Feral Jundi

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Industry Talk: Afghanistan-Pay Peanuts, You Get Monkeys

Filed under: Afghanistan,Industry Talk — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 2:08 PM

   A couple of things to note with this article.  You pay peanuts, you get monkeys.  If companies want to do business in Afghanistan, then they are going to have to invest in security.  Obviously this ‘guard’ was not thoroughly vetted or that the security company tasked with watching their employees did not keep up with a ‘constant’ vetting process.  

    But vetting costs money, and if business does not want to pay for that expenditure in a contract, then they will get substandard guard service.

    The other thing I wanted to mention, is that the salaries need to go up in Afghanistan.  If we are to follow the Iraq model, then we can deduct that the Taliban are going to continue their attacks in the cities.  That they will continue to attack businesses, create chaos, and try to scare any foreign interests away.  This tactic will hurt the government and hurt the war effort, and hurt the local populations. And if the people lose faith in the Government’s ability to protect them, then that only helps the Taliban cause.  

    Yet again, the market dictates.  If big business is scared off because of this stuff, then they are scared off.  But if the upcoming US administration and the current Afghani administration wants to keep business there, then they are going to have to get busy in either protecting them or giving some kind of incentive to keep them there.  

    And if you are a company representative that is doing research about security in Afghanistan, all I will have to say is pay up if you want to play.  Just like the shipping industry is starting to see the light about security in the Gulf of Aden, you too will have to make security adjustments to be able to operate in Afghanistan.  That’s if you think that buck is worth the effort there.  

    But if you do want to stay, one adjustment that you can do is guard your high level company leaders with substantial security.  That is a no brainer to me.  Pay the money, and get yourself a protective detail that knows their stuff.  Or continue to think that no one wants to kill you? 

     Now I will not suggest low profile or high profile security, because that is up to the guy on the ground that is assigned to protect you.  All I will suggest is to pay the money to get a professional group that has your best interest and life in mind when they make decisions, and they have the experience to back up those decisions.    

    The other adjustment is that if you are going to hire local nationals to do your security, then you should have a security expert review that contract.  Pay the money for a guy that comes highly recommended and is trustworthy, to act as quality control for the security services provided and to help write up a good contract in the first place.  Pay a good salary, and keep him around for awhile.  You cannot just hire a local company, and expect quality service–you need a third party to watch them.  You actually have to pay attention and watch that service like a hawk, and ensure that you are getting a quality product.  But yet again, that costs money.

    Hopefully we will see the adjustments needed, to give those that are over there doing business, the best chance of survival.  You see this played out time and time again.  Security is something you should not be going cheap on, if you care about your employees and want to do business in a war zone. –Head Jundi  

——————————————————————-

Killings increase Westerners’ fears in Afghan capital

October 26, 2008

 

KABUL (AFP) — The gunning down of three Westerners in the Afghan capital in less than a week is a sharp reminder that Kabul is no longer a safe haven in a country gripped by violence, expatriates say.

Saturday’s shooting of a Briton and a South African, along with an Afghan, outside the offices of the international shipping company DHL appears to have been the result of a dispute unrelated to a growing Taliban insurgency.

Nevertheless, it feeds a sense of insecurity with international residents already concerned by Monday’s killing of a British-South African aid worker and a series of attacks against expatriates this year.

“It is the unpredictability of security incidents which is making it difficult,” said Anu John, who has been in Kabul for 15 months employed by an international non-government organisation.

“The security seems to have deteriorated significantly in the last three to four months… the changes are pretty visible,” she said.

(more…)

Monday, October 27, 2008

News: Petraeus on Afghanistan

Filed under: Afghanistan,News — Tags: , , — Matt @ 10:47 AM

 

     Good little article, and this should give you an idea where we are headed with the war in Afghanistan. -Head Jundi 

—————————————————————— 

Beyond bin Laden

Petraeus: Success in Afghanistan will require a long-term commitment

By Sean D. Naylor – Staff writer

Posted : Monday Oct 20, 2008 10:59:39 EDT

Incoming Central Command head Gen. David Petraeus questioned whether al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden continues to play a significant operational role in the terrorist network and said that even if bin Laden were killed, his lieutenants would ensure al-Qaida stayed in business.

“You have to ask what bin Laden is actually doing these days, besides hiding,” Petraeus said in an Oct. 15 interview with Army Times. “To say that he has been reclusive would be a bit of an understatement. To question what impact his leadership has is reasonable, given his very limited public pronouncements [and] very limited communications with subordinate leaders.”

(more…)

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Technology: The Taliban Fear the Mobile Phone

Filed under: Afghanistan,Technology — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 3:24 PM

    Is the Taliban reading Feral Jundi?  LOL.  Actually, the Taliban have been attacking cell towers for awhile now.  But in this post, I wanted to post why they are attacking the mobile phone.   That people are actually turning in these guys, using the mobile phone is kind of cool and is definitely some proof of concept material for the ‘Crime Stoppers’ concept.  And the fact that mobile phones are becoming vital to the Afghanis.

     A couple of weeks ago, I posted an article about text messaging and counter-insurgency. That commanders in the field, or at least the war planners must take advantage of these technologies and develop a SMS plan and crowdsource the local populations.

    It sounds like to me, that this is happening to some degree, and that is great.  And with the Taliban destroying cell towers out of protest, this only helps our cause.  If the local populations come to depend on the mobile phone, and really enjoy the power of the mobile phone, and the Taliban take that away, then that will only help us to win over the local populations.

    So this is what I would do.  Flood the market with more cheap mobile phones and cheap service, set up cell towers in villages and pay these villages very well to protect that tower(or post police or private security), and reward the local populations for their love of the cellphone with interactive radio entertainment and promotional deals.  Get them to use those thumbs and vote on soccer games and songs and anything of entertainment value.  Get them hooked on the phone, like it was a drug.

   What do I mean by this?  The cellphone is addictive.  It’s like a drug almost, and when people get a taste of everything it can do, then they get hooked.  For me, I don’t go anywhere without my phone.  I make sure the service is paid for, and that it is fully charged, and I really take care of it.  The reason why, is because it is my only connection to my network and it is an important part of my life.  

   It is also the tool I need to make money, because companies call me on the phone to offer me jobs.  It is also my way of establishing relationships, or maintaining relationships.  And it is a tool that I can use to save my life by calling the police or the doctor.  I can even vote with the thing, in the various polls that radio and TV stations promote.(elections, American Idol, etc.)  Or, if I get wind of some information about a bad guy, I can text or call Crime Stoppers and actually turn the guy in for a small reward.

    My point is, that the same uses I have for this phone, are the same uses that everyone in the world has for the phone.  It is a powerful and universal tool that we can use in this war, and I tried to explain that in my other post about the topic.

    So now we have the Taliban fearing the cellphone?  Awesome.  And just like in Haiti, when the people protected the cell towers because they wanted to protect the phone service, we can see the same thing in Afghanistan.  If I was part of the Afghani Government, I would make the issue of the cellphone and text messaging a vital issue that needs to be protected.  Those phones symbolize freedom, and the Government would be wise to help protect that.  It would be just one way for them to win over the local populations.

    The other thing I wanted to mention, is that if you are reading this, and you are developing a SMS plan out there in the war, then you need to read the book Crowdsourcing.  It lists the ten rules of crowdsourcing and they are pretty universal, in terms of application.  I would be crowdsourcing the local populations of Afghanistan and Iraq like you can’t believe, to get all kinds of interesting information.  

    I would also do what I could to get phones into the really remote areas of Afghanistan and Pakistan.  It sounds like the mobile phone industry is doing pretty good in both Pakistan and Afghanistan, but it could do better with a little help.  Flood the market, give the locals a taste of this thing, and make sure they know where to go to get more of it.  

  As for the particulars of how to crowdsource the populations to get information, I would leave to the local intelligence guys.  I do know that the current radio stations that are sending out music and messages on the airwaves, are the one way you can reach these remote areas and communicate with them.  One of the rules for crowdsourcing is that you must offer a reward or give the people something for their efforts.  That could be money, or entertainment.  If you want to get something from the crowd, you have to give something to the crowd.  –Head Jundi 

——————————————————————

Afghanistan Cell Towers  

Taliban Orders Daytime Phone Shutdown, Too

Posted by Susan Hall on October 21, 2008 at 1:55 pm

 

Following attacks meant to enforce the Taliban’s orders for mobile phone operators to shut off operations at night in Afghanistan, the operators now are being ordered to shut down during the day in the Ghazni province southwest of Kabul, reports Reuters.

Several towers have been destroyed in the south, angering residents who depend on cell service as their only means of communication. NATO and Afghan officials say the Taliban want to keep villagers from ratting them out to authorities.

The story, though, says threats have been only partially carried out in the south and networks operate freely in the north, where it’s more peaceful.

Story Here

——————————————————————-

Taliban text message threats

Posted 7/24/2008

 

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — The Taliban have created a sophisticated media network to undermine support for the Afghan government, sending threats by text message and spreading the militia’s views through songs available as ring tones, according to a report released Thursday.

The International Crisis Group report comes as the Islamist militia that was ousted from power in Afghanistan by the 2001 U.S.-led invasion is making a violent comeback, particularly in the country’s south and east.

The Taliban’s propaganda exploits civilian killings by foreign forces and corruption in the U.S.-backed government to add to Afghans’ disillusionment about their lives, according to the report by the Brussels-based group. It said the Afghan government and its foreign allies should respond more quickly to their mistakes and highlight the Taliban’s atrocities.

Many of the messages that have been distributed — apparently not always directly produced by the Taliban — come in the form of songs, religious chants and poetry that appeal to Afghan nationalism and Islamic pride.

(more…)

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Film: FRONTLINE Presents- The War Briefing

Filed under: Afghanistan,Film,Iraq — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 10:31 PM

The next president of the United States will inherit some of the greatest foreign policy challenges in American history–an overstretched military, frayed alliances, and wars on two fronts. FRONTLINE gives viewers a hard, inside look at the real policy choices the next president will face. The report features strategists and diplomats giving their best advice about how to correct past failures and how to shape a realistic foreign policy approach in the war against the Taliban and Al Qaeda.

press release 

IN LEAD-UP TO U.S. ELECTION, FRONTLINE REPORTS ON THE CURRENT STATE OF THE WAR AGAINST THE TALIBAN AND AL QAEDA

FRONTLINE Presents

The War Briefing

Tuesday, October 28, 2008, at 9 P.M. ET on PBS

The next president of the United States will inherit a foreign policy nightmare: wars on two fronts, an overstretched military, a resurgent Taliban and a reconstituted Al Qaeda based far from America’s reach.

In The War Briefing, airing Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2008, at 9 P.M. ET on PBS (check local listings), award-winning FRONTLINE producer Marcela Gaviria and correspondent Martin Smith offer harrowing on-the-ground reporting from the deadliest battlefield in the mountains of Afghanistan, and follow the trail to the militant safe havens deep inside the Pakistani tribal areas, probing some of the most urgent foreign policy challenges facing the next president.

(more…)

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

News: Beheadings, Kidnappings, and Hostage Rescue in Afghanistan

Filed under: Afghanistan,News — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 11:32 AM

     When I think about hostages and kidnapping, I always go back to Iraq in 2006 when those guys from Crescent Security were snatched at a checkpoint by some thugs, and later murdered.  If the Taliban are really serious about these kinds of activities, I would not put it past them to pose as Police to pull off successful kidnappings like in Iraq.  It is all about the money, and this stuff is big business.    

     This guy that was rescued recently was damn lucky. I am happy for him and his family, and I am really happy for the SF team that was able to successfully pull this off.  These types of operations are no small feat, and my hats off to the planners of this thing.  

    The other trend is beheadings.  The Taliban have done this before in the past, and this is nothing new.  What is alarming is them actually beheading ‘groups’ of folk at one time, like what happened on the bus take down in the story below.  What’s next, Taliban beheading videos on youtube?  Who knows, but it looks like the Taliban and others are thinking in terms of kidnappings and beheadings as viable options in their war. It looks like they are taking the page right out of the Iraq playbook for this kind of thing. –Head Jundi 

——————————————————————- 

US commandos rescue American hostage near Kabul

By JASON STRAZIUSO 

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) — U.S. Special Forces soldiers freed a kidnapped American working for the Army Corps of Engineers during a nighttime mission last week — a rare hostage rescue in a country where ransom abductions have become increasingly common.

The American, who had been working on U.S. government-funded infrastructure projects, was abducted in mid-August and had been held just 30 miles west of Kabul with no public notice of his abduction. The dangerous mission to free the U.S. contractor killed several insurgents, U.S. officials told The Associated Press.

Taliban militants have kidnapped several international aid workers and journalists in recent years and have been paid large ransoms or negotiated the release of imprisoned Taliban fighters in exchange.

But increasingly aggressive crime syndicates are also raking in big money by kidnapping wealthy Afghans and foreigners and demanding ransoms.

“This guy didn’t have any money at all. It was like a personal life mission for him to help others,” said Bruce J. Huffman, a spokesman for the Army Corps of Engineers in Afghanistan. “We all felt sick about it, because he was never going to be able to pay a ransom. He’s over here helping people and they’re trying to make a buck off him.”

Hostage rescues are rarely attempted and difficult to pull off successfully. Not only could the hostage be killed by his abductors during the rescue, but U.S. forces could also accidentally shoot the hostage.

U.S. Special Forces were able to locate the kidnapper’s hideaway in the Nirkh district of Wardak province, though U.S. military officials who spoke to AP about the rescue would not say how. Three U.S. officials offered some details on the rescue on condition they weren’t identified because they weren’t authorized to release the information.

But the three declined to give specific information, saying they didn’t want to compromise tactics used in the rescue or further endanger Army Corps of Engineer personnel, who work on projects like road building and hydroelectric projects in Afghanistan’s increasingly dangerous provinces.

Story Here

——————————————————————- 

Taliban kills 31 Afghans in ambush on a bus – beheading six of them

By Daily Mail Reporter

20th October 2008

Six bus passengers were beheaded on Sunday in a Taliban ambush that left 31 Afghans dead.

The vehicle was travelling in convoy with another bus on the main road through a part of Kandahar province, an area under Taliban control.

Militants fired on the first bus, killing a child on board, but failed to stop it.

An Afghan policeman guards a highway in Kandahar, Afghanistan, after Taliban militants killed 31 passengers in a bus ambush.

Massacre: An Afghan policeman guards a highway in Kandahar, Afghanistan, after Taliban militants killed 31 passengers in a bus ambush.

They stopped the second bus and took 50 civilians hostage. General Mohammad Zahir Azimi, of the Afghan defence ministry, said around 30 were killed, six by beheading.

A Taliban spokesman said its fighters carried out the attack, but insisted only 27 people were killed and all were Afghan army soldiers.

He said everyone on the bus had their papers checked and any civilians were set free.

But General Azimi dismissed the claim saying: ‘Our soldiers travel by military convoy, not in civilian buses. And we have military air transportation.’

Taliban attacks have become increasingly lethal this year, as the militia has gained power and surged through the south and east of Afghanistan.

More than 5,100 people have died in violence in the country this year, mostly militants.

 

Find this story here 

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »

Powered by WordPress