Feral Jundi

Friday, March 27, 2009

Disaster Response: We Used PMC’s for the Katrina Hurricane Disaster, So Why Not The US/Mexico Border Disaster?

     This story below is ridiculous, and I certainly hope that this is not yet another trend that only increases do to a perceived lack of manpower or resources to fight this crap.  I have also been listening to a lot of law enforcement agencies and government officials on the news continue to complain that they just don’t have the manpower to cover this stuff. Couple that with the weapons story I just posted, and entire towns being rampaged by drug cartels, and I am just wondering when this disaster is going to be treated like a disaster?  

     To me, this is a disaster of epic proportions, and needs attention now. Arguably, the drugs and gang/border violence over the years, have killed way more people and ravaged way more communities than any muslim fundamentalists have or hurricanes have.  It is a disaster that requires attention now.  But so do the disasters in Afghanistan, Iraq, Africa, etc.

     So what is the solution, if the border needs guys with guns, and there just isn’t enough of them in the military or police? Hell, Obama just requested 4,000 more troops for Afghanistan.  And if money is an issue, or time to train up an adequate force to get on the border is an issue, then a short term or mid term solution called Private Military Companies or Private Security Companies is the answer. They were an answer during the Hurricane disaster of 2005, and they could be the answer now.   

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Sunday, March 22, 2009

Afghanistan: Military Hangs ‘Help Wanted’ Sign in Afghanistan

Filed under: Afghanistan — Tags: , , , , , , , — Matt @ 7:37 PM

   I wanted to point out a couple of things that bother me about today’s articles about contractors.  I read a lot of them, and there is a definite model of article that all of these journalists are following–or so it seems.  For example, it is rare that a journalist forgets to mention something about Blackwater (Xe), any time they want to talk about anything relating to contractors.  The story could be about contractors handing out shower shoes to poor Iraqi families, and the reporter will throw in the standard story about Blackwater killing 13 civilians in cold blood…. (ad nauseam)   

     Ok, we get it.  We know that story already, and it is like beating a dead horse every time these guys do that. It would be like mentioning the Haditha incident, every time there was a story about the military–good or bad.  But it seems like the media is really hung up on doing it with our industry, as if they are like zombies, filling in the blanks on some contractor related report software.  Shower shoes…check.  Iraq…check. Contractor does this (fill in the blank). check.  Blackwater killed 13 civilians…check.  And now you have an article!  Pffft.

   The other one I wanted to hit on, is when is it journalistic, to write as a source ‘in recent online postings’?  I am a blogger, and even I take the time to point out the link to where I got the info from.  For this article, I have a wonderful little link down below, just so people know where this came from.  But ANNE FLAHERTY has felt that being vague with her source was acceptable.  Did she get it from a blog, a forum, or what?  Was it FedBizOp?(that would be my guess, but who knows?).  Either way Anne, if you are reading this, guys like me and Jake and the rest of the crew, like knowing where you got your info from.  Not because of credit reasons, but because if you have found some jobs for our industry, we would like to know about it so we can tell our community.  That’s all.  

   With that said, I will assume she has probably been cruising the same jaunts that our crew has been cruising for info, and what she has said is not that new to us.  I did want to post this as a flag though, that Afghanistan is picking up for contracts and now the media is catching on.  I have posted several gigs lately, to include that Cohort deal.  And Anne did mention a few things that I totally agree with and wish that the government would work on. So not all is lost with this article. lol  

   Let’s try this.  Iraq could be viewed as a big testing site for the proof of concept called security contracting.  And right now, there are plenty of resources, organizations, papers, subject matter experts, legal experts, laws and attention on the subject, to really formulate a solid plan on how to use us properly out there.  It just means getting off of your ass, and doing what you have to do to make it happen.(this is totally directed at the Obama Administration and Congress right now)  You guys are the leaders and this is your ship.  Afghanistan is something we need to get serious with, and by not dealing with these issues is dangerous.  If you do not, I guarantee that we will have another Blackwater type incident, and another company will be skylined as the flagship of all that is bad with the war in Afghanistan, and we will be set back even further in this fight.  You know the Taliban will do all they can to set it up, and take advantage.  

     The industry begs you to do something about this, so we can be more effective in this war effort.   Einstein had a great quote for leaders or anyone that does not learn from past mistakes. “Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” –Matt

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 Military hangs `Help Wanted’ sign in Afghanistan

By ANNE FLAHERTY 

March 21, 2009

WASHINGTON (AP) — The military buildup in Afghanistan is stoking a surge of private security contractors despite a string of deadly shootings in Iraq in recent years that has called into question the government’s ability to manage the guns for hire.

In recent online postings, the military has asked private security companies to protect traveling convoys and guard U.S. bases in troubled southern provinces such as Helmand and Kandahar. And if truckers hired to transport fuel for the military want protection, they can hire their own armed guards, the military says.

The Bush administration expanded the use of such companies with the onset of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan because it can save the military time and money. But the practice lost much of its appeal with Congress after September 2007, when five guards with what was then called Blackwater Worldwide (the company recently changed its name to Xe) opened fire in a crowded Baghdad square and killed 17 Iraqis.

Those killings followed a 2006 incident in which a drunken Blackwater employee fatally shot an Iraqi politician’s bodyguard.

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Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Industry Talk” U.S. Honors Contractors Held Hostage by Colombian Rebels

Filed under: Colombia,Industry Talk — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 1:53 AM

   I hope the company of these guys pays them a huge bonus as well. Good on these guys, and I am glad they are getting recognized. –Matt 

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U.S. honors contractors held hostage by Colombian rebels

By JACK DOLAN

Mar. 13, 2009

Three U.S. defense contractors who were held hostage by Colombian terrorists for more than five years received the Medal of Freedom, the civilian equivalent of the Purple Heart, on Thursday.

Speaking before a packed room at the U.S. Southern Command headquarters in Doral, former hostage Tom Howes, 56, fought back tears as he said, “You never forgot us, thank you very much.”

The three men — Howes, Marc Gonsalves and Keith Stansell — suffered injuries and brutal treatment at the hands of their captors, the Colombian Revolutionary Armed Forces, known by the Spanish acronym FARC. The men still bear scars from the chains used to bind them on long, forced marches between jungle camps.

The Department of Defense created the Medal of Freedom after the Sept. 11 terrorist attack on the Pentagon. The honor goes to civilian employees killed or injured while working for the DOD. Thirty-seven have been awarded so far.

The three contractors, all of whom worked for a subsidiary of Northrop Grumman, were part of a five-man crew on a drug surveillance plane brought down by engine trouble in February 2003. FARC rebels captured them and executed two others, American pilot Thomas Janis and a Colombian Army Sgt. Luis Alcides Cruz.

`WE’RE NOT FORGOTTEN’

Howes told the mostly uniformed audience on Thursday that, at his lowest point, Stansell risked a beating to pass him a note that said: “We’re not forgotten. People are trying to get us out. We have families to go home to.”

The U.S. and Colombian governments flew 3,600 reconnaissance flights searching for the men, according to a statement released by the U.S. Southern Command before the ceremony. They logged 17,000 flight hours and spent $250 million searching for them, the report said.

Gonsalves, 36, said his greatest fear was being forgotten. ”We were isolated in the middle of the jungle,” he said, but every now and then, “we’d hear a buzz. We could never see it, because it was up so high, but we knew what it was.”

Gonsalves said his low point came after an unusually vivid dream about his 9-year-old daughter. ”I was holding her in my lap. I could smell the shampoo in her hair,” he said. “Then when I woke up I was locked in a box in the jungle.”

Unexpected salvation came for the trio on July 2, 2008, their 1,967th day in captivity.

Colombian soldiers posing as humanitarian workers arrived in a Russian built helicopter and persuaded the FARC guards to climb aboard with a group of 11 hostages, including the three Americans and Colombian politician Ingrid Betancourt.

”I saw a blur of bodies as soon as we broke ground,” Howes said, ‘in the middle of it all somebody shouted, `Colombian Army’ ”.

Within seconds, the FARC captors were disarmed and buried on the floor of the chopper beneath a pile of bodies. Stansell, a 44-year-old ex-Marine built like a linebacker, was one of those bodies, Howes added with a chuckle.

CONTROVERSY

A book the three wrote, Out of Captivity, sparked international controversy over critical comments made about Betancourt. Stansell reportedly accused her of stealing food, hoarding books, and endangering the three Americans’ lives by telling the guards that they were CIA agents.

But on Thursday, the three focused on their gratitude for the rescue, and urged the audience not to abandon 22 other hostages still held by the FARC in the Colombian jungle.

Story Here

 

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Books: Out of Captivity, Surviving 1,967 Days in a Colombian Jungle

Filed under: Books,Colombia — Tags: , , , , , , , — Matt @ 4:42 PM

Out of Captivity

Editorial Reviews

Product Description

On February 13, 2003, a plane carrying three American civilian contractors—Marc Gonsalves, Keith Stansell, and Tom Howes—crash-landed in the mountainous jungle of Colombia. Dazed and shaken, they emerged from the plane bloodied and injured as gunfire rained down around them. As of that moment they were prisoners of the FARC, a Colombian terrorist and Marxist rebel organization. In an instant they had become American captives in Colombia’s volatile and ongoing conflict, which has lasted for almost fifty years.

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Saturday, February 14, 2009

Industry Talk: Media to Contractors– Who Are You Guys?, by David Isenberg

Filed under: Industry Talk — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 4:06 PM

    “Who am I?”  (with my best Derek Zoolander impression)

    It is complicated, yet simple.  I guess the one thing I think of is if we do not define who we are, someone else or even some ‘thing’ else will do it for us.  From Wikipedia, to online forums, to journalists/authors, to academics, to just good ol’ Google search rankings, there are numerous sources for defining who we are and how we are viewed out there. So to me, it is up to us to jump into that discussion and try to fill the void of information to reach a more accurate conclusion.  

    I say Google, because it is certainly a factor we have to consider in this discussion. Every time I post on this blog, or gain another reader, we are now adding to that definition and ranking in Google. We become a source of information for the discussion, and I hope to get FJ up there as a source. Perhaps one day, when someone types in PMC or Private Military Company, Feral Jundi might be a first pager (kind of floating around the bottom, but still a genuine first pager), and that researcher might stumble upon the ideas on this site.  Then I can point that researcher to others who can provide further insight, and so on, and we can start that process of defining or even re-defining who we are.  And hey, if we are good influencers, we might even win a few over to some kind of positive consensus. Excellent article David and I hope this will further push the discussion along in the realm of PMC 2.0.  –Matt

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Dogs of War:  Media to Contractors:  Who Are You Guys?

FEB 14, 2009

By DAVID ISENBERG

WASHINGTON, Feb. 13 (UPI) — Last week I wrote that obtaining information about private military and security contractors has never been easier than it is now. But if that is so, then why do so many private military and security contractors think news coverage of their activities ranges from poor to abysmal?

Some, echoing the old right-wing canard, think the media is hopelessly liberal and therefore has an ingrained bias toward anyone dealing with military or security issues, let alone someone who might actually carry a gun for a living.

This is far too simplistic, though. For example, the specialized trade press, with the likes of Defense News and Jane’s Defense Weekly, are hardly left wing, liberal, or promoting a pacifist agenda. Many of their reporters are military veterans who understand the challenges facing security contractors.

Though overall, reporters are like most Americans in that they don’t have firsthand military experience, this does not mean they are anti-military. It just means they don’t know the vocabulary that many contractors take for granted.

But it would be fair to say the news media in the main does not understand the industry. There are good reasons for that.

First, what is it? We know what the car industry is: It makes cars. But what is a private military or security contractor? As a semi-organized business sector it has barely been around 20 years. If we were to use the automobile industry as a reference, we would still be in the horseless carriage age. If PMCs are an industry, what is your International Organization for Standardization classification?

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