Feral Jundi

Friday, June 5, 2009

Industry Talk: EODT Awarded $99.9 M Security Contract in Afghanistan

Filed under: Afghanistan,Industry Talk — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 3:44 PM

    Keep your eye on the career section on their website, and more than likely, you will see the forums lighting up when they start filling these positions.  Although, I am sure they have tons of guys lined up already for this, it never hurts to get your resume in or update an old one.  

    But look at the trend guys? Lots of jobs coming up for Afghanistan, and we are definitely needed in this war.  Security contracting is a good idea in the eyes of today’s new leaders it seems, and it is up to us to continue to make this a good idea.     

     So arm yourself mentally and remember, be the guy that does it right when nobody is looking.  Apply Kaizen and the rest of the Jundisms I have talked about to yourself and your team, and you will do great things out there. –Matt 

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EODT Awarded $99.9M Security Contract in Afghanistan

By EODT

Friday, June 5, 2009

LENOIR CITY, TN (June 4, 2009) – EOD Technology, Inc. (EODT) received an $99.9 million ID/IQ contract award to provide security services within the Task Force Duke Area of Operations in Eastern Afghanistan. Task Force Duke is a coalition task force responsible for securing northeastern Afghanistan, including four of the provinces – Konar, Nanganhar, Laghman and Nuristan. The first Task Order awarded under this contract is for services at Forward Operating Base (FOB) Fenty for $8.5M.

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Saturday, May 30, 2009

Industry Talk: Contractor Census- More Security Contractors, Less Overall Contractors in the USCENTCOM AOR

   There is a lot of juice in this report(s), and I recommend reading through it to get a feel for where things stand right now.  The stuff that jumped out at me, is the increase in security contractors in both Iraq(23%) and Afghanistan(29%) from the last quarter census.  You would think with all the negative press out there, that the US would be cutting down on the use of armed contractors.  It looks to me like someone at least appreciates what we do, enough so to contract even more of us.  

   To me this is significant.  With Iraq, troop withdrawals will be creating security vacuums in some areas, and security contractors will be filling those gaps. And with the RUF being that we are only limited to defensive operations, you will see us taking over many defensive operations in Iraq and more Coalition troops being freed up for offensive operations.  The numbers don’t lie.

   With Afghanistan, this makes sense as well.  With an increase of troops, there will be an increase in support in the form of contractors.  But someone has to protect those contractors while they build stuff, and those security contractors will be used to defend FOBs to free up the troops so they can go on the offense.

   I highly recommend checking out the report, because it showed the graphs that went along with the report, as well as the break down in contractor types.  It is broken down under US Citizens, Third Country Nationals, and Local Nationals.  In Iraq, Third Country Nationals outnumbered everyone- lots of Ugandan security contractors is one example.  In Afghanistan, it is the Local Nationals that outnumber everyone, and there is no surprise there.   

   The trend line is there and security contractors are stepping up to fill these defensive security needs in the war. My hope is that the reforms needed to manage and account for these contractors is able to catch up.  And this report below showed some promising new developments in that area as well.  It sounds like the SPOT database is starting to work it’s magic, and I am glad they were able to get a better handle on the accountability area.  The decrease in overall contractor numbers from last quarter was somewhat contributed to this new database tracking system.  There is a description of the SPOT in the link I provided below, and I recommend reading that report as well.    

   In other areas, we will see how the SOFA and UCMJ issues turn out, because that is an area that definitely needs leadership and enforcement.  I still think that we need to be moving faster on the issue of contractor management and accountability, and for it to take this long to get just this far is disheartening.  We have a war to fight and this is all stuff that should have been hashed out years ago. –Matt

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CONTRACTOR SUPPORT OF U.S. OPERATIONS

IN USCENTCOM AOR, IRAQ, AND AFGHANISTAN

BACKGROUND:  This update reports DoD contractor personnel numbers in theater and outlines DoD efforts to improve management of contractors accompanying U.S. forces.  It covers DoD contractor personnel deployed in Iraq, Afghanistan, and the U.S. Central Command (USCENTCOM) area of responsibility (AOR) as of March 31, 2009.

KEY POINTS:

Ending 2nd quarter FY 2009, USCENTCOM reported approximately 242,657 contractor personnel working for the DoD in the USCENTCOM AOR.     

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Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Industry Talk: Paravant and a Shooting Incident in Afghanistan

Filed under: Afghanistan,Industry Talk,Job Tips — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 11:44 AM

     Thanks to Russ for sending me this one. I won’t say much, because I wasn’t there. One thing I will comment on is one aspect of contracting that we really don’t talk about.  What happens when you lose a contract or get terminated and the company refuses to ship you back home? Or worse yet, the company just disappears or you get caught up in an incident?        Good question, and hey, that can happen on these gigs.  You are working in war zones in usually really crappy countries, and anything and everything could happen in these sometimes lawless places.  Companies screw over their employees all the time, and it is always wise to have a ‘Go Bag’ set up, and a plan for how you will get out of that country.  

     The kinds of things you want to do are set up fixers and travel agents that can get things going in country with a call.  You also want lots of cash, so you can take a taxi or hire a driver and get across the border that way.  Have copies of your passport, visas, credit cards, etc. hidden all over the place on your person and kit. Same thing with the money, and the more you can strategically place that stuff on your body and kit, the better. Even have a throw wallet with a little cash in it that you can give to bandits to throw them off.  Make sure you have plenty of money though, because that is the stuff that is going to bribe checkpoint guards and pay for an escape through the borders or whatever.  Even some cigarettes will help as a currency, and have a few packs of those in your kit. Like I said, have a plan and talk it up with your buddies on a region specific Go Kit or Escape and Evasion Kit and don’t just trust that your company will do the right thing.  

     Also, if you are a criminal, I hope you get caught and rot in prison. And for those companies that have screwed over their contractors out there, by hanging them out to dry…. you will get yours one day.  –Matt 

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Two Blackwater-Affiliated Contractors Flee Afghanistan

By AUGUST COLE

MAY 19, 2009

Two of the four Blackwater-affiliated contractors involved in a civilian shooting incident in Kabul earlier this month have fled to the U.S. in order to avoid possible prosecution from Afghan authorities, according to their attorney.

The four men worked as military trainers for Paravant LLC, an affiliate of Blackwater Worldwide, whose parent company is now called Xe after a recent name change. Paravant was assisting Raytheon Co. on a Defense Department contract.

Armed contractors working for the Defense Department have been a touchy issue in Iraq as well as Afghanistan because of civilian deaths when fighting sometimes erupts. In Afghanistan, the recent incident risks further inflaming anger over civilian deaths caused by U.S. forces, and is a test of the Afghan government’s posture toward foreign contractors, who are set to dramatically increase as the Pentagon ramps up the number of troops there in the coming months.

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Saturday, May 9, 2009

Industry Talk: Close Protection World Forum Meeting-London

   Talk about a cool event, and I give the guys at CP World a lot of credit for developing such an interactive and informative forum.  To all that are going, I hope you get several offers of employment and your work calender gets filled.  –Matt

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Close Protection World UK 

Close Protection World – London Fri 5th June 2009 – No cost

The Close Protection World’s 2009 FREE forum meeting has now been confirmed for Fri 5th June 2009 and people can register their attendance by following the link below. Following on from last years hugely successful forum liaison function this year the meeting has had to change venue as we have out grown the old faithful UJ Club.This year we have trade stands, recruitment companies and a massive raffle in aid of Help for Heroes and the Macmillan cancer research charity. Please see below for the current raffle prizes kindly donated by our sponsors. This list is constantly increasing and we are always looking for more sponsors and raffle prizes.The following recruitment companies have confirmed their attendance and are specifically attending the meeting in order to find potential ‘new blood’ for forthcoming contracts.

Elle security – recruiting

SIAUK.org – recruiting

Greymans – recruiting

Minimal risk – recruiting

Category1 security – recruiting

CTR recruitment – recruiting

Never before has so many recruitment companies, training providers, kit and equipment suppliers, Close Protection operatives and like minded individuals been in the same venue networking, chatting and building contacts. Please support the Close Protection World forum by attending this fantastic event and don’t miss out on this opportunity to meet fellow operators. 

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Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Industry Talk: Pope’s Swiss Guard May Allow Women After 500-year Ban

Filed under: Industry Talk — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 8:55 AM

     To me, the Swiss Guard are pretty interesting, because back in the day, these guys were the Blackwater of the industry.  But talk about pleasing the customer and hanging onto a contract? lol –Matt

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Pope’s Swiss Guard may allow women after 500-year ban

Tue May 5, 2009 

VATICAN CITY (Reuters) – After more than five centuries protecting popes, the Swiss Guard may consider opening the ranks of the world’s smallest army to women, its commander said Tuesday.

“I can imagine them for one role or another. Certainly we can think about this,” Daniel Anrig, who took over the post late last year, told Italian television program “Studio Aperto.”

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