Feral Jundi

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Industry Talk: FBO–USACE Looking For Interested Companies For Possible Security Support Contract, Afghanistan

     Not that companies who are in the mix don’t already know about this FBO posting, but still I figured I would put it out there for the rest of the industry to check out.  From the sounds of it, this contract would be similar to the remote bases that USACE used to run in Iraq for the CMC projects.  Those were cool contracts because contractors did it all at those camps.  From PSD missions to convoy security, and of course static security–security contractors were vital assets.

     What would be different here is the increased use of aviation transport.  In Iraq you could convoy everywhere and aviation was not used as much for these CMC camps.  But in Afghanistan, air transport and the security that goes with it would be a big part of this contract.

     The other difference is that USACE is probably doing a different mission with this contract than clearing munitions.  Reconstruction could mean all sorts of things and who knows what they will be building? We will see if they fly this one or not, because this is still in the beginning research phase. –Matt

R–Afghanistan Reconstruction Security Support Services for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

Solicitation Number: W912ER11R0050

Agency: Department of the Army

Office: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

Location: USACE Middle East District

Synopsis:

Added: Feb 02, 2011 11:04 pm

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE), Middle East District, is publishing this sources sought notice to solicit responses from firms interested in and capable of providing the following services throughout Afghanistan: comprehensive security, operations, transportation, aircraft, and intelligence services to secure and account for Afghanistan Engineering District-North (AEN) and Afghanistan Engineering District-South (AES) personnel, provide all forms of transportation services, provide quality assurance activities to include construction, nationwide operational oversight, intelligence analysis, production of intelligence products, convoy transportation and security, fixed/rotary wing air-transportation services, personal protective services, static site security, community liaison activities, local atmospherics, supply and maintenance of armored vehicles, establishment, maintenance and management of a nationwide, visual map-based satellite tracking product, establishment, maintenance and management of a nationwide voice and text communication network, and vetting of third-party employees. The contemplated contract awarded from a solicitation for this work will constitute an Indefinite Delivery, Indefinite Quantity (ID/IQ) type contract as defined in FAR 16.504. Task orders will be Firm-Fixed Price (FFP).

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Monday, February 21, 2011

Medical: ‘Experts’…. Look At Civilians Hurt Supporting War

     The most prevalent diagnoses for civilians were musculoskeletal/spine injuries (19 percent), combat-related injuries (14 percent) and circulatory disorders (13 percent). Among members of the military, the most common diagnoses were musculoskeletal (31 percent, 6.4 percent of them considered war-related), combat (14 percent) and psychiatric (9 percent).

     Cohen noted that civilians with psychiatric diagnoses were significantly more likely to return to duty (16 percent, versus 9 percent for soldiers). “Despite the military’s emphasis on screening and early treatment for psychiatric disorders, they still take a much greater toll on military personnel than nonmilitary personnel,” said Cohen, who is also director of Chronic Pain Research at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

 

    After looking through this, I had some objections with the study. It is lumping in civil servants or federal employees with non-federal employees or civilian contractors.  The reason why I disagree with this combination is that federal employees would have different motivations and different compensations than civilian contractors. It would have been better to completely separate the two.

    Dr. Cohen said this as well–‘Civilians, who often work in security and transportation jobs, are less likely to be in the line of fire and don’t expect to be injured in combat‘. I absolutely disagree with this statement and I am not sure how he came to this conclusion?  Even the KBR truck drivers that were hired to work in Iraq at this specific time line of the study (2004 to 2007) would have had to have known through the news and through word of mouth, that they were signing up for a very dangerous contract in an active war zone.

    The security contractors that worked at that time, and especially in Iraq, all considered the idea of being ‘injured’ or killed in combat every day they worked there.  How could a person in this position not consider this?

    This study also highlights some strengths and weaknesses of the contracting model in war zones, as it pertains to the medical side of things.  It shows how contractors view their job as a profession that will help to feed their family and pay the bills. The study makes no mention of that contractor’s patriotism or their desire to be with the team. The various motivations for them to continue going back to that war zone is varied, and this study does not differentiate. This study also represents a very dangerous time period to be a contractor, and a key time period of the development of the industry.

    On the other hand, the study pointed out that after civilians were wounded from ‘combat related’ injuries, they were more likely not to return.  Is that because they lost heart for the work or is that because the injury was debilitating enough to where they could not go back? Does the study make any mention of how many incidents that an individual had been through, both in their military history and contractor history?  Or how many of these folks have returned back to work after such incidents, but years later. This is happening in this industry, and the contracting model allows individuals to do this, dependent upon their resume and vetting.

    The other interesting statistic was this one. ‘Cohen noted that civilians with psychiatric diagnoses were significantly more likely to return to duty (16 percent, versus 9 percent for soldiers).’  This statistic needs to be clarified. How many of these folks that were questioned, were military veterans or police veterans that had carried their mental issues with them into their contract? Or what kind of diagnosis is given for each individual questioned, and was it related to combat and the war, or were these psychiatric issues a carry over from something else going on in their lives?

    With that said, the drive for a contractor with mental problems to continue working to feed their family and pay the bills, might be stronger than seeking help and not working.  At this time period of the study, a secret clearance was not mandatory. But there was the infamous CRC that many contractors had to cycle through at that time, and the military was tasked with medically screening folks.  At the bases that conducted this screening, contractor’s medical backgrounds were reviewed.

    Even with these screening processes, contractors still slip through.  Danny Fitzsimons is just one case of a contractor with mental issues making it through the system. There is also the peer review or on the ground management of teams that helps to screen folks as well. If there is an individual that is mentally unstable, they will be identified and removed from contract due to their liability. Everyone has to be a little crazy to do this work, but no one wants to depend their survival on some dude that is mentally gone.

     The high musculoskeletal/spine injuries statistic is the one statistic that was intriguing to me.  With the use of body armor and how heavy it is, as well as the hours of standing around or driving around wearing it, this can have adverse effects on the body.  Even though the armor can save a life, it still can injury a person just because of it’s weight. This is a problem for the military, and for contractors, and back injuries and the pain medications required to deal with those injuries will become very common place as contractors and military continuously work in war zones and wear this stuff. Armor is a paradox of sorts, and not to mention it’s limitations on the mobility of a war fighter. It may save your life, but it will also allow enemy combatants to out run you and give them a chance to fight again.

     Now what would be an interesting study is to pick up where they left off and see how things look now(2007 to 2011)?  A lot has happened since then.  If the study was better targeted and consultants outside of the medical group were asked to help guide the process, then that would be a more thorough and respected study. People will support what they help to create…. –Matt

Experts look at civilians hurt supporting war

February 21, 2011By Stephanie DesmonAfter analyzing data on 2,155 private contractors, diplomats and other civilians supporting war efforts in Iraq and Afghanistan who were medically evacuated from combat zones, researchers have found that such civilians are more likely to be evacuated for noncombat-related injuries but more likely to return to work in-country after treatment for these conditions.

Still, the findings of the Johns Hopkins–led research team, published online in CMAJ, the journal of the Canadian Medical Association, note that 75 percent of the nonmilitary group medically evacuated from the war zones to Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany between 2004 and 2007 did not return to the field.

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Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Industry Talk: State Department Planning Calls For 5,500 Security Contractors In Iraq

     The period immediately after the military withdrawal may be especially sensitive, as extremist groups test the new defenses and attempt to demonstrate their own relevance. Current planning calls for 5,500 security contractors to be employed by the State Department in Iraq, roughly double the current number and not including the Office of Security Cooperation. Roughly four thousand of these will be third-country nationals serving as static perimeter security for the various installations, a continuation of current practice at both civilian and military sites. 

     Though the numbers remain in flux, current plans call for about 600 guards in Irbil, 575 in Baghdad, 335 each in Kirkuk and Mosul, and about 3,650 in Baghdad. Most of State’s security contractors, both perimeter and movement, will be hired through the Worldwide Protective Services (WPS) contract, the successor to the current Worldwide Personal Protective Security (WPPS II) contract. However, some of the specialized security functions described in this section will be contracted separately.SFRC–Iraq: The Transition From A Military Mission To A Civilian-Led Effort

     Very cool and it is nice to get some more numbers on what this will look like. In my Scribd I posted the report if anyone wants to read it. It mostly rehashed a lot of the same issues in past conversations and reports about WPS and the civilian mission in Iraq.

     As far as news with the companies and WPS, all I can suggest is to follow the latest reports in the forums.  There are plenty of threads discussing the rumors and the legitimate news about what is going on with the stuff. All I can say is have patience with the process and do all you can to get that WPS certification. That kind of thing will make you very marketable in this industry. –Matt

Top diplomat defends size, cost of State Dept. presence in Iraq

Report Lists Perils for Envoys After U.S. Leaves Iraq

Top diplomat defends size, cost of State Dept. presence in Iraq

By Walter Pincus

February 1, 2011

The top U.S. diplomat in Iraq on Tuesday defended the size and cost of the State Department’s operations in that country, telling lawmakers that a significant diplomatic footprint will be necessary after the withdrawal of U.S. troops at the end of this year.

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Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Publications: Contractor Support Of USCENTCOM AOR, 1st Quarter FY 2011

Contractor Support of USCENTCOM AOR, 1st Quarter FY 2011

Friday, January 21, 2011

Film: ‘Borat’ Star Sacha Cohen To Play Saddam Hussein In Comedy Called The Dictator

     The film tells “the heroic story of a dictator who risked his life to ensure that democracy would never come to the country he so lovingly oppressed,” according to the studio. 

     In the words of Borat,’Very nice’! lol This is great and I am looking forward to this one. As soon as the trailer comes out I will put it up on the blog (which will probably be late this year or early next year). I am sure this movie will also increase sales of Saddam’s crazy book called Zabibah and the King. –Matt

Larry Charles and Sacha Cohen (as Borat).

Larry Charles, who also worked on “Borat” and “Bruno,” will direct the Paramount picture.

January 20, 2011

NEW YORK – Paramount Pictures has set a May 11, 2012 release date for Sacha Baron Cohen’s new comedy The Dictator and reunited him with the director of his previous movies.

The studio said Thursday that Larry Charles (Borat, Bruno) will once again direct.

The film tells “the heroic story of a dictator who risked his life to ensure that democracy would never come to the country he so lovingly oppressed,” according to the studio.

It is inspired by the novel Zabibah and The King by Saddam Hussein.

Producing alongside Baron Cohen are Scott Rudin, Alec Berg, Jeff Schaffer and David Mandel.

Story here.

——————————————————————

‘Borat’ star in Saddam Hussein-inspired comedy

January 21, 2011

LOS ANGELES — British comedian Sacha Baron Cohen, creator of the satire “Borat,” will turn heads again with his new project “The Dictator,” inspired by a novel from late Iraqi tyrant Saddam Hussein, his studio said Friday.

The film, set for release in May 2012, “tells the heroic story of a dictator who risked his life to ensure that democracy would never come to the country he so lovingly oppressed,” Paramount Pictures said.

The comedy is “inspired by the best selling novel ‘Zabibah and the King,’ written by Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein,” said the production studio.

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