Feral Jundi

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Afghanistan: U.N. Considering all Possibilities, Including Hiring Private Security Contractors to Protect Staff

Filed under: Afghanistan,Industry Talk — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 6:40 PM

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

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 (Researcher and commentator at the International Peace Institute, New York)

   Wow. This is significant. The UN is finally coming to a realistic conclusion, and that is security forces should not be limited to donor nations. This is pretty much a slap in the face to every human rights organization or anti-contractor group out there that has chastised the private military or private security industry.  Even UNWG is probably getting a hundred emails right now about what the Secretary General has just stated.

   Either way, I salute the UN for at least coming to their senses and considering using this industry.  One word of advice though.  The success or failure of using contractors, will depend on how much you are willing to spend, how well the contract is written up, and how well the UN monitors the action.  Please do not be a ‘marshmallow eater‘ and take the easy way out on this stuff. The lives of your staff are in your hands. –Matt

——————————————————————

Secretary-General to Hold High-Level Staff Meeting on Threats to UN Security

By Margaret Besheer

United Nations

29 October 2009

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon will convene a meeting of the organization’s top officials on Friday to discuss the serious security challenges facing the organization in Afghanistan and other parts of the world. Mr. Ban appealed to the members of the Security Council for their support during an emergency session Thursday – a day after an attack on a U.N. guesthouse in Kabul killed five staffers.The U.N. Secretary-General said Friday’s meeting will focus on the growing threat to the United Nations in places across the world where it operates.”Increasingly, the U.N. is being targeted,” said Ban Ki-moon. “In this case, precisely because of our support for the Afghan elections. Not counting peacekeepers, 27 U.N. civilian personnel have lost their lives to violence so far this year – more than half of them in Afghanistan and Pakistan.”

(more…)

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Afghanistan: Three Contractors Killed in Plane Crash

  This kind of missed the news, and adds to the brutal list of air accidents that have happened recently. RIP. –Matt

——————————————————————

3 bodies found in US plane wreckage in Afghanistan

October 27, 2009

KABUL — NATO-led forces have recovered the remains of three American military contractors from the wreckage of a U.S. Army reconnaissance plane that crashed two weeks ago in the rugged mountains of northeastern Afghanistan, the military said Tuesday.

The Army C-12 Huron twin-engine turboprop had been missing since it crashed Oct. 13 while on a routine mission in Nuristan province, a Taliban insurgent stronghold. The plane went down less than two weeks after insurgents overran a coalition outpost the same province, killing eight American troops in one of the war’s deadliest battles for the U.S.

NATO said in a statement that the crash is “under investigation, though hostile action is not believed to be the cause of the crash.”

Thomas Casey, a spokesman for Lockheed Martin Corp., confirmed that the three dead men — a pilot, co-pilot and technician — were American citizens working for Lockheed Martin subcontractors.

They were employed under a Lockheed Martin contract for “counter-narcoterrorism” operations, Casey said.

U.S. forces spokesman Col. Wayne Shanks said the crew were the only ones aboard when the craft went down without giving off any distress signals.

“We just lost contact,” Shanks told The Associated Press.

Nuristan has been the site of the two deadliest battles of the war for U.S. forces, including the Oct. 2 attack in the province’s Kamdesh outpost and a July 2008 raid that killed nine American soldiers at an outpost in Wanat area.

The NATO-led mission is planning to withdraw troops such isolated strongholds to focus on more heavily populated areas as part of a new strategy to protect Afghan civilians.

Shanks said the plane was on a mission for NATO-led forces at the time, but he gave no other details. Casey said only that it was a surveillance mission.

The pilot and co-pilot worked for a company called Avenge Inc., while the technician was employed by a contractor called Sierra Nevada Corp., Casey said.

The military said a UH-60 helicopter traveling to the crash site four days later “experienced a strong downdraft and performed a hard landing” nearby. The helicopter’s crew members were rescued, and the chopper was stripped of sensitive and useable parts and destroyed to keep insurgents from salvaging anything in the wreckage.

Story here.

Afghanistan: Gunmen Storm UN Guest House in Kabul, 11 Dead

Filed under: Afghanistan — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 12:32 PM

John Turner, a trucking contractor from Kansas City, said the attackers appeared well organized and were able to penetrate the building, located on a residential street.

Flushed and with black stains on his hands and face, Turner said 40 people were staying at the guest house, of whom about 25 took refuge in the laundry room at the back of the building under his protection.

“I am armed. I carry an AK-47 and I kept firing it to keep the attackers away from the group I was guarding,” he said. The group later jumped over a back wall to take refuge in a house behind the guest house, he said.

***** 

     Good on John Turner, and way to step up and deal with these bastards.  Rest in peace to the fallen, and my heart goes out to the friends and family.

     My one commentary on this is that soft targets are now the flavor of the month.  The goal is to disrupt the runoff election, by attacking the UN and it’s workers.  The other goal is to make unsafe, any and all areas in which NGO’s and others wish to operate out of.  The security for these so-called soft targets needs to be re-evaluated and adjusted in order to defeat similar Taliban attacks in the future.

      And going back to the super empowered individual as a counter to the super empowered individual or cell. As you can see, John the trucker was definitely able to make an impact on this attack.  To completely rely on police to come in and save the day, is not realistic, and these attacks happen way too fast in order for that to happen.  It takes a ‘John the trucker’ armed with a AK, or ‘Mary the accountant’ armed with a Blackberry, to act in the face of chaos, and do the things necessary to defeat the attacker.  Just having a plan for a facility, and ensuring everyone knows the plan, will help to save lives, as well as empowering those on the facility with the mental tools necessary to survive these incidents.  And like Dr. Phil Zimbardo says, teach people to be ‘a hero in waiting’. –Matt

—————————————————————–

Gunmen storm UN guest house in Kabul, 11 dead

By RAHIM FAIEZ and AMIR SHAH

October 28, 2009

KABUL – Taliban militants wearing suicide vests and police uniforms stormed a guest house used by U.N. staff in the heart of the Afghan capital Wednesday, killing 11 people including five U.N. workers.

The two-hour attack, which began shortly before 6 a.m., sent people jumping out of windows or hopping from roof to roof to escape a fire that engulfed part of the three-story building. A man from Kansas City, Mo., said he held off gunmen with a Kalashnikov until a group of guests escaped through the laundry room.

It was the biggest in a series of attacks intended to undermine next month’s presidential runoff election. At least 25 U.N. staff were staying at the guest house, most of them advisers for the Nov. 7 balloting.

A Taliban spokesman claimed responsibility for the assaults, which included rocket attacks at the presidential palace and the city’s main luxury hotel. The Taliban has warned Afghans to stay away from the polls or risk attacks.

The chief of the United Nations’ mission in Afghanistan, Kai Eide, said the attack “will not deter the U.N. from continuing all its work” in the country.

(more…)

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Video: Held By the Taliban, Interview with David Rohdes

Filed under: Afghanistan,Pakistan,Video — Tags: , , — Matt @ 2:16 PM

Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy

Monday, October 26, 2009

Military News: 14 Americans Killed in 2 Helicopter Crashes

Filed under: Afghanistan,Military News — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 2:02 PM

   Rest in peace to the fallen.  In the fire fighting industry, air crashes are the number one cause of deaths.  It is an unfortunate reality of using aircraft for logistics and support, but something we can’t get away from.  All we can do is to continue to apply Kaizen to all air operations, and find the weaknesses that could contribute to future accidents and correct them.  We will never be free of accidents or shoot downs in war, and I am surprised we don’t see more of these incidents.

   Also, there were more than just Americans killed in these incidents, and the Afghani deaths matter too. I wish the main stream media would get that point as well.

   It is also important to note that there were DEA deaths in these crashes.  I am assuming these are the FAST Team guys, and my heart goes out to the friends and family of the fallen as well. The DEA has been pretty active in Afghanistan, and it was only a matter of time before they would start suffering losses like this. –Matt

—————————————————————–

14 Americans killed in 2 helicopter crashes

By Heidi Vogt

Monday Oct 26, 2009

KABUL — Helicopter crashes killed 14 Americans on Monday — 11 troops and three drug agents — in the deadliest day for the U.S. mission in Afghanistan in more than four years. The deaths came as President Barack Obama prepared to meet his national security team for a sixth full-scale conference on the future of the troubled war.

In the deadliest crash, a helicopter went down in the west of the country after leaving the scene of a firefight, killing 10 Americans — seven troops and three Drug Enforcement Administration agents. Eleven American troops, one U.S. civilian and 14 Afghans were also injured.

In a separate incident, two Marine helicopters — one UH-1 and an AH-1 Cobra — collided in flight before sunrise over the southern province of Helmand, killing four American troops and wounding two more, Marine spokesman Maj. Bill Pelletier said.

It was the heaviest single-day loss of life since June 28, 2005, when 16 U.S. troops on a special forces helicopter died when their MH-47 Chinook helicopter was shot down by insurgents. The casualties also mark the first DEA deaths in Afghanistan since it began operations there in 2005.

U.S. authorities have ruled out hostile fire in the collision but have not given a cause for the other fatal crash in the west. Taliban spokesman Qari Yusuf Ahmedi claimed Taliban fighters shot down a helicopter in northwest Badghis province’s Darabam district. It was impossible to verify the claim and unclear if he was referring to the same incident.

Military spokeswoman Elizabeth Mathias said hostile fire was unlikely because the troops were not receiving fire when the helicopter took off.

(more…)

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »

Powered by WordPress