Feral Jundi

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Chile: Looting Sparks Security Concerns In Post-Quake Chile

   No word if any companies will be responding to this disaster. I will assume that Chile has all the security forces it needs with it’s police and military, but you never know.  We will keep a look out for anything that pops up.

   Luckily, Chile’s buildings were better built than what was in Haiti, and that is good.  I am sure they would have had way more deaths if they weren’t. My heart goes out to the victims of this earthquake, and I hope they are able to respond fast enough to save everyone. –Matt

Edit: 3/6/2010 – Thanks to Rosa for sending me this link on an interesting site that compiles all the available news video footage on the event, and does some analysis based on that compilation.  Check it out here.

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Looting Sparks Security Concerns in Post-Quake Chile

Michelle Ruiz

March 1, 2010

Rescuers searched for survivors in the rubble-strewn streets of Chile today as widespread looting sparked security concerns following the earthquake that has killed more than 700 people and displaced more than 2 million. Three more aftershocks hit the country this morning, according to a published report.

“The catastrophe is enormous,” President Michelle Bachelet said at a news conference Sunday, adding that her declared “state of catastrophe” would continue as the Chilean military maintains order in the streets and the air force flies basic supplies to the hardest-hit regions.

“We are confronting an emergency without parallel in Chile’s history,” she said.

In the heavily damaged city of Concepcion, looters descended on supermarkets and electronic stores and police fought them

with tear gas and water cannons.

Firefighters in Concepcion who were ready to lower a rescue worker into the rubble were halted when the scent of tear gas forced them to stop.

“It’s sad, but because of the situation you have to confront the robberies and at the same time continue the search,” police officer Jorge Guerra told The Associated Press.

Bachelet gave the military control of security in the area, where nearly every market had been emptied and no food or drinking water was available, according to the AP. Power outages kept the city in the dark.

“We are overwhelmed,” a police officer told the AP.

Looters reportedly cleared the contents of a shopping mall in San Pedro, even robbing ATM machines and siphoning gas from underground tanks.

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Mobile Apps: Army Launches Software Application Development Challenge “Apps For The Army”

   Ok military guys and gals who are ‘avid readers’ of Feral Jundi, now is your chance. If you want to win a portion of that $30,000 prize, then you would be foolish not to submit Feral Jundi as a mobile app for this contest. lol  Just kidding.  But hey, if this blog counts as news about contractors (which is important to the military), then FJ would be a cool app to have on these new military smart phones they plan on distributing.

   Either way, FJ is already set up as a mobile app, complete with a cool little button avatar. Although I refuse to pay for the thing to be submitted to iTunes Store.  At least not yet.

   The most important part of this article though, is the idea that some of these apps that the contest produces might be Blackberry/Android/iPhone compatible.  That would be cool, and I can’t wait to see what the contest produces.  I am sure some of the stuff they make will have PMC 2.0 utility as well. –Matt

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smart phone on a weapon

Army Launches Software Application Development Challenge “Apps for the Army”

March 1st, 2010

The Pentagon, Arlington, VA  – Today the Army announced its first internal applications development challenge, dubbed Apps for the Army or A4A.  Open to all Soldiers and Department of the Army civilians, A4A offers Army personnel the opportunity to demonstrate their software development skills and creativity.  In return, the Army hopes to improve its current capabilities or to add new ones – all through the ingenuity of its people.

“We’re building a culture of collaboration among our Army community to encourage smarter, better and faster technical solutions to meet operational needs,” said Army Chief Information Officer/G-6 Lt. Gen. Jeff Sorenson.

“Soldiers and Army civilians will be creating new mobile and web applications of value for their peers—tools that enhance warfighting effectiveness and business productivity today,” Sorenson said.  “And, we’re rewarding their innovation with recognition and cash.”

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Maritime Security: Arming The Vessel’s Crew Vs. Armed Security Professionals

   Finally, someone is starting to talk some sense when it comes to this stuff.  I commend the Captain for giving an honest assessment and presenting a voice of reason.  If you are in the maritime security business, this is the kind of stuff that should be required reading. It will give you the necessary market intelligence about what your customers are dealing with, and how you can modify your services to meet their demands.

   It sounds to me like vetting crew members on these boats is lacking.  One idea for companies, is to provide some basic vetting of not only their security team, but the ship’s crew, as part of a total security package.  From the sounds of it, this is a major concern on these boats, and the ship’s captain is constantly given a crew that is not properly vetted. (that gives us incite into how little these shipping companies care I guess) I really feel bad for them when it comes to the non-US vessels, because it sounds like vetting is non-existent.

   The other thing I picked up on is the maritime security company mentioned called Lakonian International.  I did a quick Google search, and low and behold that company is an affiliate of NEK.  Which is interesting, because NEK has been advertising for awhile for maritime security specialists, and I guess now they are setting up a separate company to deal with that market entirely.  That, and the author singled them out specifically. Get your resumes into NEK so you can get in on a chance to wear one of those cool Lakonian International t-shirts. lol –Matt

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 Lakonian International

Arming the Vessel’s Crew vs. Armed Security Professionals

By Captain Jim Staples

02/19/2010

    A common question asked by the general public in the United States following the Maersk Alabama incident has been, “Do you have guns onboard the ship to protect yourselves?” This question is a good one and the reason sound; however, the reality of shipboard operations, crew nationalities and religious beliefs make it a complicated solution globally.By looking onboard U.S. vessels, we find that crew turnover and how a crew member finds employment present some of the difficulties that go along with arming a crew. The employment of a U.S. crewmember begins at a hiring hall. The seaman puts in a shipping card once a job has been posted on the bulletin board. Who gets the job depends on a few variables.        The candidate must first be qualified to take that position. He must have his STCW for the rating he intends to sail in. He must be drug free and competent according to USCG regulations. To receive his documents, the seaman must have had a background check which is completed by the USCG when he applies for or renews his documents. A background check is done every renewal period at five year intervals. Background checks on American seaman are comprehensive and extensive. Generally most seamen have a clean record and receive their documents with no problem at all. Nothing is perfect and this is true with the American Merchant Seaman who has been checked out by the USCG and FBI It has been found that some seaman have extensive criminal backgrounds and never should have been allowed onboard American vessels never mind foreign vessels. Yet they seem to find their way onboard and become part of the crew. This does not happen often, but it does happen.

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Monday, March 1, 2010

Paracargo: Army Testing New Airdrop System For Afghanistan

     Boy, I don’t know about this one.  Dropping paracargo without a chute, is the holy grail I guess, but in practice, there are a ton of issues.  If an aircraft has to drop low and slow, then now they are a prime target for an enterprising enemy.  How many aircraft will have to be shot down, before this ‘chute-less’ system becomes a failure is my question?

     The other point I want to make, is that if there is a need for more paracargo operations in Afghanistan, then a quick fix to get more folks over there, is for Dept. of Homeland Security to detail out the smokejumper units during the off season.  You have pilots, spotters (kickers), and tons of smokejumpers who all specialize in paracargo operations, who have nothing to do during the winters.  They could be called upon for disaster relief or the war effort, and they are all federal assets.  Or if companies wanted to tap into that resource, they could easily spread the word throughout the various lofts of smokejumper bases, and say they are looking for folks who specialize in small bundle paracargo operations.

     I think it is also pretty funny that the Army or whomever came up with this LCLA concept, and thinks that it is new or revolutionary. I have news for you folks, Low Cost Low Altitude paracargo operations is nothing new and the military, NGO’s, and smokejumpers have been performing such operations for a long time.

     At least with the smokejumpers, we actually make a point of retrieving, repairing, and reusing those cheap parachutes that the military is currently just throwing away.  But I guess if you guys are going to throw away paracargo chutes, then at least make the cheapest chutes possible.  In my experience, just a square piece of canopy with four lines made out of tubular webbing attached to it, worked pretty good.  Or you can take all of those old parachutes that the Army and Marines threw out, and convert them into usable paracargo chutes.  I know there are warehouses filled with that stuff, and it wouldn’t take much to get the machine of industry to modify all of that stuff for the war effort.  That is the kind of Low Cost paracargo operations that I am talking about. –Matt

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Army Testing New Airdrop System for Afghanistan

By USArmy

February 25, 2010

WASHINGTON: The supply requirement in Afghanistan will dramatically increase this year according to the Army’s top logistician, and he said the Army is testing a new airdrop system to help meet the demand.

Speaking at an Association of the U.S. Army Land Warfare Institute breakfast series Feb. 19, Lt. Gen. Mitchell H. Stevenson, Army G-4, told the attendees that he hopes the new delivery system will be ready for deployment to Afghanistan by the end of summer.

The Army Freedrop Packaging Concept Project is currently developing and testing a new airdrop system called the Freedrop Delivery System forAfghanistan.

The new system will allow bundles of supplies such as ammunition, small generators and other Class IX repair parts, Meals Ready to Eat, and bottled water of up to 150 pounds to be freedropped (no parachutes) at about 70 knots airspeed from under 75 feet above ground level at the current 19Afghanistan outposts which can only receive supplies by air.

“The idea here was to develop a package that you just kick out the side of a helicopter or airplane when you’re flying very low… 50 feet above ground,” Stevenson said. “You eliminate the problem of packing, rigging the chute and of course doing any kind of recovery operation.”

The freedrop system is currently being developed and tested by the Army G-4’s Logistics Innovation Agency and involves a number of key stakeholders, to include operational partners in the 82nd Airborne Division at Fort Bragg, N.C.

The Army already uses four airdrop systems in Afghanistan. Getting supplies to Soldiers there is tough because the country has no seaport and relies on two main land routes so “airdrop has become big business” said the Army’s chief logistician.

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Afghanistan: Marjah Update–The Afghans Are ‘Trash Talking’ Their Way To Victory

   I love stories like this.  I can just picture these guys all grouped together and listening to the radio, and planning their comebacks.  They probably have guys in these groups who pull up the ‘yo momma’ jokes, or some crude reference to ‘relationships with camels’. lol

   So my take on this, is why are we not helping these guys out with trash talk strategy?  In the US, we have some outstanding trash talking comedians or athletes that could certainly advise the Afghan army.  Think about it?  A perfectly crafted comeback or slam, could easily infuriate the opposition to the point of doing something that would compromise their position or force them to do something stupid.  I posted a similar story awhile back of US troops trash talking the Taliban in order to get them out for the fight.  It worked, and if I were these Afghans, and the Coalition forces working with them, I would take advantage of that weakness to no end.  Hell, get creative and infuriate them with the kind of trash talking that only Muhammad Ali or Mike Tyson would be proud of .  If the Taliban is that easily goaded, then by all means that weakness should be exploited. –Matt

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Trash Talking the Taliban During Firefights

By MIGUEL MARQUEZ

MARJA, Afghanistan, Feb. 25, 2010

It’s a remarkable combination of psychological warfare, political roundtable and trash-talking. Afghan soldiers and Taliban fighters taunt each other, debate each other and try to persuade each other almost daily over their radios, at times while even shooting at each other.

I came across the astonishing facet of the Afghan War while spending time with the 302nd kandak, or battalion, of the Afghan National Army. The foes chatter with each other over their Vietnam-era, two-way radio system. It’s such an antiquated system that the Taliban and the Afghan forces share radio frequencies, and verbal barbs, as they try to kill or capture one another.

I asked Maj. Said Rahim Hakmal what they talk about. Politics, he said. “The Taliban will say things like why do you side with the Americans? Why do you sell out your country? You love Obama more than Afghanistan.”

Hakmal said the standard response goes something like, “The Americans are here to help our country function again. They don’t want to stay. They want to help, then leave. You should help, too.”

Then the shooting starts.

To the Taliban, religion is politics and they are willing to die for their way of life. At least half the Afghan Army’s and its government’s job here is to sell the Talibs on the notion that they can have their religion, they just have to keep the politics separate. Easier said than done when it comes to fundamental beliefs about the nature of being and whom the almighty favors.

The Taliban and their politics aside, there are other questions Afghans have for America. While they do appear to trust that America has no interest in colonizing Afghanistan, they wonder about our true motives. Their No. 1 concern, maybe fear: Pakistan. They are desperate to know what America is really up to with their needed yet distrusted neighbor. Who does America support in Pakistan and why? Why doesn’t America, with all its power, just kill all the “terrorists” in Pakistan? For many Afghans, all their problems, and conspiracies, are rooted and imported from Pakistan.

Everybody Has an Opinion

Pro-government Afghans have a harder time wrestling with their beliefs than the Taliban. They have to simultaneously believe that the United States is good and questionable, maybe bad, for Afghanistan. Afghans are all for America when it comes to the surge, defeating the insurgency and building its government. They are less trustful when they look at U.S. actions outside Afghanistan.

It’s like Americans who love their congressmen but have few kind words for Congress.

Afghans want to know just about everything about America but they’ll settle for the American in front of them. The questions are non-stop. Where are you from? Who is your father? How big is your family? Do you have a wife? Children? What do you do for fun? What food do you like? Show me your pictures? Is that your phone? Signal? Can I call home?

When we’d go about our work shooting interviews or sending back material via a small satellite transceiver, the Afghans would gather around as though it were the day’s entertainment. They all want to be interviewed. They don’t really care about the questions. They have an opinion on just about everything and are always ready to share. That, too, reminds me of home.

Story here.

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Afghan Flag Raised Over Marja After Battling Taliban for 12 Days

Raising of the Afghan Flag Symbolizes a New Beginning in the Town of Marja

By ZOE MAGEE

Feb. 25, 2010

After 12 days of combat, U.S. commanders said today the worst of the fighting is over and as if to prove the point they watched as the new Afghan government raised its flag over the former Taliban stronghold of Marja for the first time in years.

U.S. military commanders were upbeat, bolstered by the high turnout in the center of town to watch the flag raising ceremony and the swearing-in of Abdul Zahir Aryan as the town’s new administrator.

“What you see here is Afghan government getting under way and the hard work really starts from today onwards,” Major Gen. Nick Carter said.

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