Feral Jundi

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Industry Talk: Can’t Anyone Here Manage a Contract?, by David Isenberg

Filed under: Industry Talk — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 11:34 AM

   A great article and lots of excellent suggestions for the commission to check out. (hint….hint?) Let’s review the statistics shall we, so we can have a little perspective during this conversation.  250,000 plus or minus private contractors operating in the various war zones.(this number refers to DoD, DoS, USAID, others) As for personal sacrifice of the contracting community,  Iraq (1,314) and Afghanistan (111) casualties.  Not to mention the 31,000 contractors that have been injured. (and that is a rough number as well) So with those numbers, why is the government still not doing the things necessary to organize and manage this industry?

    Maybe the government wants this industry to be disjointed and unorganized?  They want fraud and abuse cases to happen, because it takes the spot light off the government, and allows them to blame private industry for all of their ills?  I don’t know, and it still boggles my mind as to how this continues to flail in the wind.  

   Look, it is simple.  If the current leadership tasked with organizing and managing this effort is not up to the task, then fire them, and get someone else in there to get the job done.  The next effort should be to shame those leaders in government and military who have allowed this to carry on.  We have a war to fight, and if the Obama administration has deemed this war a national interest and priority, then we need get off our collective ass and do what is necessary to organize and get efficient.  

   I would also like to see a conversation about including this 250,000 plus or minus contractors into the discussion about the various regional military and diplomatic strategies.  It is odd to me that we have thousands of us working with and around civilian populations out there, and our wartime strategies supposedly deal with protecting and helping those populations, and yet there is no coordination of my industry to insure we do not screw that up.  If a company implements bad business practices, or grossly impractical road tactics, or poor treatment of local nationals, etc. because there were no regional rules on what was acceptable for private industry, then of course that is going to work against the overall regional strategy and the war effort.  In the eyes of the local populations, we are all one in the same(foreigners in their land), and our military/diplomatic leaders and strategists need to recognize that reality. 

    The private industry does have an impact on the war, and if we are serious about managing that impact, then all 250,000 of us have to be brought into the conversation about war time strategy and how to conduct ourselves out there. That to me is reason enough to get serious about contractors, but who am I or David to bring that point up?  

    And the war continues……-Matt 

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Can’t anyone here manage a contract?

by David Isenberg 

June 9th, 2009 

Tomorrow, according to the Associated Press, the Commission on Wartime Contracting will present a bleak assessment of how tens of billions of dollars have been spent since 2001. The 111-page report, according to AP, documents poor management, weak oversight, and a failure to learn from past mistakes as recurring themes in wartime contracting.

The commission’s report is scheduled to be made public Wednesday at a hearing held by the House Oversight and Government Reform’s national security subcommittee.

While this is hardly the first report to document failings of oversight on private contractors it is nevertheless significant, as supposedly the U.S. government has taken significant steps in the past couple of years to improve its management of contractors. Yet apparently, to paraphrase the poet Robert Frost, contractors have numerous promises to keep and the government has years to go before it can sleep comfortably.

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Sunday, March 1, 2009

Podcasts: Cato Daily Podcast–Security Contractors in Iraq, featuring David Isenberg

Filed under: Podcasts — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 10:46 AM

Cato Daily Podcast

December 29, 2008: “Security Contractors in Iraq” featuring David Isenberg

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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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Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Podcasts: Combat Operator Radio Interviews David Isenberg

Filed under: Podcasts — Tags: , , — Matt @ 10:43 PM

     Hey folks, check it out. You might know of David through his Dogs of War column at UPI.  His book is awesome as well, and certainly worth your time.  

    As for this interview, David had some excellent ideas and discussed the concept of a Center for Contractor Lessons Learned and talked about the history of contracting in the US.  I also liked the discussion about military versus civilian leadership styles in today’s PMC/PSC’s. –Matt 

Edit: I took out the part that David has a blog, and he does not have one at this time. 

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Combat Operator Radio Interview with David Isenberg Here 

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Books: Shadow Force, by David Isenberg

Filed under: Books — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 2:05 PM

     Hey everyone, here is another cool book just in time for the holidays.  David has done a lot for this industry, and he is good people.  I have yet to read this book, and I am excited to get my hands on it.  Check it out.  –Head Jundi

Edit:  You can also get 50% off of the price of the book with this code.  Thanks to David for the tip!

Visit www.greenwood.com, search or browse for books, and use our secure Shopping Cart to place your order. All orders must be prepaid.

Enter Source Code E0866A at the bottom of the first Shopping Cart screen and click “Use Code.” Your discount will automatically be applied.

OR

Call our Customer Service Desk at 1-800-225-5800 (9am-5pm EDT, Mon.-Fri.), and mention Source Code E0866A when placing your order. All orders must be prepaid 

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“David Isenberg has been a tireless chronicler of the birth, growth and rise of the private military phenomena. Shadow Force is a new addition to the “must have” list of books on the privatization of violence.”–Robert Young Pelton, author of Licensed to Kill

“David Isenberg was among the very first serious researchers to recognize a unique industry among the many firms providing services to governments in conflict in post-conflict environments. While others dismissed the phenomenon or soon departed into populist conjecture, David grasped the history and recognized both the long-term value and sober implications of this maturing sector. His research and articles in the mid 1990s helped stimulate a cottage industry of scholastic and journalistic research on the topic-often more absurd than serious. No one else considers this topic with the same breadth of knowledge or rational understanding, and few are as good at discerning genuine areas of concern from great gobs of absurd speculation.”–Doug Brooks, Founder and Director of the International Peace Operations Association

“They are not mercenaries and they are not soldiers. So what are they? That is the question increasing numbers of people, both government officials and the general public, have been asking since the United States invaded Iraq. In this book David Isenberg, one of the earliest and most perceptive observers of the private security contracting industry explains who is operating in Iraq, their benefits and liabilities, and their impact both nationally and globally. If you have to read just one book on the subject make it this one.”–Lawrence J. Korb, Senior Fellow, Center for American Progress, Senior Advisor, Center for Defense Information

Product Description

From their limited use in China during World War II, for example, to their often clandestine use in Vietnam ferrying supplies before the war escalated in 1964 and 1965 when their role became more prominent-and public-private military contractors (PMCs) have played made essential contributions to the success and failures of the military and United States. Today, with an emphasis on force restructuring mandated by the Pentagon, the role of PMCs, and their impact on policy-making decisions is at an all time peak.

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