Feral Jundi

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Industry Talk: Triple Canopy to Take Over Xe’s WPPS Contract

Filed under: Industry Talk — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 10:49 PM

 

     Well, we will see how they do.  That is a huge contract to take over, to include the aviation stuff.  –Matt

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Source: Firm to take over Blackwater/Xe’s Iraq contract 

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

From Charley Keyes

WASHINGTON (CNN) — Herndon, Virginia-based Triple Canopy has been awarded the security services contract in Baghdad, a State Department source told CNN Tuesday.

The order is effective Tuesday, the source said, but Triple Canopy’s “in-country performance” won’t begin until May 7.

Triple Canopy will take over the expiring contract of Blackwater, which changed its name to Xe last month. The State Department decided in January not to renew Blackwater/Xe’s contract when it expires in May.

That followed a refusal by the Iraqi government to renew the firm’s operating license because of a September 2007 shooting incident in which the Iraqi government says security guards — then employed by Blackwater — fired upon and killed 17 Iraqi civilians.

As part of a contract to protect American diplomats and other employees around the world, the State Department hired Blackwater for a multiple-year assignment in Iraq, renewable once a year. Blackwater/Xe, one of three security firms working for the United States in the country, had one of the biggest security contracts in Iraq.

Triple Canopy already has a State Department contract in Iraq. The new contract will increase its share of the security work there. DynCorp International also has a State Department contract for work in Iraq.

Losing the contract is considered a huge blow to Blackwater/Xe. While the company is privately held, the Iraq contract has been estimated to make up one-third to one-half of its business. Blackwater/Xe has about two dozen aircraft in Iraq, as well as 1,000 personnel.

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Publications: CSBA Report and Finding Strategists, By Barry Watts

Filed under: Military News,Publications — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 10:02 PM

   I found this over at DOD Buzz and it grabbed my attention.  Anything to do with strategy grabs my attention, and especially the lack there of within today’s military leadership. But the real juice of this article, is the discussion of how do you find ‘good strategists’ and what are the qualities of a skilled strategists, besides the obvious trait of achieving victories? I love stuff like that, because this guy goes beyond the standard report, and tries to infuse a little science into the deal.  Cool report, and check it out.    –Matt

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Clausewitz 

Finding Strategists

By Barry Watts

     Do most U.S. political leaders have the cognitive skills and talents to craft and implement effective long-term strategies? Do most senior American military leaders — even those who have demonstrated tactical competence in combat — have those skills and talents? Historical evidence, as well as leading-edge research into human cognition, suggest that the answer to both questions is: no.

     There is considerable evidence that strategic performance is an area in which U.S. political and military leaders have shown declining overall competence in recent decades. True, as the outcome of the Cold War and the turn-around in Iraq testify, American strategies have not been uniformly poor. Still, a case can be made that, on the whole, American strategic competence has been declining since the Vietnam War and continues to do so today. Given the recent financial crisis and economic down-turn, can the United States afford another decade of declining strategic competence? Or is it time to begin finding good strategists and put strategy in their hands?

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