Feral Jundi

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Jobs: Security Officer, Afghanistan

Filed under: Afghanistan,Jobs — Tags: , , — Matt @ 1:26 PM

Title: Security Officer (Entry Control)

Location: 

Req Number: SD-LOGCAP-11821-TO1C

Position Description:

Location: Various sites at US bases throughout Afghanistan

POSITION SUMMARY:

Perform duties and responsibilities related to providing Security Services in support of current US Military operations in the Afghanistan Area of Operations (AOR).

The (Security Officer, Entry Control) performs routine duties in an outdoor environment under a covered shelter, providing entry control to US military installations and other government faculties. This is non-armed position, responsible for Authorized Access ID Card verification using biometrics to validate the identity of personnel.

This is a customer service position that requires a courteous attitude and high degree of professionalism, dealing with a variety of nationalities and cultures. Work is performed in a fast paced environment with service provided to an international customer base.

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Saturday, January 17, 2009

Cool Stuff: SHOT Show 2009

Filed under: Cool Stuff,Gear Review,Weapons Stuff — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 3:15 PM

   If you can make it to this show, you are really in for a treat.  All the newest equipment and weapons are introduced at this show, and it is a massive event.  Look for reviews of gear at a few of the forums on youtube, and especially at a few of the top equipment bloggers like Soldier Systems. The SHOT Show website has a lot of cool highlights as well.

    So far, I am liking the new and old stuff from Lewis Machine and Tool. Here is a tour brought to you by Defensetech.  –Matt

Edit:  The Gear Scout at Military Times has a great review of new products at SHOT 09.

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About the Show

The SHOT Show is for the trade only and is not open to the general public.

The Shooting, Hunting, Outdoor Trade Show and Conference (SHOT Show) is the largest and most comprehensive trade show for all professionals involved with the shooting sports and hunting industries. It is the world’s premier exposition of combined firearms, ammunition, archery, cutlery, outdoor apparel, optics, camping and related products and services. The SHOT Show attracts buyers from all 50 states and more than 75 countries. The SHOT Show is owned and sponsored by the National Shooting Sports Foundation and is produced and managed by Reed Exhibitions.

The 2009 Show

January 15-18, 2009 – Orange County Convention Center

Orlando, FL

The 2010 Show

January 19 – 22, 2010

The 2011 Show

January 18 – 21, 2011

2009 Show Hours:

Thursday,  January 15     8:30am-5:30pm

Friday, January 16            8:30am-5:30pm

Saturday, January 17       8:30am-5:30pm

Sunday, January 18         8:30am-4:00pm

Shot Show Website Here.

Funny Stuff: Taliban Training Films Presents ‘The Tao of Lord Humongous’

Filed under: Afghanistan,Funny Stuff — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 1:14 PM

Friday, January 16, 2009

Israel: How to Close the Gaza Tunnels, by William Saletan

Filed under: Israel,Tactical Thought Process,Technology — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 4:36 PM

    An excellent collection of ideas, on how to shut down these tunnel systems on the borders of Gaza.  I think a combination of several of these ideas are the way to go.  Who knows, there might be some contracting opportunities with this one for some construction company.  It would either be an Egyptian or Israeli company to work on this stuff, but you never know who they might contract for this stuff.  I posted some stuff regarding the SBInet Boeing project along the US border, and they experiment and use a lot of the same stuff to detect tunnels.

   My favorites are the combination of UAV/with sensors, and ground sensors, all tied into one center.  It sounds expensive, but anything that could reduce the smuggling operations would equate to less rockets being manufactured and launched. The tunnel issue will be a big deal during the ceasefire–when it comes. –Matt

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Holey War

How to close the Gaza tunnels.

By William Saletan

Posted Friday, Jan. 16, 2009, at 7:58 AM ET

In the skies over Gaza, Israel rules. Its planes, helicopters, and drones patrol and fire at will. On the ground, Israeli troops advance while Hamas lies in wait. But the ultimate battleground isn’t visible from the sky or on your television news. It’s underground.

Gaza is riddled with tunnels. Some are for smuggling; others are for transporting weapons; others are for hiding or ambushing Israeli troops. The crucial passageways—400 to 600, by recent estimates—run from Gaza to Egypt, circumventing the closed border. That’s how Hamas gets parts and material for the missiles it fires into Israel. Any deal to end the current fighting has to include “an effective blockading” of that border, “with supervision and follow-ups,” according to Israel’s prime minister. To stop the war—and to keep it stopped—you have to figure out how to stop the tunnels.

But how? Here are some of the options.

1. Buffer zone. Israel used to control a 300-meter strip between Gaza and Egypt. That wasn’t enough to stop Gazans from tunneling under it to Egypt. But what if the strip were thicker? Would that raise the cost of tunneling, or the probability of a collapse somewhere along the passage, enough to deter diggers? Israeli hawks want a buffer zone three kilometers thick, which would make tunnel excavation much more difficult, expensive, and time-consuming. Lately, the Israeli Defense Forces have dropped leaflets urging Gazans along the border to leave their homes—an attempt, some experts believe, to use the war to widen the buffer zone. But good luck getting Hamas, the Palestinian Authority, or European intermediaries to hand over three kilometers of south Gaza, much less remove the inconvenient residents from their homes.

2. Wall. Instead of thickening the old buffer zone, how about deepening it? Years ago, Israel tried a concrete-iron wall that extended 10 feet underground. A nice try, but fairly useless, since the tunnels went at least 20 feet underground. Then, just more than a year ago, two high-ranking officials from the U.S. Defense and State Departments went to Egypt with a proposal to build a new barrier, including “piles driven deep into the earth.” But even if you extend a wall far enough underground, tunnelers can dig through it.

3. Moat. Maybe, instead of burying a solid barrier that could be dug through, we should make the barrier hollow and fill it with water. That way, anyone trying to dig through would—well, let’s just say you wouldn’t want to be there when it happened. This was such an intriguing idea that Israel tried it several years ago, soliciting bids for a moat four kilometers long, 100 meters wide, and 80 feet deep. Estimated cost: $250 million. Israel scrapped the plan because the water would come from the sea and might contaminate Gaza’s groundwater. But the idea keeps coming back. Two years ago, Israel broached it again, and Egypt considered it. The U.S. officials who went to Egypt a year ago raised it again. Even the president of the Palestinian Authority has lobbied Egypt to do it.

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Building Snowmobiles: Counter-insurgency, The Art of Phenomenology and Shepard Fairey

Filed under: War Art — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 3:06 AM

   So your probably wondering why this is a building snowmobiles topic?  The concept of what Shepard Fairey is doing, and has done, is absolutely radical and powerful.  He is the guy that made the Obama posters and the Obey stickers, if you want to know what he is famous for, and his art and ideas take on a life of their own.  But there is a method, and Shepard started all of this with a manifesto he created in 1990.  

   Personally, I am not really into the guy’s politics or his ‘save the whales’ mindset, but I am into his concepts and methodology.  In this war of ideas we are having with radical Islam, it takes thinking outside of the box, and this kind of propaganda could be very helpful in combating our enemy’s ideas.  

     Imagine if a guy like Shepard Fairey, or similar artist using the same modus operandi, was able to make a piece of art that would shake the world of radical Islam and force them to question why they do what they do?  That Danish cartoon depicting Muhammad with a bomb on his head was somewhat viral, but it only infuriated and unified Islamic extremists.  We want an idea that will make them want to stop, or at least question what they are doing. What we need is something more like the Obey Giant campaign, and something that people want to download and make stickers out of and plaster them all over place.  Because that is what happened with the Obey stickers–they were plastered all over and it became a cultural phenomenon.  

   Now the meaning of the message ‘Obey’, is a way of telling you to obey and kiss the ring of your masters or big brother or whatever authority figure–and with that simple order, that inner rebel inside you says ‘no way’.  So it is a concept of dissent and questioning authority that makes it so powerful.  And when a supporter of Obey slaps a sticker up, in essence they are acting out in defiance.

    The sticker is also a pain in the ass to remove.  Some people were even trying to find ways of putting the Obey sticker in really impossible places, just so clean up crews could not get rid of the thing.  The sticker also dares you to question the environment that it has been placed, or for you to question some commercialized ad right next to the sticker.  If you see a Marlboro ad, and someone just plastered an Obey sticker over the cowboy’s face or somewhere near the poster, then you are forced to look at it and also you subconsciously read the sticker.  So now you have two images and two messages competing for your conscious.

    The idea of Obey, also gets ingrained into the landscape.  Some look at it as vandalism, others look at it as art.  Others who get the message, might like the idea of that thing up there on the light pole–others might not.  

     Either way, these concepts need to be looked at for possibly combating our current enemy.  Of course this has another name for it, like propaganda, but this is definitely a modern day twist on propaganda and it needs to be looked at.

   So how could this be used by a field commander in Afghanistan, trying to conduct counter-insurgency?  The key is to get a good artist and a creative idea, and think like Shepard Fairey to promote your idea.  Shepard has the working model for such a thing, and he obviously is doing something right.  He built that snowmobile by using the concepts of phenomenology and art, to promote and spread ideas like a virus.  He has made a ton of money with his viral art, fueled numerous calls to action, and helped elect a US President with an inspirational poster.   We need to learn from this, and apply it to the war effort in some way. –Matt

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Shepard Fairey – The Obey Manifesto

the logic behind the sticker and stencil campaign

 

The OBEY sticker campaign can be explained as an experiment in Phenomenology. Heidegger describes Phenomenology as “the process of letting things manifest themselves.” Phenomenology attempts to enable people to see clearly something that is right before their eyes but obscured; things that are so taken for granted that they are muted by abstract observation.

The FIRST AIM OF PHENOMENOLOGY is to reawaken a sense of wonder about one’s environment. The OBEY sticker attempts to stimulate curiosity and bring people to question both the sticker and their relationship with their surroundings. Because people are not used to seeing advertisements or propaganda for which the product or motive is not obvious, frequent and novel encounters with the sticker provoke thought and possible frustration, nevertheless

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