Feral Jundi

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Afghanistan: Hundreds of New Civilian Employees Proposed for Afghanistan

Filed under: Afghanistan,Jobs — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 5:57 PM

     And here comes the Civilian version of the surge.  This needed happen a long time ago, and we have some serious catching up to do.  The reporter for this does have a point with the UN post as well–we paid for it, we might as well make the best out of it and get someone in that deputy ambassador slot that can make the most of it.

     The one part of this article that is really not discussed that much, but is important to our industry, is the protection of this civilian army.  Do they want to use the military to protect these individuals, or use a smaller footprint and go with civilian contractors through the WPPS program, or what?  

     It would make sense to me, to use the smaller footprint.  Hell, use a bunch of guys like Tim Lynch and company to protect these individuals.  I am sure they will be way more effective that way.  My fear is that this larger presence of civilian employees will be smothered by large military protective details, and that might really piss off the local populations.  Especially if these larger details attract the bad guys, and the villages get stuck in the middle.  It will be interesting to see how this plays out and will keep my ear to the tracks.  –Matt 

—————————————————————- 

Hundreds of New Civilian Employees Proposed for Afghanistan

By Karen DeYoung

Washington Post Staff Writer

Wednesday, March 18, 2009; 3:43 PM

Hundreds of additional U.S. diplomats and civilian officials would be deployed to Afghanistan as part of the new civil-military regional strategy that President Obama’s top national security advisers plan to present for his signature next week, according to administration officials.

Leading this proposed civilian expansion will be two veteran senior diplomats: Peter W. Galbraith, who will be the deputy to the top United Nations official on the ground; and Francis J. Ricciardone Jr., who will get the unprecedented title of “deputy ambassador” to boost the diplomatic heft of the U.S. Embassy. Obama last week nominated Lt. Gen. Karl Eikenberry, the former U.S. military commander in Afghanistan, as the country’s ambassador.

Other civilian officials are to be drawn from government departments such as Agriculture and Justice, and hundreds of new “full-time, temporary” positions are planned under a hiring program authorized by President George W. Bush four days before he left office.

(more…)

Friday, January 30, 2009

Iraq: Blackwater Says It Could Leave Iraq with 72 Hours

Filed under: Industry Talk,Iraq — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 1:45 PM

   And as a follow up to the last story, this sounds more and more like a game of poker.  We will see what DoS does.  –Matt 

——————————————————————- 

Blackwater says it could leave Iraq with 72 hours

By MIKE BAKER, Associated Press writer Mike Baker, Associated Press Writer Thu Jan 29, 4:54 pm ET

MOYOCK, N.C. – Blackwater Worldwide, which guards American diplomats in Iraq, said Thursday it would be prepared to leave that country within 72 hours after Iraqi officials denied the North Carolina-based company an operating license because of a deadly shooting spree in Baghdad.

But Blackwater founder Erik Prince told The Associated Press that while losing the State Department contract would hurt the company, the move would cause more harm to the diplomats it has protected since soon after the U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.

“Our abrupt departure would far more hurt the reconstruction team and the diplomats trying to rebuild the country than it would hurt us as a business,” Prince said Thursday in an exclusive interview with the AP.

Iraqi officials said the lingering outrage over a September 2007 shooting in Baghdad’s Nisoor Square that left 17 Iraqi civilians dead led to its decision.

(more…)

Monday, November 24, 2008

Government Work: VIP Driver/Special Security Officer, Virginia

Filed under: Driving,Executive Protection,Government Work,Jobs,Virginia — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 12:47 PM

 

DoS

 

VIP Driver / Special Security Officer

US Department of State

Arlington, VA

Date Posted:  11/21/08

 Job Status:  Full-Time

 Contact Information:  Not Listed

 Pay Range:  $61-80K

Career Level:  Experienced (Non-Manager)

Industry:   Transportation / Logistics, Government / Civil Service

VIP Driver / Security Officer

The U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Diplomatic Security, Dignitary Protection Division has an opening for one (1) VIP Driver / Security Officer. This is a full-time, one-year renewable, personal services contract position at the GS-12 equivalent level.

Mandatory Requirements:

* U.S. Citizenship required. This must be clearly stated on the application

* A valid drivers license

* Strong background in security skills including surveillance detection

* The ability to travel worldwide on short notice

* At least one year experience equivalent to at least the next lower grade level

* The ability to work long hours ability to obtain a medical clearance

* Must be able to obtain and maintain a Top Secret Security clearance prior to contract start date.

Other Requirements:

(more…)

Monday, November 10, 2008

Industry Talk: Changing the Culture of Pentagon Contracting Report

Filed under: Industry Talk — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 1:29 PM

      Boy, where do I start with this thing.  First of all, in their panel of experts and contributors to this report, I didn’t see any security contractors?  What is up with that?  You would think these guys would at least bring in a couple of actual guys that have done the job out there and could give some perspective about the industry.  I was never contacted about this, nor have I seen them advertise on the forums.  The only names I recognized were Robert Young Pelton and David Isenberg.  Pelton is a travel author who writes books about traveling to war zones, that also wrote a book about security contractors. Isenberg has a column about the industry over at UPI, and that is it for input about the industry. The rest of the panel were experts in foreign policy and other related fields. I think they would have produced a better product if they would have actually included us ‘grunts’ that have some ground truth input about the industry.

      The other one that killed me about this report, is they made the suggestion that security contractors should only be used for static security posts in the war.  That PSD and Convoy operations should be done by the military.  Where I disagree on this, is this completely limits operational capability for the companies over there that are operating on their own.  And this also rips away the military to serve civilian supply efforts.  So will these civilian companies pay the military to do these services.  How about for transporting employees for leave or for medical situations?  Will the military provide an on call shuttle service for us civilians operating at these camps?

(more…)

« Newer Posts

Powered by WordPress