Feral Jundi

Monday, September 7, 2009

Military News: Samurai Mind Training for Modern American Warriors

     I got a kick out of this story, because it does have some application to our industry.  Call it meditation, call it visualization, call it ‘in the zone’, or whatever, guys have had to get into a frame of mind to deal with all sorts of activities.

     One of the things that I have practiced was visualization, both as a smokejumper and for shooting tests for contracts.  You visualize everything you need to do in order to execute the perfect parachuting operation or visualize all the actions for a specific shooting drill, all before you actually do it.  I find a quite place to think about it all, like in a hotel room or whatever, and go through the whole process in my mind.  It takes concentration and focus, and that is the whole point of visualization.  I learned the concept from sports psychology.

     As for the Warrior Mind Training program, I think it would be worth a shot trying it out.  I am for anything that gives you an edge, and if these techniques can help you to shoot better or deal with stress better, that that is great.  Hell, the techniques might actually get you a job, because you were able to calm yourself and get focused before vetting at schools and for shooting tests.

    Better yet, these techniques could help you deal with the stress of convoy and PSD work, and just winding down after ‘one of those days’. And contractors are up against the same deployment realities when they come home.  One day, they are running the roads and surviving as best they can, and the next day they are home and driving down the streets of their city.  We go through the same cultural and situational shock as the military, and anything to help guys continue to work a contract and not turn into walking burn outs, is alright in my book.-Matt

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Samurai Mind Training for Modern American Warriors

By BONNIE ROCHMAN Bonnie Rochman

Sep 7, 2009

Not long ago at Fort Bragg, N.C., the country’s largest military base, seven soldiers sat in a semi-circle, lights dimmed, eyes closed, two fingertips lightly pressed beneath their belly buttons to activate their “core.” Electronic music thumped as the soldiers tried to silence their thoughts, the key to Warrior Mind Training, a form of meditation slowly making inroads on military bases across the country. “This is mental push-ups,” Sarah Ernst told the weekly class she leads for soldiers at Fort Bragg. “There’s a certain burn. It’s a workout.”

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Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Call to Action: Wounded Warrior Cruise II

Filed under: Call To Action,Military News — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 11:49 PM

    This was sent to me by Frank over at Secure Aspects.  What a great deal for our wounded vets out there, and definitely get the word out on this. –Matt

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Bionic Shirt from Ranger Up

Bionic Shirt from Ranger Up.

Friends and Wounded Warrior supporters,

We need help in finding “Wounded Warriors” that have won the Purple Heart for wounds received in Iraq and Afghanistan that are able to go on our Wounded Warrior Cruise II.

Reed (our Director) and I have sent emails to the Commander of Walter Reed AMC and to other Commands with very little results. We are offering free cabins for those selected and their spouse (or significant other).

The Cruise sails from Fort Lauderdale, Florida on 28 November and returns on 5 December 2009.

Transportation to the ship and returning home is at the expense of the participants and in some cases we may be able to provide some assistance.

We have contacted a lot of large government contractors and asked for support but we have not had much of a response.

***We need the names before the end of this month*** so that we can reserve the cabins.

We still need corporate sponsors and we could also use some help in selling additional Raffle Tickets which are $2.00 each or 3 for $5.00 and we still have about 2000 remaining.

Any assistance would be greatly appreciated as 100% of the money our organization collects goes to the program and everyone in our organization is an unpaid volunteer.

Thanking you in advance and please pass the word throughout the workplace.

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Sunday, August 2, 2009

Military News: Remains of Captain Michael “Scott” Speicher Found, Missing 18 Years in Iraq

   I am floored on this.  Back during the first Gulf War, this was a very big deal, and it was always a bitter pill to swallow.  I am glad the family knows now, and they can finally say he is found.  Rest in peace. –Matt

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Remains of Captain Michael “Scott” Speicher found, missing 18 years in Iraq 

By PAULINE JELINEKThe Associated PressSunday, August 2, 2009 9:27 AM

WASHINGTON — The remains of the first American lost in the Persian Gulf War have been found in Iraq, the military said Sunday, after struggling for nearly two decades with the question of whether he was dead or alive.

The Pentagon said the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology on Saturday had positively identified the remains of Navy Capt. Michael “Scott” Speicher, whose disappearance has bedeviled investigators since his fighter jet was shot down over the Iraq desert on the first night of the 1991 war.

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Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Military News: White House Confirms Medal of Honor

Filed under: Afghanistan,Military News — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 3:36 AM

   Good deal, and glad to hear this was approved.  I know there are more cases of heroism in this war, and the public needs to know about that. We need to recognize these individuals that gave the enemy hell, and in most cases, gave everything they got by paying the ultimate sacrifice.  Which makes me think, the military and the White House would be well served if they for once gave the Medal of Honor to a living hero, as opposed to just the dead.  Something to think about and rest in peace Sgt. Jared Monti. –Matt

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 Jared Monti

White House confirms Medal of Honor

By Gina Cavallaro

July 28, 2009

Sgt. 1st Class Jared Monti, a fire support specialist who was killed June 21, 2006, in Afghanistan, will receive the Medal of Honor for his actions in combat.

The announcement was made by the White House in a news release Friday morning. The award will be presented to Monti’s parents in a Sept. 17 ceremony at the White House.

The soldier’s father, Paul Monti, told Army Times on Thursday that President Obama had called him Tuesday evening at his home in Raynham, Mass.

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Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Military News: General McChrystal’s New Way of War

What Gen. McChrystal realizes, in effect, is that we need to create our own Robert Warburtons. If his experiment succeeds, future commanders can build on the precedent to provide the kind of cultural and linguistic skills that we will need to win the long war against Islamic extremists. 

   I read this story, and Tim Lynch of Free Range International came to mind as one of those ‘Warburton types’ that are mentioned in the article.  But I also think the mention of contractors as ‘Robert Warburton‘ types was incredibly understated.  I have known guys in Iraq who have worked the same gig or region for years.  The private industry has easily created individuals like this, and many of them.

   Also, the deployment and leave schedules for private industry has evolved to be way more conducive towards what Gen. McChrystal is wanting to do. In our industry, most companies do not go beyond a 6 month deployment.  I have seen everything from 2 month, 3 month, 4 month, 6 month, and even some 12 month deployment(rare).  My personal view on it is that 2 to 3 month deployments are about perfect, and this allows as much time as a contractor needs to do their business at home(if the contractor is given a sizable amount of time home, with some flexibility built into it). And that is what it really is all about.  Companies have to know, that if you want to attract or even keep your really good employees, taking care of them means giving them a leave and deployment schedule that is family and life friendly.  Burned out employees or contractors make mistakes.

   I also think deployment length is a huge problem for today’s military men and women.  From a private industry point of view, the longer the deployments, the longer the chance for burn out incidents to happen.  Fights, suicides, shooting incidents, etc. can all happen as the soldier’s stress is increased over time.  By changing the time frames a little, I think we could see some really positive developments.  And if General McChrystal and Max Boot get their way, if units are assigned regions and allowed to cycle in soldiers in more condensed deployment cycles, then I think that will have a dramatic impact on morale and troop welfare. It will also contribute to creating better learning organizations, for each specific region.

   Finally, and this is a call to guys like Max Boot and others who have the ear of the military strategists out there.  We must have the conversation about contractors and war, in a strategic sense.  We are not going away, and if General McChrystal, President Obama, General Petraeus, and the rest of the US (and worldwide partners) are actually serious about winning in the wars we are fighting in, then eventually they are all going to have to talk about the 246,000 of us contractors that are in the war.  We have an impact on the war–we are fighting and dying in these wars, we are rebuilding in these war zones, we are working with and around soldiers from all over, and we are intimately connected with much of the local populations out there. What other reasons do you guys want for this discussion?

     246,000 of us folks in the Warburton Fan Club are waiting for an answer….and some leadership.-Matt 

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General McChrystal’s New Way of War

The U.S. has been bringing soldiers home as soon as they get any experience.

JUNE 17, 2009

By MAX BOOT

Gen. Stanley McChrystal was appointed commander in Afghanistan to shake up a troubled war effort. But one of his first initiatives could wind up changing how the entire military does business.

Gen. McChrystal’s decision to set up a Pakistan Afghanistan Coordination Cell means creating a corps of roughly 400 officers who will spend years focused on Afghanistan, shuttling in and out of the country and working on those issues even while they are stateside.

Today, units typically spend six to 12 months in a war zone, and officers typically spend only a couple years in command before getting a new assignment. This undermines the continuity needed to prevail in complex environments like Afghanistan or Iraq. Too often, just when soldiers figure out what’s going on they are shipped back home and neophytes arrive to take their place. Units suffer a disproportionate share of casualties when they first arrive because they don’t have a grip on local conditions.

There was a saying that we didn’t fight in Vietnam for 10 years; we fought there for one year, 10 times. The North Vietnamese, on the other hand, continued fighting until they were killed or immobilized. That gave their forces a huge advantage.

In Vietnam, units already in the field would get individual replacements from home, thus making it hard to maintain unit cohesion. Sometimes new soldiers were killed before anyone even knew their names.

The policy now is unit rotation — an entire battalion or brigade (or a higher-level staff) trains together, deploys together, and leaves together. That makes for better cohesion, but makes it even harder to maintain continuity because there is little overlap between units.

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