Feral Jundi

Wednesday, December 30, 2009

Year In Review: 2009 Google Analytics Report For Feral Jundi

   A couple of things about this year.  For one, there has been a massive readership increase.  From 15,414 visitors in 2008 to 100,658 visits in 2009 is a big increase, and I am humbled by the positive response of the readership.

   On that note, let’s go over the information for this year, sponsored by Google Analytics. I love this type of stuff, because it lets me know what you folks really want more of.  It also lets me know if the blog sucks or is doing well.  By all accounts, the blog is doing well and the trend lines are all going nicely in a upward direction.

   The top title with the most views is the ‘Potential’ motivational poster.  We love to laugh on FJ, and nothing is funnier than poking fun at islamic extremists.

   Then there is the weapons stuff.  Boy, I get the point and I will be sure to keep up the interesting weapons posts.  The 6.8 SPC versus the 6.5 Grendel post is a carry over from last year, and so is the Russian Sniper Rifle post.  I should also note that the last month here, the Neopup and the Anzio Ironworks rifle was very popular.  What can I say, other than you guys love the weapons stuff.  I do to.

   Now here is the one area that I really dig, and that is jobs.  Afghanistan and any jobs posted for it, was a hot topic.  I have had hundreds of guys and gals asking me about job stuff this year, and everyone continues to think I am a recruiter or someone that works for the company I am posting for.  Let me say this again, just so it is clear.  I will let you know in the post, if I am a recruiter or not.  Other than that, follow the directions of the job post and good luck.  It is cool though, that this site has helped out a ton of folks to get contracts, and I plan to keep doing that in the future.

   The down side with job stuff, is sometimes I post stuff that is no longer flying or worse yet, the company is just fishing for resumes.  For that, I depend upon my readership or the forums to get the real deal on what is going on with this stuff.  But for the most part, I  just want to get the information out there so you folks can react to it.  Timing is everything with this stuff, and it is first come first serve.

    The gear review is always a fun one, and for the record, I do own a pair of MSA Sordins and I am happy.  I will continue to do more reviews in the future.

   Now onto the Al Qaeda torture manual thing.  I post that stuff, not for people to commit torture on others, but for information purposes. That, and to let people know that AQ has done far worse things to people than we could ever imagine.  Gitmo is a holiday resort compared to what Al Qaeda has done in the name of Allah. Enough said there. (by the way, I am Lutheran, if any Jihadists care to know. lol)

   The one thing that does not show up on this list of titles, that I think should get a mention at least, is the coverage on the topic of Letters of Marque and Reprisal, the explorations into more effective forms of warfare on land and sea in this war, and the whole Jax Desmond episode.  The Kabul Fiasco and the Fitzsimmons incident gets a mention as well. There is also the continuing saga of CTU in Iraq and the poor guys not involved with bs at AGNA who had to work in that environment in Kabul.  We have also lost a few contractors in this war, to accidents and combat, and my heart goes out to all the families and friends of the lost.

   The really under reported star of the year though, is the amount of contractors there are in this war, and how important we all are to the war effort. You and I know the real deal, and I only see more work for us all in the future. And the future will be another post.

   As always, thanks to everyone who has contributed and participated on the blog, and because of your input, Feral Jundi is what it is.  The numbers and data below are proof. Here’s to another year!-Matt

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January 1, 2009 to December 29, 2009

100,658 people visited this site, with 185,0144 page views. From January 1, 2008 to December 29, 2008 , there were 15,414 visitors.  There were 37,559 page views.

 

Top Ten Most Popular Titles

Funny Stuff: Potential

Weapons Stuff: The 6.8 SPC versus the 6.5 Grendel

Weapons: The VSS Vintorez Russian Sniper Rifle

Jobs: Multiple Convoy/PSD/Static Security Jobs, Afghanistan

News: Al Qaeda Torture Manual Revealed

Jobs: Multiple Security Jobs with Blue Hackle, Afghanistan

Jobs

Gear Review: Electronic Hearing Protection-MSA Versus Peltor

Jobs: Embassy Security Force, Afghanistan

Funny Stuff: Strength

 

Top Ten Visitors By Country

United States

United Kingdom

Canada

Germany

Australia

South Africa

Netherlands

France

Mexico

Italy

 

Top Ten Visitors By State In The US

California

Texas

Virginia

Florida

New York

Georgia

North Carolina

Illinois

Washington

Arizona

DIY: Survival Mindset, Snares And Kit Ideas, By Doug

Filed under: DIY,Fish and Game,Texas — Tags: , , , , , , , , — Matt @ 5:51 AM

   This is some good stuff.  Doug (not Doug Brooks) has been working on a lot of interesting concepts lately involving lightweight combat survival kits and the mindset and knowledge necessary to use all of that stuff. So it is cool to see where it is all taking him.

   To properly set this up, Doug lives down in Texas, is prior service and has worked in the security contracting industry. He has guest posted before, and is a welcome contributor to the blog.  Enjoy. –Matt

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 Texas Hog

 

     Here is a website and book which I’ve found absolutely awesome.  It is set up by some US Military SERE instructors.

Their belief is that any man in the world can live off the land, very well in fact with nothing more than:

-a handful of snares

-.22 pistol

-poncho

-thermals

-bowie knife & multi tool

     I have been playing with their techniques out in the woods for the past couple of weeks or so and have concluded they are right.  Damn right in fact!

     Attached is a picture of a 200 lb. wild boar which I took last week with a single shot from a .22 pistol. As soon as he was hit with the sub-sonic round he dropped to the ground.

(he appears a lot smaller than he actually was, due to me having cleaned him & having his skin with its 1.5″ fat layer removed.)

    The boar was caught up in one of my snares. The snare had caught him right around the nose.  Boy, was he really pissed off when I walked up on him while checking my trap line the other morning.

     I shot him from 20 yards because I knew I could and more to the point I wanted to stay near a tree encase I had to climb it if need be. It was an instant kill so it turned out to be no worries.

     At noon the day before, I set up 3 hog snares.  By 9am the next morning two of the snares had game in them, while the third had either fallen down or been knocked down by a passing coyote.

    Now talk about an easy way to get food. With minimal effort using only a handfull of commercial grade snares, I had 300 lbs of animal laying on the ground.   all in a span of a few hours with having burned minimal calories.

     Also, this was my very first time setting up snares, so needless to say I am highly impressed. Talk about an extremely successful method of living off the land.

     The snares take up very little space in my buttpack.  6 small snares (squirrles, rabbits, skunks, or anything up to 20 lbs), 4 medium snares (coyotes, racoon, deer, or anything up to 100 lbs) & 1 large snare (large deer, aligator, black bear, wild hog up, or anything up to 200 lbs) are a perfect loadout.

Plus, if you were to attach the snares to a lifting trap, one could trap even larger animals.

     Now addmittedly it took all day for me and one of my buddies down here to process all that meat.  Way too much work for one person.  I wont be setting up more than 1 large game trap at a time from now on. But this is how we learn.

In fact I learned a ton on trapping from that one FTX.

     Now if one were to combine the skills of living off the land with super lightweight gear from our SERE instructors with trackers, then one could have an extremely highly effective tracking team. They wouldn’t even need to carry armor or much ammo. A rifle with 1-2 mags is all. Their job isn’t to engage baddies but simply trail them and radio in their location.

     Even without the tracking aspect, those SERE instructors really know there business. Their $13 book is worth every penny.  Those boys are squared away.

     As far as outdoor survival goes, everyone and their dog has some sort of survival book & dvd out there.  they all say pretty much the same thing.  Interesting yes, but I haven’t been overly impressed. The SERE instructors though, are the heat.  No bs and all practicallity.

    What I really love about them is their travel light & stay warm at night attitude.  (you may not always be comfortable, but you will be alive & well.) With my messed up spine, I simply can not carry that much weight anymore.

    My daily carry out here in the woods, outside of what is on my belt & in my pants pockets is just a maxpedition fanny pack. (expensive but a very tough piece of kit)

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Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Somalia: Pirate Town

Filed under: Maritime Security,Somalia,Video — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 11:58 PM

PMC 2.0: Armchair Deputies Patrol U.S. Border

   I posted a deal about this awhile back, and it is cool to finally get some statistics about the program.  I thought it was an awesome idea back then, and I still think it is good idea and deserves further study and use.

   Now some of you are probably wondering why this isn’t under law enforcement or technology?  I put it under PMC 2.0 because I think the lessons learned with this virtual border watch program, could easily be applied to other countries and border security contracts.  Especially countries where border control is a matter of life and death, where terrorists are looking to import their hate.

   Look at the Afghanistan and Pakistan border, or the Iraq borders, or the Saudi Arabia and Yemen border?  Crowd sourcing a border watch program could very well be the trend of future border security operations.  It also involves that Grandma in Michigan, if in fact she wanted to make  a difference in the war effort or with border enforcement here in the US. It is like a modern day version of the coastal lookouts that civilians participated in back during World War Two.

   By the way, these guys should turn this into a mobile application for smart phones, and make this something people can do while waiting in the doctor’s office before an appointment.  That would really increase the numbers if you know what I mean.-Matt

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Armchair deputies patrol US border

December 26, 2009

By Claire Prentice

When John Spears gets home from his sales job in New York, he sits down at his computer with a bottle of beer and starts patrolling the US border.

And to do it, he does not need to stir from his sofa.

He is one of tens of thousands of people around the world who are volunteering to patrol the 1250-mile long (2000 km) stretch between Texas and Mexico via the web.

The controversial $4m (£2.5m) Texas Virtual Border Watch Programme invites civilians to log on to Blueservo.net.

There they can monitor live feeds 24/7 from 21 hidden surveillance cameras placed at intervals along the border.

Supporters see the initiative as a step forward in US efforts to curb illegal immigration, drug smuggling and border violence.

Critics say it is encouraging vigilantism and stoking anti-immigrant feeling.

Value for money?

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Strategy: The Failure Of Today’s Counter Piracy Strategy

   I don’t care what any of the experts think on this one.  It doesn’t take a defense analyst or a counter piracy expert to look at these two stories, and the one I posted about the chemical tanker and fertilizer ship being taken, and deduct that the current strategy is not working.

   Look at this first story I posted below. The Dutch capture 13 pirates, and they had to release them because no one wanted to deal with them?  And then they had to give them food and fuel so they could ‘make it home alright’? How sweet of us. Pfffft. This is lunacy.  No wonder this whole piracy thing is increasing, because it is the ultimate criminal venture to be in.

   The next story really spells out the failure of the strategy.  We have a massive flotilla of navies from all over the world, that costs millions of dollars to operate every day, and this is what we get out of that investment? An increase in successful pirate operations?  Who the hell is in charge of this mess?

   The strategy I propose is pretty simple. Make it mandatory that all ships have armed security, and they all have the means to contact a Naval quick reaction force via protected communications. Put the cost of security and proper communications on the shipping industry, and only use a few key Naval vessels for back up.  If a ship gets into a fight with pirates, then they put out the distress call to the closest strategically placed Naval QRF, and do the best they can to hang on until they get there. Hell, we could just have armed drones flying around all day to act as back up. But just as long as there is competent and well armed security on these boats, then this will give the boats enough time to out maneuver the pirates or hang on until help gets on station.

   We could also hunt them down at sea, but good luck with that.  It would take thousands of boats, canvasing the sea, all with the right to search and seize vessels.  Even then, these pirates will just hide on a fishing vessel and pretend to be safe, until the hunting vessels are gone.  I say if we are going to hunt them, then you use really good bait, which is why it is so important to have armed ships with a Naval QRF to back them up. That QRF should also be in the form of aviation, and not some slow cruising boat that would take an hour to get where it needs to be. That is my idea of a a QRF on the ocean.

   The second part of my strategy is all about dealing with the land problem, and that requires eradicating any threats to the government, and giving the government the time and support necessary in order to establish a solid governance over the land. But it all requires a professional army to do a proper job of cleaning up that resistance, and establishing control over key corridors and areas. Anything is possible, just as long as you have the manpower and resources to contribute to the effort.  You could either use a competent PMC (something similar to Executive Outcomes) or try to get an organized and well trained Army that is not busy with the current wars we are in.  Good luck with that last one.

   The point being, is that we really cannot be effective at sea, if we do not have a land based component of our strategy. Until we do what we have to do, these pirates will only continue to get more wealthier, more bold, more greedier, and probably more dangerous because now they can afford the good stuff. –Matt

Edit: 12/31/2009 – Further proof of the failure.  Look at these numbers. (I posted the rest in the comments section)

Mr. PHAM: Unfortunately, and I hate to rain on the parades of the world’s navies, but they haven’t sent an unambiguous message. Since August of 2008 to mid December 2009, the combined navies of the world have stopped 706 pirates. Of these 706, 11 were killed in the altercations with the navies. Four hundred and eleven, however, were simply catch and release because the various countries of the world can’t agree on rules for prosecution.

And so the pirates look at this and say the chances of actually being caught and actually having to suffer some legal penalty, 46 convicted out of 706 stopped, your chances are pretty slim.

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Captured Somali pirates get away scot-free

December 18 2009

The Dutch navy frigate HNLMS Evertsen has released 13 Somali pirates who were captured earlier this month. The European Union failed to find a country willing to put them on trial on suspicion of piracy and ordered their release on Thursday.The pirates were kept in detention on the ship’s aft deck, which was “an unpleasant situation” according to the Dutch Defence Ministry. They were released near Djibouti and transferred to their own ship, which had been towed all the way by HNLMS Evertsen.

HNLMS Evertsen was part of an EU mission off the Somali coast. The men were arrested when they attempted to hijack a merchant ship.

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