Feral Jundi

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Year In Review: 2010 Google Analytics Report For Feral Jundi

     “Nation states no longer have a monopoly on military force, intelligence, diplomacy or anything else,” Mr. Clarridge said. “What’s going on in Somalia, where you have skilled contractors training a counter-piracy force, is an example of where the future of the military is going. No government or group of governments can get their act together to do it, but someone has to do it, and they are doing it.”- Duane Clarridge, From The Article “Private Firm Trains Somalis To Scuttle Pirates“, December 28, 2010

     Interesting year and it is nice to see all the little changes have made a huge difference.  Namely using Facebook as a means to promote the blog and using Google Reader for filtering stories. I also really liked using Google Alerts because that was bringing all sorts of good stuff into my inbox.

     I added a Scribd profile to the website and that was a really nice place to put documents in. Expect to see more interesting documents and publications to be converted into this format, and I might even get into writing some papers to put out there via Scribd.

     As you can see with the statistics below there has been a huge increase in visitors and page views this last year.  So I am very happy with this and the trend line for the blog just continues to go up and up.  Thanks to all of you out there for visiting, and I am glad you enjoy the site.

     One statistic I thought was cool was the amount of time folks spent on the blog.  Because there is so much information here a person could easily spend some time just browsing.  From the history stuff, to jobs, to information about taxes–all of it is drawing the reader in and the blog is definitely accomplishing the goal of educating the masses.  The average time on the site per visit, for the year, was about 3 minutes.  That is 3 minutes of time that the reader could have easily spent elsewhere, and usually the averages in the past were about a minute in a half. Content is king.

     The Top Ten Titles give you an excellent idea of what topics were popular for the blog.  Viktor Bout, Haiti and all the jobs for that disaster, Jax Desmond, and all my classic Funny Stuff Posters. ‘Potential’ actually draws in some hate mail from the jihadist dorks from time to time, and that makes me happy. lol

     The country and state visitor locations are no surprise to me. The key word stuff matches up with the popular titles as well.

     I guess what Google Analytics is missing is what my favorite posts or subjects were this year.  I enjoyed reading about the Saracen International stuff and the Insurance backed Private Navy.  Those are two stories I am following and it will be interesting to see how it goes for them.  The private navy story also grabbed my interest due to the potential there of using a Letter of Marque in modern times. Stay tuned there.

     The history posts are always fun for me. When I find some interesting little tidbit that deals with contractors in the past, I love getting that stuff out there. All the Koevoet material was a favorite of mine (non-contractor related). The John Coffee Hays and his Texas Rangers post was fun, as was the Soldier of Fortunes of the Mexican Revolutionary War. The young George Washington and his involvement with mercenaries during the French and Indian wars was cool too.

     Gary Faulkner popped up as the crazy bastard of the year that motivated the hell out of me.  I just pictured this guy going to Pakistan year after year, wandering the wilderness looking for Osama Bin Laden and wanting to kill him. Gary gets an ‘A’ for effort.

     Then there was Simon Mann returning to work for Obiang. This is the leader that originally imprisoned Simon and his gang for a coup attempt.  I am still trying to figure that one out.

     My best Building Snowmobiles posts were the Drone Archer and the Cyber Privateer ones. One post I continue think about from time to time is the Open Source Counter-Terrorism topic, and it is fun to think up new ways of promoting this empowerment concept. Also this was the first year I had a reader who came up with a Building Snowmobiles concept that involved economic/political theory and COIN, that he wanted to share with me. After looking at it I agreed that it was intriguing and put it up. So the innovation process here is influencing the readership out there to produce new ideas. That is awesome.

     The big ticket stories were the State Department’s army of contractors, the massive contracts that companies have received, the contractors thrown in jails around the world (wrongly or not) and the excellent support network on Facebook that helped apply the pressure on governments to do the right thing . Notice how the UAE is one of my top readers this year, and especially after the Moody case? lol

     Of course we cannot forget about Crazy Karzai and his attack on contractors in Afghanistan.  It was such a stupid episode, and really highlighted how much of a corrupt idiot he is. Luckily Karzai and company realized how unrealistic it was to ban all PSCs by December of last year.

     Let’s not forget the heroes and the dead this year.  We read about how Louis Maxwell defended his UN compound, and was later shot by Afghan police because they wanted his gun. Shane Schmidt passed away this year, and this guy defined a key jundism– ‘have the courage to do what is right’.

     Finally, the big story that needs to be mentioned from last year was the Code of Conduct signed by all the companies. I have noticed less negative attention on all the work done by contractors and companies this last year. That could be a sign that there are more pressing issues, like the economy or whatever. Or maybe we are starting to get squared away, and the governments using us are getting squared away?  Maybe.

     We will always be scrutinized out there by the media and others, and that comes with the territory. But honestly, I have seen an overall increase in the use of security contractors world wide, and I have seen an increase in the willingness to use security contractors for all types of jobs. It is a dangerous and complex world out there, and this industry will continue to be called upon to do what is required. –Matt

January 1, 2010 to December 31, 2010

307,256 people visited this site, with 436,213 page views.

 

January 1, 2009 to December 31, 2009

129,409 people visited this site, with 187,698 page views.

 

January 1, 2008 to December 31, 2008

21,427 people visited this site, with 37,841 page views.

 

Top Ten Most Popular Titles

1. Feral Jundi

2. Funny Stuff: Potential

3. Jobs Category

4. Funny Stuff: Panzerhaubitze 2000 155mm Schaldampfer!

5. Mexico: Exclusive-Los Zetas Responds To Jax Desmond, And Puts A Hit Out On Company

6. Jobs: Personal Security Detail And Medical Personnel, Haiti

7. Weapons: The VSS Vintorez Russian Sniper Rifle

8. Jobs: Static Security And Mobile Security Positions, Haiti

9. Funny Stuff: Strength

10. Gear Review: Electronic Hearing Protection-MSA Versus Peltor

 

Top Ten Most Popular Keywords

1. Feral Jundi

2. Funny Stuff

3. Jax Desmond

4. Security Jobs In Haiti

5. Viktor Bout

6. Haiti Security Jobs

7. Jax Desmond Worldwide

8. Paravant

9. Electronic Hearing Protection Reviews

10. What Does Feral Jundi Mean?

 

Top Ten Visitors By Country

1. United States

2. United Kingdom

3. Canada

4. Germany

5. Australia

6. India

7. South Africa

8. France

9. Finland

10. United Arab Emirates

 

Top Ten Visitors By State In The US

1. California

2. Texas

3. Florida

4. Virginia

5. New York

6. North Carolina

7. Georgia

8. Illinois

9. Washington

10. Arizona

Sunday, December 26, 2010

Legal News: Senate Passes Key Defense Policy Bill Filled With Contractor Oversight Mechanisms

     The key thing here is that this bill was passed just in time to deal with DynCorp’s billion dollar contract.  Which is great.  I would certainly hope that the government would actually care about how this money is spent and that they get their money’s worth.  Although my view on the thing is that actions speak louder than words, and I will believe it when I see some actual adult supervision on this stuff.

     I really liked the last provision listed which “prohibits small arms contracts from being awarded on a sole source basis and require those contracts be awarded based on full and open competition in order to get the best weapons for our troops in combat.” Wow, that is cool! Hopefully this will open up things a little to all companies out there, and contribute to a truly innovative and vibrant competition that would result in getting the best possible weapons into the hands of the troops. –Matt

Senate Passes Key Defense Policy Bill with McCaskill Provisions

December 22, 2010

Senator’s provisions will improve healthcare and benefits for military, increase contracting oversight, and address F/A-18 shortfall.

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Today, U.S. Senator Claire McCaskill applauded the passage of a major defense policy bill, the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2011, which was passed unanimously by the Senate this morning. The NDAA outlines funding levels for the Department of Defense (DoD) for the coming fiscal year and addresses major defense policy matters. When the bill passed the Senate Armed Services Committee, McCaskill, who serves as a member of the committee, was able to win inclusion of several important amendments in the bill that will help improve access to healthcare for the military and improve oversight of DoD contractors. Despite fairly significant changes to the bill before final passage, many of her measures were included in the final bill.

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Saturday, December 25, 2010

Industry Talk: DynCorp Awarded One Billion Dollars For Training And Mentoring In Afghanistan

     Now this is impressive.  But what is even more impressive is DynCorp not mentioning a peep of this award in a press release.  This will be a huge endeavor and all eyes will be on this company.  For their sake, and for the sake of the war effort, I hope they will get it right out there. –Matt

December 23, 2010

     DynCorp International, LLC, Falls Church, Va., was awarded on Dec. 20 a $1,043,726,525 cost-plus-fixed-fee contract.  The award will provide for specialized training and mentoring services for the government of Afghanistan, and provide logistics and life support components for 14 training facilities in Afghanistan.  Work will be performed in Afghanistan with an estimated completion date of Aug. 19, 2014.  The bid was solicited through the Internet with eight bids received.  The U.S. Army Research, Development and Engineering Command Contracting Center, Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md., is the contracting activity (W91CRB-11-C-0053).

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Maritime Security: The JLT ‘Private Navy’ Is Close To Kick-Off

      Woollerson would also like to see it involved in trying to remove the causes of Somali piracy through land-based initiatives.

     “I see the CEP as a self-destructing company. Maybe in many years’ time we will no longer be needed and could donate the tonnage to a Somali coastguard,” he said.

     This is a very interesting quote, and actually the entire article below is filled with some great stuff. Bravo to the author for getting the scoop and putting it out there for all to read. Here are my older posts with comments that first talked about this venture.

     Now for my take on the whole thing.  In order for this Convoy Escort Programme (CEP) to be a ‘self-destructing company’, it must take part in destroying their ‘Raison d’être’ –the pirates.  Escorting ships does not alone create this kind of market mechanism. Especially if they only plan on capturing 27% of the merchant traffic going through the GoA, and allowing the pirates to feast on the other 73% of the merchant traffic. If anything the consequence, intended or unintended, will be a higher concentration of armed pirates attacking undefended vessels.

    The other angle on this is that merchants and insurance companies will see how this works, and they too will fire up a similar business model.  That other 73% of the merchant market might shrink pretty fast with a higher concentration of pirates coming down on them, and an increase of insurance backed protective services available to them at a decent price.

    But this is where the quote up top really grabs me, and that is the land based initiatives of this CEP team.  Could there be something going on here, like JLT taking a hint from what is going on with Saracen International and their proposed private militia? I bet JLT wouldn’t mind attracting some of that funding coming from this middle eastern mystery donor either.

    Finally, there is the quote about a reputable flag state sponsoring these CEP vessels, and the concept of a government and military granting them ‘legitimacy’. That sounds like all the makings for a Letter of Marque or some kind of similar license to do what they are going to do. We will soon find out in the coming months exactly what kind of arrangement we have here. –Matt

‘Private Navy’ Is Close To Kick-Off

December 10, 2010

An insurance broker’s plan to create a “private navy” to combat Somali piracy is close to being launched.

Shipowners could be asked to back the project as early as late January or February with private military-escort vessels sailing alongside merchant ships by mid-2011.

A reputable flag state prepared to register the 18 patrol boats has been lined up, shipowner support is being canvassed and preparations made to secure funding for the vessels and crew.

Sean Woollerson of the Jardine Lloyd Thompson (JLT) insurance-broking group says there are still issues to overcome but the key task of securing government and military support to give the project “legitimacy” is almost there.

The venture, now branded as the Convoy Escort Programme (CEP), estimates it needs only £15m ($23.5m) to buy secondhand vessels suitable for use as patrol boats and the rest of the infrastructure.

Greek salvage entrepreneur George Tsavliris is already seeking support from fellow shipowners and Bimco has indicated a willingness to help facilitate the project.

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Saturday, December 18, 2010

Cool Stuff: The PMSC Observer, By David Isenberg

     This is great.  I am glad to see that David created a blog purely dedicated to everything PMSC, and it is really cool to see him have his own site to play around with.  This blog is on my RSS reader and it will be fun to see what he digs up in the future for everyone’s reading pleasure.

     His archives will be a great resources as well because of all the industry related work he has done over the years. Check it out and feel free to drop him a comment, or do a search to get any questions answered. –Matt

The PMSC Observer

David Isenberg has over 20 years experience analyzing U.S. defense, foreign policy, national and international security issues. He has written for print (both for general public and specialist readers), television and radio, and run Internet websites and mailing lists. He has testified before Congress and lectured to the military. Areas of expertise include U.S. military force structure, defense budgeting, WMD proliferation, terrorism, homeland security, counterdrug, peace operations, intelligence policy, international arms trade, small arms proliferation, operations other than war, information warfare, private military companies, biological weapons, and general arms control issues.

Link to website here.

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