Feral Jundi

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Iraq: Iraq to Deny New License to Blackwater Security

Filed under: Iraq — Tags: , , — Matt @ 8:53 PM

   I think the key word is preferred contractor, because Blackwater brings a lot of toys and capability to the table.  I guess we will see if in fact, they do go away. –Matt 

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Iraq to Deny New License To Blackwater Security

U.S. Embassy’s Preferred Contractor Accused of Killings

By Ernesto Londoño and Qais Mizher

Washington Post Foreign Service

Thursday, January 29, 2009; A12

MOSUL, Iraq, Jan. 28 — The Iraqi government has informed the U.S. Embassy in Baghdad that it will not issue a new operating license to Blackwater Worldwide, the embassy’s primary security company, which has come under scrutiny for allegedly using excessive force while protecting American diplomats, Iraqi and U.S. officials said Wednesday.

Iraq’s Interior Ministry conveyed its decision to U.S. officials in Baghdad on Jan. 23, in one of the boldest moves the government has made since the Jan. 1 implementation of a security agreement with the United States that sharply curbed American power in Iraq.

Blackwater employees who have not been accused of improper conduct will be allowed to continue working as private security contractors in Iraq if they switch employers, Iraqi officials said Wednesday.

The officials said Blackwater must leave the country as soon as a joint Iraqi-U.S. committee finishes drawing up guidelines for private contractors under the security agreement. It is unclear how long that will take. Blackwater employees and other U.S. contractors had been immune from prosecution under Iraqi law.

“When the work of this committee ends,” Interior Ministry spokesman Maj. Gen. Abdul-Karim Khalaf said, private security companies “will be under the authority of the Iraqi government, and those companies that don’t have licenses, such as Blackwater, should leave Iraq immediately.”

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Monday, January 19, 2009

Podcasts: G. Gordon Liddy Show Talks with Blackfive Media about Raven 23 Radio Logs

Filed under: Iraq,Legal News,Podcasts — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 2:08 PM

An interview between G. Gordon Liddy Show and Jim Hanson of BlackFive Media in regards to the radio logs of the Blackwater Nisour Square shooting.  The media now has copies of these radio logs, and it is pretty apparent that these guys were being attacked.  Why this is important is that the DoJ has made the claim that these guys were not attacked, and fired on civilians.  The logs and pictures of bullet riddled vehicles will be very helpful to this case.

 

Link to Podcast and Blackfive here

Monday, January 12, 2009

Legal News: Raven 23 Radio Logs Key for Defense

Filed under: Iraq,Legal News — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 12:17 PM

     I also understand that now a days, some of the companies are using video cams, similar to what law enforcement use, to record actions during missions.  Any record of actions taken, especially in this phase of the Iraq war, will be vital to protect a team in a court of law(Iraqi or US).  

    Although, most companies do not put the money into these kinds of systems because of cost.  Even a simple recording machine back at the TOC is too much to ask for.  I personally think that the Raven 23 example might change some minds about keeping records or purchasing recording equipment. –Matt 

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Blackwater radio log key in guards’ defense: Rochester man among those charged

Article published Jan 11, 2009

The call came in at 11:59 a.m.: A car bomb exploded 25 yards from a female U.S. Department of State official as she attended a meeting in a dangerous section of Baghdad. The blast left a crater in the ground.

Five Blackwater Worldwide security guards, part of a 19-man team known by the call sign “Raven 23,” grabbed their M-4 carbines and loaded into their heavily armored BearCat assault vehicle. One manned the M-240 machine gun turret.

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Sunday, January 11, 2009

Industry Talk: In Defense of Security Contractors

Filed under: Industry Talk — Tags: , , — Matt @ 12:45 PM

   This story popped up on a few of my radars, and Scott sent me a copy as well.  As you might guess, I am always interested in hearing the critiques of this industry and the support of this industry.  So this article in the magazine Foreign Policy was a good little support piece.  

   One thing I want to add to this, that I think the author was kind of lacking on though, was the amount of security contractors in this war, and the numerous companies doing all sorts of interesting things out there.  Here on FJ, I have mentioned a few.  Like the CMD(CMC) program, where security contractors protect an entire camp and munitions dump, while UXO workers demolish old munitions.  Security contractors do everything from guarding UXO to convoy operations between all of the bases to supply camps and transport people.  These camps were completely run and operated by civilians, and they worked.  The only military management, if you could call it that, were Army Corps of Engineer guys.  These camps would usually have one or two of these folk to watch everything.  But other than that, these camps were completely civilian operated and protected. I brought up this example with other authors out there, and it continues to be ignored.  This mission helped to remove thousands of tons of old explosives in Iraq, and at a cost to contractor lives.  It deserves a mention at the least.

    The GRD program in Iraq was another massive program that involved convoy protection services, and DOD contractors(guys got killed doing this as well).  And currently there are solicitations for the same kind of convoy protection services contracts in Afghanistan, as there were in Iraq.  The programs that this author spoke of, are the TWISS(DoD) and the WPPS(DoS) program.  He gives only a partial picture, and the New America Foundation put the number of security contractors at over 12,000 if we are to look at the entire war effort.  230,000 plus was the figure for civilian contractors in total(that is KBR type folk, as well as the meat eater types).

   Overall, I enjoyed the article because at least it was someone willing to challenge this mindset that we are ‘a bad thing’ for this country.  I also believe that with a little effort on the part of the DoD and DoS, the quality of these contracts could be monitored and managed effectively.  That would require leadership and actually putting in the necessary manpower to manage all the thousands of contractors out there.

   The author also mentioned a key component of why it is so important to keep tabs on contractors:  

Finally, the bodyguard mentality won’t go away with the security company contracts; it must be changed from the top. Behind the highly publicized incidents were not “rogue mercenaries” but professionals dedicated to the mission — protecting the principal at all costs. “At all costs” means just that; costs to the locals, to the broader counterinsurgency effort, and to relations with the host government are irrelevant. For a bodyguard, this is the only measure of effectiveness, and it won’t go away just because the bodyguard works for the government. 

    DoS and DoD need to remember to include us when they talk about Strategic Communications and Unity of Effort. Of course our actions impact the overall counterinsurgency effort, and none of us in the industry want to hurt that effort.  So going back to leadership and effectively managing contractors, you can see that it is not only an important thing for accounting purposes, but it is also important for the war effort.  We can get there, it’s just the client needs to start talking more about how to effectively manage the ‘elephant in the room’ called contractors.  And like the author pointed out, just getting rid of us is not the most practical or even reasonable answer to these issues.  I say do like Pete Blaber said for solving complex problems.  Saturate, incubate, and illuminate and accomplish that mission.-Matt

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In defense of security contractors

By Col. Mark Cancian (USMCR Ret.)

01/08/2009

Like them or hate them, we still need private security contractors

In criticizing the use of contractors in Iraq, some observers cite Blackwater as the tip of the contractor iceberg. It’s a fair analogy, but it deserves to be taken a step further. As with an iceberg, you may be able to shave some off the tip, but hacking away at the body is pointless.

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Thursday, January 8, 2009

Legal News: Feds Plan to Charge Former Montanan for Iraq Death

Filed under: Iraq,Legal News,Montana — Tags: , , — Matt @ 10:26 AM

Feds plan to charge former Montanan for Iraq death

Jan 6, 2009

By GENE JOHNSON of the Associated Press

SEATTLE – Federal prosecutors intend to charge a former security contractor for Blackwater USA in the killing of an Iraqi guard in 2006, his lawyer said Tuesday.

Attorney Stewart Riley said he received a letter from prosecutors outlining their intent to charge his client, Seattle resident Andrew Moonen. Riley declined to discuss the letter any further or say if it revealed what charge the U.S. attorney’s office is contemplating, but said he has neither received nor made any plea offer for Moonen.

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