Feral Jundi

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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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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Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Military News: General McChrystal’s New Way of War

What Gen. McChrystal realizes, in effect, is that we need to create our own Robert Warburtons. If his experiment succeeds, future commanders can build on the precedent to provide the kind of cultural and linguistic skills that we will need to win the long war against Islamic extremists. 

   I read this story, and Tim Lynch of Free Range International came to mind as one of those ‘Warburton types’ that are mentioned in the article.  But I also think the mention of contractors as ‘Robert Warburton‘ types was incredibly understated.  I have known guys in Iraq who have worked the same gig or region for years.  The private industry has easily created individuals like this, and many of them.

   Also, the deployment and leave schedules for private industry has evolved to be way more conducive towards what Gen. McChrystal is wanting to do. In our industry, most companies do not go beyond a 6 month deployment.  I have seen everything from 2 month, 3 month, 4 month, 6 month, and even some 12 month deployment(rare).  My personal view on it is that 2 to 3 month deployments are about perfect, and this allows as much time as a contractor needs to do their business at home(if the contractor is given a sizable amount of time home, with some flexibility built into it). And that is what it really is all about.  Companies have to know, that if you want to attract or even keep your really good employees, taking care of them means giving them a leave and deployment schedule that is family and life friendly.  Burned out employees or contractors make mistakes.

   I also think deployment length is a huge problem for today’s military men and women.  From a private industry point of view, the longer the deployments, the longer the chance for burn out incidents to happen.  Fights, suicides, shooting incidents, etc. can all happen as the soldier’s stress is increased over time.  By changing the time frames a little, I think we could see some really positive developments.  And if General McChrystal and Max Boot get their way, if units are assigned regions and allowed to cycle in soldiers in more condensed deployment cycles, then I think that will have a dramatic impact on morale and troop welfare. It will also contribute to creating better learning organizations, for each specific region.

   Finally, and this is a call to guys like Max Boot and others who have the ear of the military strategists out there.  We must have the conversation about contractors and war, in a strategic sense.  We are not going away, and if General McChrystal, President Obama, General Petraeus, and the rest of the US (and worldwide partners) are actually serious about winning in the wars we are fighting in, then eventually they are all going to have to talk about the 246,000 of us contractors that are in the war.  We have an impact on the war–we are fighting and dying in these wars, we are rebuilding in these war zones, we are working with and around soldiers from all over, and we are intimately connected with much of the local populations out there. What other reasons do you guys want for this discussion?

     246,000 of us folks in the Warburton Fan Club are waiting for an answer….and some leadership.-Matt 

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General McChrystal’s New Way of War

The U.S. has been bringing soldiers home as soon as they get any experience.

JUNE 17, 2009

By MAX BOOT

Gen. Stanley McChrystal was appointed commander in Afghanistan to shake up a troubled war effort. But one of his first initiatives could wind up changing how the entire military does business.

Gen. McChrystal’s decision to set up a Pakistan Afghanistan Coordination Cell means creating a corps of roughly 400 officers who will spend years focused on Afghanistan, shuttling in and out of the country and working on those issues even while they are stateside.

Today, units typically spend six to 12 months in a war zone, and officers typically spend only a couple years in command before getting a new assignment. This undermines the continuity needed to prevail in complex environments like Afghanistan or Iraq. Too often, just when soldiers figure out what’s going on they are shipped back home and neophytes arrive to take their place. Units suffer a disproportionate share of casualties when they first arrive because they don’t have a grip on local conditions.

There was a saying that we didn’t fight in Vietnam for 10 years; we fought there for one year, 10 times. The North Vietnamese, on the other hand, continued fighting until they were killed or immobilized. That gave their forces a huge advantage.

In Vietnam, units already in the field would get individual replacements from home, thus making it hard to maintain unit cohesion. Sometimes new soldiers were killed before anyone even knew their names.

The policy now is unit rotation — an entire battalion or brigade (or a higher-level staff) trains together, deploys together, and leaves together. That makes for better cohesion, but makes it even harder to maintain continuity because there is little overlap between units.

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Saturday, June 6, 2009

Military News: The Current State of USSOCOM, by Admiral Eric Olson

     In testimony the other day before the House Armed Services Committee, Adm. Eric Olson, the head of U.S. Special Operations Command had a lot of interesting things to say about the current state of USSOCOM.  I thought this particular section was the most eye catching.  Is anyone else thinking what I am thinking? lol –Matt

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ADMIRAL ERIC T. OLSON 

COMMANDER 

UNITED STATES SPECIAL OPERATIONS COMMAND 

Introduction and History 

 Mr. Chairman and distinguished Members of the Committee, thank you for this opportunity to report on the state of the United States Special Operations Command (USSOCOM)…….  

Service Enabling Capabilities 

    Demand for special operations forces is on the increase; yet, by their very nature, Special Operations Forces are limited in size and scope. I am already on record as stating that SOF cannot grow more than three-to-five percent per year in those key units and capabilities that must be developed within our own organizational structures and training pipelines. This growth rate will not meet the already obvious appetite for the effects of SOF in forward operating areas. 

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Monday, May 11, 2009

Military News: General McChrystal to Replace Top Commander in Afghanistan General McKiernan

Filed under: Afghanistan,Military News — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 5:25 PM

Lt. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the commander of the Joint Special Operations Command (JSOC) responsible for hunting al-Qaeda in Iraq, employed what he called “collaborative warfare,” using every tool available simultaneously, from signal intercepts to human intelligence and other methods, that allowed lightning-quick and sometimes concurrent operations.

Asked in an interview about the intelligence breakthroughs in Iraq, President Bush offered a simple answer: “JSOC is awesome.” – Bob Woodward

   Crazy news and click on the link below for General McChrystal on Wikipedia, to read some more about him.  Also, Bob Woodward mentioned a quick deal about General McChrystal and the reduction of violence in Iraq during the surge.  –Matt

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General McChrystal to Replace Top Commander in Afghanistan General McKiernan 

May 12, 2009

WASHINGTON (AFP) — Defense Secretary Robert Gates has decided to replace the commander of US forces in Afghanistan, General David McKiernan, in a shake-up of the US military mission, a Pentagon official said on Monday.

Gates plans to name General Stanley McChrystal, a former commander of special operations who now serves as director of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, as the new commander, the official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told AFP.

The move, to be announced later at a news conference at the Pentagon, suggested a lack of confidence in McKiernan, who has been on the job less than a year having taken over command in June last year.

(more…)

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