C.B. "Scott" Jones
Expanded Background

Summary

Dr. Jones is is founder and president of the Peace and Emergency Action Coalition for Earth.  The principal function of P.E.A.C.E. is to oversee the development of the global Center for Sustainable Peace and Development system.   Previous to this he was co-founder and president of the Human Potential Foundation.  This was established in 1989, and conducted research into all conditions of humankind:  physiological, psychological and spiritual, to assist the individual to achieve the highest levels of human potential in body, mind and spirit in order to compete and cooperate at personal excellence throughout life.  Prior to this position he was Special Assistant to Senator Claiborne Pell from January 1985 until March 1991.  Retiring as a Commander in the U.S. Navy, approximately half of his thirty-year naval career was spent in intelligence service overseas and in the United States.  In post-navy careers he has taught at the university level and worked in the private sector research and development community involved in U.S. government sponsored projects for the Defense Nuclear Agency, Defense Intelligence Agency, U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command, and other organizations

Intelligence Experience 

As Assistant Naval Attaché and Naval Air Attaché to New Delhi, India and Katmandu, Nepal from January 1965 to June 1967, he was involved in intelligence collection and provided intelligence support to defense attachés throughout Southeast Asia, the Middle East and North Africa.  This tour was followed by assignment to the Naval Scientific and Technical Intelligence Center where, as Head of the Missiles, Ordnance, and Astronautics Division, he directed the production of technical intelligence reports for the Navy and Defense Intelligence Agency at all classification levels.   During this period he was Chairman of the Naval Missile Group, an interagency group that supported the Guided Missile and Astronautic Intelligence Committee.     As Chief  of  the Navy’s Intelligence Anti-Ship Missile Task Force, he directed the effort that provided intelligence support for a critical anti-ship missile defense research and development effort.  During this time he was a briefer to the President’s Scientific Advisory Committee, and testified before House and Senate committees and sub-committees of the Armed Services on technical naval intelligence.

Other intelligence assignments include three years as Chief of the Targets Development Branch in the Intelligence Directorate of Headquarters, U.S. European Command, and in intelligence related assignment in the National Military Command System Support Center.

Research Experience

Dr. Jones managed the Nuclear Test Personnel Review program under contract to the Defense Nuclear Agency.  This program quantified the degree of radiological hazard incurred by Department of Defense personnel involved in atmospheric nuclear testing between 1946 and 1962.  Extensive document search and retrieval from a large number of libraries, archives and record centers was involved.  The recovered information and technical data was synthesized and converted into histories written for the layperson of each nuclear test operation.

He participated in contracts with the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) in a project instructing analysts in quantitative methodologies and in development of self-paced learning modules on various methodologies including Event Sequence Network Analysis and Interpretative Structural Modeling.  Also for the DIA he was involved in the transfer of advanced quantitative methodological software technology from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency to DIA workspaces.  For the U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command he participated in systems design for increasing ADP support.

Of particular significance for the establishment of the global network of regional Centers for Sustainable Peace and Development, was an assignment as Chief, Procedures Branch, Data Division, National Military Command System Support Center (NMCSSC) February 1961 to August 1963.  In this assignment he directed and managed activities concerned with the research, analysis, collection, and evaluation of all operational inputs to NMCSSC systems and  with  the  system  design  of  a  computer model for depicting  the

Status of Forces and the Monitoring of Operational Plans (SOFMOP).  Additionally he designed and then developed the database in support of this system.   The principal operational plan monitored by SOFMOP was the Single Integrated Operational Plan (SIOP).  The SIOP was the U.S. strategic nuclear attack plan against the Soviet Union, the Warsaw Pact, and the Peoples Republic of China.  In order to war game the SIOP, he then was assigned to research and build a database of real U.S. target counterparts to the SIOP target database.  This database was used in gaming by a Red Single Integrated Operational Plan (RSIOP).  The target category list was extensive, e.g., command and control, industries, communications, transportation, military establishments, ports and cities, etc.  His final assignment following the success of the SOFMOP system and the RISOP database development was to assist in the design of the Technical Development Plan for the National Military Command System. 

In a subsequent assignment, 1970-1972, to the Intelligence Directorate of the U.S. European Command (EUCOM), he was responsible for another complex computer system design.  Based upon a target category weighting system he designed, this program selected potential tactical nuclear targets in countries of EUCOM interest, but not covered by NATO’s tactical nuclear war plan.  All categories from the Target Data Inventory (TDI) were considered.

A South Asia area specialist, he has traveled extensively throughout the region.  His dissertation was, “How the Indian Lok Sabha Handles Defense Matters: An Institutional Study.”

He has led research into applied anomalous phenomena.  Networking with the parapsychological community, he has worked throughout the executive branch to address issues of government support for basic parapsychological research, and to consider implications and application of these phenomena.

In 1985, he founded and was president of the Center for Applied Anomalous Phenomena.  This non-profit educational and scientific research organization was chartered to conduct research and analysis of anomalous phenomena, their implications and applications.  Anomalous phenomena include exceptional human capabilities.  This Center was transferred into the Human Potential Foundation

In 1989, he and Senator Claiborne Pell co-founded the Human Potential Foundation that was involved in a number of research projects.  These included a joint research effort with the Chinese Academy of Somatic Science in Beijing, in accelerated bone healing using qi gong; a sponsored symposium conducted by Russian medical scientists on psychoanalytical and psychocorrection computer technologies; a survey of attitudes of medical professionals toward death and the dying process and how these are translated into decisions about treatment of critical and terminal patients; the translation from Chinese of the book: Collected Works on Qi Gong Science.

Under the Center for Interspecies Communications, the Foundation conducted Projects Neptune Helper I and II, dolphin research with Atlantic Bottlenose and Spotted dolphins.

A major two-year program funded by Mr. Laurance Rockefeller was completed with an international conference, When Cosmic Cultures Meet, in Washington, D.C. in May 1995.  At the conference a wide spectrum of academic disciplines and interests assessed the implications, preparations and responses for the time when there is no ambiguity about the understanding that higher intelligences from cosmic cultures are meeting.

In November 1998, the Human Potential Foundation was dissolved and its principal undertaking, a global peace initiative, transferred to the newly established Peace and Emergency Action Coalition for Earth, Inc.

Boards and Organizations  (partial)

Teaching Experience  

While in Germany on Navy assignment, Dr. Jones taught political science in the University of Maryland overseas program at several Army posts from 1970 to 1972.  His terminal naval assignment was at the University of Kansas as Associate Professor of Naval Science, 1973 to 1975.  During this time he also taught undergraduate and graduate courses in the Department of Political Science.  Retiring from the navy in 1975, he took a fulltime teaching position in political science at Casper College and the University of Wyoming at Casper from 1975 until 1978.  In October 2000, he was a quest lecturer in the Peace Studies Program at the University of Missouri, Columbia, MO.

Education

Selected Publications