Feral Jundi

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Industry Talk: Ms. Sparky In The News

Filed under: Industry Talk,Iraq — Tags: , , , , , , — Matt @ 10:54 PM

   I thought this was pretty cool. Kudos to Ms. Sparky and I am glad she is getting some recognition for all the hard work she has been putting into her blog.  One person can make a difference. –Matt

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Debbie Crawford

Debbie Crawford manages the mssparky.com website from her Washington home while grandson Keelen Goldsworth studies nearby. The journeyman electrician spent two years working for war contractor KBR in Iraq.

Ms. Sparky aims at KBR, electrifies war-contractor scrutiny with blog

Sunday, July 11, 2010

Julie Sullivan

Debbie Crawford was playing with her grandson at her Battle Ground home two years ago when she heard a news report on a Green Beret who died in Baghdad. The water pump in his Army shower was not properly grounded, and when he turned the faucet, a jolt of electricity killed him.

Crawford cried, her worst professional fear realized. She went to her laptop and began to type:

“As a licensed electrician who worked for KBR in Iraq for two years, I find this UNACCEPTABLE!!!! How did this happen? Let me give you my opinion from first-hand experience….”

Five weeks later, after a Senate staffer saw her post, Crawford testified before Congress to poor management and poor workmanship by Kellogg, Brown & Root in Iraq, including subcontracting electrical work to locals not skilled to U.S. standards and failing to check electricians’ credentials.

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Thursday, July 8, 2010

Military News: Gates Recommends Mattis For Central Command Job

   What a strange and crazy couple of weeks.  Who would have guessed that all of this shuffling of military leadership would have happened, and like this?  We get rid of McChrystal because of comments his team made in a Rolling Stones article, we pull Petraeus from CENTCOM and make him the guy in charge of Afghanistan, and now the toughs as nails Marine named Mattis will be in charge of CENTCOM. What a ride! Interesting stuff and I look forward to how this new mix of leadership will pan out for the overall war effort. –Matt

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Gates Recommends Mattis for Central Command Job

By Jim GaramoneAmerican Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, July 8, 2010 – Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates today recommended Marine Corps Gen. James N. Mattis to be the next commander of U.S. Central Command.

Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates has recommended to President Barack Obama that he nominate Marine Corps Gen. James N. Mattis, commander of U.S. Joint Forces Command, to succeed Army Gen. David H. Petraeus as commander of U.S.

If confirmed by the Senate, Mattis will succeed Army Gen. David H. Petraeus, who now commands U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan.

Mattis currently is commander of U.S. Joint Forces Command.

“General Mattis has proven to be one of the military’s most innovative and iconoclastic thinkers,” Gates said during a Pentagon news conference today. “His insights into the nature of warfare in the 21st century have influenced my own views about how the armed forces must be shaped and postured for the future.”

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Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Iraq: The Falcon Club– Paragliding Over Mosul!

Filed under: Funny Stuff,Iraq,Parachuting — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 7:51 AM

     This looks fun, but what really makes this unique is that this is a paragliding club in Mosul.  I guess you could call this sport, ‘combat paragliding’. lol Either way, I think this is great and I certainly hope this catches on and becomes a popular sport there. –Matt

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Mosul Paragliders

Holly Pickett for The New York Times Ziad Abdulsattar lifts his feet when taking off with a parachute with Falcon Club near Mosul.

Paragliding Over Mosul – Because Iraq Just Isn’t Dangerous Enough Already

By TIMOTHY WILLIAMS AND ZAID THAKER

July 1, 2010

Holly Pickett for The New York Times Members of the Falcon Club paragliding near Mosul.

MOSUL, Iraq – The risk-averse will tell you that it takes a special sort of foolishness to jump from a mountain with just a paraglider strapped to your back.

So what, then, does that make the members of the Falcon Club, an Iraqi group of daredevils who sail through the air above Mosul, which is perhaps Iraq’s most dangerous city?

Holly Pickett for The New York Times Ahmed Assad prepares his parachute before paragliding with the group.

As if flying flimsy contraptions in a war zone was not enough, the Falcon Club faces the added danger of having been a favorite of Saddam Hussein – whose former friends and allies continue to be hunted down by Shiite militias and others.

Indeed, their recklessness leaves even the club’s members seeking a reasonable explanation.

“Flying is like a disease,” said Saba Yasin Fathi, 43, the club’s leader and a former Iraqi air force pilot who lost his left pinky finger to a propeller last year. “You do it once, you want to do it again and again.”

So the Falcon Club endures the suspicions of Iraqi soldiers at Mosul’s innumerable checkpoints who have never heard of a paraglider, have never seen a hot air balloon outside of an American movie and who believe — reasonably — that Iraq is dangerous enough without courting death.

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Saturday, June 19, 2010

War Art: ‘That Guy’, From LMS Defense-The Comics

That Guy

That Guy’ by LMS Defense- The Comics.  Artwork by Righteous Duke.

Friday, June 18, 2010

Afghanistan: The War Between State Capitalism And Free Markets

     But executives with international mining firms said in interviews that while they believed that Afghanistan’s mineral deposits held great potential, their businesses were not planning to move into the country until the war was over and the country more stable.

     “There are huge deposits there,” said David Beatty, chief executive of Rio-Novo Gold, a mining company based in Toronto. “But as chief executive, would I send a team to Kandahar? And then call a guy’s wife after he gets shot? No.”

*****

     I was reading an excellent book the other day called “The End of the Free Market: Who Wins the War Between States and Corporations” by Ian Bremmer, and it was quite the read.  Basically, if you track the actions of countries like China in places like Iraq, Africa or Afghanistan, you start to get the idea that something is going on here. That state owned companies have the advantage over private industry in these war ravaged and resource rich countries. That reality is what worries me, and in the larger battle over resources in this world, we need to make some adjustments.

     The problem is that private industry just does not want to take the risk of entering these places, because there is just too much liability.  Besides, a private company does not have the full weight and support of a country behind it, but a Chinese owned company does. That is a huge advantage.

    I have talked about clashes before between free markets and state capitalism in the past, and a prime example was the battle between China and Google.  Another example was between Chinese companies and all of the privately owned oil companies going after contracts in Iraq. In both examples, China is able to win contracts or do whatever they want to bend the markets to their advantage, all because they have the full strength of a country behind such endeavors.  They can absorb risk, do whatever they want to their people, pay whatever they want, etc., and this hybrid machine called state capitalism is definitely a factor to deal with in the market place.

     So how do companies compete against such a thing?  That is a question that I am not qualified to answer. The book provides some answers, and I highly suggest folks to check it out. All I can provide in this conversation are some ideas to alleviate concerns about risk in these countries.  Private security is what private industry (along with free market supporting governments like the US) uses to protect their investments, and that is what I specialize in.  In this war between state capitalism and free markets, security contractors are right there on the front lines.

     One thing that can happen to help in our fight against state capitalism, is for capitalist countries to empower private security to do their job. If you make it impossible or difficult for us to be effective, then of course the risk will go up for those investors.  This is a fine line to walk, but it is necessary to address if you want to benefit from that free markets that capitalism needs in order to flourish.

     Now with Afghanistan, we have a deal where Chinese companies are aggressively pursuing these mineral claims and the rest of the world wants nothing to do with the things.  They fear the risk due to the war and politics of the region, and rightly so. With that said, all and effort must be made by the coalition to make that market more attractive to private industry and to allow private industry to do what it needs to do in order to alleviate that risk.  Because right now, we are losing that war between state capitalism and free markets in the places where the West has done all of the heavy lifting and dying. –Matt

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Afghanistan Moves Quickly to Tap Newfound Mineral Reserves

By ALISSA J. RUBIN and MUJIB MASHAL

June 17, 2010

KABUL, Afghanistan — The Ministry of Mines announced Thursday that it would take the first steps toward opening the country’s reserves to international investors at a meeting next week in London even as Afghans expressed a mixture of hope and doubt about the government’s commitment to develop the country’s newly documented mineral wealth.

The focus of the meeting will be the Hajigak area of Bamian Province, which has major iron ore deposits, the Mines Minister, Wahidullah Shahrani, said at a news conference here.

It was Mr. Shahrani’s first public appearance since news that the country had at least $1 trillion in untapped mineral resources became public after an article appeared Monday in The New York Times that detailed findings of the Pentagon and United States Geological Survey. Afghan officials described the $1 trillion estimate conservative and said their estimates suggested the reserves could be worth as much as $3 trillion.

“This good news has the potential of adding a lot of value to the economy of Afghanistan and it will serve the development of Afghanistan,” Mr. Shahrani said.

The previously unknown deposits include huge veins of iron, copper, cobalt, gold and critical industrial metals like lithium. With so many minerals that are essential to modern industry, Afghanistan could be transformed into one of the most important mining centers in the world, according to American officials.

Two hundred mining investors from around the world have been invited to next week’s meeting in London where they will offer suggestions for how to develop the iron ore deposits at Hajigak, said Craig Andrews, the principal mining specialist for Afghanistan for the World Bank.

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