Feral Jundi

Friday, August 28, 2009

Industry Talk: No Respect, By Col. Oliver North

    Bravo to Col. Oliver North for having the courage to say what is right.  Contractors are an important part of this war effort, and there has been very little recognition of that fact. Semper Fi. –Matt

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No Respect

Friday , August 28, 2009

By Col. Oliver North

Bagram, Afghanistan

It is amazing how a change of geography can alter perception. In the weeks leading up to this, my 16th FOX News deployment to cover the fight against radical Islamic terror, the news was full of attacks on civilian contractors. The target: Those who have been providing support for U.S. military and intelligence operations since Sept. 11, 2001.

“Contractor” is the new dirty word in the so-called mainstream media and in Washington. On Capitol Hill, contractors are the Rodney Dangerfields of the war – they just don’t “get no respect.” Here, where the war is being fought, contractors are regarded as essential to victory.

The attacks on civilian contractors didn’t begin with this summer’s hemorrhage of congressional leaks, sensational disclosures of classified information, threats of inquisitions and the appointment of a special prosecutor. Civilian contractors have been in the crosshairs of Congress since George Washington had to defend buying beans, bread, bandages and bullets from sutlers accompanying the Revolutionary Army. In the opening days of World War II, then-Senator Harry Truman became famous for threatening to “lock up” civilian contractors for producing sub-par munitions and President Dwight D. Eisenhower ominously warned against the threat of a “military-industrial complex.”

— Catch the ‘War Stories Classic: Flashpoint Vietnam: The Road to War,’ Monday, August 31 at 3 a.m. ET — only on FOX News Channel

However, all that is pale by comparison to the viscera now being aimed at civilian contractors supporting the campaigns in the land between the Tigris and Euphrates and in the shadow of the Hindu Kush. Though the mainstream media and congressional critics initially ignored the essential role played by civilian security and logistics contractors in the opening months of Operation Enduring Freedom, they went into high dudgeon when the Bush administration began preparations for liberating Iraq from Saddam Hussein.

It has gone downhill since.

Critics on the left are quick to point to events like the 2007 incident in Baghdad that led to the prosecution of security contractors for using excessive force in carrying out protective duties. On Capitol Hill, members of Congress have threatened to cut the budgets of federal agencies that use security contractors instead of government employees to protect key personnel and sensitive installations. At the Pentagon — which uses more civilian contractors in the war effort than any other U.S. government entity — the response to the criticism was capitulation.

In April, Defense Secretary Robert Gates announced plans to hire 30,000 additional Department of Defense employees to cut the percentage of work being done by contractors. The FY 2010 Defense Budget request replaces nearly 14,000 contractor personnel with government employees, even though the “lifetime cost” — counting government benefits and retirement — will more than double the expense to American taxpayers. The numbers don’t mesh, but when it comes to getting the press and politicians off the backs of Pentagon poobahs, cutting contractors loose is apparently a small price to pay.

Unfortunately, dollars may not be the only thing lost.

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Books: The Tactical Trainer: A Few Thoughts On Training And Training Management From A Former Special Operations Soldier, By Msg. Paul R. Howe, U.S. Army Retired

Filed under: Books,Training — Tags: , , , , , , — Matt @ 12:46 AM

    Add this to your reading list.  Paul Howe has produced another outstanding resource for the military/police/contractor community.  For the record, I have not read this book because it just came out.  If any FJ readers have anything to say about the book, let it rip in the comments section, because I would be very interested to hear any feedback on the thing. –Matt

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The Tactical Trainer: A Few Thoughts On Training And Training Management From A Former Special Operations Soldier

By Msg. Paul R. Howe, U.S. Army Retired

     I will be describing how to structure high risk tactical courses in this book.  I have developed these courses through my years of instruction with CSAT (Combat Shooting and Tactics).  While I describe various techniques, I will limit any description of tactics as the bad guys have a tendency to study our work.  Sometimes, I will be generic and it will be so on purpose.

     I will also describe some “near misses” and training accidents in this work.  This is not to demean or cast a shadow on those involved.  It is necessary to learn from our mistakes.  If we cover them up, they will be repeated at the same price-the loss of a human life.  My goal is to always give safer and more efficient training techniques to fix the problem.  These safety techniques will come through a logical stair-stepped methodology.

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Thursday, August 27, 2009

Cool Stuff: Blasting a Brick Wall with a Vortex Cannon

Filed under: Cool Stuff — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 11:48 PM

Industry Talk: The Book ‘Beyond Market Forces’ and a Policy Forum with UNWG and Company

The convention does not want to eliminate the use of private companies at all…. -Shaista Shameem

Over a decade ago, Kofi Annan concluded that the world wasn’t ready for privatized peacekeeping. It’s still not. But that shouldn’t mean that we are oblivious to the very important role that many private military and security companies are playing at what I would call the second rank level, freeing up national troops to play key frontline roles. We see these kinds of companies, for example, providing security analysis and training, local private security companies are often key in providing site security and in some cases, convoy support services, and humanitarians operating under a UN security umbrella come into contact with these kinds of companies in a wide variety of theaters and playing a wide variety of functions. -James Cockayne 

     Ok, here is a quick run down of this policy forum, book promotion and gathering of some really smart folks.  The general idea that I am getting from this group is that PSC’s and PMC’s are a fact of life, and it is on the various countries that use them to back up some kind of way to regulate them, all with the idea that accountability should be built into the whole process to prevent human rights violations.  The UNWG (UN Working Group) along with other groups (IPOA, PASA, BAPSC, etc.) have been working hard on some kind of a standard that companies and countries can adhere to, how to regulate it and also exploring what these security contractors should do and not do out there.

    For the most part, the folks on this panel think it is just fine that PMC’s and PSC’s should do defensive tasks, like convoy protection, PSD or static security (note the quotes up top).  It’s just anything in the realm of offensive actions is what they are against and very wary of.

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Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Video: PBS–Once Upon a Coup, The Controversial World of Private Security Contractors

Filed under: Video — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 11:12 PM

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