Feral Jundi

Monday, March 14, 2011

Legal News: Paravant Contractors Get An Involuntary Manslaughter Charge For Self-Defense Shooting In Afghanistan

Filed under: Afghanistan,Legal News — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 1:49 PM

 

This is stupid. Being charged with involuntary manslaughter for killing the passenger in a threat vehicle? In an active war zone as well?  Think of the situation here. These guys were trying to stop a perceived threat, which happens to be a car driving recklessly towards them and their accident site. To me, the ones responsible for the death of the passenger is the guy driving the vehicle. Chris and Justin were simply acting in self-defense–which the jury has agreed was the case. It’s as if the prosecution had to find ‘something’ to get the evil contractors with, and were able to convince the jury that this was a legitimate charge?

With that said, I certainly hope the defense will file a motion and have this charge removed.  All in all though, this is a victory for the defense in the face of such heavy duty political pressure. The prosecution had a retrial and second chance to go after these two men, and all they could eek out of the process was an involuntary manslaughter charge?  The point is, they failed at convincing a jury that this was murder, and the final outcome was that it was a ‘defensive act’. When the charge is removed, I will post an update. –Matt

From the Free Justin H. Cannon Facebook Page

Justin and Chris were found guilty of one count of involuntary manslaughter at about 4:30 p.m. today.

Their attorneys think they have a chance of getting the verdict set aside, or if that fails, getting it overturned on appeal. Involuntary manslaughter was not in the original indictment, but the prosecution convinced the judge to include it and voluntary manslaughter in his instructions to the Jury.

(more…)

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Quotes: The Interior Ministry In Kabul Depends On 282 Foreign Advisors, And 120 Are Contractors!

     The Interior Ministry in Kabul has 282 foreign advisers working there, according to the NATO Training Mission Afghanistan, which placed them in the ministry. Of the 282 advisers, 120 are contractors, costing $36 million a year, paid for by the U.S. government. The rest are made up of 119 U.S. military and U.S. government civilians, and 43 from other coalition countries…..

     …..Several Interior Ministry officials, serving and retired, were complimentary about the work of the foreign advisers. One mid-ranking security official, who didn’t want to be named because he wasn’t authorized to speak to reporters, said that corruption would be “many times” greater if the foreigners weren’t present. 

     That last part of the quote up top is what I was focused on.  If you read through the article below, you hear all sorts of negative comments about the services of this foreign advisory group, to include bashing the contractor element. Of course those corrupt souls in the Afghan government would bash these pesky foreign advisors that would report on their greedy activities…. To me, this advisor crew is vital to the war effort, by helping to minimize the amount of corruption in this government.  Imagine if there was no adult supervision?

    Also, DynCorp and MPRI were listed as some of the top contractor advisors, which is interesting.  MPRI is like a retirement home for retired military officers. So it would make sense that this collection of military mind power and experience would be directed towards a very crucial part of the war.  And that is getting the Afghan government on it’s feet, and trying to make it look good in the eyes of the people.  A tall order if you ask me.

     This also indicates to me the strategic importance of contractors.  The US and NATO could have insisted on having an all federal or military group of advisors.  But they do not have that capability, and they have had close to ten years to try and develop an all government force.  As you can see, private industry has been able to answer the call just fine, and a majority of this group is composed of smart and very capable contractors, doing a very important job.

     It is also an example of the ‘blended workforce’ concept. This advisory corps has 162 government and military advisors in it, so they too can contribute in building the Afghan government, as well as keep track of and manage the advisory corps and it’s efforts. A federal/public partnership, or blended workforce is what you call this. You see this arrangement with other areas of war zone contracting, like with the WPS program–a federal handler, overseeing a contractor security team. Hopefully this blended workforce concept does not impede the advantages of private enterprise, or decrease the strength of government oversight. It should complement both, and the end result should be something everyone can support.-Matt

  

Afghans rely heavily on foreign advisers as transition looms

By Saeed Shah

Nearly 300 foreign advisers, most of them Americans, work at Afghanistan’s Interior Ministry, and hundreds more work in other government departments, a reliance on foreign expertise that raises doubts about the viability of the West’s exit strategy.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai will announce later this month his plans for “transition” from heavy international involvement in Afghanistan’s governance and security to local control. But the number of civilian advisers in the ministries suggests that either Afghans lack the ability to govern themselves or that the international community is trying to run the administration itself, more than nine years after the U.S.-led invasion of the country.

There’s no clear plan to reduce that number.

Foreign advisers in the Interior Ministry, for example, appear to outnumber the senior Afghan officials they serve.

The Afghan government’s capacity to execute plans is so lacking it will spend only half of its $1.5 billion budget for economic development projects this fiscal year, according to the Ministry of Finance — despite the desperate need for investment in education, health and other basic services.

(more…)

Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Legal News: Welch And Jones Introduce Bipartisan Bill To Stop Afghanistan From Taxing US Aid

     I like it, and I am sure many aid organizations and companies getting harassed by the Afghan government will like this as well.

     If you support a bill like this, by all means communicate that to Reps. Welch or Rep. Jones. I have also provided the FAQ below from a website called Congress.org that spells out how you can best communicate electronically with Congress.(you can sign up with their service, or just do it on your own)

     Also, if you want to ‘like’ a congressman on Facebook, and voice your opinion on the bill on their wall, that is another quick way of communications and voicing support. –Matt

Welch and Jones introduce bipartisan bill to stop Afghanistan from taxing US aid

Monday, 07 March 2011

Reps. Peter Welch (D-Vt.) and Walter Jones (R-N.C.) on Monday introduced bipartisan legislation to prevent the Afghan government from taxing American companies delivering US aid to Afghanistan.

The Stop Taxing American Assistance to Afghanistan Act (H.R. 936) would bar future assistance to Afghanistan unless US contractors and subcontractors delivering aid are exempt from taxation by the government of Afghanistan. According to the Washington Post, the Afghan government recently sent overdue tax bills to US contractors working in the country.

“It is absurd for the Aghan government to suggest taxing America’s effort to rebuild their country,” Welch said. “While that may make sense in Hamid Karzai’s world, it makes no sense to the American taxpayer. This legislation will make sure America is not taxed on the assistance it provides to Afghanistan.”

“It is outrageous for the Karzai government to tax U.S infrastructure spending for the reconstruction of their country,” Jones said.

The calls to tax US contractors come despite bilateral agreements that exempt US-based companies from such taxation. In recent months, the Afghan government has warned contractors in the country that failure to pay what it deems overdue tax bills could result in arrest or confiscation of goods.

H.R. 936 was referred to the House Committee on Foreign Affairs.

Story here.

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Communicating with Congress

E-mailing Your Elected Officials

Veteran Washington reporter Craig Crawford offers some tips on how to write an effective letter to Congress. (Transcription available here. )

Members of Congress prefer to hear from their constituents by e-mail. It’s faster, easier to sort and doesn’t present any security risks. (Read more here.) In order to avoid having their in boxes flooded with spam and letters from people in other states, Senators and Representatives require people e-mailing them to supply an address and other information before sending an e-mail. Because of these requirements, however, you cannot e-mail more than one of your elected officials at the same time through their Web sites.

(more…)

Monday, March 7, 2011

Industry Talk: Ares Management Will Acquire Global Defense Technology And Systems

     It paid nearly $27 million for the Fort Meade-based Zytel and almost $53 million for Signature Government Solutions in Herndon.

     Those purchases “kind of tapped them out, so they really needed some dry powder to continue on the acquisition campaign . . . to maintain their growth and maintain their competitiveness,” Kipp said.

     Hillen said Ares’ backing could potentially accelerate GTEC’s plans to buy more companies as it seeks to grow organically and through acquisitions.

     The company is focusing on high-end technology companies that work in areas like cybersecurity and intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance. 

     Boy, if you owned any GTEC stock you probably experienced a little bump as a result from this acquisition news. I also included the stock screener for GTEC so you can see for yourself what Ares Management is seeing in Global.

     This company is doing well, and the infusion of private-equity will help them to continue to do well.  Who knows what companies will be in Global’s sights for future purchase, but if you look at their past purchases dealing with cyber security, we probably can deduct that we will see more of the same in the future. Cyber security is huge business, and companies are all jockeying for position in this evolving market.

    Of course the reason I put this up on the blog is because GTEC is also related to Global Strategies Group.(From website: Our former wholly-owned North American subsidiary, Global Defense Technology & Systems, Inc. GTEC, recently completed an initial public offering. GLOBAL continues to be a significant shareholder of GTEC.) Although I don’t think this news will really impact you guys out there too much, unless you owned stock in GTEC. Thanks to a reader for giving me the heads up. –Matt

Private equity firm will acquire GTEC of McLean

By Marjorie CenserMonday, March 7, 2011

McLean-based Global Defense Technology & Systems, a growing contractor primarily focused on intelligence systems and services, announced last week it will be acquired by an affiliate of private-equity firm Ares Management.

The company is the latest to be picked up by private equity, which has played an increasingly large role in the defense industry as it adjusts to anticipated reduced budgets and new Pentagon guidelines on conflicts of interest.

The buy “highlights the capital market renaissance that’s occurred over the last 12 months,” said Bob Kipps, managing director of the McLean-based investment firm KippsDeSanto.

The definitive agreement reached by GTEC, as the company is known, and Ares, based the deal on a share price of $24.25, a nearly 51 percent increase over the company’s $16.08 close the day before the agreement was announced. The total deal value is approximately $315 million, including the assumption of debt and prior to expenses, GTEC said.

(more…)

Publications: CRS Report-DoD Use Of PSC’s In Iraq And Afghanistan, February 2011

CRS Report–The Department of Defense’s Use of Private Security Contractors in Afghanistan and Iraq: Backgr…

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