Feral Jundi

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Jobs: Aerial Gunner, Rotary Wing (UH1-HII)

   Cool gig, and I hope some lucky FJ reader gets it.  By the way, please do not send me a resume/CV for this, because I am not the point of contact or recruiter.  I find this stuff, and post it for the job seekers out there as a nice little benefit of the blog only.  If I ever do recruit for a company, I will let you guys know, and you can send me resumes until the cows come home.

    Also, please refrain from posting a resume in the comments section, because I will just delete it.  That is for your guy’s protection and I just don’t understand why folks do that.  If you have a question, and I have stated that I am a point of contact for the job in the post, then contact me via emails.  Other than that, happy job hunting guys and gals. –Matt

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Aerial Gunner, Rotary Wing (UH1-HII)

Job ID: 2009-118A

Location: Kabul, Afghanistan

Category: Security

Position Type: Contract

Contract Name: International Narcotics and Law Enforcement (INL)

Contract Length: 1 Year With an Option to Renew

Salary: Competitive Salary (DOE/DOQ)

Security Clearance: Secret

Status (definition): Vacant

Company Description

Global Platform Support Solutions

Position Description

Principle Responsibilities:

Perform duties as an aerial gunner on helicopter missions flown in support of the U.S. Department of State, Bureau for International Narcotics and Law Enforcement and the ground eradication effort in Afghanistan. Individual will perform all other duties as directed.

Education Required:

High School diploma required.

Experience Required:

Military crewmember with experience and knowledge of helicopter mounted weapons systems and their employment in a high-threat environment. Combat experience is desired. Weapons training and previous exposure to operations in Afghanistan is desired.

Special Knowledge/ Skills Required:

Experience on the GAU-17 mini-gun and M240 or similar crew served weapon desired.

Prior military experience as a helicopter crew chief and gunner desired.

Knowledge of U.S. Military aircrew training programs desired.

Experience as a UH-1H crew chief or gunner is desired.

Experience as a non-rated crewmember instructor is desired.

Must complete and pass a Class III Flying Duty Medical Examination.

Must successfully complete weapons qualification (M-4, M-9, M240, and Minigun/Gau-17), security training,

(more…)

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Military News: White House Confirms Medal of Honor

Filed under: Afghanistan,Military News — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 3:36 AM

   Good deal, and glad to hear this was approved.  I know there are more cases of heroism in this war, and the public needs to know about that. We need to recognize these individuals that gave the enemy hell, and in most cases, gave everything they got by paying the ultimate sacrifice.  Which makes me think, the military and the White House would be well served if they for once gave the Medal of Honor to a living hero, as opposed to just the dead.  Something to think about and rest in peace Sgt. Jared Monti. –Matt

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 Jared Monti

White House confirms Medal of Honor

By Gina Cavallaro

July 28, 2009

Sgt. 1st Class Jared Monti, a fire support specialist who was killed June 21, 2006, in Afghanistan, will receive the Medal of Honor for his actions in combat.

The announcement was made by the White House in a news release Friday morning. The award will be presented to Monti’s parents in a Sept. 17 ceremony at the White House.

The soldier’s father, Paul Monti, told Army Times on Thursday that President Obama had called him Tuesday evening at his home in Raynham, Mass.

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Sunday, July 26, 2009

Afghanistan: Military Weighs Private Security on Front Lines

   Walter and the rest of the media is a little late to this party, but we can deal with that.  Although it would be nice for the Washington Post to add a little balance to their articles about such things.  Like mentioning a crucial quote that Defense Secretary Gates gave in regards to security contractors.  Here it is, and I posted the story below this one as the source.

     “As recently as February, however, Gates called the use of private security contractors in certain parts of Afghanistan “vital” to supporting U.S. bases. A contract for the work also creates job opportunities for Afghans, he said.”

   Also, the article mentions the dangers of these forward operating bases in Afghanistan, as if that is a new thing or something totally unreasonable for a private security company to handle.  Guess what, we have been protecting bases for awhile now.(TWISS, etc.)  I think what this article was trying to get at is that somehow contractors would not be up to the task of actually doing the job they are contracted to do.  As if somehow Afghanistan is ‘too much for them to handle’.  Pffft.

   And then Michael O’Hanlon enters into the discussion with his thoughts on the matter.

“We don’t want to waste scarce Afghan army and police, so we must be creative,” said Michael E. O’Hanlon, a senior fellow and military expert at the Brookings Institution.

But O’Hanlon also said he is concerned that if contractors were to take over security at forward operating bases, they would be the first to see hostile fire, and they — not soldiers — would have to decide whether to employ weapons against an enemy.

Instead of hiring a private firm, O’Hanlon said, the Americans and Afghans could create a local version of Iraq’s Facilities Protection Service, the modestly trained but government-paid guard force that was pulled together to provide protection for government ministries in Baghdad and the oil fields. “We should create a different branch of the Afghan security forces that has minimal training,” he said.”

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Monday, July 20, 2009

Funny Stuff: Hair of Death

Anton Chigurh

Anton Chigurh from the Movie No Country for Old Men

A sociopathic assassin hired to recover the drug money. The character was a recurrence of the “Unstoppable Evil” archetype found in the Coen Brothers’ work, though the brothers wanted to avoid one-dimensionality, particularly a comparison to The Terminator. The Coen Brothers sought to cast someone “who could have come from Mars” to avoid a sense of identification. The brothers introduced the character in the beginning of the film in a manner similar to the opening of the 1976 film The Man Who Fell to Earth. Chigurh has been perceived as a “modern equivalent of Death from Ingmar Bergman’s 1957 film The Seventh Seal”. Chigurh’s distinctive look was derived from a 1979 photo from a book supplied by Jones which featured photos of brothel patrons on the Texas-Mexico border. Describing his “extraordinary moptop haircut,” Bardem said, “You don’t have to act the haircut. The haircut acts by itself.” He also reportedly said after seeing himself with the new hairdo for the first time, “Oh no, now I won’t get laid for two months.” Bardem signed on because he had been a Coens fan ever since he saw their debut, Blood Simple.

*****

Johnny Walker Lindh

John Phillip Walker Lindh

Was captured as an enemy combatant during the United States’ 2001 invasion of Afghanistan. An American citizen, he is now serving a 20-year prison sentence in connection with his participation in Afghanistan’s Taliban army. He was captured during the Battle of Qala-i-Jangi, a violent Taliban prison uprising where American CIA officer Johnny “Mike” Spann was killed.

Lindh received training at Al-Farouq, an alleged Al-Qaeda training camp located in Afghanistan. There, he attended a lecture by Osama bin Laden before the September 11, 2001 terror attacks. Lindh had previously received training with Harkat-ul-Mujahideen, an internationally designated terrorist organization based in Pakistan.

Lindh went by Sulayman al-Faris during his time in Afghanistan, but prefers the name Hamza Walker Lindh today.

*****

Taliban Contract Killer (From Free Range International)

Any Afghan vets recognize this look? If this cat were driving a motorbike in Zabul Province he would be shot on sight. The bob haircut, moustache, dead eyes, and bracelets mark him as Taliban, a contract killer or both. Tim of Panjwayi made him instantly and spent a good 15 minutes trying to chat him up, shake his hand, in short let him know we know and that not all the internationals here are clueless. It pissed our man off; amused the other Afghans who are normally intimidated by guys like this. It is not like us to let a shitbird like this slide by when he shows up wearing colors.

*****

Baitullah 'Hairball' Mehsud

Baitullah ‘Hairball’ Mehsud

Is a leading militant in Waziristan, Pakistan and the leader of the Taliban umbrella group, Tehrik-i-Taliban Pakistan, formed in December 2007.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Industry Talk: Wall Street Goes to War

Filed under: Afghanistan,Industry Talk,Iraq — Tags: , , , , , , — Matt @ 5:05 AM

     Well if you want to know the DynCorp story, read this sucker.  As a contractor, we are so removed from the world of the CEO’s, investors and upper level management, and reading this article made that reality very clear.  I wonder if these guys have any ‘shared reality’ with their company?  Do they visit with the guard force in Qatar, or hang out at the mechanics shop at some airbase in Afghanistan or Iraq?  Or how about hang with the police advisors that are all over the world, or drive along during a poppy eradication mission in Afghanistan? Who knows, and for those that have worked for DynCorp, this story is for you. (some reverse shared reality I guess)

   And if any of you bigwigs with DynCorp are reading FJ, all I would like you to know is that your contractors/employees are your best asset out there–take care of them.  You are making a lot of money off of their hard work and sacrifice, and the least you can do is show them some respect and take care of your people.  I understand the concept of free market capitalism, and completely support it.  But that is not everything in life, and please take note, the most respected companies in the world do an excellent job of taking care of their people while still remaining profitable and providing an excellent service/product.

    The goal of any company in the defense industry should be to achieve what Google or Toyota has accomplished, and that is acceptance and respect.  To have your company’s name stand for something good, and not bad, should be your goal.  Be the company that contractors want to work for and customers want to do business with. And because most of DynCorp’s work is US government related, be the company that taxpayers feel is a good value. Be the company that a reporter could write about, and be in awe of it’s operations and total dedication to Kaizen and customer service/satisfaction.  And if you are profitable, there is no reason in the world to not take a little of that and invest the time and money into the little details that could make you the best.

     Maybe Forbes will write an article about a defense company like that some day? Some day….. –Matt

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Wall Street Goes to War

Nathan Vardi

Forbes

For 19 years Robert McKeon and Thomas Campbell were inseparable. They raised money and struck deals together, buying and selling dozens of companies, often in the defense sector–smallish outfits such as Athena Innovative Solutions, Integrated Defense Technologies and Vertex Aerospace. Working 12-hour days out of next-door offices in midtown Manhattan, they could hear each other’s phone conversations and knew the most personal details about each other. They golfed together, went skeet and trap shooting, traveled together for meetings and once shared a hotel room in Mexico. On Fridays they would dine, just the two of them, at Harry Cipriani, the ritzy Manhattan restaurant. “I believe we were pretty close to best friends,” says Campbell.

They also hatched the most lucrative deal of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Their 2005 purchase of DynCorp International, the Falls Church, Va. provider of services to the U.S. military, landed McKeon and Campbell at the center of a booming and controversial business. The leveraged buyout also helped rip apart their relationship. McKeon ended up very rich, personally earning $350 million, or seven times his investment, and in control of a company that has emerged as the biggest winner in the war game. Campbell, forced out of DynCorp, came away with very little and has started over. Today the two former friends are locked in mortal combat–trading accusations of greed and betrayal in protracted litigation and competing for $25 billion a year in battleground services contracts for the U.S. government.

Battlefield contractors have been around for years. But their importance has grown in post-Cold War defense spending. Roughly 240,000 contractor employees, many of them foreign nationals, support U.S. missions in Iraq and Afghanistan, outnumbering the troops they serve. They provide security, military and police training, logistics and air support, reconstruction and every mundane service it takes to feed, clothe and clean fighting forces–collecting some $100 billion of the $830 billion U.S. taxpayers are on the hook for in the two wars. Though they don’t operate under the same rules of engagement as the U.S. military, contractors risk their lives; 1,360 of them have been killed and 20,000 injured in the two war zones.

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