Feral Jundi

Friday, July 11, 2008

Film: HBO’s Seven-Part Miniseries called ‘Generation Kill’

Filed under: Film,Iraq — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 10:33 AM

    You know, I am kind of mixed on these types of shows and movies.  The book was interesting, but I have no clue how the film will turn out.  Hollywood has such a hard time getting this stuff right, and invariably they end up pissing off a ton of veterans because they didn’t get it right.  But sometimes they hit a home run.  

     It sounds like the Marine test audience liked it, so that is promising.  I also like the fact that they involved some of the actual Marines who were there(very cool).  I have to tell you though, after the latest batch of Holly-crap anti-war war films, I am giving this some good ol’ fashion ‘cautious optimism’.  And hopefully, for the sake of the veterans that this film depicts, they are happy with the end product.  By the way, I want to give thanks to a buddy of mine that gave me the heads up about this film.  –Head Jundi 

 

TV Critics Tour: Marines Give Thumbs Up to ‘Generation Kill’

HBO’s Seven-Part Miniseries Detailing Iraqi Invasion Debuts July 13

By Linda Moss — Multichannel News, 7/10/2008 10:01:00 PM

Beverly Hills, Calif.—U.S. Marines at Camp Pendleton responded well to Generation Kill, the HBO miniseries about the 2003 invasion of Iraq, during a screening at the base this week, officials said Thursday.

Generation Kill, which debuts July 13, is a gritty seven-part miniseries based on a book by Rolling Stone reporter Evan Wright, who was embedded in a Marine unit during the invasion. It was executive produced and co-written by David Simon and Ed Burns of The Wire.

During a session on the miniseries at the Television Critics Association summer tour, Wright said Generation Kill had been shown Wednesday at the Marine base just north of San Diego.

“There were several hundred Marines,” Wright said. “It was f—king awesome…That audience totally got exactly what David and Ed and I were all doing on this project. They laughed at all the right jokes…It was the most gratifying moment of the whole production, to see these guys laughing and nodding their heads with recognition, especially as controversial as it was in some quarters.”

Panelist Simon added that the airing at Camp Pendleton was what everyone cared about.

“We screened this at Camp Pendleton,” said Eric Kocher, a former Marine and military advisor for Generation Kill. “We screened it to the real Bravo 2 Marines and the biggest comments they say are, you know, the dialog is excellent,” Kocher added. “It hits exactly the way Marines talk, and the atmosphere is visually what you see, what you hear in the background. Everything is it. It hits Iraq…That’s the biggest comments that everyone tells me, especially in the Marine community.”

At the Generation Kill panel, HBO Films president Colin Callender denied that the miniseries was cut down to seven episodes from eight because of fear that it would not perform well, since many TV shows and movies on Iraq have flopped. 

“It was a budget issue,” he said. “It wasn’t an editorial decision.”

During the network’s executive session earlier Thursday, HBO officials argued that Generation Kill really isn’t about the politics of the war, but about the young soldiers sent in as part of the invasion.

“It has nothing to do with politics,” HBO co-president Richard Plepler said. “It’s really the story of this particular Marine reconnaissance unit as it came into Iraq…it is the emotional truth, the psychological truth of what those kids experienced.”

Story Link Here 

Thursday, July 10, 2008

Funny Stuff: Iran’s Use of Photoshop and Too Many Missiles

Filed under: Funny Stuff,Iran,Photo — Tags: , , — Matt @ 10:26 AM

Shahab photoshop

And Here is the Story about Iran’s Photoshopped Missile Test Photo.

 

News: The IRAM, Flying IED and Barrack Buster

Filed under: Colombia,Iraq,Technology — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 10:06 AM

Thanks to Doug for sending me this article.  I posted the Long War Journal article about the ‘flying IED’ a couple of weeks ago and it sounds like it’s use is not a fluke.  So I decided to delve further into the history of these improvised munitions, and it looks like the IRA used to call these things a ‘barrack buster’.  But like the Post article mentions, this weapon is rocket assisted, and not explosively launched like the barrack buster.  I am sure that the IRA and the FARC have fooled around with rockets on these things before.

Now the question I have is where are these 107 mm rocket motors coming from?  Some say from Iran, and some say these engines were taken out of old ammo supply depots littered throughout Iraq.  A lot of these depots were vulnerable to looting back in 2003 after the invasion.  And we also bombed a lot of these depots, which made getting through fences and bunkers a little easier for the locals.  Luckily we have been working hard over the years to secure these sites and clean them up, but it is a massive and ongoing effort.  Or the other idea is that they are making homemade engines out of the tubes of fired 107 mm rockets .

I posted a video of Hezbollah in Gaza building a rocket and it’s engine from scratch.  I do not doubt that technologies and techniques are being passed freely via the internet or otherwise.  Our enemies are very good at building ‘snow mobiles’ , to use a Colonel John Boyd phrase, when it comes to making munitions.

So how do you defeat this?  I have to say that the limiting factor of this system is range.  So patrols should be focusing on the area around bases up to the maximum range.  It looks like they also want to put these things on trucks with open truck beds.  And I say if propane tanks are a common theme in these weapons, then they must be controlled.  Like with a weapon, maybe licenses should be distributed coupled with biometrics ID to track the movement and sales of propane tanks.  If this continues to be a problem, then all and any solutions must be considered.

As for defenses, roofs definitely need to be reinforced.  This is a top down weapon, with IED power.  But it is also very inaccurate.  If you look at it’s deployment, they like using clusters of this weapon.  So another thing that they are trying to achieve is blanketing an area with these things.  So markets or places where a lot of soldiers gather would be the easiest and best targets for these weapons.  So patrols should be focused on IRAMs that are within range of these types of areas.  I have no doubt that the Coalition is formulating a plan for these things, and so are the Private Security Companies tasked with static security at the various bases.  The IRAM is just one more thing to consider. –Matt

 

IRA with Barracks Buster

An IRA’s ASU (Active Service Unit) displaying a Mark-10 mortar in a propaganda video (1994).

 

U.S. troops in Iraq face a powerful new weapon
Use of rocket-propelled bombs spreads; at least 21 killed in IRAM attacks
By Ernesto Londoño
July 10, 2008
Suspected Shiite militiamen have begun using powerful rocket-propelled bombs to attack U.S. military outposts in recent months, broadening the array of weapons used against American troops.
U.S. military officials call the devices Improvised Rocket Assisted Munitions, or IRAMs. They are propane tanks packed with hundreds of pounds of explosives and powered by 107mm rockets. They are often fired by remote control from the backs of trucks, sometimes in close succession. Rocket-propelled bombs have killed at least 21 people, including at least three U.S. soldiers, this year.
The latest reported rocket-propelled bomb attack occurred Tuesday at Joint Security Station Ur, a base in northeastern Baghdad shared by U.S. and Iraqi soldiers. One U.S. soldier and an interpreter were wounded in the attack.
U.S. military officials say IRAM attacks, unlike roadside bombings and conventional mortar or rocket attacks, have the potential to kill scores of soldiers at once. IRAMs are fired at close range, unlike most rockets, and create much larger explosions. Most such attacks have occurred in the capital, Baghdad.
‘Flying IEDs’

(more…)

News: Roadside Bomb Kills 3 KBR Workers in Iraq

Filed under: Iraq,News — Tags: , , , , , , — Matt @ 12:50 AM

 

 I had also heard that the fourth person killed was a Wackenhut employee.  Rest in peace. –Head Jundi

——————————————————————- 

KBR 

Roadside bomb kills 3 KBR workers in Iraq

 July 9, 2008, 6:36PM

By DAVID IVANOVICH

WASHINGTON – Three KBR employees in Iraq were killed and as many as 13 others were injured Monday when an armored passenger bus traveling near Mosul struck a roadside bomb, company officials confirmed today.

The bus, carrying 34 passengers, was traveling between Qayyarah Airfield West and Camp Diamondback in Mosul, when it is believed to have hit a large improvised explosive device, said Heather Browne, a spokeswoman for the Houston-based military contracting giant.

Citing their families’ privacy, KBR would not provide any other details about the victims.

A military spokeswoman for the Multi-National Force Iraq  declined to discuss the incident beyond saying that four people in all were killed and eight were injured. KBR said the fourth fatality was not one of its employees.

The discrepancy in the KBR and military injury counts could not be reconciled Wednesday.

To date, 87 KBR workers have been killed and another 849 wounded by hostile action in Iraq. The company has not said how many were Americans.

Article Link 

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Industry Talk: Contractors Oppose Move to End Immunity from Iraqi Law

Filed under: Industry Talk,Iraq — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 11:30 AM

 

   This is just a follow up to the story I posted earlier about lifting the immunity of security contractors from Iraqi law.  I have been following the security industry forums out there, and there seems to be two schools of thought forming on this issue.  

    The first school of thought is ‘deal with it’.  That security contractors have been operating in countries all over the world, and working under the laws of other countries for a long time now and Iraq is no different. Big boy rules they say. blah blah blah (I hate the term ‘big boy rules’- that is ‘manager speak’ for I could care less what you think and deal with it)

    The other school of thought is ‘no way’.  That Iraq is still a weakened state, and really does not have the capacity to deal with this issue.  That their legal system is not insulated from corruption and the infiltrations of the enemy.  And because there are so many questions that have not been answered with this latest move, that guys are really not interested in being the guinea pig for these new set of operational rules.   

    My personal belief on this is that security contractors are already covered by UCMJ, and that we should be off limits to Iraqi law until the war is over and Iraq has a fully functioning government and legal system.  I also think that it is extremely hypocritical for the DOD and DOS to expect security contractors to fall under Iraqi law, but not put their own military/government personnel under Iraqi law?    

    And in my observations on the forums, it seems that most are not too happy with this at all. –Head Jundi 

——————————————————————

Contractors oppose move to end immunity from Iraqi law

By Joseph Giordono, Stars and Stripes

Mideast edition, Saturday, July 5, 2008

Contractors working for the U.S. military in Iraq say a move to end their immunity from Iraqi law would make many leave their jobs instead of face a justice system they do not trust.

Earlier this week, the Iraqi foreign minister, Hoshyar Zebari, said the immunity issue was one of the American concessions made in ongoing negotiations over a long-term security agreement. Since the announcement, contractors — both current and former workers in Iraq — have been buzzing about its implications. There are an estimated 180,000 foreign contractors working in Iraq, more than there are U.S. troops in the country. More than 1,000 have been killed.

“Having worked for two years and two months in Iraq, I can tell you without a doubt, I would in no way work if I fell under Iraqi Law,” a deputy sheriff who trains Iraqi police said in an e-mail to Stars and Stripes. “Are you kidding? You wouldn’t be able to get but the most desperate people to work if they fell under their ridiculous laws.”

(more…)

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »

Powered by WordPress