‘Modern SWAT’ by LMS Defense- The Comics. Artwork by Righteous Duke. Recently showcased on Wired’s Danger Room blog here.
‘Modern SWAT’ by LMS Defense- The Comics. Artwork by Righteous Duke. Recently showcased on Wired’s Danger Room blog here.
The thing to focus on with this gig is that you must be SSO trained, and medical/ SIA certified. This is a UK company and unless you have these kinds of credentials, I wouldn’t even bother submitting a resume. But, they do offer the courses for SSO, SIA, and probably medical as well. (go figure, lol) Which is cool, and you could knock out a bunch of really necessary courses through this company, if you wanted to get into the maritime security industry. That is not to say that you will get a job with EOS, if you go to their courses, but it will definitely make you more marketable.
I am not the point of contact or recruiter and go through EOS if you want to apply or learn more about their contracts (current and upcoming). Also, I am not endorsing the company and I am only putting the information out there for those readers who qualify and are interested in this stuff. Good luck and let me know how it goes. –Matt
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Opportunities
Maritime Security Trainer
Experienced trainer for delivery of Ship Security Officer, Company Security Officer and Port Facility Security Officer courses (approved by the UK Maritime and Coastguard Agency and Transec – Dept of Transport)required for occassional short term training contracts in both the UK and Overseas.
Ship Security Officers – Medic Trained
Medic qualified Ship Security Officer (SSO) required for inclusion in 4 man counter piracy team. Must be SSO qualified and have demonstratable experience in maritime security.
Applying
If you believe you have the qualities required to work for Eos Risk Management Limited please email your CV to recruitment@eosrisk.com in a format which includes the following information:
• A brief personal profile
• Chronological career history – with most recent employment first
• Education, qualifications and languages
• Copy of SIA license (if relevant)
• Passport photograph (preferred)
By sending in your information you will allow Eos to maintain your details on a database, which shall be used by the Company for recruitment purposes. All information maintained shall be done in strict accordance to the Data Protection Act 1998. Please specify when you send your CV if you do not want your details kept on our database.
Link to website here.
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From Close Protection World Forum
Eos Risk Management Ltd is looking to compile a cadre of experienced maritime security team leaders, operatives & consultants for potential up coming contracts.
We anticipate a number of contracts to be completed in the near future. However, nothing is definite at this stage and we do not wish to mislead anyone into thinking you will be flying out tomorrow!
Please contact us ONLY if you fulfil the following criteria:
Essential:
1) SSO or CSO trained by Eos Risk Management
2) Operational experience within MARITIME security
3) CP SIA license
4) Previous military and/or law enforcement experience
5) Current or near future availability
I did not make this poster below, but I thought it was worthy of Feral Jundi. There are tons of awesome drawings and posters that folks put up over at the Facebook group, and I am sure they are busy just processing all of them. This little Facebook group is also pissing off all the right people and bravo to the creators. And hey, I think every day should be Draw Muhammad Day just so these dorks get the message. lol –Matt
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Pakistan blocks YouTube, Facebook
By Sami Zubeiri
May 20,2010
ISLAMABAD — Pakistan on Thursday condemned caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed that appeared on Facebook, blocking access to the networking site and YouTube in a growing backlash over Internet “sacrilege.”
Students and Islamist activists protested against the drawings and denounced the West in an expression of outrage that sparked comparisons with riots across the Muslim world in 2006 over drawings published in European newspapers.
The caricatures appeared on Facebook after a private user asked people to submit drawings of the Prophet Mohammed in an online competition that sparked fury in conservative Muslim Pakistan.
“We strongly condemn the publication of blasphemous caricatures of our holy Prophet on Facebook,” foreign ministry spokesman Abdul Basit told reporters in the capital Islamabad.
Rest in peace to Daniel Saville, David Taylor, and Chris Carter and my heart goes out to the families and friends. Yet again, where is the recognition for the deaths of these men? I have no idea what company these guys were working for, but at the very least that company should be demanding that their contractors be recognized and counted for paying the ultimate sacrifice. To pay your respects, there is a thread on the subject over at SOCNET here.-Matt
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Three Britons named in Afghan plane crash blamed on bad weather
David Brown
May 18, 2010
Three Britons were among 44 people feared dead after an Afghan passenger plane crashed in mountains 60 miles north of the capital Kabul yesterday.
The missing men are Daniel Saville from Manchester, David Taylor from Staffordshire and Chris Carter, whose address is not known. They are all believed to be security contractors.
Poor weather has hampered efforts to locate the Pamir Airways flight from the northern city of Kunduz. There was no immediate word on casualties.
By nightfall rescuers were still struggling to reach the area, in snow-capped mountains near the 12,700 foot Salang Pass, a major route through the Hindu Kush mountains that connects the capital to the north.
Paul Norris, a spokesman at the British embassy in Kabul, said: “The plane is currently technically ‘missing’ as the crash site hasn’t yet been found. But we can confirm that three British nationals were on board.” The State Department said a US citizen was also among the missing.
The plane left Kunduz shortly after 8.30am. The Antonov An-24 is a 60-year-old medium range twin-turbo prop civil aircraft built in the former Soviet Union from 1950 to 1978.
Yama Ariaye, of Pamir Airways, said: “We don’t have any news but the weather was a problem. It was quite cloudy at the time.”
Insurgents have fired rockets at the base in the past, but the assault was “not something that commonly happens quite in this way,” said Army Master Sgt. Tom Clementson, a U.S. military spokesman at Bagram.
“That’s a dog chasing a school bus. You don’t attack Bagram with 20 guys,” one U.S. official said. “Either they’re crazy or brave or both.”
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I haven’t a clue as to who the contractor is, and if they were part of the guard force or not. If a reader can fill in the details on this, if it is appropriate, feel free to do so in the comments. Rest in peace to the fallen.
Now on to this attack. I tried to get as many articles as I could, to piece together how the attack went down. The reason for this, is there might be some clues that guys can pick up on for the defense of their positions in other parts of the war. These ever evolving tactics and strategies of the enemy are used in both Iraq and Afghanistan, and contractors as well as the military are in static security positions all over. So understanding the dynamic of these types of attacks is essential for the defense of outposts and FOBs everywhere.
Last week I posted a deal on suicide assaulters and the swarming attack that the Taliban and extremists have been using, and they are really playing around with the concepts to find a sweet spot for complex assaults. I wanted to get the mental juices flowing on this, so everyone is thinking about how best to defeat this in their AO.
The other point I want to emphasize is that the attackers were supposedly dressed like NATO or US troops. That isn’t confirmed yet according to the article, but that is a crucial element to this whole thing. The enemy is famous for using Afghan police or army uniforms as cover, and if this latest deal would not surprise me if they were wearing our uniforms.
Overall though, it sounds like the defense at Bagram was able to defeat these bumbling fools, and bravo to them for a job well done. And with attacks like this, the defense will only learn more about how to do it better, and further implement SOP’s that are effective and successful at defeating this stuff. Attacks like this also emphasize how important it is to be constantly vigilant and focused with your job. If you let your guard down, the enemy will definitely teach you a deadly lesson.
It also emphasizes the point of why you do not want the lowest bidder defending these bases out there. You want the best value company defending a base, just like you would want the best doctor looking out for your health.
One last thing with this. I am completely disgusted with the accountability the government promised when it comes to keeping track of contractor deaths. Even the current accounting measures with icasualties or Wikipedia sucks, and they have done a terrible job in keeping up or listing everyone that has been killed. Why is it so hard for the government to keep track of the who, what, where, when, and why’s of contractor deaths or injuries? That information should be collected(and mandated by law), and it should be available to the public to read. It is also extremely disrespectful to that fallen contractor and their family to not recognize their death.
It also bothers me that we do not recognize the deaths of local contractors, like in Afghanistan or Iraq. They died transporting our food or fuel, interpreting our language to other locals, working on our bases, protecting outposts, and to not recognize their sacrifice is just wrong. I know other contractors feel the same, because all of us that have been in this business for awhile have lost local national friends/contractors out there, and their deaths should be counted. Hell, guys have trusted the lives with local national contractors at outposts, or fought side by side with them in combat. To not recognize their sacrifice is wrong…… just plain wrong. –Matt
Edit: 5/22/2010 -The name of the fallen contractor is Bryan Farr. Ms. Sparky has more on her blog about him here.
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U.S. contractor killed, 9 soldiers wounded in Taliban attack on Bagram air base
By Joshua PartlowMay 20, 2010
KANDAHAR, AFGHANISTAN — The Taliban’s brazen assault against the heavily fortified, city-size Bagram air base Wednesday demonstrated again the insurgents’ penchant for headline-grabbing strikes at the most potent symbols of foreign power in Afghanistan.
The attack before dawn, with gunfire, rockets and grenades, killed one U.S. contractor and wounded nine American soldiers. The U.S. soldiers at the base responded by killing 10 insurgents, including four wearing suicide vests.
It was the second ambitious attack in as many days, and possibly a demonstration of the new offensive the Taliban promised this month. As the U.S. military sends thousands of new troops to the southern city of Kandahar, the Taliban vowed to respond by targeting Afghan officials, contractors and NATO forces.
On Tuesday, a suicide car bomber targeted a U.S. convoy in Kabul, killing five U.S. troops, a Canadian and at least a dozen Afghan civilians. The attack, coupled with the death of two American troops in separate bombings, pushed the U.S. death toll past 1,000 for the nine-year Afghan war.
The attack at Bagram involved 20 to 30 insurgents and began before 4 a.m., U.S. military officials said. None of them breached the perimeter, but gun battles continued for several hours.
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