Feral Jundi

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Iraq: The Falcon Club– Paragliding Over Mosul!

Filed under: Funny Stuff,Iraq,Parachuting — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 7:51 AM

     This looks fun, but what really makes this unique is that this is a paragliding club in Mosul.  I guess you could call this sport, ‘combat paragliding’. lol Either way, I think this is great and I certainly hope this catches on and becomes a popular sport there. –Matt

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Mosul Paragliders

Holly Pickett for The New York Times Ziad Abdulsattar lifts his feet when taking off with a parachute with Falcon Club near Mosul.

Paragliding Over Mosul – Because Iraq Just Isn’t Dangerous Enough Already

By TIMOTHY WILLIAMS AND ZAID THAKER

July 1, 2010

Holly Pickett for The New York Times Members of the Falcon Club paragliding near Mosul.

MOSUL, Iraq – The risk-averse will tell you that it takes a special sort of foolishness to jump from a mountain with just a paraglider strapped to your back.

So what, then, does that make the members of the Falcon Club, an Iraqi group of daredevils who sail through the air above Mosul, which is perhaps Iraq’s most dangerous city?

Holly Pickett for The New York Times Ahmed Assad prepares his parachute before paragliding with the group.

As if flying flimsy contraptions in a war zone was not enough, the Falcon Club faces the added danger of having been a favorite of Saddam Hussein – whose former friends and allies continue to be hunted down by Shiite militias and others.

Indeed, their recklessness leaves even the club’s members seeking a reasonable explanation.

“Flying is like a disease,” said Saba Yasin Fathi, 43, the club’s leader and a former Iraqi air force pilot who lost his left pinky finger to a propeller last year. “You do it once, you want to do it again and again.”

So the Falcon Club endures the suspicions of Iraqi soldiers at Mosul’s innumerable checkpoints who have never heard of a paraglider, have never seen a hot air balloon outside of an American movie and who believe — reasonably — that Iraq is dangerous enough without courting death.

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Sunday, July 4, 2010

Cool Stuff: Get Kony, By Ian Urbina

     This is an outstanding article and Sam here is quite the guy. I certainly hope he can find and kill Joseph Kony, and save as many children as he can over there.  What is really cool is I guess Hollywood digs his story too and they will be making a movie about him. Thanks to Jason for sending me this. –Matt

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“I found God in 1992,” says Sam Childers. “I found Satan in 1998.” The reference is to Joseph Kony, leader of the outlaw Lord’s Resistance Army. Photograph by Jonathan Becker.

Get Kony

By Ian Urbina

April 27, 2010

The Lord’s Resistance Army—a murderous rebel group made up mostly of Ugandans, and led by a crazed warlord named Joseph Kony—today ranges across the jungles and scrubland of Uganda, Congo, Sudan, and the Central African Republic. Its ranks may be depleted, but the remnant deals death wherever it goes. U.S.-backed military forces are trying to hunt Kony down. So is a Pennsylvania-based evangelical preacher named Sam Childers—a biker and former drug dealer who has found his calling in this quest for a killer. Last year the author joined Childers as he continued his hunt for Kony. It is a story of pursuer and pursued, each believing that God is on his side.

It’s two a.m., and we’re barreling down a deeply pocked dirt road in Southern Sudan. In the cool of night, the temperature is nearly 100 degrees. Sam Childers, 46, is behind the wheel of a chrome-tinted Mitsubishi truck. Christian rock blares on the speakers. He has a Bible on the dash and a shotgun that he calls his “widow-maker” leaning against his left knee. His top sergeant, Santino Deng, 34, a Dinka tribesman with an anthracite complexion and radiant black eyes, sits in the passenger seat, an AK-47 across his lap. I sit in the back. Since leaving the town of Mundri, headed toward the Congolese border, we’ve been driving for two bone-jarring days on roads littered with the charred wrecks of armored vehicles and fuel tankers, remnants of battles past. A truck follows close behind, carrying 15 men from the small militia group under Childers’s personal command. The convoy is on its way to a Sudanese town called Maridi. In the area we’re passing through, just hours ago soldiers from the Lord’s Resistance Army (L.R.A.) hacked 15 villagers to death with machetes, then disappeared into the bush. Intelligence sources from the Sudan People’s Liberation Army—the ragtag military wing of the breakaway government of Southern Sudan—have indicated that elements of the L.R.A. are now headed to Maridi. Childers wants to intercept them, and kill their leader.

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Afghanistan: Petraeus Calls For Unity Of Effort

     This is significant, because this speech sets the pace and tone of the new management in Afghanistan.  This is an excellent first step, and I absolutely agree that unity of effort is the one thing we should be able to control, before we press forward.  That means everyone comes together and rallies around the strategy and goals, and insures their efforts do not negatively impact the overall effort. Unity of effort is vital to success in war.

     What is interesting though, is that Petraeus is making great pains to create this revitalized unity of effort in Afghanistan amongst all the top civilian and military leadership, but he is also missing a huge group that must also be brought under this umbrella of ‘unity of effort’. That group is contractors….all 110,000 plus contractors working in Afghanistan.

     So the next question with that, is how do you reach all of these contractors, and how do you insure they all are focused on unity of effort? What contractor general or CEO would you talk with, to get something like this done?  That is a good question, and because there is a lack of centralized authority or organized labor for this gaggle of civilian workers, all Petraeus really can do is get the word out on how each and every one of us can contribute to this ‘unity of effort’. He can can also make sure that contracts that are signed have language that pushes along a company towards this unity of effort, and he could also personally talk with the CEO’s of companies and insure they are on the same sheet of music.

     Those are just some ideas, but I do know one thing.  If he does nothing about contractors, then how could he or anyone expect any kind of synergy or synchronicity?  How could expect any kind of harmony with operations or interactions with one another? In other words, you cannot treat us like the elephant in the room that no one wants to talk about. If Petraeus wants to be the great unifier, contractors are a group he must bring under the tent. –Matt

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Petraeus Calls for United Effort to Win Afghan War

Ayaz Gul

3 July 2010

New U.S. commander of the international military mission in Afghanistan, General David Petraeus, has called for united efforts to solve the problems of the war-ravaged country. The U.S. general made his first public comments a day after arriving in Kabul to take command of the 140,000 American and NATO forces.General David Petraeus has arrived in Afghanistan to lead the international forces at a time of rising Taliban insurgency. The month of June was the deadliest for the U.S.-led coalition since the Afghan war began nearly nine years ago.Addressing hundreds of local and foreign guests gathered at the U.S. Embassy to mark America’s Independence Day, General Petraeus underlined the need for unity to deal with the challenges in Afghanistan.”This is an effort in which we must achieve unity of effort and common purpose, civilian and military, Afghan and international, we are part of one team with one mission,” he said. (more…)

Legal News: Bill Shaw Has Been Acquitted!!!

     This is fantastic news and Bill can now call this his ‘independence day’.  Excellent work by everyone in bringing attention to this as well. It was so cool to see the media attention, or guys like Michael Yon just hammering away on getting this story out there. I was very impressed to see all the letters and commentary at the British Embassy in Kabul Facebook Page by friends and supporters of Bill, and every little bit counts. So thanks to everyone for getting the word out and helping out a contractor who was wronged. –Matt

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Cleared Briton Bill Shaw describes Afghan ‘living hell’

Sunday, 4 July 2010

Bill Shaw said he felt “absolutely elated” but the last few months had been “living hell”

A British man acquitted of bribery by an Afghan appeal court has described time in prison as “a living hell”.

Bill Shaw, a 52-year-old former Army officer from Leeds, was found guilty of bribing officials in March.

At the time, he was manager of a security firm providing protection to foreigners. He said he thought he paid a legitimate fine.

Mr Shaw told the BBC he was looking forward to “proper freedom”. His family said they were “absolutely elated”.

The appeal court cited lack of evidence as the reason for dropping the charges.

At his trial at Afghanistan’s newly-established anti-corruption court in March, Mr Shaw admitted paying for the release of two impounded vehicles but insisted he thought it was a fine.

We’ve been sure of dad’s innocence all along and we are truly grateful to the appeal court for its decision

Lisa Lucklyn-Malone Bill Shaw’s daughter

He was jailed for two years and fined £16,185.

Afghan officials who took the money have since disappeared.

Mr Shaw, who served for 28 years in the British army and was awarded the MBE for his service, was held in Kabul’s Pul-e-Charkhi prison, alongside inmates from the Taliban and al-Qaeda.

He told the BBC he was “very, very excited” he had been cleared, but the last four months had been “in all honesty, a living hell”.

“I never thought, as an honest person with integrity, that I’d be put in this position.

“That’s why I never ran away in the first place, even though advised to. But I didn’t because I stood, and I’ve got principles.

“And I’m just looking forward now to proper freedom now and taking these chains off,” he said.

Mr Shaw’s daughter Lisa Lucklyn-Malone, who lives in Kent, said the family was “over the moon” and her father “deserved” to be released.

“He called from the court room, choking back emotion, he was finding it hard to speak, but said ‘I’m coming home, I’m free, it’s brilliant’.

“We’ve been sure of dad’s innocence all along and we are truly grateful to the appeal court for its decision,” she said.

She went on to thank people “all over the world” for their “incredible support”.

She said her father had lost a lot of weight, and was physcially and mentally drained, but the news would have “picked him up 100%”.

‘Positively medieval”

The BBC’s Quentin Sommerville in Kabul, said Mr Shaw told him it was “unbelievable”.

“He’s clearly in shock, he didn’t really know whether these charges were going to be dropped against him or whether the appeal would be successful,” he said.

Our correspondent said Mr Shaw was likely to be released within a week.

But he added the “positively medieval” and “very dangerous” prison that Mr Shaw had been held in had taken its toll.

A Foreign Office spokeswoman said she was “pleased” for Mr Shaw and his family and consular staff were liaising with officials in Kabul to determine a date for his return to the UK.

“We welcome the appeal court’s decision which is now subject to finalisation in the Supreme Court.

“The UK continues to strongly support the work of the Afghan government to counter corruption and reinforce the rule of law in Afghanistan,” she said.

At the appeal ruling, Mr Shaw’s co-defendant, Afghan bodyguard and translator Maiwand Limar, had his sentence downgraded from two years to eight months.

Story here.

Saturday, July 3, 2010

Afghanistan: The Heroes Of Edinburgh International Defend D.A.I/U.S.A.I.D In Kunduz, 6 Taliban Killed!

      “The actions taken by the EI security staff in defense of the compound and project staff were nothing short of heroic,” said DAI President and CEO James Boomgard. “We are deeply grateful for their bravery, and for the work they do day in, day out, to make our development mission possible. Our hearts go out to the families of the deceased at this terrible hour.”

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     Rest in peace to the fallen heroes of Edinburgh International.  You defended your client and paid the ultimate price in the process. USAID and the companies involved in this should award these fallen heroes with medals of valor, because if these were soldiers in any army, they certainly would have been recognized for these actions.

     The interesting thing here is the attack shows a definite pattern.  Suicide assaulters blasting the entry point and swarming the target, looking for opportunities of attack as they penetrate deeper. I would also be curious if they were wearing body armor under their suicide vests or if they were wearing ANA or ANP uniform? Regardless, the defense that the EI guys had in place, was able to protect what was important and kill all six suicide assaulters. I would be interested in reading the AAR for this and hopefully any lessons learned is getting out to other learning organizations/guard forces throughout Afghanistan. –Matt

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Kunduz

Firefighters try to put out a fire in a building which was attacked by Taliban insurgents in Kunduz  Photo: REUTERS   

DAI Project Office Attacked in Afghanistan, Four People Killed

July 2, 2010

DAI is today mourning the loss of four staff following an early morning attack on our Local Governance and Community Development (LGCD) Program office in Kunduz, Afghanistan. All four of those killed worked for our security subcontractor, Edinburgh International (EI).

“The actions taken by the EI security staff in defense of the compound and project staff were nothing short of heroic,” said DAI President and CEO James Boomgard. “We are deeply grateful for their bravery, and for the work they do day in, day out, to make our development mission possible. Our hearts go out to the families of the deceased at this terrible hour.”

One British, one German, and two Afghan nationals were killed in the incident, and several more EI staff were injured. Two DAI staff were injured but all are safe and receiving medical care under the auspices of the Provincial Reconstruction Team.

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