Feral Jundi

Friday, December 19, 2008

Funny Stuff: Company Spotlight-Somcan FZC

Filed under: Funny Stuff,Maritime Security,Somalia — Tags: , , — Matt @ 5:55 PM

We are located in the ajman free zone, uae and have been operation for 5 years. The company was formed to provide coast guard services for the puntland state of somalia. We have been running this service very successfully since then…….  

 

     This belongs in the funny stuff section for sure. Three gunboats, yet less than 5 employees?  1 million to 2.5 million a year in annual sales?  Oh yeah, this company is doing a stellar job of securing the Somali coast. Just ask the chuckleheads shown in the picture below what they think of Somcan FZC. LOL.  –Matt

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pirates 

A Local Anti-Pirate Company

THE INDIAN OCEAN NEWSLETTER

20/12/2008 

To put an end to the exploits of Somali pirates, the boss of the firm

Somcan in Puntland, Abidiweli Ali Taar, is asking the UN and European Union

to give him $30 million.

The managing director of the firm Somalian Coast Guard (Somcan), Abdiweli

Ali Taar, travelled to Nairobi last week to take part in an international

conference on fighting piracy that had been organized by the United Nations.

His own objective was simple enough: to button-hole officials from the UN

and European Union to persuade them to allocate $30 million per year to his

company to improve its ways of dealing with Somalian pirates. Taar’s firm is

based in Bosaso in Puntland, the breakaway region in the north east of

Somalia that is home to Somalian pirates.

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Legal News: Blackwater Radio Logs–Guards Took Incoming Fire

Filed under: Legal News — Tags: , , — Matt @ 1:55 PM

 “The Justice Department began their presentation to the American people with a lie,” Connolly said

 

I think this quote and the photo says everything I have to say about this whole thing.  –Matt  

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Blackwater vehicle 

Blackwater radio logs: Guards took incoming fire

12/19/2008

By MATT APUZZO and LARA JAKES 

WASHINGTON (AP) — Radio logs from a deadly 2007 shooting in Baghdad cast doubt on U.S. government claims that Blackwater Worldwide security guards were unprovoked when they killed 14 Iraqi civilians. The transcripts of Blackwater radio reports, obtained by The Associated Press, describe a hectic eight minutes in which the guards repeatedly reported incoming gunfire from insurgents and Iraqi police.

Five guards face manslaughter and weapons charges for their roles in the shootings. A sixth has pleaded guilty. Prosecutors said the men unleashed a gruesome attack on unarmed Iraqis, including women, children and people trying to escape.

But the radio logs from the Sept. 16, 2007 shooting suggest otherwise. Copies of the logs were turned over to prosecutors by Blackwater.

Because Blackwater guards were authorized to fire in self-defense, any evidence their convoy was attacked will make it harder for the Justice Department to prove they acted unlawfully.

The logs, which document radio traffic heard by the company’s dispatch center inside the U.S.-controlled Green Zone, show that the Blackwater convoy known as Raven 23 reported taking small arms fire_or SAF_ from insurgents within one minute of shutting down traffic in Baghdad’s Nisoor Square.

“Mult insuirg SAF @ R23,” the log states at 12:12 p.m.

One minute later, the Raven 23 convoy reported taking fire from Iraqi police: “R23 rpts IPs shooting @ R23.”

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Thursday, December 18, 2008

Government Work: Civilian Response Corps

Filed under: Government Work — Tags: , — Matt @ 12:44 PM

Introduction to the Civilian Response Corps

The challenges of the 21st century require a significant increase in our capacity to respond quickly and effectively to emerging threats that unstable states present to the security of the United States and to our friends and allies.

Civilian Response Corps (CRC) members develop and implement a “Whole of Government” approach needed to help fragile states quickly restore stability and the rule of law, and achieve economic recovery and sustainable growth.

The central idea behind the Civilian Response Crops is building more effective partnerships – among our government’s civilian departments and agencies, among our civilian and military institutions, together with our friends and allies abroad, and with foreign leaders and citizens whose countries are in crisis, or approaching crisis, and who want our support. Ultimately, the Corps’ goal is to enable countries in crisis to transition as quickly as possible to governing themselves, sustaining themselves, and securing themselves – without U.S. or international assistance.

Because no single U.S. Government entity has all of the relevant expertise to deal with these threats, the Civilian Response Corps is a partnership of eight departments and agencies: the Department of State, U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), Department of Agriculture, Department of Commerce, Department of Health and Human Services, Department of Homeland Security, Department of Justice, and Department of the Treasury.

The Secretary of State, in partnership with the aforementioned agencies, has requested funding for 250 full time employees for an interagency Active component comprised of trained and equipped R&S first responders who can deploy in 48 hours to countries in crisis. The request would also fund training for 2,000 Standby members drawn from within these agencies. Additionally, it proposes to build a Reserve, whose members would be drawn from the private sector and state and local governments across the United States, with expertise in the range of processes necessary in a transition from crisis including: policing and rule of law, infrastructure development, economic stabilization, state and local governance, agriculture, and provision of basic services.

Membership in the Active and Standby components was expanded to the interagency on July 16, 2008 at a ceremony held by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice.

Website Here

Vacancies Here

Legal News: Update about Don Ayala

Filed under: Afghanistan,Legal News — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 12:35 PM

   This story just gets me every time I read about it.  This is such a tough deal for everyone involved, and the emotions involved with this will make the trial very interesting.  –Matt 

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Killing in Afghanistan hits very close to home

by Bruce Alpert, The Times-Picayune

Tuesday December 16, 2008, 10:08 PM

WASHINGTON — Paula Loyd, a social scientist helping U.S. troops adjust to the cultural and political landscape of war-ravaged Afghanistan, was talking to residents of a village near Kandihar last month when, without warning, one of the men ignited a container of flammable liquid and tossed it at her, setting her on fire.

With Loyd, 36, engulfed in flames, the attacker fled, running about 50 yards in the direction of Don Ayala, a New Orleans man working as a private security contractor to protect Loyd and other members of her Army Human Terrain System team. Ayala, according to an affidavit from an Army special agent, drew his pistol but did not fire, instead extending his arm to knock the attacker, Abdul Salam, to the ground.

Assisted by soldiers from C Company, 2-2 Infantry Battalion, Ayala subdued Salam, and handcuffed him with plastic restraints, although the man continued to resist, according to the affidavit. About 10 minutes later, a soldier passed word to Ayala and the U.S. soldiers that Loyd’s condition was very bad.

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News: How Blackwater Serves America, by Erik Prince

Filed under: Iraq,News — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 12:20 PM

   Finally some push back.  This was an Opinion piece that Blackwater CEO Erik Prince wrote for the Wall Street Journal.  Unfortunately, this message will be completely drowned out by the sea of negative press that has been brought against his company.  Wired’s Danger Room blog decided to be assholes about this opinion piece and completely ignore the main message by nitpicking the thing.  Boy, that was bold.(sarcasm)  I think I would have more respect for their post, if the author was actually a little more fair on their evaluation of why Prince would even say such things or the points that he made.

   So to counter what the Danger Room decided to focus on, here are my thoughts. Mind you, I am a security contractor and I do know how dangerous Iraq is.  In other words, I am not some computer geek writing about the secret evil world of ‘Mercenaries’.  And really, if Wired wants to give some credibility to their work in the Danger Room, then need to reach out to those of us that know what we are talking about.

   The thing I had an issue with, is Wired spending all their time in their article, trying to refute the idea that Blackwater only hires military and police.  Who cares? Maybe in the early days they did this, but not now.   And in this industry, Erik Prince is spot on.  Most of us are prior military or police, and it is very rare to get individuals that get in without that background.  But really, someone that is able to hustle and get in that way, I have a lot of respect for.  It’s just very rare.  So yes, there are those that do get in without that background, but it is more albino rare than a common practice to worry about or some significant argument against what Prince said.  It was just nitpicky crap.   

   And with today’s massive amount of veterans available, Blackwater has nothing but vets to choose from.  There is extreme competition for security positions with Blackwater, and those without combat experience/military service have a lot to contend with for those jobs.  

   I also have read the book Licensed to Kill by Robert Young Pelton, and the individual that the Wired author used as an example was hired at a time when Blackwater did not have a massive applicant pool of combat veterans or qualified close protection specialists.  So Mr. Prince did think outside the box, and use some guys that were ‘locked on’ and could handle the job of high risk close protection.  

    Even close protection is a skill that is not commonly taught in the police or military schools, and some civilians are more locked on in that field.  Especially in the beginning, when those skills were rare to have.  When I was a grunt in the Marines, if someone would have mentioned ‘executive protection’ in conversation, I would have thought it was some athletic equipment or something.  Of course now, that is a different story and close protection is very common out there because of the news and the war.  And it is big money for these companies, because the US government did not have enough resources for the task.  

    Then the author made a comment about discharging weapons.  I think what Prince was referring to is possibly accidental discharge of weapons.  In the contracting community, that is bad because it shows a lack of safety protocols or poor weapons handling.  Perhaps Mr. Prince was referring to that, or he meant all weapons discharge in Iraq.  But yet again, who cares?  It is a war zone and these men are tasked with protecting high level targets.  They are armed with machine guns and sniper rifles and everything in between to protect their client.  And I say high level targets, because the insurgency knows that Blackwater was protecting these DoS employees and to kill just one would be a fantastic accomplishment.  So yeah, if Blackwater guards were firing their weapons, then that might indicate how dangerous their job really was.  Like I said, it is a war zone and weapon usage is a factor in a war zone.  To nitpick how many times a weapon is fired over there, is just stupid. 

   And then there is the boast factor.  Guys stretch the truth all the time to impress people.  Military veterans do the same thing, and unless these pseudo facts and figures are verified by the authors at Wired, then it is just hearsay that they pick up from other authors that are trying to sell books.  I always cringe when bloggers or reporters reference books like Jeremy Scahill’s ‘Blackwater’, or that latest dorky book called ‘Big Boy Rules’ by Steve Fainaru.  Why they give these books so much credit I do not know.  Jeremy never interviewed Prince and he was factually wrong in several areas of the book, and Fainaru took isolated incidents, and defined an entire industry with those incidents. Every other word out of his mouth is mercenary this and mercenary that–pffft.      

     The final point that I wanted to bring up, is the mention of driving on the wrong side of the road.  Guess what, that is actually a tactic that saves lives, and not some accidental thing that companies do.  It sucks if the tactic caused an accident, but yet again, I default to Blackwater’s job–hauling around ‘high value targets’ that everyone wants to kill.  If the tactic saves lives and gets the client from point A to point B, then it works.  And all the companies used that tactic, and not just Blackwater.  So I did not like the tone or context of the last comment that Wired’s author made.  

   Overall, Wired’s Danger Room does a great job about reporting on gadgets in the war or interesting little tidbits about the contracting world, but as soon as they get into the business of providing some kind of opinion about what professionals with guns actually do for a living out there, they often miss the mark.  And notice, not one mention of Blackwater’s sacrifice– of all the guards that have been killed in defense of the client, and not one mention that ‘not one’ DoS employee that was protected by Blackwater was killed in Iraq.  That means a lot to me and this country, is certainly significant in the context of the war in Iraq over the bloody years, yet this fact continues to be ignored by the media and the so-called experts out there who scream for our attention. –Matt

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How Blackwater Serves America

Think of our staff as soldiers who re-enlist.

DECEMBER 16, 2008

 

By ERIK D. PRINCE

 

Since United States military operations in Iraq began in 2003, I have visited Iraq at least 15 times. But unlike politicians who visit, the question for me has never been why the U.S. got into Iraq. Instead, as the CEO of Blackwater, the urgent question was how the company I head could perform the duties asked of us by the U.S. State Department.

Last week the Department of Justice announced charges against six Blackwater security guards for a shooting incident in Baghdad in September 2007. But before the histories are written, it is crucial to understand the often mischaracterized role of security contractors in this unique war.

In Iraq, State Department civilians and U.S. soldiers have been operating in the same location in an active war zone. While the troops have been facing insurgents, the State Department civilians have been working to rebuild institutions and infrastructure. Blackwater’s role in this war evolved from this unprecedented dynamic. The government saw a need for highly experienced, highly trained Americans to protect our civilians abroad, and so it selected Blackwater.

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