Feral Jundi

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Podcasts: COR Interviews William Beaver of Danger Zone Jobs

Podcasts: COR Interviews William Beaver of DangerZoneJobs.com 

     This show should be required listening for all of those readers out there that are trying to break into overseas contracting.  Bill is an expert in this field, and I highly recommend his Danger Zone Jobs service.  There is a lot of information on that site, and it is one stop shopping for those who want to keep up with the latest news on the industry.  Bill also offers a free PDF on his site, that is a survey of contractors and how they found a job in the contracting field.  It is a wealth of information, and you can find it at www.dangerzonejobs.com . –Matt

 ——————————————————————-

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Industry News: Presidential Airways Helicopter Crashes, Pilot Killed and Student Injured

   My heart goes out to the families, and to Xe.  This kind of news always sucks and Xe’s Little Bird pilots are awesome guys. –Matt

—————————————————————— 

Helicopter crash at former Blackwater site kills pilot

MOYOCK, N.C.

02/24/2009

A fast, light “Little Bird” helicopter crashed Tuesday at the U.S. Training Center, formerly known as Blackwater Worldwide, killing the pilot and injuring a student.

An instructor pilot and the student were flying the Hughes 369-F on a training run at about 1:50 p.m. when the helicopter skid caught on an object and the aircraft flipped over, said Kathleen Bergen, Federal Aviation Administration spokeswoman.

It’s the first fatal accident in the 12-year history of the training center, according to Anne Tyrrell, spokeswoman for the military contractor now known as Xe.

The center and company headquarters, set on a rural campus in northeast North Carolina, offer a variety of civilian and military training on weapons, logistics and security.

The pilot was a full-time Xe employee and the student was an independent contractor for the company, she said. No names have been released.

Bergen said the student was walking after the crash and did not appear to be seriously injured. FAA safety inspectors were at the campus in Camden County near Moyock during the accident, she said.

She added that safety inspectors routinely observe flight operations and inspect air fields.

Sandy Casey, Currituck County’s chief deputy, said he responded to the scene quickly but that the FAA already had the area roped off.

“All I could see from where I was were two pieces,” he said. “The tail looked like it was broken off.”

The helicopter belonged to a Xe subsidiary known as Presidential Airways, Tyrrell said. It has a fleet of more than 70 planes and helicopters, with some stationed abroad and at other training facilities, she said.

The aircraft that crashed Tuesday was manufactured in 1984 and powered by an Allison turbo-shaft engine, according to FAA records.

The small, fast aircraft has several variations that are commonly known as Little Birds. A two-person crew in a Little Bird can typically transport two or three troops, along with a variety of automatic weapons and missiles, according to the Federation of American Scientists Web site.

Blackwater Worldwide deployed the Little Birds to Iraq to protect truck convoys and occasionally whisk VIPs to secure locations. Insurgents in Baghdad shot down a Blackwater Little Bird in January 2007, killing four private contractors.

Pilot writer Lauren King contributed to this report.

Story Here

 

Military News: Grunts to Rebuild Like SOF, Move Away From Bases-Mattis

Filed under: Military News — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 1:16 AM

   I like it, and I hope Mattis is able get this going soon.  To me, it is all about a division of labor like Mattis said, and we just do not have enough snake eaters to get this done. –Matt

—————————————————————- 

Speech at FPRI Luncheon 

February 12, 2009

Gen. James Mattis, USMC

Gen. James Mattis is Supreme Allied Commander Transformation and Commander, U.S. Joint Forces Command. He was introduced by the Hon. John Hillen, FPRI Trustee.

This presentation was the keynote address at the “Defense Showstoppers” conference sponsored by FPRI’s Program on National Security and the Reserve Officers Association. FPRI thanks its trustees W. W. Keen Butcher, Bruce H. Hooper, John M. Templeton, Jr. for funding the Program on National Security.

(Go to minute 30:37 for the part that relates to the story below) 

Video Link Here

—————————————————————– 

Grunts to Rebuild Like SOF, Move Away From Bases: Mattis

By Greg Grant 

February 19th, 2009 

Fighting two simultaneous counterinsurgency wars in Iraq and Afghanistan has placed enormous demands on the small number of elite Army Special Forces teams, known as Operational Detachment Alpha. So the Army and Marines plan to restructure and create many more small combat and advisory teams from existing conventional ground forces, says Marine Gen. James Mattis, Commander, U.S. Joint Forces Command.

The military is dominant in conventional warfare and can best any opponent in high-intensity battle, but it’s not superior in irregular warfare, the types of wars the U.S. is most likely to fight in the future, Mattis said. The requirement for small combat and advisory teams, along the Special Forces model, is now a “national priority.” Mattis recently created a Joint Irregular Warfare Center, headed by a Special Forces officer, to guide the effort “to shift general purpose forces more into a special operations forces approach to fighting, without giving up conventional warfare.” Creating these small, deployable “high performing” teams for irregular warfare will require many more Army and Marines trained as advisors.

“We need more troops who are culturally adept, who are comfortable working outside mother Army, mother Marine Corps and able to work in small teams,” Mattis said, speaking Feb. 12, at a conference sponsored by the Foreign Policy Research Institute, in Washington, DC. Irregular wars are fought amongst the people, requiring American troops, “understand not just of the nature of the conflict, but the ‘human sea,’ to use Mao’s analogy, within which the enemy swims,” according to the “Joint Operating Environment,” a recent Joint Forces Command publication.

Mattis said in future irregular wars, the military must avoid the logistically demanding and often problem causing “heavy footprint,” where large numbers of troops are sent ashore and operate from massive bases, as in Iraq and Afghanistan. He prefers an expeditionary approach, using small advisory teams who live and work among the local people. It will require a “fundamental shift” in the approach to basing in foreign countries, “where not every troop has a big screen TV and eighteen entries on the menu that night and where they’re completely isolated from the local people.” He said the seabasing concept, where troops operate from large naval platforms located offshore, will be an important component of the new irregular warfare operating concept.

(more…)

Monday, February 23, 2009

Industry Talk: DoD Contractor Numbers as of December 2008

Filed under: Afghanistan,Industry Talk,Iraq — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 1:50 PM

     It’s always nice to see just exactly where the numbers sit in this industry.  This report does not include all the NGO’s or other companies using security or contractors in the war, but it is an interesting look at DoD related contracts. The numbers are interesting, and especially in Afghanistan. –Matt

—————————————————————– 

U.S. Department of Defense Contractor numbers as of December 2008

CONTRACTOR SUPPORT OF U.S. OPERATIONS

IN USCENTCOM AOR, IRAQ, AND AFGHANISTAN

BACKGROUND:  This update reports DoD contractor personnel numbers in theater and outlines DoD efforts to improve management of contractors accompanying U.S. forces.  It covers DoD contractor personnel deployed in Iraq, Afghanistan, and the U.S. Central Command (USCENTCOM) area of responsibility (AOR) as of December 31, 2008.

KEY POINTS: Ending 1st quarter FY 2009, USCENTCOM reported approximately 259,400 contractor personnel working for the DoD in the USCENTCOM AOR. 

Total DoD contractor numbers in Iraq: 148,050

*9,218 are doing security (about 6%) 

*782 of those security contractors are American/Coalition citizens, 7,226 are Third Country Nationals and 1,210 are Local Nationals.

Total DoD contractor numbers in Afghanistan: 71,755

*3,689 are doing security (about 6%)

*15  of those security contractors are American/coalition citizens, 23 are Third Country Nationals and 3,651 Local Nationals.

Go Here to Read the Report

 

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Jobs: Personal Security Specialist for WPPS, OCONUS

Filed under: Afghanistan,Iraq,Jobs — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 10:17 PM

     Hey guys, this is the latest word from DynCorp.  I am not the POC, just posting some open source job stuff from the forums. –Matt

—————————————————————–

DynCorp International, WPPS is currently looking for Personal Security Specialist (PSS) Operators. To be accepted into the DI WPPS program, applicants must meet the minimum requirements below:

1.     Must be a U.S. Citizen

2.     Three (3) years military, law enforcement, or protective security.

3.     One (1) of these years including experience in protective security.

 If interested, please send your correspondence and resume to dynwpps@gmail.com

 NOTE* If you are currently employed with BW, in Al Hillah or Baghdad, there is NO need to apply to work for DI WPPS at this time. In the event that we win the Baghdad and / or Al Hillah Task Orders, we will send a transition team who will transfer you to DynCorp. 

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »

Powered by WordPress