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・ National Agricultural Research Centre
・ National Agricultural Research Institute (Eritrea)
・ National Agricultural Research, Extension, and Teaching Policy Act of 1977
・ National Agricultural Research, Extension, Education, and Economics Advisory Board
・ National Agricultural Safety Database
・ National Agricultural Statistics Service
・ National Agricultural Technology Institute
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National Air and Space Intelligence Center
・ National Air and Space Museum
・ National Air and Space Museum Film Archive
・ National Air and Space Museum Trophy
・ National Air Barrier Association
・ National Air College
・ National Air Communications
・ National Air Force Museum of Canada
・ National Air Force of Angola
・ National Air Pollution Symposium
・ National Air Race Museum
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・ National Air Traffic Controllers Association
・ National Air Transport
・ National Air Transportation Association


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National Air and Space Intelligence Center : ウィキペディア英語版
National Air and Space Intelligence Center

The National Air and Space Intelligence Center (NASIC) is the United States Air Force unit for analyzing intelligence on foreign air and space forces, weapons, and systems. NASIC assessments of aerospace performance characteristics, capabilities, and vulnerabilities are used to shape national security and defense policies and supports weapons treaty negotiations and verification.
==History==
In 1917 the Foreign Data Section of the Army Signal Corps’ Airplane Engineering Department was established at McCook Field, and a NASIC predecessor operated the Army Aeronautical Museum of the Material Division, August 22, 1935. The Office of the Chief of Air Corps's Information Division had become the OCAC Intelligence Division by 1939, which transferred into the USAAF as AC/AS, Intelligence and was known as A-2 (in April, 1942, the Air Intelligence School was at the Harrisburg Academy.) The United States Army Air Forces evaluated foreign aircraft during World War II with the "T-2 Intelligence Department at Wright Field and Freeman Field, Indiana". In July 1944, Wright Field analysts fired a V-1 engine reconstructed from "Robot Blitz" wreckage (an entire V-1 was reconstructed at Republic Aviation by September 8).〔U.S. Air Force Tactical Missiles, (2009), George Mindling, Robert Bolton ISBN 978-0-557-00029-6〕 Post-war, Operation Lusty recruited German technology experts who were interrogated prior to working in the United States, e.g., Dr. Herbert Wagner at a Point Mugu USMC detachment and Walter Dornberger at Bell Aircraft. The "capability…anticipated for Soviet intercontinental jet bombers" (e.g., in NSC 20/4 in the fall of 1945) determined a Radar Fence was needed for sufficient U.S. warning and that the "1954 Interceptor" (F-106) was needed (specified in the January 13, 1949, Air Development Order): "the appearance of a Soviet jet bomber (in the ) 1954…May Day parade".
"By 1944, it had become obvious that German aeronautical technology was superior in many ways, to that of this country, and we needed to obtain this technology and make use of it," said P-47 and Messerschmitt ME-262 pilot Army Air Forces Lieutenant Roy Brown during a speech at NASIC in 2014. To accomplish this task, then Col Harold E. Watson was sent from Wright Field to Europe in 1944, to locate German aircraft of advanced design. Watson would become an integral part of forming the intelligence unit that would eventually become NASIC.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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