Feral Jundi

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Afghanistan: Government Has Barred Compass ISS And Watan Risk Management

     Wow, Compass ISS and Watan Risk are huge companies that have been operating for awhile there, so I am not sure if this is a for sure deal or not.  If so, all of their competitors are probably licking their chops right now.

     Overall, this is a necessary move in order to get a handle on the situation and send a message to the 52 registered security companies in Afghanistan. Which is a good thing, because every innocent killed will only enrage the civilian population, and increase support for the Taliban shadow government.

     Now if I was the Afghan government, I would pour on the juice when the Taliban kill civilians.  Do not give them a free pass, and every time a Taliban force kills a civilian, it should be highlighted as to how un-islamic they are and how little they care for the civilian population’s safety. It’s called propaganda and it should be part of their strategic communications plan.  The Afghan government must sell itself as a better idea than the Taliban, and win over the civilian population.  –Matt

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Afghanistan bars security firms

04/09/2010

KABUL — Afghanistan has barred two private security firms from one of the country’s most dangerous highways after their guards shot and killed two civilians, the government said Sunday.

The victims were killed accidentally in separate incidents on the road that connects the Afghan capital Kabul to the south — the heartland of the Taliban militants waging a bloody insurgency against the Western-backed government.

Civilian deaths are a highly sensitive issue in Afghanistan and interior ministry spokesman Zemarai Bashary said both companies had also been ordered to pay compensation to the victims’ families.

“The perpetrators of both incidents have been arrested and are being prosecuted,” he told journalists at a press conference in Kabul following the killings, which both occurred in the last two weeks.

“The ministry of interior warns all private security firms to conduct their operations within the boundaries of the law and avoid shooting at people.”

The two firms, Compass and Watan Risk Management, are among 52 private security companies registered to operate in Afghanistan, where security has deteriorated in recent years.

Their clients include NATO and US-led forces, aid agencies and private businesses, which use them to provide armed escorts for convoys travelling on dangerous roads.

Civilian deaths caused by foreign forces fell 28 percent last year, the United Nations has said.

But such incidents continue to undermine efforts to win Afghan hearts and minds and are a source of tension between the Afghan government and foreign forces.

The United States and allies are ordering thousands of extra troops to Afghanistan, where foreign troop numbers are set to peak at 150,000 by August, in a bid to reverse the Taliban insurgency as quickly as possible.

Most of the extra troops will deploy in the southern provinces of Kandahar and Helmand, where the Afghan government said three of its soldiers had been killed over the past 24 hours.

The troops were operating with international forces in the Sangin district of Helmand, the defence ministry said in a statement.

Story here.

Industry Talk: KBR To Get No-Bid Army Work As U.S. Alleges Kickbacks

     “Odierno said, ‘I’ve got three million pieces of equipment I’ve got to get out of Iraq, I’ve got 100 or so bases to close, I’ve got to move 80,000-plus people out of here and you want me to change horses in the middle of the stream?’” Casey recounted.

*****

   Interesting news.  I thought the current administration made a point of limiting the practice of no-bid contracts in this war? Reality sets in I guess…..

   My only thoughts on this whole deal is that the DoD realizes that they actually need KBR for the massive draw down in Iraq, and the build up in Afghanistan.  It is a crucial time period, and it could be costly and time consuming to switch companies during this time period.  The bottom line–the DoD and the administration needs KBR, if they want to be successful in their current strategies. Hell, the numbers and facts speak for themselves and we are more vital than ever before to the current war effort. –Matt

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KBR to Get No-Bid Army Work as U.S. Alleges Kickbacks

May 06, 2010

(Updates with General Casey’s comment in 10th and 11th paragraphs, McCaskill comment in third paragraph from end.)

By Tony Capaccio

May 6 (Bloomberg) — KBR Inc. was selected for a no-bid contract worth as much as $568 million through 2011 for military support services in Iraq, the Army said.

The Army announced its decision yesterday only hours after the Justice Department said it will pursue a lawsuit accusing the Houston-based company of taking kickbacks from two subcontractors on Iraq-related work. The Army also awarded the work to KBR over objections from members of Congress, who have pushed the Pentagon to seek bids for further logistics contracts.

The Justice Department said the government will join a suit filed by whistleblowers alleging that two freight-forwarding firms gave KBR transportation department employees kickbacks in the form of meals, drinks, sports tickets and golf outings.

(more…)

Somalia: Pirates Vs. Islamists–A Dispute Over Business

   Finally some reportage that gave some commonsense analysis on this latest move in Somalia.  Hizbul Islam are attacking pirate havens because they want to control the ports.  Shabab has their ports, and Hizbul Islam wants their ports.  It totally makes business sense, and strategic sense, if they want to capitalize on all the piracy related operations going on out there.

   Now what is interesting to me is how the media sucked into the spin that Hizbul Islam was trying to produce about their latest move.  That somehow what they were doing was righteous and piracy is an anti-islamic business. pffft. Whatever chews your khat. Bravo to Mr. Wadham for calling it like it is and getting the real story out.

   One final point.  We show sorrow and outrage over the tragedy in the Gulf of Mexico with the oil spill disaster there.  So my question is what happens when pirates take a chemical tanker (oops, that just happened) on behalf of an extremist group like al Shabab or Hizbul Islam, and they sink that thing or crash it into some western port? Will we then realize that assigning armed escorts to each boat/floating weapon system out there is something that should be required? Why must we wait for a disaster like this to happen, before we do something about it? –Matt

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Somali Pirates vs. Islamists: A Dispute Over Business

By Nick Wadhams/Nairobi

Friday, May. 07, 2010

Even by the jaded standards of the failed state of Somalia, this week’s news was enough to raise eyebrows: one of the country’s two competing Islamist factions, Hizbul Islam, stormed into the coastal city of Harardhere and drove out the pirates who have run amok in the waters off the Horn of Africa, wreaking havoc on global shipping and confounding the world’s navies.

“Piracy has become too much. It’s an anti-Islamic business, and we won’t accept it,” Hizbul Islam spokesman Sheik Mohamed Ali Abdinasr told TIME. “We want to bring law and order to that country of Somalia, and we want to show the good name of Somalis.”

But what may at first glance appear to be a showdown between two trends that have coexisted in relative peace in Somalia until now — piracy and Islamic radicalism — is actually a cunning power play for resources.

First, a bit of background. One of the best ways to thrive as a Somali businessman is to import just about anything — cars, food or clothing, for example. Very little gets produced in Somalia. And in the absence of central government authority, which collapsed 19 years ago, the best way for any armed group to finance itself is to control one of Somalia’s ports.

The Western-backed Transitional Federal Government gets much of its very limited revenue from the Mogadishu port, one of the few patches of Somali real estate over which it maintains control. Hizbul Islam’s capture of the pirate lair at Harardhere may have been motivated primarily by the fact that it was driven out of the southern port of Kismayo late last year by the al-Qaeda-linked al-Shabab militia. Experts say Hizbul Islam attacked Harardhere because it needed a new port to control.

“They lost their foothold in Kismayo when they fell out with Shabab,” says Roger Middleton, a piracy expert at the London-based Chatham House think tank. “Moving to Harardhere seems to me like a move to find some territory that they can control and to have a port in order to try to make some money.”

(more…)

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Jobs: Security Guard Force -Site Manager, OCONUS

   This is a good move on TigerSwan’s part, if they plan on expanding in the future.  I hope to see more shooter related jobs come out of this company as well.  Anyway, definitely sign up with their Talent Network and get on board.

   As a disclosure, I do not work for these folks so I really can’t give a full endorsement. Here is a training video that they put out, and this will give you a good intro to the training side of the company.  I am not the POC or recruiter either, so follow the links below to sign up. Good luck. –Matt

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TigerSwan Talent Network

Employment Opportunities with TSI

 Join our Talent Network and be the first to know about future opportunities at TigerSwan

  You will be considered for our Current AND Future Jobs & Opportunities

No Need to Apply multiple times with us

Your Skills, Experience, Preferences AND Personality are matched to our positions

Receive email Alerts when there is a new job or opportunity that matches your Profile

You can search jobs & opportunities, express interest, and even leave us comments

 As we continue to expand our services to the US Government and other clients, we are looking for top notch professionals with expertise in a variety of fields who are interested in becoming part of the TigerSwan team.TigerSwan is an equal opportunity employer. Applicants receive consideration without regard to race, age, ethnicity, religion, gender, national origin, disability or any other basis prohibited by law. TigerSwan is a service disabled veteran owned small business and is accepting applications for the following positions:

Security Guard Force -Site Manager

Job Description

·Reports to the In-Country Program Manager

·Manage a large Third Country National (TCN) guard force

·Responsible for overall task order performance

·Makes and carries out management decisions, with regards to in-scope task order performance requirements

·Ensures guard force are familiar with and understand directives from the US Military, Rules of Force and Rules of Engagement

(more…)

Friday, May 7, 2010

PMC 2.0: If You Have A Company Website, You Should Have RSS For News And Jobs

Filed under: Industry Talk,PMC 2.0 — Matt @ 2:11 AM

Today I wanted to do a quick little post on something that caught my eye. Something that one of the companies did out there that makes sense and is PMC 2.0 worthy. EODT has just souped up their website by putting an RSS button for their company news. This simple act, has now allowed guys like me to put their company directly into my Google Reader (RSS reader) and stay up to date easily about what is going on with them.

Why is that a good thing? Well bloggers, journalists, etc. all have time constraints, and they all do things to save time in their research. There is such a massive amount of information out there, that any tools used to make that search easier is great. Most of my time spent blogging, is actually just reading and going through all that information out there. In order to process all of that stuff, I use tools to make it easy to pick out the good stuff. I use alerts from Google Search, group pages, newsletters sent by companies, forums, and most importantly, RSS readers like Google’s RSS reader.

So with that said, if you have a website for your company and you post news or jobs through that website, it would be highly advisable to set up RSS for your news and jobs. It will make your company more accessible to guys like me, and it will also make your company more accessible and utilitarian to potential customers.

This will also help out those in the industry that are looking for work or looking for information about your company. That might catch them just in time before they submit a resume somewhere else. It also helps your employees as another way for them to keep up to date on news and jobs.

If you are constantly sending out news through your feeds, you will actually create a readership for your company too. But that is only if you make it easy to get that news, and your content is actually good. If you have a blog for your company, that should have RSS as well. The newsletter works to, but RSS feeds that post news as it happens is better.

Forum owners would be wise to set up RSS as well. There are threads that bloggers and journalists like to follow, that are filled with vital information about a subject they are researching. By making it easy to follow a thread, you might see an increase of traffic to your forum, because now you have folks who will instantly jump to that thread when something pops up.

RSS is a great feature to have on your website, and I recommend that companies follow EODT’s lead and get up to speed. This is also nothing new and to me, companies that are not doing simple things like this, are behind the times. –Matt

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RSS (most commonly expanded as Really Simple Syndication) is a family of web feed formats used to publish frequently updated works—such as blog entries, news headlines, audio, and video—in a standardized format. An RSS document (which is called a “feed”, “web feed”, or “channel”) includes full or summarized text, plus metadata such as publishing dates and authorship. Web feeds benefit publishers by letting them syndicate content automatically. They benefit readers who want to subscribe to timely updates from favored websites or to aggregate feeds from many sites into one place. RSS feeds can be read using software called an “RSS reader”, “feed reader”, or “aggregator”, which can be web-based, desktop-based, or mobile-device-based. A standardized XML file format allows the information to be published once and viewed by many different programs. The user subscribes to a feed by entering into the reader the feed’s URI or by clicking an RSS icon in a web browser that initiates the subscription process. The RSS reader checks the user’s subscribed feeds regularly for new work, downloads any updates that it finds, and provides a user interface to monitor and read the feeds.

RSS formats are specified using XML, a generic specification for the creation of data formats. Although RSS formats have evolved from as early as March 1999, it was between 2005 and 2006 when RSS gained widespread use, and the icon was decided upon by several major Web browsers.

Wikipedia for RSS here.

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