Feral Jundi

Friday, August 14, 2009

Africa: U.S. Boots On Congo Ground

Filed under: Africa,Industry Talk — Tags: , , , , , , , — Matt @ 2:02 AM

    This is a joke, right?  I get the impression that Mr. O’Hanlon, like many journalists and authors out there, has completely written out of the dialogue any mention of PMC’s.  It’s as if they have all committed to the idea that security contractors are a bad idea, and that somehow a reworking of the military structure will solve the problems of manpower issues for these types of missions.

    I have news for you guys, kids these days are smart, and a program like this is still the military and it is still serving in a war zone.  How is that different, other than calling it something different?

   Further more, once you put these ‘safe and sane’ troops on the ground in the Congo, and they are confronted with a force of rebels that see an opportunity to go kinetic on this new style western force, what will these forces answer back with?  Will this new peace force answer rebel bullets and bombs, with high velocity love letters and flower bombs?  This kind of thinking is dangerous and idiotic to say the least, and I am highly skeptical.

   Perhaps Mr. O’Hanlon should get some shared reality, and talk to Eeben Barlow of Executive Outcomes about what is required in these countries if we really care to keep some kind of peace?

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Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Maritime Security: Aegis to Help Combat Piracy Off Somali Coast

   Interesting news.  I wonder if this is a precursor to Aegis coordinating a massive security contractor effort in Africa to deal with piracy? Kind of like the ROC in Iraq.  We will have to keep our eye on this one. –Matt

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Aegis to help combat piracy off Somali coast

By Sylvia Pfeifer in London

April 21 2009

Tim Spicer, the founder and chief executive of Aegis Defence Services, the private security company whose main market is in Iraq, is preparing to do battle on the high seas by tackling piracy off the coast of Somalia.

The company is in talks with several states in the region, including the Yemeni and Djibouti governments, about setting up a command and control centre that would monitor the threat of piracy and act as an information exchange centre for vessels in the area. Somali pirates have stepped up attacks in the Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean in recent weeks, forcing the issue on to the agenda of Western governments.

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Saturday, April 18, 2009

Rwanda: ‘We Were Lying in Pools of Blood’-15th Anniversary of the Genocide

Filed under: Africa,Rwanda — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 8:15 PM

   I have talked about the Rwandan genocide in past posts, and I think it is worthy to bring up the anniversary of that horrific event.  Truly awful. –Matt 

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“We Were Lying in Pools of Blood”

April 12, 2009

On the 15th anniversary of the Rwandan genocide, survivors recall how the world abandoned them in their hour of need

by Michael Abramowitz

Thousands fell silent last week at a hillside memorial here in Kigali, the capital city of Rwanda, as Karasira Venuste told the story of how the world community, as represented by blue-helmuted U.N. peacekeepers, abandoned him and 5,000 other Tutsi near this exact spot 15 years ago.

On the morning of April 7, 1994, Venuste and his neighbors in a nearby village heard the news on the radio that the plane of Rwanda’s Hutu president had been shot down the night before. Thinking of the threats and violence directed at his fellow Tutsi over the past several years, he believed it likely that he and his neighbors would be blamed by the government and its allies for the assassination.

“We are done for,” Venuste thought to himself. “We are finished.”

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Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Industry Talk: International Affairs Forum Interviews Doug Brooks of IPOA

Mr Brooks: The UN contacted [Executive Outcomes] and said, “Could you end the genocide in Rwanda?” This was probably about two weeks into the genocide when nobody else in the world was willing to go in there, to deploy their military. And so EO is sort of between assignments… They said, “Yea, we could do that.” …They got the tickets and were about to head to New York and got another phone call saying the deal’s off.

Shortly afterwards Kofi Annan would famously say, “Maybe the world’s not ready to privatize human security.

     So could the Rwandan genocide have been stopped by Executive Outcomes?  I think so, given EO’s track record in the region, but we will never know.  It is shameful that the UN and the leading nations of the world did not do all it could to prevent this tragic loss of life, and EO could have been a solution to stop it. Shameful….

     Anyways, this was an excellent interview, and some of the points that really jumped out at me was the discussion about the rules for the use of force and the IPOA’s work on developing a set of rules for that. That and the fateful decision of the UN not to use Executive Outcomes to stop the genocide in Rwanda(which is not new, but it still needs to be mentioned over and over again).

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Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Industry Talk: Eeben Barlow’s Military and Security Blog

   I would like to do a little promotion of a blog, of a very significant company and individual that certainly has had an impact on the industry.  Mr. Barlow and his company called Executive Outcomes was very busy in Africa back in the day.  EO’s accomplishments are legendary, and I highly recommend reading the wiki I posted to get an idea of what I am talking about.  

   Also, if you check out his blog, Mr. Barlow is discussing the current piracy issues.  Good stuff. –Head Jundi

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EO

 

Eeben Barlow’s Military and Security Blog 

From Eeben Barlow:

     I founded the Private Military Company (PMC) Executive Outcomes (EO) in 1989. The company operated primarily in Africa helping African governments that had been abandoned by the West. EO also operated in South America and the Far East. I have lectured, and still lecture, to military colleges and universities on security and defence issues in several countries. I believe that only Africans can truly solve Africa’s problems. I currently consult to a USA-based company.

Blog Site Here

Wikipedia for Executive Outcomes

 

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