Feral Jundi

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Legal News: The Open Anthropology Project and HTT

Filed under: Afghanistan,Legal News — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 3:26 PM

     Thanks to Jedburgh on Twitter for sending me this link.  Here they talk about the HTT stuff, and there is a link to Ayala’s formal indictment. This is in regards to the incident were a HTT member was burned by a local Afghani, and then that Afghani was shot by a security specialist named Ayala. That burn victim just recently died as well. The name of this blog that is covering this case is called the Open Anthropology Project.

Also be advised, this blog is extremely anti-HTT and anti-war, but I do think it is noteworthy to read what these guys have to say. Thanks to the readership for helping to point that out as well.  –Matt 

 

Mexico: Could Hamas or FARC Ideas, Inspire Mexico’s Narco-Insurgency?

Filed under: Crime,Mexico — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 3:00 PM

 

   Today I want to look at the situation across the border, and kind of look into the future of the narco war in Mexico.  Also please read General McCaffrey’s After Action Mexico Report, as a good little primer on the situation.  The question I have, is Mexico strong enough to battle these drug cartels, and how will the drug cartels treat the US as we feed the anti-drug war with Plan Merida?

    So with that in mind, let’s for a second explore the possibilities, no matter how ridiculous.  Already tunnels have been used to smuggle people, drugs, and weapons on the US/Mexican border.  Notice how this same tactic is used by Hamas in Israel?  There have also been incidents of criminals engaging with Border Patrol using automatic weapons, and operating more like military units, as opposed to thugs.  Is this not what Hamas does?  Or how about FARC?  We have a deal with Colombia called Plan Colombia, and that support is used to fight a very bloody narco war there.  Imagine if Colombia was right on our border in the US?  Would FARC have crossed the border, and made the US pay for our support of Colombia?  I am positive they would.  

   So where do all of these examples lead us?  With a determined group, they will try everything they can to survive and keep the business going.  These groups will learn from others, and will be inspired by working models of operation.  Mexico’s Narco-insurgency will learn from Hamas and they will learn from FARC, and I am sure they will learn from others, as to the best way to stop the governments of both the US and Mexico from messing with their business.

    One way that I could see these guys going, is launching rockets into the US, much like Hamas did with Israel.  Hell, the FARC even did something similar within Colombia, by using propane lob bombs or IRAM’s.  The idea being, is to piss off the larger neighbor to the north, and force the US to do something violent.  They would want US forces to come into Mexico and try to shut things down.  But once that happens, then the larger picture of Public Relations presents itself, and a US military action in Mexico would make the Mexican military and police seem even weaker and this action could piss off a lot of civilians.  At worse, even civilians could be killed in that scenario.  And if you are to study the FARC in Colombia, civilians have been killed during that narco-war, mostly by FARC, but also by accidents with government reaction to the FARC. 

   Now with an insurgency, when a smaller group attacks an occupier or an invading force, that smaller group actually becomes the good guy in some cases amongst the local populations.  The drug cartels would love for this scenario to present itself.  So if these guys could egg on the US, to become more involved, then they would be happy.  The Plan Merida, much like the Plan Colombia, is our first step in combating these narco-insurgencies.  But we also have to be prepared for some push back from the drug cartels for getting involved like this.  Will these guys start launching rockets into US cities to start a fight?  Who knows, but I do know that the drug cartels in Mexico are getting more brazen and more powerful all the time.  The Mexican government is having a hell of a time fighting this, and my big fear is that a full blown narco war in Mexico could look a lot like the one in Colombia, and that would not be a good thing for the US. –Matt 

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General McCaffrey’s After Action Mexico Report focusing on drugs and crime in Mexico.

Academic Mexico Trip Report – December 2008

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Mexico’s Narco-Insurgency 

 Hal Brands | 22 Dec 2008

World Politics Review

When Barack Obama takes office on Jan. 20, his foreign policy will almost certainly be consumed by the insurgencies in Iraq and Afghanistan. Yet Obama would do well to pay equal attention to a third ongoing insurgency, one that is currently more violent than the war in Iraq and possibly more threatening to American interests. This insurgency is raging not half a world away in the Middle East, but just across America’s southern frontier in Mexico.

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Industry Talk: In Defense of Security Contractors

Filed under: Industry Talk — Tags: , , — Matt @ 12:45 PM

   This story popped up on a few of my radars, and Scott sent me a copy as well.  As you might guess, I am always interested in hearing the critiques of this industry and the support of this industry.  So this article in the magazine Foreign Policy was a good little support piece.  

   One thing I want to add to this, that I think the author was kind of lacking on though, was the amount of security contractors in this war, and the numerous companies doing all sorts of interesting things out there.  Here on FJ, I have mentioned a few.  Like the CMD(CMC) program, where security contractors protect an entire camp and munitions dump, while UXO workers demolish old munitions.  Security contractors do everything from guarding UXO to convoy operations between all of the bases to supply camps and transport people.  These camps were completely run and operated by civilians, and they worked.  The only military management, if you could call it that, were Army Corps of Engineer guys.  These camps would usually have one or two of these folk to watch everything.  But other than that, these camps were completely civilian operated and protected. I brought up this example with other authors out there, and it continues to be ignored.  This mission helped to remove thousands of tons of old explosives in Iraq, and at a cost to contractor lives.  It deserves a mention at the least.

    The GRD program in Iraq was another massive program that involved convoy protection services, and DOD contractors(guys got killed doing this as well).  And currently there are solicitations for the same kind of convoy protection services contracts in Afghanistan, as there were in Iraq.  The programs that this author spoke of, are the TWISS(DoD) and the WPPS(DoS) program.  He gives only a partial picture, and the New America Foundation put the number of security contractors at over 12,000 if we are to look at the entire war effort.  230,000 plus was the figure for civilian contractors in total(that is KBR type folk, as well as the meat eater types).

   Overall, I enjoyed the article because at least it was someone willing to challenge this mindset that we are ‘a bad thing’ for this country.  I also believe that with a little effort on the part of the DoD and DoS, the quality of these contracts could be monitored and managed effectively.  That would require leadership and actually putting in the necessary manpower to manage all the thousands of contractors out there.

   The author also mentioned a key component of why it is so important to keep tabs on contractors:  

Finally, the bodyguard mentality won’t go away with the security company contracts; it must be changed from the top. Behind the highly publicized incidents were not “rogue mercenaries” but professionals dedicated to the mission — protecting the principal at all costs. “At all costs” means just that; costs to the locals, to the broader counterinsurgency effort, and to relations with the host government are irrelevant. For a bodyguard, this is the only measure of effectiveness, and it won’t go away just because the bodyguard works for the government. 

    DoS and DoD need to remember to include us when they talk about Strategic Communications and Unity of Effort. Of course our actions impact the overall counterinsurgency effort, and none of us in the industry want to hurt that effort.  So going back to leadership and effectively managing contractors, you can see that it is not only an important thing for accounting purposes, but it is also important for the war effort.  We can get there, it’s just the client needs to start talking more about how to effectively manage the ‘elephant in the room’ called contractors.  And like the author pointed out, just getting rid of us is not the most practical or even reasonable answer to these issues.  I say do like Pete Blaber said for solving complex problems.  Saturate, incubate, and illuminate and accomplish that mission.-Matt

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In defense of security contractors

By Col. Mark Cancian (USMCR Ret.)

01/08/2009

Like them or hate them, we still need private security contractors

In criticizing the use of contractors in Iraq, some observers cite Blackwater as the tip of the contractor iceberg. It’s a fair analogy, but it deserves to be taken a step further. As with an iceberg, you may be able to shave some off the tip, but hacking away at the body is pointless.

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Saturday, January 10, 2009

Publications: IG Faults Oversight of Security Contractors

Filed under: Publications — Tags: , , — Matt @ 11:48 AM

Interesting little report about DoS and their lack of quality control and proper management with the WPPS contracts. –Matt 

Status of the Secretary of State’s Panel on Personal Protective Services in Iraq Report Recommendations 

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IG Faults Oversight Of Security Contractors

State Dept. Might Have Violated Rules

By Karen DeYoung

Washington Post Staff Writer

Saturday, January 10, 2009

The State Department may have violated federal regulations in turning over management aspects of its multibillion-dollar private security contract in Iraq to other contractors, the department’s inspector general concludes in a report released yesterday.

The report, produced by a regional IG office established last year to keep closer watch on expenditures in Iraq and Afghanistan, says the State Department Bureau of Diplomatic Security had been “highly effective in ensuring the safety” of diplomatic personnel in Iraq. There have been no casualties among U.S. diplomatic and civilian officials protected by contractors under the bureau’s supervision.

“However,” it says, “the rapid rise in use and scale of private security contractors has strained the Department’s ability to effectively manage them.” Department efforts, the IG found, were “undermined by frequent staff turnover, understaffing, increased workload, and the lack of standardized operating policies and procedures.”

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Afghanistan: Contractor, Set Afire in Nov. by Afghan, Dies

Filed under: Afghanistan — Tags: , , — Matt @ 11:18 AM

Another sad chapter in this tragic story.  Rest in peace. –Matt

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Contractor, set afire in Nov. by Afghan, dies

Posted on Sat, Jan. 10, 2009

By Matthew Barakat

McLEAN, Va. – An anthropologist embedded with the U.S. Army in Afghanistan to help soldiers understand local customs has died more than two months after being doused with fuel and set on fire.

The attack on Paula Loyd, 36, prompted an alleged revenge killing by one of Loyd’s colleagues, who now faces the first murder charges filed against a military contractor in Afghanistan or Iraq under a 2000 law that allows such prosecutions. Don Ayala of New Orleans is charged with second-degree murder in U.S. District Court in Alexandria.

Loyd suffered second- and third-degree burns over 60 percent of her body in the Nov. 4 attack west of Kandahar and died Wednesday at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio.

Celia Jones, executive director of the Moonlight Fund, a nonprofit group that assists burn victims and their families and worked closely with the Loyd family during her two-month hospital stay, said that Loyd had been chatting with an Afghan man about fuel prices when he suddenly attacked her. “It was such a senseless act,” Jones said.

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