Feral Jundi

Thursday, July 9, 2009

Industry Talk: GAO Finds Major Security Lapses at Federal Buildings

Filed under: Industry Talk — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 4:42 AM

    I see a couple of failures here.  For one, you pay peanuts, you get monkeys. I would guarantee if the companies paid a decent salary for these positions, they would attract employees that would care.  But the one salary they certainly should not skimp on is the supervisor.  A well paid supervisor that knows what they are doing, could easily shore up these security issues brought up by the GAO.

  Be that as it may, most of these companies could care less about customer service or satisfaction, and most could care less about Kaizen.  Primarily because the feds have yet to put the pressure on them, and doing just ‘good enough’ is financially sound to them.  It costs money to train and costs money to get good people.  Might as well just run the show all shabby until someone blows the whistle–no one cares, until now.

   And then there is the lapse of federal oversight, which continues to be lightly mentioned in the MSM over and over.  I will not beat that dead horse.  Although I will go back to the main solution to these problems.  It’s leadership all the way.  It’s a good leader that monitors and tests the abilities of it’s security force and insures that the post orders are being followed.  It’s a good leader that recognizes deficiencies in the guard force and corrects them on the spot.  It’s a good leader that applies Kaizen, customer service and customer satisfaction to their security services. If the FPS and the companies recognized the value of focusing on these supervisors, and insuring that they are in fact getting the right man for the job, then these issues will be corrected.

   The leadership within the FPS and Companies need to be evaluated as well.  Did those leaders tasked with managing these supervisors and regions do the things necessary to insure things were going well out there?  Did they have a ‘shared reality’ with their men out in the field, or did they lead from a desk?  I think we know the answer, and the proof is in the pudding. –Matt

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GAO finds major security lapses at federal buildings

The Federal Protective Service comes under fire as government investigators tell Congress they were able to carry bomb-making materials through all 10 security checkpoints tested.

From the Los Angeles Times

By Kristina Sherry

July 9, 2009

Reporting from Washington — The Government Accountability Office told a congressional panel Wednesday that its investigators were able to carry bomb-making materials through 10 security checkpoints monitored by the Federal Protective Service, which guards nearly 9,000 facilities throughout the country.

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Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Cool Stuff: Slinging.org

Filed under: Cool Stuff,Weapons — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 9:14 PM

   This is a fun one, and thanks to Doug for sending me this.  I guess the one thing that is cool about slings, is that you could potentially use a sling as a less than lethal option for crowd control.  Thats all depending on the type of projectile you use. (please note the Israeli using the sling below).  Or if you are bored at some outpost and want something to do on your downtime, build a sling out of paracord and see if you can hit a tin can with it.  It’s cheap fun, but it is also cool to get a feel for how this weapon could have been used back when it was a weapon of war.  With the right projectile and some skill, a sling can certainly be deadly. –Matt

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An Israeli soldier uses a sling shot to stone demonstrators and workers dismantling the area in front of the Fatima Gate on the Israeli-Lebanese border, at Kfarkila, southern Lebanon, Tuesday Oct. 10, 2000. The area was liberated after the Israeli’s troops withdrew from southern Lebanon in May.

Welcome to Slinging.org!

When I first became interested in this fascinating weapon, I could find little information on the web or in published material. I hope this website can be the definitive source for slinging related information and news. Of course, it needs a community of slingers to experiment and pass on their knowledge. With your help, I hope we can rekindle the interest in this truly simple, effective, and historically significant weapon.

Sling Ranges

The range of the sling has always been a point of contention among enthusiasts and scholars. Present literature generally underestimates the sling’s range. Consider this snippet of text from Thom Richardson’s “The Ballistics of The Sling”, which provides an overview of some of these statistics:

“The more conservative estimates are around the 200 m mark (Ferrill 1985: 25), Connolly suggests 350 m (1981: 49), Korfmann estimates 400 m (1973: 37) while Demmin and Hogg go to 500 m (1893: 876; 1968: 30). The few accurately recorded observations are rather different. Reid records 55 m with a 227 g stone, and 91 m with 85 and 113 g balls (1976: 21). Burgess threw stones with his reconstructed Lahun sling between 50 and 100 yds, but admits to being unskilled at the art (1958: 230). Korfmann observed Turkish shepherds sling ordinary pebbles, ‘in 5 out of 11 trials the pebbles reached 200 m, and the three best casts were between 230 and 240 m (1973), while Dohrenwend has himself thrown beach pebbles over 200 yds (1994: 86).”

Since many of these statistics are formulated from authors’ experiences, the ranges that are creeping into literature, and becoming the standard, might not be representative of the true potential of the sling. The sling is a demanding weapon; range varies considerably from amateur to expert. Below is a table documenting the varied ranges of some members on slinging.org’s forum. It’s also important to consider the projectiles used in the test. A stone or softball will not perform as well as a biconical lead projectile, like those often used in antiquity.

For comparison, the current World Flight record for a “historically accurate” English longbow and horn/sinew composite bow is 306m and 566m respectively. It should be noted, however, that these ranges were achieved using light-weight flight arrows designed for range, and not for combat.

Website here.

5-Strand Woven Paracord Sling Tutorial

Strategy: How David Beats Goliath, by Malcolm Gladwell

Filed under: Strategy — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 5:26 AM

How David Beats Goliath

When underdogs break the rules.

by Malcolm Gladwell

May 11, 2009

A non-stop full-court press gives weak basketball teams a chance against far stronger teams. Why have so few adopted it?

When Vivek Ranadivé decided to coach his daughter Anjali’s basketball team, he settled on two principles. The first was that he would never raise his voice. This was National Junior Basketball—the Little League of basketball. The team was made up mostly of twelve-year-olds, and twelve-year-olds, he knew from experience, did not respond well to shouting. He would conduct business on the basketball court, he decided, the same way he conducted business at his software firm. He would speak calmly and softly, and convince the girls of the wisdom of his approach with appeals to reason and common sense.

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Sunday, July 5, 2009

Maritime Security: All-Arab Red Sea Anti-piracy Force Proposed in Riyadh

    Interesting. I have no clue about the possible contracting opportunities associated with this, but I am sure we will see some training type gigs if anything.  Maybe Vinnell Arabia type programs will pop up for this stuff?-Matt

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All-Arab Red Sea anti-piracy force proposed in Riyadh

By Paul Handley

June 30, 2009

RIYADH (AFP) — Arab states of the Gulf and Red Sea said on Monday that they are planning a joint anti-piracy force, insisting defence of the crucial Red Sea waterway was the “primary responsibility” of littoral states.

Saying it was necessary to prevent the spread of piracy to the Red Sea or the Gulf, 11 regional states agreed to set up an all-Arab Navy Task Force, to be led at the outset by the Saudis, the official Saudi Press Agency reported.

The delegates to the conference in the Saudi capital stressed the “importance of the exclusion of the Red Sea from any international arrangements, especially the fight against sea piracy.”

Royal Saudi Navy commander Lieutenant General Prince Fahd bin Abdullah told journalists: “This subject is now under negotiation and we are hoping to reach an agreement to form this force.”

Joining the talks were representatives from Bahrain, Djibouti, Egypt, Jordan, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, the United Arab Emirates and Yemen.

Fahd said part of the effort would be to design ways of cooperating with the flotillas from some 20 foreign countries now patrolling sea lanes in the Gulf of Aden and off the Horn of Africa to stop pirate attacks.

“One of the objectives of the meeting is to discuss joint Arab coordination with multinational forces operating in the region to combat piracy and to agree on the mechanisms of the Arab contribution” to these efforts, he said.

He said that the Gulf states were involved in the proposed task force because of the danger posed to their shipping, particularly vital oil and gas exports which pass via the Red Sea to the Suez Canal and the Mediterranean.

A joint statement said the Saudi navy will coordinate efforts by the other Arab naval commands on the Red Sea and Gulf for a period of one year and then review the results.

Another meeting on the issue will be scheduled in two months, it said.

More than 70 vessels, including a fully-laden Saudi oil supertanker, have been hijacked for ransom by Somali pirates in the past two years. Despite patrols by a raft of foreign navies, attacks are still frequently reported.

Saudi Arabia has said in recent months that it has stepped up its high-seas patrols for pirates.

The International Maritime Bureau has reported a handful of attempted pirate attacks, none successful, at the southern end of the Red Sea this year, mostly in the strategically important Bab al-Mandab strait linking to the Gulf of Aden.

The bureau recorded no attacks in the Red Sea last year.

But the Saudi push for an all-Arab naval task force could also be related to what diplomats say are Riyadh’s growing worries over the security not only of Red Sea shipping but also of its essential infrastructure in the area, including oil facilities, power generation and desalinisation plants.

Story here.

 

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Afghanistan: Could PMC’s Be Used in the ‘Hold’ Phase of This New Strategy?

John Nagl, a counterinsurgency expert who was appointed last week to the defence policy board at the Pentagon, said: “We do not have enough troops to hold what we have cleared in Helmand. The additional American troops are a help, but they are insufficient.

“We have more fighting in Afghanistan in front of us than we have fighting behind us, full stop. This is going to be a harder fight than Iraq. Afghanistan needs [to create its own] national army of 250,000 to enable the allies to depart.”

At present the Afghan national army has about 92,000 troops, while the police force numbers 83,000. More US troops are needed to fill the gap, but first they would have to be diverted from Iraq. 

   Ok, I know this post is going to tweak a few people out there, because it is just ‘too crazy’ or ridiculous.  How could we possibly use PMC’s or PSC’s to ‘hold’ villages?

    Well, it’s easy, we first rework what PMC’s can or cannot do in the war (like give them the necessary tools and authorization to defend villages and AO’s) and we open the flood gates of contracts for such a thing.  Then we insure the necessary architecture is in place to insure that the company in place is in fact doing good things and following the contract for that village.  But none of this is new in the realm of how we set these things up, we just have to do it.

   Here is another way to look at this.  Take a good look at what the ‘holding’ troops are actually doing in these villages, and logically look at what jobs a company could conceivably perform during that holding operation.  Contractors have been used in the defense on US bases, in disaster zones, and for protecting remote civilian camps in places like Iraq, the next progression to me, is using contractors to defend villages.  If our goal is to protect people in Afghanistan from the Taliban, and we do not have enough troops to do that, then why not use contractors?

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