Feral Jundi

Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Building Snowmobiles: Franklin ‘Chuck’ Spinney Talks about Afghanistan

   This was an interesting article, because Chuck was analyzing the situation much like Boyd would have.  And of course Chuck is a member of Boyd’s Acolytes, so I thought this to be certainly befitting of this category.  Enjoy. –Matt

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Float Like a Butterfly, Sting Like a Bee

The Taliban Rope-a-Dope

By FRANKLIN SPINNEY

July 14, 2009

On July 7, the Times [UK] carried a remarkable report describing the trials and tribulations of the Welsh Guards, who are now engaged in the ongoing offensive against the Taliban in Helmand Province, Afghanistan. It described in riveting detail how accumulating mental and physical stress are grinding down the bodies and minds of what are clearly highly-motivated, well-trained, and competently-led troops. My aim is to elaborate on the Times report by examining its information from a different perspective. My hope is that this will provide a better appreciation of the Taliban’s game.

With the exception of the last sentence in the penultimate paragraph (i.e., “The Taliban fight not to win but to outlast”), which is silly, the Times provides a graphic description of the pressures on the individual British soldiers, and it is an excellent window into the effects of the Taliban’s military art. The information suggests the Taliban’s strategic aim is to wear down their adversaries by keeping them under continual strain and by working on their psychology, or as the late American strategist John Boyd would say, by getting inside, slowing down, and disorienting their adversary’s Observation – Orientation – Decision – Action (OODA) loops. Moreover, the Taliban’s operational art seems particularly focused on the mental and moral levels of conflict. Outlasting, by running away to fight another day whenever faced with superior forces, is a central part of any winning strategy directed toward achieving this aim. (Interested readers can find a brief introduction to OODA loops in the last section of my remembrance of Boyd in the Proceedings of the Naval Institute, Genghis John.

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Saturday, July 11, 2009

Logistics: Marines’ Beasts of Burden are Again Leading the Pack

Filed under: Afghanistan,Logistics,Military News — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 9:36 PM

    This was a great story and it got me thinking.  Matter of fact, Tim’s recent post and the challenge posed by Small Wars Journal got me thinking about the infantryman’s load in Afghanistan, and some of the solutions for making that lighter.  Obviously, donkeys are a good choice, and this article tells it all.

   But that also made me think of how far would this concept go in terms of the current conflict?  Would companies be contracted out to lead mule trains up to Combat Outposts and FOB’s?  Would security contractors escort these mule trains as they try to bring them in safely to the destination, much like security contractors in Iraq (and Afghanistan) have been doing with vehicle convoy operations?  With the Marines, we are not talking about a few ODA teams out in the hinterland, we are talking about infantry units that need supplies up in the mountains, and the possibility is there I guess for companies to get involved with that. Or not.

   I guess the thing to think about with this is that how many units will it take to command these pack trains as they go through the mountains?  What would be the percentage of pack trains that would get attacked and the precious cargo destroyed?  So that would leave the idea of having a very involved pack train system, just so that these combat outposts could have somewhat dependable supply deliveries.  Could the military keep up with that, or would there come a point where contractors would have to be brought in?  Interesting stuff and we will see.

     On a side note, these pack trains are great.  In the smokejumpers, we used them all the time to haul gear in and out of the mountains.  Although it seems I still ended up hiking a lot of gear all over the place.  I have also trained up at Pickle Meadows up at Bridgeport, and that is some beautiful country. –Matt

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Marines’ beasts of burden are again leading the pack

For centuries, donkeys and mules have been the preferred mode of military transport in Afghanistan. At a training center in the Sierra Nevada, Marines learn how to handle the sure-footed animals.

By Tony Perry

July 7, 2009

From the Los Angeles Times

Reporting from Bridgeport, Calif. — With 75 pounds of military gear cinched on her furry back, Annie was stubborn the whole way.

The two Marines assigned to her pushed, pulled and sweet-talked her up the steep, twisting trail on the eastern side of the Sierra Nevada.

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Saturday, July 4, 2009

Afghanistan: Could PMC’s Be Used in the ‘Hold’ Phase of This New Strategy?

John Nagl, a counterinsurgency expert who was appointed last week to the defence policy board at the Pentagon, said: “We do not have enough troops to hold what we have cleared in Helmand. The additional American troops are a help, but they are insufficient.

“We have more fighting in Afghanistan in front of us than we have fighting behind us, full stop. This is going to be a harder fight than Iraq. Afghanistan needs [to create its own] national army of 250,000 to enable the allies to depart.”

At present the Afghan national army has about 92,000 troops, while the police force numbers 83,000. More US troops are needed to fill the gap, but first they would have to be diverted from Iraq. 

   Ok, I know this post is going to tweak a few people out there, because it is just ‘too crazy’ or ridiculous.  How could we possibly use PMC’s or PSC’s to ‘hold’ villages?

    Well, it’s easy, we first rework what PMC’s can or cannot do in the war (like give them the necessary tools and authorization to defend villages and AO’s) and we open the flood gates of contracts for such a thing.  Then we insure the necessary architecture is in place to insure that the company in place is in fact doing good things and following the contract for that village.  But none of this is new in the realm of how we set these things up, we just have to do it.

   Here is another way to look at this.  Take a good look at what the ‘holding’ troops are actually doing in these villages, and logically look at what jobs a company could conceivably perform during that holding operation.  Contractors have been used in the defense on US bases, in disaster zones, and for protecting remote civilian camps in places like Iraq, the next progression to me, is using contractors to defend villages.  If our goal is to protect people in Afghanistan from the Taliban, and we do not have enough troops to do that, then why not use contractors?

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Tuesday, June 23, 2009

Industry Talk: Canada Agrees to Stricter Controls on Afghan Hired Guns

“If they had a rule book and they followed it, you’d think they’d be very happy to tell you about it,” Harris said.

The Defence Department directed questions to the Foreign Affairs Department, which answered with an email late Tuesday afternoon.

The accord “is fully consistent with current Canadian policy and practice related to the use of private military and security companies,” said the note from Alain Cacchione. 

   Finally, some talk about the Montreaux Document. The big one here goes back to regulation and quality control.  You can sign all the documents in the world, but unless there is enforcement of those rules, companies are going to do whatever they want.  If Canada was to take a hint at the US lackluster performance, they would hire enough government or military contracting officers (CORs) to actually manage these contracts.  Give the CORs a strong leader and some teeth to deal with the delinquent companies, and get to work.

    As for managing these local companies, you tell them if they cannot abide by the contract, then it is a default on contract and the thing is null and void.  Then put the word out that because company X could not perform to the standards of the contract, they were dropped or massively fined.  Companies will catch on real quick about what contract compliance means. Where companies get away with murder, is when no one is watching or even cares.  That is why it is so important to have enough people to watch these companies and actually keep these groups honest.

   The other one that kills me is when governments make excuses on why they cannot manage these companies.  There is no viable excuse.  You write a comprehensive contract that both the company and yourself understands and agrees too, and then you provide the necessary resources to manage that contract. Make it a priority, and hire the necessary folks to manage this stuff.

    And management does not mean quality control from the comforts of your office in Kabul or Washington DC.  Management means actually getting out in the field, and checking up on these guys.  If the companies know your watching and care, they will comply.  And in the tradition of Sun Tzu, if you make an example of the first company that decides to mock the contract…. drop those fools.

     Better yet, if you can write into the contract some kind of fines system, that would be better. I am not talking about a few thousand dollars, I am talking about tens of thousands of dollars or even millions–make it painful.  Money is what drives these companies, and money should be the first tool of choice used to punish or even reward the company.  If the company refuses to pay the fine, drop them and take them to court if you want.  There are plenty of options of controlling and disciplining these companies, and it all starts with a well written contract along with enforcement of these contracts. All of this should be commonsense, yet every story I read about this stuff tells me that no one has any sense at all in the upper ranks of this machine.  Wake up.

   The other point I want to stress for the Canadians is that if you are serious about COIN, then it behooves you to get your hired guns under control.  That your regional strategy could be hindered or even destroyed, because you failed to properly manage your contractors in that region.  You have to remember, these companies are your asset, and essentially a representative of you.  If they kill some civilians in a village, and the the village knows the company was working for you, who do you think the villagers are going to blame?  Who do you think the Taliban are going to blame in that scenario? Wake up.

     Man this pisses me off.  Both the US and Canada, along with the rest of the Coalition in this war, have done Jack Squat about managing the close to a quarter million contractors in their AO’s.  If you want your COIN strategy to succeed, you are going to have to actually first acknowledge our existence, and second, tell us what your plan is so we don’t mess things up.  It’s ok to tell us what to do…. you’re the one paying for our service….really, it’s ok.  To me, this is like playing a football game, and half the team is not included in the huddle. –Matt

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Canada agrees to stricter controls on Afghan hired guns

Jun 16, 2009

By Murray Brewster, The Canadian Press

OTTAWA – Canada quietly signed an international agreement on regulating private security companies in war-zones just weeks after a Canadian soldier was allegedly shot by a contractor during a confused firefight in Afghanistan last summer.

But it’s unclear what the government is doing to keep the hired guns on its payroll in check.

Canada was one of 17 countries to agree last fall to the Montreaux Document, which lays out responsibilities for the use of hired guns under international law.

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Sunday, June 21, 2009

Military News: The Marine Corps Lioness Program and Counter-insurgency

   Cool program and glad to see it having an impact.  I have never heard of such a thing, and this is certainly some out of the box thinking on the part of the Marines. Maybe the companies out there should work to hire a few female security contractors in order to have this kind of capability out there?  Especially if you could get a few of these Lioness veterans. Semper Fi. –Matt

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Lionesses work to improve community in local Iraq city

6/12/2009

By Byline Lance Cpl. Melissa A. Latty  ,

Unit 2nd Marine Logistics Group

CAMP KOREAN VILLAGE, Iraq  —

Female Marines from Combat Logistics Battalion 7, 2nd Marine Logistics Group (Forward), have been participating in civil affairs missions with the Civil Affairs Group 10, 2nd Marine Division for approximately three months in various cities surrounding Camp Korean Village, Iraq.

The women are part of an all-female team called Lioness that was first formed several years ago to implement culturally-sensitive methods of searching Iraqi women to deter the enemy’s use of females to conduct terrorist attacks.

However, Lionesses aren’t just female searchers. In fact, they now do little to no searching at all.

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