Feral Jundi

Saturday, June 19, 2010

Industry Talk: U.S. Training Center Wins $120 Million Afghan Contract

     Yep. They won it alright, and if anyone at all doubts how desperate the US government is for manpower in this war, this is proof positive. The only reason why a company like this, wins this kind of contract, is because they can deliver.

     Obviously Xe is disliked by the government, but the government dislikes dead federal employees or losing the war even more.  Plus time is not on their side.  The administration has to show success in Afghanistan, and part of that strategy involves the civilian surge.(along with this military surge) Xe and the rest of my community are essential for that civilian surge to happen.  The war strategists know this, DoS and DoD knows this, and that is just the way it is.

     While big military is out killing the Taliban and doing the heavy lifting, who do you think will be doing the convoy, static and PSD work for all of these civilians?  The Afghan companies? (wait, we are investigating them for their dealings with the Taliban-yikes)  We could initiate the draft? (Oh, now that is even more politically unacceptable–election killer) We could use the National Guard and IRR? (wait, we are using them for the border or gulf spill clean up) Congress could vote for more troops to be sent to Afghanistan? (that would make the venture even more of a re-election killer for a congress and administration already on the ropes) We could put the call out to more countries to send troops? (wait, no one can afford to send any more–something about a world wide recession) How about some Ugandans? (already using them in Iraq) Any others?…. We could contract with DynCorp or Triple Canopy instead of Xe for this job? (we will and are already using them for this work, and DoS has already made their choice as to who is more capable at this time and for this contract/location–best value)

     I guess my point is, is that using security contractors and companies like Xe is essential to the war effort at this time. That is the best way I can spell it out for the reader. How are we not, if the DoS is willing to bite it’s lip and contract with this company? How is it not if we are now in the quarter million range as far as contractor numbers in both Iraq and Afghanistan?  How are we not after close to 2,000 dead and well over 40,000 injured?

     For the protection of federal employees and property in places like Iraq and Afghanistan, the best forces available right now, are the ones the companies have to offer. That is this war, and that is the politics of this event. –Matt

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Firm once known as Blackwater gets Afghan contract

June 19, 2010

KABUL, Afghanistan — Part of the company once known as Blackwater Worldwide has been awarded a more than $120 million contract to protect new U.S. consulates in the Afghan cities of Herat and Mazar-e-Sharif, the U.S. Embassy said Saturday.

The United States Training Center, a business unit of the former Blackwater, now called Xe Services, was awarded the contract Friday, embassy spokeswoman Caitlin Hayden said.

The company won the contract over two other American firms — Triple Canopy and DynCorps International, she said. The one-year contract can be extended twice for three months each for a maximum of 18 months.

Under the name Blackwater, the Moyock, North Carolina-based company provided guards and services to the U.S. government in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere but came under sharp criticism for its heavy-handed tactics in those missions.

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Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Industry Talk: Erik Prince Plans Sale Of Xe Services LLC

     This will be interesting to watch.  I would be very curious as to who would be interested in purchasing the whole nut, or the various companies within Xe? Undoubtedly, the training and aviation stuff would be profitable.  It’s just the name and history that comes with all of it.  So who will bite? Who is this ‘mystery buyer’ that Mr. Prince is talking about?

     Also, check out Danger Room’s poll of who should buy Xe.  It is actually pretty funny, and Blackfive as well as Steve Jobs are top contenders. –Matt

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Blackwater Founder Erik Prince Plans Sale of Security Company

June 07, 2010

By Gopal Ratnam and Timothy R. Homan

Blackwater Worldwide founder Erik Prince is pursuing the sale of the private security company whose guards once faced charges in the fatal shootings of 14 Iraqis.

Xe Services LLC, as the closely held company is now known, said in a statement it has undergone “significant” changes in the past 15 months that will make it more valuable to a buyer. It didn’t specify the changes.

The company, whose customers include the U.S. government, is in talks with possible buyers, said a person familiar with the matter. Prince briefed employees on his plan today at Xe’s headquarters in Moyock, North Carolina, said the person, who declined to be identified because the details are private.

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Sunday, May 30, 2010

Industry Talk: What Memorial Day Means To A Security Contractor

A memorial on campus at Xe honors fallen comrades. 

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What Memorial Day Means To A Security Contractor

5/30/2010

     What does Memorial Day mean to a security contractor?  Well for one, it is an American holiday, so I imagine that American security contractors would be more in the position of remembrance than any other contractors from other countries.  But under contract with companies who work for US DoD, DoS, etc., many contractors from other countries have died.  That includes local nationals like Iraqis or Afghanis, or third country nationals who include everyone else. I guess my point is that do we only recognize the sacrifice of American fallen during this day, when so many have died in support of America and this global war?  Or do these contractors only get recognized by their country for their sacrifice in this war, and we only focus on American contractors during our Memorial Day? Because on this day and in this war, a security contractor has many deaths to remember and pay respects to.

   For one, a security contractor in this war usually is a military veteran and from the combat arms.  So more than likely, they knew men or women that died in the war when they were in the military.  When that veteran got out of the military and went back into service as a security contractor, they might have been in a position to lose fellow contractors as well.  Those fallen contractors could be American, or they could be South African, or they could be some Iraqi team member. It could be all three in an attack, and an IED does not discriminate.  The common bond between all parties is the service given during the war and the companies they worked for.

   So the question comes up again.  What does Memorial Day mean to a security contractor?  Well to me it is a remembrance for all of those who died in the first Gulf War (I was a Marine in this war). I also have a profound respect for all the fallen soldiers of all other wars the US has been in.  It is not a day of picnics on the lake, or sales at shopping centers.  Memorial Day is a somber day, in which you are reminded that you are the lucky one who lived, and those that are in the ground are the ones who did not.

   Then there is the other side of me who is a security contractor.  As a contractor, I remember three groups who have all made sacrifices.  I remember the Iraqi jundis that I worked with who were killed in the war.  I remember the South African I worked with who was killed.  And I remember the Americans I worked with who were killed.  All of these deaths are sacrifices that have meaning to me and to my fellow contractors who worked in those companies and on those contracts.

   On this day I give equal attention to both the military deaths and contractor deaths, and that is what Memorial Day means to a security contractor.  The difference between the sacrifice of both sides, is that the military deaths are paid the ultimate respect by society, and the contractor deaths are ignored by society.  There are no holidays dedicated to fallen security contractors, no monuments at the Mall in Washington DC for security contractors, and no special headstones for fallen security contractors in cemeteries.  If anything, a fallen security contractor is buried with a headstone that has dedications to their military service.

   But that is changing, and private industry has found ways to remember the fallen.  For an example, the company Xe (Blackwater) has a memorial for it’s fallen contractors.  I imagine that the families and friends of fallen Xe contractors will be going to this memorial as well as to the cemetery where that individual was buried on Memorial Day.  So that is two places for the friends and family to go and bravo to Xe for building such a thing.

   Still, there is nothing in the US that is dedicated to contractors who have perished in the war. There isn’t even an accurate accounting of all the contractors that have been killed in this war.  At this time, I can’t even give a statistic like who was the first security contractor or regular contractor killed in the war. Were they an expat, local national, or third country national?  I could speculate or maybe just go off of wikipedia or icasualties.org, but both of these sites have proven to be insufficient in providing a complete database.  Even the Department of Labor’s count of deaths based on death benefits and insurance claims is incomplete. But we certainly know who was the first soldiers or federal employees to die in the wars in Iraq or Afghanistan.

   Then there is the historical perspective on contractor deaths in war. Is there a monument or memorial for the privateers that were killed during the early wars of the US?  Or do their sacrifices not count when it comes to the founding of this country?  How about the thousands of men and women who perished in all of the wars that the US has fought, who worked as contractors (or whatever name given to private industry warriors over the years).  I have made a point of bringing that history back into the discussion about contractors, because these are all sacrifices given during the process of defending and supporting the US over the years, and that should mean something.

   Perhaps one day congress will recognize the sacrifice of private industry during times of war. A monument that serves to recognize all types of contractors, and from all countries, who have all participated in and died in our wars.  I could not foresee the names of all of those contractors on a monument like this, because unfortunately there is no list for such a thing. Either way, a monument would be a great way to show that contractors are not forgotten and that their sacrifice does matter.

    So to answer the question I brought up in the beginning. Memorial Day for me is a remembrance for both the military and civilian deaths in this war, and wars past. I also remember those who died who were not only Americans, but were from other countries. And when I walk through a cemetery and see the head stones with crosses and military honors on them, I also think about the civilian contractors out there who were killed in the war that have nothing on their head stones to identify their service. If there is a monument locally where a veterans group is putting on a ceremony, I often like attending those.  Guys like myself pay their respects in ways that best suit them.  I like to write, and this blog gives me the opportunity to pay tribute.

    Others might be overseas working during this day, and paying tribute could mean attending a ceremony on some FOB or outpost.  In this digital age, many go on to the forums and pay their respect online. Contractors remember their fallen brothers when they were in the military, and they remember their fallen brothers in the various companies they have worked for. Most of all, military veterans and contractors remember their dead every day, and it doesn’t take a holiday to remind them to do so. But it is a day designed to put attention on war time sacrifice, and reminds those who have not served or have not lost someone that such a sacrifice exists.  That is Memorial Day for a security contractor, and my personal thoughts on the matter. Rest in peace to the fallen. –Matt

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Somalia: Respected Islamic Scholars Declare War As ‘Un-Islamic’

   You know, I think this is pretty significant.  There have been some new and startling developments in the war in Somalia, and I think it is important to highlight what is really going on.  The other reason I want to post this, is to set the record as to who is really responsible for all of this chaos over there.

   First off, my message to these extremists groups in Somalia is that Blackwater did not bomb your mosques.  Nor did Blackwater dig up Sufi graves and hide the bodies.  Nope.  Nor did Blackwater allow piracy to continue under their watch in Somalia, or cut off food supplies to the people of Somalia via banning the World Food Program food shipments, or proclaim that a 13 year old girl who was gang raped by thugs to be a whore and then have her stoned to death in public.  Nope, Blackwater didn’t do any of that.

    But I will tell you who did.  It was al Shabab and company, and now that Somalia’s true Islamic scholars have spoken and rejected their war, from here on out they will have that hanging over them. How can you wage holy war, when you don’t have a case for such a thing?

   Further more, I will go as far as to say that al Shabab and company care more about power and making money, than living some kind of purist lifestyle under Sharia Law.  In other words, I call them hypocrites.  You administer your form of sick justice on helpless little girls, yet look the other way when it comes to piracy, desecrating graves, bombing of mosques, chewing khat, recklessly launching mortars into population centers and otherwise making a hard life for the people of Somalia, even worse.  And now you have lost the support of the guys who are more knowledgeable of Islam than you. And last I checked, these scholars said nothing about Blackwater at the Garowe Islamic conference. Nope, they were referring to your now ‘un-holy war’ and you have no one to blame but yourselves.

   On a side note, I do think it is funny that islamic extremists fear contractors as much as they do.  It used to be that the Marines or Special Forces where the ones that everyone feared or put the blame on for everything.  But hey, if you guys want to make us into the new bogeyman, so be it……. Boo! lol –Matt

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Aweys rejects clerics’ verdict on Somalia war

11 May 11, 2010

The Islamist leader of Somalia’s Hizbul- Islam rebel group Sheikh Hassan Dahir Aweys dismissed the declarations of the country’s most respected Islamic scholars, who were in attendance at the recently concluded Garowe Islamic conference, Radio Garowe reports.

The Islamic conference was held last month in Garowe, capital of Puntland in northern Somalia, where more than 50 respected Somali clerics declared that the ongoing war in Somalia as un-Islamic.Aweys defended the war his waging against the foreign troops and UN-backed government as “in accordance with Islamic law.’“The war we are waging is in accordance with Islamic law, because we are not after power. We want to implement Sharia Law in the country,” said the 65-year old cleric.

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Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Industry Talk: Erik Prince Slams Big Government In Michigan Speech

     Prince returned to his hometown of Holland to give a speech criticizing government spending and regulation that drew a standing ovation from more than 700 people. The event, part of the town’s annual Tulip Time Festival, had to be moved to Hope College’s basketball arena because of the high demand for tickets. 

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     This is interesting because you just don’t hear of Erik Prince doing too many of these types of events. This might be an indicator that he is wanting to get more public and more vocal, either to push some politics, correct the record or sell books. It’s probably a little of everything, and controversial figures like him sell big time at speaking events.  Who knows, but one thing is for sure–the crowd liked him, and they wanted more. Now if he started a blog, complete with a facebook/twitter page, well then he could really get vocal. (hint, hint) lol –Matt

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Blackwater founder slams big gov’t in Mich. speech

By KATHY BARKS HOFFMAN

April 6, 2010

HOLLAND, Mich. — Blackwater Worldwide founder Erik Prince said Wednesday his values of hard work and personal responsibility “have gotten me a few detractors along the way, and I’m OK with that.”

Prince returned to his hometown of Holland to give a speech criticizing government spending and regulation that drew a standing ovation from more than 700 people. The event, part of the town’s annual Tulip Time Festival, had to be moved to Hope College’s basketball arena because of the high demand for tickets.

Holland, about 30 miles west of Grand Rapids, is in Michigan’s most reliably Republican county. Home to many residents of Dutch descent, the area is known for its strong Dutch Reformed faith and conservative values.

Although 60 people outside held signs protesting Blackwater’s actions in Iraq, many inside said Prince’s speech inspired them. They said they were glad to hear his side of unflattering news reports about the North Carolina-based company, now called Xe Services.

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