Feral Jundi

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

News: Palestinian Bulldozer Driver Goes on Deadly Jerusalem Rampage

Filed under: Israel,News — Tags: , , — Matt @ 12:21 PM

Palestinian Bulldozer Driver Goes on Deadly Jerusalem Rampage

By Jim Teeple, Jerusalem, 02 July 2008

At least four people were killed and about 40 others injured when a Palestinian bulldozer driver went on a deadly rampage in downtown Jerusalem. The man was killed by an off-duty soldier and police say the incident was a terrorist attack. VOA’s Jim Teeple reports from Jerusalem.

Witnesses reported a scene of chaos and panic as the bulldozer plowed over cars, knocked over a city bus and damaged buildings on busy Jaffa Road near the city’s main bus station.

The driver was shot by an off-duty soldier, one of several people who climbed onto the bulldozer in an effort to stop the rampage. Police spokesman Mickey Rosenfeld told VOA the incident was clearly a terrorist attack and the bulldozer driver was heading for Jerusalem’s main food market.

“Police officers arrived on the scene and attempted to stop the killings,” he said. “We clearly understood that it was a terrorist attack by the way that he continued to try and make his way to the market, and therefore it was critical to stop him from continuing in the direction of the market.”

Rosenfeld says the man driving the bulldozer was a Palestinian with an East Jerusalem identity card. The area where the incident took place is a construction site with a new light rail system and road widening projects under way. Palestinian residents of East Jerusalem have access to Jewish West Jerusalem and carry out nearly all construction work in the city.

This was the second terrorist attack this year. In March, an East Jerusalem man attacked a Jewish seminary killing eight students. Rosenfeld says just like that attack there was no prior warning.

“There were no specific warnings that an attack was going to take place, but immediately after this incident the security level was heightened, both in Jerusalem and in other cities,” he said.

Hamas and Islamic Jihad militants who have carried out many terrorist attacks inside Israel said they were not responsible for the bulldozer incident and police say they are trying to determine if the man acted by himself.”

The attack took place as a truce between Israel and Palestinian militants in the Gaza Strip enters its second week.

On Wednesday Israel reopened cargo crossing points into Gaza.

Meanwhile, hundreds of Palestinians tried, but failed, to break through the Gaza crossing point between Egypt and Gaza. The crowd surged past Hamas guards at the border, but was beaten back by Egyptian troops who used water cannons to disperse the Palestinians.

Egypt says it will open the crossing once Hamas and other Palestinian militants agree to go along with an Egyptian mediated prisoner swap between Israel and Hamas that would free an Israeli soldier in exchange for hundreds of Palestinian militants.

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Here is a video of the attack.  

Video 1

And here is the video of the savage eating the bullet.  

Video 2

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He Cried Allah Akhbar and Hit the Gas’ 

The Jerusalem Post 

July 2, 2008 | Yaakov Katz

Posted on Wed Jul 2 08:41:26 2008 by Cecily

Moshe Plesser, the off-duty soldier who shot and killed the terrorist on Wednesday, was riding his bike down Jaffa Road when he spotted the overturned bus and a massive bulldozer tearing through the streets of Jerusalem.

Understanding that the Arab driver behind the wheel was in the midst of a terror rampage, Plesser, on a furlough from the Golani Brigade’s elite Egoz unit, threw his bike to the side of the road and began chasing after the bulldozer.

Speaking with reporters several hours after the attack, Plesser recalled the sequence of events that led to his courageous action on Wednesday. He is the brother-in-law of Capt. David Shapira, the IDF officer who stormed the Mercaz Harav Yeshiva in March and killed the Arab terrorist who had massacred eight students in the religious seminary.

As he began running towards the bulldozer, Plesser said that he shouted out to onlookers for a gun. Together with another civilian, Plesser climbed aboard the bulldozer and began wrestling with the driver.

 

“At one point he [the driver] yelled out “Allah Akhbar” [God is great] and stepped on the gas pedal,” Plesser recalled. “I drew the weapon of the civilian who was with me and shot the driver three times in the head. I think I did what is expected from every soldier and citizen.”

Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Industry Talk: Private Contractors and Iraqi Law

Filed under: Industry Talk,Iraq — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 4:26 PM

 

Private Security Contractors Protecting Ambassador Paul Bremer and Coalition personnel.

 

     This story is kind of troubling to me.  I know that eventually Iraq will operate on it’s own one day, but I always worry about the transition from war to peace there.  I have no problem with obeying another country’s laws.  But this war is not over by a long shot.  Sure the threat has died down, and the Iraqi government is gaining control of their country, but placing civilian contractors under Iraqi law right now is not a good move.  We are there to defend the very people that are helping to rebuild Iraq, and we already fall under the laws of the DOD(UCMJ).  So if we defend our DOD or DOS client, and save their life during an ambush, but then get charged with murder by an Iraqi court because we actually had to shoot our weapons and eliminate a threat, then how the heck are we supposed to do our job of protecting in the first place?  Why even give us weapons?  

    Now if the only threat in Iraq was typical criminal stuff, then maybe I could see falling under Iraqi law.  But just as long as we have an enemy in Iraq(Al Qaeda and the various militias who are opposed to the Iraqi Government), and the war is still being fought, then they will use this law to their advantage as a tool of warfare.  Of course they will fire on security contractors from populated places, and of course they will do all they can to force us to defend ourselves in heavily populated areas.  It is what I would do if I were in their shoes.  It is just one more way to fight a propaganda war against the US and insure that Iraq fails.

   I also understand the politics of this.  An Iraq that can govern itself, is a victory in the war for the Coalition.  Our enemies want us to fail there, and the more screwed up things are, the better it is for them.  Allowing civilian contractors to fall under Iraqi law, opens up all sorts of potential in the propaganda war being waged.  

    What the State Department and DOD needs to emphasize is that civilian contractors are in Iraq to protect and support the Coalition there, and that we already fall under the Uniform Code of Military Justice.  And because we are a vital asset to the mission in Iraq, any threat to our existence, is in essence a threat to the US mission there.  We are an integral part of the Coalition, and this point should be made very clear to Iraq and the world.  

    The costs would increase too.  The insurance premiums would go up, because of the legalities of working in Iraq and abiding by their laws.  After every incident involving firearms use, a company would be open to Iraqi investigation.  And do we trust that Iraq has been able to purge their system of bad guys?  And what of the Operational and Personal security of the client?  An Iraqi court, would certainly have to bring this information out in the open, in order to prosecute.  So yet again, could we trust this Iraqi legal system with this information?   

   Also, the days of 2006, when contractors were getting kidnapped at ‘supposed’ Iraqi manned checkpoints is still fresh in our minds.  Who is to say that the Iraqi justice system is strong enough to protect itself from infiltrations of the enemy?   Maybe when Iraq has become entirely peaceful, and the Coalitions is no longer needed to assist in the peace and stability operations there, then us contractors might feel a little more comfortable falling under Iraq law.  I guess the question that needs to be asked, is if the Coalition feels comfortable falling under Iraqi law?  

     I say if the Coalition, the DOD, and the State Department employees and soldiers in Iraq think this is a good idea, then maybe they should fall under Iraqi law too?  When I was a Marine back in the day, we called that’ leadership by example’.  We’ll see how it turns out, and hopefully someone speaks up against this, or can explain how this is a good idea.  –Head Jundi   

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Iraqi minister: Deal seeks to end security contractors’ immunity

    * Story Highlights

    * Iraq official: Deal with U.S. says security contractors won’t have immunity in Iraq

    * No immediate comment from U.S. State Department

    * Issue was one sticking point in negotiations for U.S.-Iraq security pact

    * Parliament member declines to say whether deal arose from Blackwater shootings

BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) — Security contractors working in Iraq will no longer receive immunity from prosecution in that nation under a deal being brokered by Iraqi and U.S. officials, Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari said.

Zebari said he briefed Iraqi parliament members about the immunity agreement Tuesday during a closed-door meeting. Officials at the U.S. State Department, which is leading the U.S. side of the negotiations, could not be immediately reached for comment.

The immunity issue was one of the sticking points in talks over a long-term security pact that deals with, among other things, the future of the U.S. military presence in Iraq. Negotiations on the pact continue.

The reported immunity agreement comes more than nine months after an incident in which Iraqi officials allege guards with the Blackwater security firm shot and killed 17 people, including women and children, and wounded 27 at Baghdad’s Nusoor Square.

Survivors and victims’ family members allege Blackwater guards started shooting without provocation, but Blackwater said armed insurgents attacked its guards.

Blackwater is one of the contractors providing security services for the State Department in Iraq. Under a provision instituted in the early days of the U.S.-led occupation of Iraq, security contractors have had immunity from Iraqi law.

The shootings prompted a bitter protest from Iraqi officials and placed the operations of Blackwater and other security firms in Iraq under scrutiny.

A U.S. federal grand jury investigating the Blackwater shootings heard testimony from three Iraqi men in March.

Mahmoud Othman, a member of the Iraqi parliament, said that he attended Tuesday’s closed parliamentary session and that the Iraqi representatives were very pleased with the immunity agreement.

“Zebari explained everything to the members of parliament and told us that the negotiations are still ongoing and we didn’t reach the final version yet. Still, Zebari believes that there are some good developments,” Othman said.

Asked if the immunity agreement grew from displeasure over the U.S. handling of the Blackwater incident in September, Zebari declined to answer.

He said he may have more information during a news conference he scheduled for Wednesday.

CNN’s Saad Abedine and Mohammed Tawfeeq contributed to this report.

Story Link 

Sunday, June 29, 2008

Cool Stuff: The WPPS Ring

Filed under: Cool Stuff — Tags: , — Matt @ 2:32 PM

         This is interesting.  This is the first time I have ever seen jewelry offered up for security contractors.  Personally, I don’t like wearing rings, but for some guys out there, this means a lot.  Especially if you are proud of your service as a contractor. Personally, I like a nice watch, like a Rolex or something.  I just thought the cross in the center of the ring was interesting, and had certain meaning. 

      The whole Knights Templar thing with the ‘shield and cross’, is a pretty common theme on patches and t-shirts.  So is eating bacon and pork.  Heck, I have even seen the shield and cross marked on helmets and drawn on the shields on gun tubs.  It’s not that contractors are particularly religious, it’s just that we are up against an enemy that is deadly religious and has been conducting their own crusade, and the KT cross is a symbol of mocking that religious extremism by using another form of religious extremism.  

      Of course no one really gives a crap about that stuff with our group, they just do it for the psychological edge, and it helps you get through the day.  I am not defending or putting it down.  That’s just how it is over there, and only those that have done any time over there, know what I mean.

       Then of course if you are religious, then that cross can be a good thing to have on you.  Just as long as you aren’t going on your own personal crusade and trying to convert or kill the masses. LOL  But like they say, there are no atheists in foxholes, and security contractors are no different than anyone else over there, in that regard.    

      The other little known fact that relates to this ring, is that’ Templar’ was a common call sign over there, and that is with all the companies, and not just with the WPPS companies.  –Head Jundi   

 Eagle Rings

 

 

 Gold WPPS ring

    

 WPPS ring, 14K Gold

Sterling Silver WPPS Ring

WPPS ring, Sterling Silver

The WPPS Ring

This ring was made in recognition and appreciation of the Worldwide Personal Protective Services.  WPPS is a program under the U.S. diplomatic effort to reconstruct Iraq and Afghanistan after the commencement of the War on Terrorism . It employs honorably United States discharged military and law enforcement citizens in a range of protection services for US personnel and facilities abroad.

The Templar Cross and shield represents Christianity and the protection it has offered to a country that has been attacked by threats domestic and international. The Eagle stands for Freedom and the term: “Armis Exposcere Pacem” is Latin for ‘They demand Peace through Force of Arms’. This ring serves as a symbol to honor and sacrifices many have given in the performance of their duties. This is the only ring in our collection made from computer-generated technology.

WPPS Ring Pricing

Heavy Sterling Silver $276

10K Yellow Gold $859

14K White or Yellow Gold $1230

18K White or Yellow Gold $1670

Company Website 

Saturday, June 28, 2008

Funny Stuff: Predator and Politics, Here Comes Billy Bear!

Filed under: Funny Stuff,Kentucky — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 1:13 AM

 

   It just doesn’t get any funnier than this.  What is it about the movie Predator and politics?  And get this, Sonny was a porn star at one point in his career and also served some time in federal prison, on top of being an eighties action star! LOL  If you check out his website, you will get quite shock, and also see the multitude of cheesy action films he was in.  Enjoy.  –Head Jundi 

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Actor runs for U.S. Senate in Kentucky as Libertarian

June 26th, 2008 

In a story that is getting picked up by many newspapers and websites, the AP reports Sonny Landham, who “played Billy Bear in ‘48 Hours’ and was killed by an alien in ‘Predator,’” is running for U.S. Senate in Kentucky as a Libertarian. Landham, “known for his powerful physique, booming voice and his American Indian heritage,” says he is “serious about his longshot bid, because too many politicians are indifferent to voters’ problems.”

Landham “must collect at least 5,000 valid petition signatures by August 12,” and Kentucky LP Chairman Ken Moellman “believes Landham will make it.” However, the AP says Landham’s appearance in adult films could haunt his campaign. Additionally, Landham “served more than 2 1/2 years in federal prison after being convicted of making threatening and obscene phone calls to his ex-wife. The conviction was thrown out by a federal appeals court that found he committed no crime.”

If Landham scores an upset victory, he would be the third member of the cast of “Predator” elected to major public office, following Govs. Jesse Ventura and Arnold Schwarzenegger.

Story Link

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Be sure to check out his website. It is beyond funny. Next, will be an onslaught of Billy Bear porn.

http://www.sonnylandham.com/

Friday, June 27, 2008

Weapons Stuff: The LULA by Butler Creek

Filed under: Weapons Stuff — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 1:42 PM

   This little guy has been around for awhile, but I figured I would give it some attention on FJ.  I own one, and they are awesome.  If you shoot a lot, this little device will save your fingers and make loading and unloading magazines way easier and faster.  

    It is great for contracting too.  Especially if you have to unload all of your truck magazines before a mission, so you can inspect and clean them, and then reload them fast so you can focus on other stuff.  A little gadget like this, can make those big tasks way easier and certainly faster.  

   Butler Creek also makes a pistol LULA, and that works pretty good too.  It takes a little more getting used to though, but will still save your fingers and cut down on loading time, if you have to load a ton of magazines.  Good piece of gear.  –Head Jundi   

 

 

Butler Creek Website 

Magazine loader & unloader (US Patent 6,810,616)

The LULA™ loader & unloader is a military quality personal magazine loader and unloader. It facilitates both loading of loose rounds into a magazine and unloading them out of the magazine. It does so fast, safely, comfortably and painlessly. Usable for tens-of-thousands rounds.

AR-15 / M-16  LULA™ loader is made to fit plastic and metal 5.56mm (.223rem) AR-15 / M-16 type magazines, as:

USGI mags. (NATO STANAG 4179) 

Thermold

Orlite

CMAG (both loads and unloads !)

(more…)

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