Feral Jundi

Saturday, October 3, 2009

War Art: ‘Stovepipe’, a Play About Security Contractors

Filed under: Industry Talk,United Kingdom,War Art — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 10:58 PM

   This is a first, and I wonder how I missed this one with the first production in the UK last April? Although I am sure these plays are both political and kind of dorky, but hey, that’s theater for you. lol  Honestly though, I really can’t comment on this play because I have not seen it.  If any of the readers have seen it, I would love to hear your input on the thing.  I guess one way to look at it, is this play is a historic first for this industry and war. –Matt

——————————————————————

Stovepipe

I will jump this contract, for it vexes me…….

Have gun, will travel in Stovepipe

By Fiona Mountford

Evening Standard  10.03.09

If we expect to learn about the murky world of private security contractors in Iraq anywhere at all, it’s certainly not in a cavernous basement underneath Morrisons in a Shepherd’s Bush shopping centre. Yet this intriguing found space is just where innovative young producers HighTide, in collaboration with the Bush and National Theatres, have pitched up, for a thrilling promenade performance that walks us through the less salubrious aspects of the post-war Middle East.

(more…)

Law Enforcement: Police Departments Back Anti-terror Citizens Watch

     I should file this under ‘super empowered sheepdogs’ or SEI, because that is what we will need to combat super empowered individuals (SEI) and groups. I brought up the Joker from the movie Dark Knight in past posts, as the epitome of a SEI. These SEI’s are individuals that learn about their cause and how to prosecute it, all on their own. They can conduct operations that can cause a lot of death and damage, and with tools like the internet, they are intellectually empowered to create all sorts of mayhem. Law enforcement cannot be everywhere and at all times, so it is important to tap on to the one resource out there that can be everywhere and at all times.  That resource is you.

     Now one idea for iWatch is to make it into a mobile application.  Not only could you update what to look for on each smart phone through updates, but iWatch could send alerts with new info, straight to the iWatch mobile application.  The other thing they could do is put the ‘most wanted’ list on iWatch, with a last known location (LKL) function attached to that list.  I would set it up where the iWatch app notifies you when you are in the area of a LKL of a most wanted individual or individuals.  It would be a reminder of who to look for, based on specific areas.

     The way I could see it working is that you have your iPhone or PDA in your pocket, and then as you are walking around, you get a notification.  You as the user could set up your notifications and alerts to your personal preference, but either way, you get a notification in the form of a alarm or vibration.  You pull out your phone, hit the alert tab on your iWatch icon, and then it gives you the details.  Now you will have a picture in your head for that specific area.  And now the odds of a offhand spotting of a booger eater increases.  Or even an offhand spotting of a vehicle listed or of suspicious activity.  There are all types of things you could do with this.  Hell, you could even do like Crime Stoppers, and attach bounties and awards to this, to further increase the odds of a capture. –Matt

——————————————————————

Police departments back anti-terror citizens watch

By EILEEN SULLIVAN (AP) – 2 hours ago

WASHINGTON — Big city police chiefs are backing an anti-terrorism community watch program to educate people about what behavior is truly suspicious and ought to be reported to police.

Police Chief William Bratton of Los Angeles, whose department developed the iWATCH program, calls it the 21st century version of Neighborhood Watch.

(more…)

Afghanistan: ‘Obama’s War’ Teaser, Frontline, October 13th

Industry Talk: As Troops Draw Down, More Contractors Hired

     Warning, this story is a positive story about security contractors.  So if you are one of those ‘contractor-hater’ types, stop reading right now.  If you are actually interested in what it is we do in the war, or interested in the motivations of actual security contractors, then read on.

    Overall, this was a pretty basic human interest story, and showed EODT and it’s employees in a non-biased way.  Good stuff, and thanks to the Star Tribune for having the courage to actually approach this story devoid of any pre-tense or subjectiveness. –Matt

——————————————————————

As troops draw down, more contractors hired

By MARK BRUNSWICK, Star Tribune

October 2, 2009

Their unit was a target almost every time it went off-base. Friends from high school died in front of them, and they were hit by rocket attacks while trying to retrieve fallen comrades on the desolate roadways of Iraq’s Anbar Province.

Just as they were starting to pack to leave in 2007, they learned that they were part of a group of 2,500 Minnesota National Guard troops whose deployments had been extended an additional four months as part of President George W. Bush’s “surge.”

So where did two veterans from Detroit Lakes end up after coming home? Back in Iraq.

Dustin Heard and Dan Wilson, who were in the same unit in Iraq during a 15-month tour with the Guard, are now working as private security contractors at a base near the Baghdad International Airport.

“This time is a lot different,” said Heard, who was hired to supervise security at the base’s high-occupancy areas such as the dining hall and the gym.

“Stuff has calmed down. It doesn’t seem like the same place.”

As it draws down its combat forces in Iraq, the United States is contracting with more private security companies to protect its installations.

In June, there were more than 13,000 security contractors in Iraq and services for security represented 11 percent of all contractors, a 19 percent increase from the three previous months. In the coming years, the costs of these contracts could exceed $1 billion.

The jobs have changed

The actions of some contractors, such as the former Blackwater, have given security firms something of a Wild West aura and raised questions about their proper role in wartime. There is no doubt that the work can be dangerous — former St. Louis Park police officer Paul Johnson-Reuben was one of five contractors killed in 2008 after being kidnapped near the Kuwait border.

(more…)

Friday, October 2, 2009

PMC 2.0: Mesh Networks

   This is important research for PMC’s and PSC’s, because if companies want a simple way for contractors to communicate with each other on some disaster zone or war zone gig, then this will allow them to do that.  Especially since most guys have, or will soon have smart phones that are bluetooth and wifi capable. You could add this capability to your communications plan, and if these guys can make this open source and free, then it would be a no-brainer to utilize Mesh Networks.

   In disaster zones and war zones where there is no infrastructure for 3G or cell towers, or those things were destroyed somehow, you must have a communications infrastructure back up system.  Mesh Networks is a possible solution if they can pull it off.  To make it free is even cooler, because then it will not be something that is exclusive to one company or another.  Along with the Mesh Networks, there must also be a way to encrypt the communications or something, and I am sure some technology will come along to do such a thing.  But first things first–get the Mesh Networks going.

    And for military/police/medical/disaster response crews, this will be awesome. For coordinating purposes and for evolving incidents like the Mumbai attack, you must have communications and information sharing systems that have redundancy built into them. If terrorists or some flood destroys the cell tower(s), then you must have an alternative network for everyone to talk on.  This is smart and I wish them all the luck in their research. –Matt

—————————————————————–

Researchers developing free mobile mesh network

Munir Kotadia

Oct 1, 2009

Can provide comms during mobile network blackout?

Researchers from Australia and Singapore are developing a wireless ad-hoc mesh networking technology that uses mobile handsets to share and carry information including high quality video.

The mesh network will make use of Bluetooth or Wifi and could be used at a large sporting event, conference, or even a crowded city centre during an emergency, to swap information between handsets – even if the mobile phone network was offline.

(more…)

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »

Powered by WordPress