense Command. In response, a space surveillance and missile warning system was constructed to provide worldwide space detection, tracking and identification.

The emergence of the ICBM and SLBM threat in the early 1960s was something of a blow. By the early 1960s, a quarter of a million personnel were involved in the operation of NORAD. A formal NORAD agreement between the two governments was signed on May 12, 1958. On September 12, NORAD operations commenced at Ent, Colorado.

Discussions and studies of joint systems had been ongoing since the early 1950s and culminated on August 1, 1957 with the announcement by the US and Canada to establish an integrated command, the North American Air Defense Command. The command and control of the massive system then became a significant challenge. Attacks across the Pacific or Atlantic would have been detected by AEW aircraft, Navy ships, or offshore radar platforms. The systems gave around three hours warning of bomber attack before they could reach any major population centre.

This was a network of 57 stations along the 70th parallel. The third joint system was the DEW Line, also completed in 1957. This system was roughly 300 miles north of the Pinetree Line along the 55th parallel. In 1957, the McGill Fence was completed; it consisted of Doppler radar for the detection of low-flying craft.

However, technical defects in the system led to more radar networks being built. The first series of radars was the Pinetree Line, completed in 1954, of 33 stations across southern Canada. In the early 1950s they agreed to construct a series of radar stations across North America to detect a Soviet attack over the pole. The growing perception of the threat of Soviet long-range strategic bombers armed with nuclear weapons brought Canada and the US into closer cooperation for air defense.

Department of Homeland Security, but both organizations coordinate training and planning USNORTHCOM missions. NORAD and USNORTHCOM have no direct command and control links with the U.S. forces have a commander for their contingents at Cheyenne Mountain. Both Canadian and U.S.

Traditionally the commanding officer of NORAD is American and the deputy commander Canadian. General Rick "Eric" Findley, Canadian Forces Air Command. The deputy commander of NORAD is Lt. Keating, USN, who is also the commander of the United States Northern Command (USNORTHCOM).

The present commanding officer of NORAD is Admiral Timothy J. Three subordinate headquarters at Elmendorf AFB, Alaska (Headquarters for the Alaskan NORAD Region (ANR)), CFB Winnipeg, Manitoba (dual Headquarters (HQ) for 1 Canadian Air Division (1CAD) and the Canadian NORAD Region (CANR)), and Tyndall AFB, Florida (Headquarters for First Air Force, the Continental NORAD Region (CONR) and the Southeast Air Defense Sector (SEADS)), receive direction from the Commander and control operations within their areas. The commander is based at Peterson Air Force Base, Colorado with Cheyenne Mountain Operations Center, the central collection and coordination facility for the sensor systems around the world, nearby. The organization is headed by a commander appointed by both the President of the United States and the Prime Minister of Canada.

Aerospace control  includes providing surveillance and control of Canadian and United States airspace. Aerospace warning or integrated tactical warning and attack assessment (ITW/AA) covers the monitoring of man-made objects in space, and the detection, validation, and warning of attack against North America by aircraft, missiles, or space vehicles. NORAD consists of two main parts, corresponding to its mission. .

Air Force, under the command of the 721st Mission Support Group [1], part of the 21st Space Wing [2], headquartered out of Peterson Air Force Base. The facility is hosted by the U.S. While the terms "NORAD" and "Cheyenne Mountain" are often used interchangeably to describe the facility, NORAD is the name of the Command, while Cheyenne Mountain is the name of the facility. From 1963, NORAD's main technical facility has been located at Cheyenne Mountain, Colorado.

It was founded on May 12, 1958 under the name North American Air Defense Command. North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) is a joint United States and Canadian organization which provides aerospace warning and aerospace control for North America. Ashy, USAF (1994 – August 1996). Joseph W.

Estes III, USAF (August 1996 – 14 August 1998). Howell M. Myers, USAF (14 August 1998 – 22 February 2000). Richard B.

"Ed" Eberhart, USAF (22 February 2000 – 5 November 2004). Ralph E. Keating, USN (5 November 2004 – Present). Timothy J.