Feral Jundi

Monday, November 2, 2009

Veteran News: Retroactive Stop Loss Special Pay

    Hey gang, this was sent to me by Chris and I think this could impact quite a few guys and gals in this industry.  If you were part of the stop loss crew, here is the information you need.  Just follow the link to the Veterans Today website, and they have listed all the services that have websites that will help you file for your retroactive stop loss pay. –Matt

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From Veterans Today

The 2009 War Supplemental Appropriation Act set aside $534.4 million for the Retroactive Stop Loss Special Pay compensation authority. Soldiers, veterans and survivors of those whose service was involuntarily extended under Stop Loss between September 11, 2001 and September 30, 2008 can apply to receive $500 for every month, or portion of a month, they served under Stop Loss. The 2009 War Supplemental Appropriations Act established and largely funded the payment for all military services, but dictated that each service process and pay their own applicants.

Go here to learn more.

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Story at Marine Corps Times here.

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Story at Army Times here.

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Story at Stars and Strips here.

 

Medical: Resiliency As Positive Deviance–Rethinking Counseling and the Military, by Angela Benedict

   This is a treat.  Angela has been an active reader of FJ and of PMH, and definitely has done a lot of work on PTSD issues at her Military Healing Center. She is one of the few out there in her industry that actually care about the mental health of not only soldiers in the war, but of contractors as well. So it is a pleasure to showcase some of her work as a guest author on FJ.

   You can see the theme with today’s posts, and we really need to be thinking about the mental health aspects of this industry.  In order to continue doing this kind of work, you need to arm yourself with the mental tools for longevity. Angela is a great person to talk to, if you want to assemble that mental tool kit. –Matt

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RESILIENCY AS POSITIVE DEVIANCE: Rethinking Counseling and the Military

By Angela Benedict

We live in a world that functions in a myriad of negative deviances. Child abuse and sexual trafficking, domestic violence and condoned incest, corruption and extortion, rewarded dishonesty and extreme poverty, torture of war criminals and sexual partners, embedded violence and jealousy, materialism and isolation.    We live in fear of our neighbours, foreigners, family members and ourselves.  We are on guard, awaiting the next attack from our boss, our co-worker, our spouse, to be projected at us by the news, the internet.  We often see power misused.  Most of us feel powerless.

It is not surprising that over the last 30 years there has been a steep incline in the cases of mental illness.  Depression is ranked highest followed by spikes in schizophrenia, mood disorders, anxiety disorders, and other psychotic illness.  Stress is cited as the cause.

Out of this incline another trend has appeared, that of the trauma counselor.  Trauma has begun to define us.  We are not our accomplishments as much as we are a society identified by our ailments.  We are a depressed society living in disastrous times where our expectations are that things will only get worse.  This is a tough perception.

Currently, the field of trauma counseling is receiving harsh criticism from within the ranks of psychology where it is being viewed as a reinforcement to not only illness, but to negative deviant behaviours.  Given the high stakes of the epidemic status of post traumatic stress, a solution must be found soon. Resiliency training can become the counter to the negative and be used to reinforce positive deviance.

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Legal News: Murder Charge Briton Daniel Fitzsimons May Face Psychiatric Tests

   I found this over at PMH and figured I would post it here as well. This story will give the reader a little bit of an inside view on how the Iraqi legal system is working out. –Matt

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Murder charge Briton Daniel Fitzsimons may face psychiatric tests

Sunday 1 November 2009

Lawyers for Daniel Fitzsimons, the British security contractor accused of shooting dead two colleagues in Baghdad, have asked for him to be moved to a psychiatric unit in an attempt to head off a murder trial that could lead to a death sentence.

Fitzsimons, a former paratrooper, was taken to Baghdad’s central criminal court today for a pre-trial hearing in which several witnesses were due to testify that he had been involved in the late night shooting in the city’s international zone in August. But the case was unexpectedly adjourned until 15 November after a lawyer for one of the victims asked for more time to prepare his case.

Several minutes before the trial was due to begin, Fitzsimons met his lawyer, the high-profile Iraqi legal figure Tareq Harb, for the first time. His pre-trial briefing amounted to a five-minute conversation outside the court room and a phone call to his UK-based solicitor, John Tipple.Harb said the court was obliged to agree to his request to move Fitzsimons to a psychiatric unit in Baghdad’s Rashad Hospital, where he will be evaluated by three psychiatrists. He is understood to have been treated in the UK for a psychological condition.

The trial was adjourned until November 15. Before the hearing,Earlier, Judge Saad Dawoud Suleiman, who will preside over the case – the first of its kind since full judicial rights were handed back to Iraqi authorities on 30 June – said Fitzsimons would face a death penalty if convicted.

“This is a very serious case,” he said in his chambers inside the fortified court house on the edge of the international zone. “The death penalty is on the statutes for such a crime.”

An official from the British embassy in Baghdad was at the court, as was a representative from ArmorGroup, which had contracted Fitzsimons to return to Iraq for a third tour as a security contractor several weeks before the alleged incident. An Iraqi guard who was wounded in the alleged attack, in which Briton Paul McGuigan and Australian Darren Hoare were killed, was also present, along with members of his family.

In the hours after the shooting, Fitzsimons signed a statement allegedly confessing to the shootings. But today he told the Guardian he could not remember the night of the shooting and planned to withdraw the confession. “I was under the influence of the drugs they gave me at the time,” he said. “I don’t remember a thing.”

Iraqi investigators say in the hours before the shooting, McGuigan and Hoare had gone to Fitzsimons’s room in the ArmorGroup compound and provoked him. They claim the pair had then sat with Fitzsimons, who had been drinking. Shortly afterwards a violent row allegedly erupted.

The prisoner advocacy group Reprieve is now also lobbying for Fitzsimons, whom and his UK legal team want him extradited to the UKhome to stand trial.

“Reprieve are now formally part of the UK legal team,” said Tipple. “They are playing a proactive role and taking it very seriously.”

Iraq has indicated it will take a tough stance with Fitzsimons, who is the first foreign national to be tried under Iraqi law since the American military withdrew to its bases in June. Senior officials have so far indicated they will not agree to any extradition request.However, Mr Harb said yesterday that the Central Criminal Court is obligated to agree to his request to move Mr Fitzsimons to a psychiatric unit in Baghdad’s Rashad Hospital, where he will be evaluated by three psychiatrists. He is understood to have been treated in the UK for a psychological condition.

Story here.

 

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Industry Talk: Hero Contractor Recalls Deadly U.N. Assault

Filed under: Afghanistan,Industry Talk — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 3:21 PM

Visit msnbc.com for Breaking News, World News, and News about the Economy

Friday, October 30, 2009

Industry Talk: Senator Claire McCaskill–‘Contracting is a Necessity’

 “Contracting is a necessity,” she said. “It doesn’t have to be an evil necessity.”-Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill, former Missouri state auditor and contractor watchdog

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     Ok, here is number three folks. A veritable trifecta of shockingly pro contractor statements!! (lightning will soon strike my laptop and burn my fingers–ahhhhhhh)

    To hear Senator Claire McCaskill say that little gem up top, is like hearing that Code Pink was sub-contracted by Triple Canopy for convoy operations in Afghanistan. lol It is refreshing to hear that folks are starting to finally figure out why this industry matters.

   Now to be somewhat critical of the article.  The historical context of contractors needs to go back further, if in fact the author is going to even bring up history in this article.  Contractors have had way more of an impact on this Nation’s history, than just today’s wars or our contributions in the Balkans conflict.  I have continued to bring up that history time and time again, all with the point of providing that context in today’s discussion about this industry. It is wrong not to include that context, and it shows a certain degree of either naivety, laziness or worse yet, journalistic bias.

    That’s ok, because us New Media warriors will certainly fill that void. –Matt

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New rules due on defense outsources

By: Jen DiMascioOctober 26, 2009 04:54 AM EST

In an Oct. 3, 2007, speech in Iowa City, Iowa, several weeks after Blackwater security guards allegedly shot 17 civilians in an incident in Baghdad, then-presidential candidate Barack Obama made it clear what he thought of the use of contractors to perform essential jobs in Iraq: “We cannot win a fight for hearts and minds when we outsource critical missions to unaccountable contractors.”This week the White House Office of Management and Budget is expected to release a new round of guidelines for contracting that may shed light on when the Pentagon thinks it’s appropriate to go outside the government for contractors and what sort of work the government considers “inherently governmental.”But none of the new OMB guidelines are likely to change the fact that contractors in Iraq and Afghanistan are as much of a fact of life for the Obama administration as they were under President George W. Bush.During the campaign, Obama pledged to reduce the number of battlefield contractors in Iraq — which two years ago numbered 160,000 — and he’s on the way toward meeting that goal. In Iraq, the number of contractors is down to nearly 120,000, but that’s been offset by an increase in the number of contractors in Afghanistan as the war effort grows there. As of June, the last time figures were released, 243,735 contractors were serving across the U.S. military zone known as Central Command.  (more…)

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