Feral Jundi

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

News: SOFA Update-Iraq Seeking Changes to US Deal

Filed under: Iraq,News — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 1:57 PM

     So I guess it has all come down to who has legal jurisdiction over the US Military/Contractors.  I for one am glad that finally, we are being lumped together in this agreement, and not separate.  The whole off duty thing I can buy into, because obviously you will have to be accountable for your actions in that situation.  But on duty, and in Iraq, there is plenty keeping us in line(UCMJ comes to mind).  

     Of course that is my opinion on the matter, and I hope the US negotiators don’t back down on this.  And of course Sadr is going to push this issue, because it helps him politically speaking to look like he is a champion of the Iraqi.  Or is he just being a champion of his supporters….?  Anyways, I hope this turns out well.  Inshallah. –Head Jundi 

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Iraq seeking changes to US deal

Tuesday, 21 October 2008 

 

Iraq’s cabinet is demanding changes to a draft agreement with Washington that would allow US forces to stay until 2011, a government spokesman has said.

“The cabinet have agreed that necessary amendments to the pact could make it nationally accepted,” Ali Dabbagh said, without specifying the changes.

The draft was presented last week after months of painstaking US-Iraq talks.

US officials have not said if they are willing to renegotiate the Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA).

The draft agreement calls for a drawdown of US combat forces from Iraq by the end of 2011 and includes US concessions on immunity for US troops who break Iraqi law.

(more…)

Thursday, August 28, 2008

Industry Talk: CIA Curtails Contract with MVM, SOC Picks it Up

Filed under: Industry Talk — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 10:48 AM

Thanks to Scott for hooking me up with this article.  –Head Jundi 

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CIA Curtails Contract

With U.S. Security Firm in Iraq

By SIOBHAN GORMAN and AUGUST COLE

August 28, 2008; Page B1

 

MVM Inc., one of the biggest security contractors used by U.S. intelligence agencies, has lost the bulk of a Central Intelligence Agency contract in Iraq after failing to provide enough armed guards, according to company emails and contractors familiar with the decision.

 

The loss of the CIA contract, which was potentially worth more than $1 billion over five years, is a big blow to closely held MVM, based in Vienna, Va. Overseas work for U.S. intelligence agencies represents a third of the company’s $200 million in annual revenue and is believed to be one of the fastest-growing areas of the contracting business.

 

Intelligence officers needing protective services are likely to remain in Iraq even after U.S. troops leave, so demand for such services will continue or possibly increase. The CIA’s largest foreign station is in Baghdad, with hundreds of officers estimated to be based there. The loss of the contract will likely hurt MVM’s chances of winning further work with the agency.

 

“We are disappointed to announce that the client has not chosen MVM Inc.,” Rob Whitfield, who manages MVM’s CIA work, wrote to the company’s pool of guards on Aug. 22, according to a copy of the email viewed by The Wall Street Journal.

 

MVM declined to respond to specific questions. In a written statement, the company said it has an “outstanding performance history” working in dangerous regions and it has never failed to “secure any personnel or facilities that we have been contracted to protect.” The company also said that it is “fully compliant with all of the contractual obligations of our diverse client base.”

 

A CIA spokesman said the agency doesn’t comment on contracting decisions.

 

MVM’s performance on the CIA contract, known as Panther, was the subject of a Page One article in the Journal last month. The article also discussed alleged problems with a related National Security Agency contract, dubbed Scorpion, which provides guards for NSA employees overseas.

 

The article detailed allegations from a former MVM guard who said his teammates fabricated an after-action report about a November 2004 shooting incident to cover up their errors. Other contractors detailed problems in areas such as staffing and equipment.

 

In the article, MVM Chief Executive Dario Marquez said the government had been satisfied with MVM’s work. “We have a great working relationship with both these clients,” he said in an interview for the article, referring to the CIA and NSA.

 

The NSA has begun probing the allegations, according to a former MVM manager familiar with the inquiry, including sending an official to Baghdad last month to interview contractors employed by MVM at the time. An NSA spokesman said the agency had no information to provide on the inquiry or the contract.

 

The CIA’s Panther contract with MVM was to protect CIA officers in Iraq. MVM will retain a small portion responsible for guarding CIA facilities and will continue to provide a handful of mobile guards at two sites whose locations are classified, but which aren’t in Iraq, Afghanistan or Pakistan, according to Mr. Whitfield’s email.

 

The CIA awarded the more profitable work-protecting officers traveling around the country to a Nevada company, SOC Inc. SOC has been providing logistical support such as food services and electricity to the CIA in war zones.

 

SOC didn’t respond to requests for comment.

 

The U.S. relies on contractors throughout the intelligence community, though few are sent overseas. According to a recent report from the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, about 5% of the estimated 37,000 contracted intelligence personnel work overseas.

 

Overall, about 70% of the total intelligence budget, including electricity, is outsourced; some 27% of the total amount is spent on people doing core work, such as those with specific skills such as languages.

 

According to several former MVM managers, MVM was regularly 10 to 15 guards short of the 100 or so it promised. The lack of guards required the agency to postpone missions, one former manager said.

 

Guards working on Panther were frustrated with MVM’s management and pay and many decided to sign on with SOC, which promised $715 a day, compared with $630 MVM offered, according to a contractor familiar with the situation.

 

MVM’s Mr. Whitfield said in the email that the company “would have provided the most positive working environment for the independent contractors in the field.”

 

MVM plans to pursue “other opportunities” with CIA, Mr. Whitfield added.

 

Wall Street Journal article

 

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

News: Russia Recognizes South Ossetia and Abkhazia

Filed under: Georgia(country),News,Russia — Tags: , , — Matt @ 12:22 PM

     Oh my, this gets more interesting every day. Of course Georgia and the West does not recognize this latest move.  It sounds like Cheney is inbound to Georgia, along with a few warships.  And I guess the Russians are implying that they will ‘militarily’ deal with the missiles in Poland?  Wow, this thing is really ramping up, and we will see who backs down first.  –Head Jundi 

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 Russia recognises Georgian rebels

 

Russian president speaks to BBC

 

President Dmitry Medvedev has declared that Russia formally recognises the independence of the breakaway Georgian regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

 

Mr Medvedev told the BBC Russia had tried to preserve Georgian unity for 17 years, but that the situation had changed after this month’s violence.

 

He said Moscow now felt obliged to recognise South Ossetia and Abkhazia as other countries had done with Kosovo.

 

Georgia said Russia was seeking to “change Europe’s borders by force”.

 

In a televised address on Monday evening, President Mikhail Saakashvili said the declaration was completely illegal and vowed to begin a “peaceful struggle” to restore Georgia’s territorial integrity.

(more…)

Saturday, August 9, 2008

News: Armed Cossacks Pour in to Fight Georgians

Filed under: Georgia(country),News,Russia — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 10:54 AM

     Here come the Cossacks!  In this article, they talked about how these volunteer troops are getting issued a uniform and hopping on a bus to go to the war.  That they would be issued a weapon when they got there.  LOL

 

     Typical of the Russians to pull this latest move.  They bring out the Cossacks to stir up nationalism for all of these types of conflicts.  Something tells me that the US/ Israeli trained Georgian troops with combat experience in Iraq, will decimate these guys.  Hell, I wouldn’t be surprised if we start to see the use of IEDs and EFPs big time in Georgia, as this thing drags on.

  

     It is also interesting to note the history of the region.  Most in Eastern Europe remember events that happened hundreds of years ago, as if it happened yesterday. Putin has also been really sucking up to these groups to stir up that old Russian feeling again, so I thought that this was an interesting article about the Cossacks and this current conflict. 

 

     The way Russia is dealing with the town of Gori and the capital Tskhinvali , is telling as well.  They are using the same tactics they used in Chechnya, in which they just bomb the crap out of everything.

 

     On a side note, it is rumored that Georgia has downed 10 Russian jets and 30 tanks.  The casualty figures are supposedly at 1600 now. –Head Jundi  

 

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Armed Cossacks pour in to fight Georgians

Neighbours mobilise in anger at Tblisi’s attack on enclave 

Tom Parfitt in Vladikavkaz, North Ossetia

The Guardian,

Saturday August 9 2008

Hundreds, possibly thousands, of volunteer fighters from Russia were mobilising to enter the war in Georgia’s breakaway republic of South Ossetia last night.

Units of armed Cossacks from across the North Caucasus region which borders Georgia were poised to join the battle for the separatists’ capital, Tskhinvali.

In North Ossetia, the region of Russia which shares cultural links and a border with South Ossetia, lists of men willing to fight against Georgian forces were drawn up. Vitaly Khubayev, 35, from the capital, Vladikavkaz, told the Guardian: “There are already two busloads of fighters leaving for Tskhinvali every day. They give you a uniform on the way and you get issued with weapons once you arrive. If I didn’t have three children I’d have gone.”

(more…)

Friday, August 8, 2008

News: War Between Russia and Georgia, and the Impact on Our Iraq Mission

Filed under: Georgia(country),News,Russia — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 11:16 AM

     So I guess you are probably wondering, what the hell is going on in Eastern Europe?  Are we seeing another Chechnya unfolding before our eyes?  Who knows, but I guess the latest death toll from this conflict is 1400(unconfirmed) and this could get bloodier.  I know we are trying to diffuse this, but once the the cat is out of the bag, it is kind of hard to stop these things.  The timing is interesting too, with Olympics in China.

      But what really interests me, is the troop movements and how that might impact our efforts in Iraq.  And the private contractors that are currently in Georgia and assisting the training efforts of the Georgian military.  

     I have read on various forums that the contractors have been accounted for, but that is unconfirmed and things are happening fast over there.  So that will be something to look out for.

     The one thing that piqued my interest though, was the idea that Georgia was going to pull out 1000 troops in Iraq.  Georgia has over 2000 troops in Iraq now, and are the third largest contributor of troops in Iraq.  These troops that are being pulled out, will definitely impact operations elsewhere, and we will be doing some interesting troop shuffling to back fill these positions.  And knowing the enemy, they will definitely take advantage. We’ll see how it goes and Georgia will be the country to watch.  

      I also think the energy component of this is interesting, seeing how this would be a threat to the BTC oil pipelineto Europe and the west. –Head Jundi 

 

ANALYSIS-Georgia takes gamble with move on rebels

Fri Aug 8, 2008 10:48am EDT

By William Schomberg

LONDON, Aug 8 (Reuters) – Georgia’s bid to re-take its rebel region of South Ossetia by force is a gamble by its leader that he can still count on Western support as he tries to thwart Russian efforts to regain influence over the ex-Soviet republic.

Analysts said the escalating conflict risked far-reaching consequences for a region that has become a test of the post-Cold War balance of power as well as a key energy transit point for Europe which needs oil and gas from Asia.

Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili was welcomed by the West as a fresh, reform-minded leader when he led a revolution in 2003 and was elected the next year, making NATO membership his priority as he tried to escape the orbit of Moscow.

(more…)

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