Feral Jundi

Monday, October 19, 2009

Somalia: A New Template for Fighting Terrorism, and More Thoughts on CSS Global

Filed under: Africa,Somalia — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 12:53 PM

   Interesting article, but I noticed that there was no mention of CSS Global and their latest contract with the Somali government?  Security contractors running around and providing protection to Somali government officials, tends to get noticed by the people, and I wonder if anyone in DC or any other think tank has thought about this latest deal?

   Maybe CSS Global can pull it off, and do really well.  Although I wonder why a more well known company with more proven capacity wasn’t chosen for this daunting task?  Islamic extremists read the paper too, and you can bet they have some welcoming gifts ready for any company wanting to come in and do this kind of work.

   The biggest advantage any group has in Somalia, is to reawaken the Blackhawk Down syndrome we have in regards to Somalia.  To make operating there, a living nightmare, and make it very public and bloody.  That is what they like to do in failed states, and warfare is sport in Somalia.

   The other angle, and this is classic guerilla warfare, and that is to create a Blackwater Bridge scenario.  Kill some contractors, drag their bodies through the streets (a la Blackhawk Down style), and then hang them up for the world to see on some telephone pole or bridge.  The intended result is to get us angry, rally the fighters, recruit more guys, infuse doubt within the people about the foreigner’s capability and try to suck the foreigner into a country with actual ground troops as opposed to just contractors. They want us to go in there and kick ass, or at least try to, because that only rallies the people around the ‘wannabe’ home team.  Or at least that is what Al Shabab is thinking.

   Or maybe that is our intention?  Allow a company with little experience and capability into a death trap like Somalia, and hope for a Blackwater Bridge scenario?  No troops would be killed–just security contractors.  But those contractors are American, and it would bring attention to the situation there. It would make Al Shabab look like animals.   Then we could use that as a means for getting more involved in Somalia. It sounds farfetched, but I keep going back in my brain about CSS Global and their background.

   You need your Varsity teams for Somalia, and CSS Global is kind of the Junior Varsity of teams.  Is this a matter of lowest bidder, or CSS Global selling Somalia on capability?  Who knows, and maybe a CSS Global or State Dept. representative can explain what is going on here?  I want to believe that they are the best for the job, but their history really doesn’t point to that.  Am I off base here?  Let me know what you guys think? –Matt

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In Somalia, A New Template for Fighting Terrorism

10/17/2009

Jeffrey Gettleman

The New York Times

Somalia isn’t just a nagging geopolitical headache that won’t go away. It is also a cautionary tale. Few countries in modern history have been governmentless for so long, and as the United States has learned, it would be nice to think you could ignore this wild, thirsty, mostly nomadic nation 7,000 miles away. But you can’t.

Al Qaeda is working feverishly to turn Somalia into a global jihad factory, according to recent intelligence assessments, and the way the United States chooses to respond could serve as a template for other fronts in the wider counterterrorism war. Just last month, American helicopters swept over the dusty Somali horizon to take out Saleh Ali Saleh Nabhan, a wanted Qaeda suspect who had been hiding out in Somalia for years and training a new bevy of killers; some of those trainees are believed to be Somali-Americans who could easily slip back into the United States and do some serious damage as suicide bombers.

In a way, the daring daylight strike against Mr. Nabhan, which was supposedly part of the Obama administration’s shift from targeting terrorists with cruise missiles that often kill civilians, was a flashback. Few in Somalia — or the American military — have forgotten Black Hawk Down, the battle in October 1993 when Somali militiamen in flip-flops killed 18 American soldiers, including members of the Army’s elite Delta Force. It was a searing humiliation for the Pentagon, which had just emerged from the first gulf war pumped up on smart bombs and laser-guided missiles, but in Somalia found itself back in a Vietnam-style quagmire where high technology was no match for local rage.

Black Hawk Down made the United States gun-shy for years, contributing to its failure to intervene against genocide in Rwanda and, for a time, in Bosnia, too. The battle itself was immortalized in a so-so film and a great book — required reading for some courses at West Point.

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Sunday, October 18, 2009

History: Contractors During the Indian Wars of 1864 – 1866

Filed under: History — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 12:46 PM

“These are perilous times, Mr. Holladay, all over our country; my anxiety is great. We have no soldiers to spare, but I will do all in my power… You will be reimbursed for all loses and damages; like all patriotic men, you must trust to the honor of our government.” -President Lincoln in reply to Ben Holladay’s urgent plee for help, in regards to keeping the routes west open and running, despite indian attacks (Chapter 13, Stagecoaches by John A Sells).

*****

   Who here has an American Express card, or has an account with Wells Fargo?  Have you ever wondered about the history of these two institutions?  Well guess what, these institutions, along with the Pinkertons, have some interesting history.  They were operationally speaking, equal to today’s companies like Armor Group, Blackwater, Triple Canopy, Dyncorp and any number of other PMC’s or PSC’s that are conducting convoy or PSD operations for clients in today’s wars. These companies were among the many companies performing convoy and PSD operations during the Indian wars of 1864-1866.  And it wasn’t just these years, it was during all of the years during the expansion out west.

   The point is, it took armed contractors with the guts to say ‘I will transport you or your goods to where they are needed’, no matter how dangerous.

   And especially during the Civil War. Troops were short during that time, and armed contractors were especially important during these times. Things were very dangerous, and Indian attacks, bad weather, terrain, and bandits were all contributors to that danger.  Sound familiar?

   I have posted several stories below, but the first one is the most important.  I would like for the reader to go through this story, and replace Smoky Hill Route with Route Tampa in Iraq.  Or replace the Butterfield Overland company with Armor Group (AG transported many folks on the dangerous roads in Iraq). The Indians would be the insurgency.  The reporter writing the story, of course would be an embed traveling with Armor Group on Route Tampa.  You get the idea.

   Finally, what I want the reader to come away with on this, is that the expansion into the west was of vital national interest.  Gold and natural resources were necessary to fund the Civil War and for the growth of the US.  It was in our best interest to keep pumping folks out west, and that is clearly evident with Lincoln’s reply to Ben Holladay in the quote up top. Contractors are what made that happen, and the importance of contractors and private industry in regards to supplying the war effort or expanding control throughout the west, is the history that no one talks about.

   It is history that was always there, and it is very interesting to apply today’s definition of what we do, to what we did back in the day.

   By now, you are starting to see the theme here.  From Privateers winning  the sea war during the Revolutionary War, to the Marines at the shores of Tripoli using mercenaries, to the Pinkertons protecting Lincoln, to contractors being essential to the expansion into the West, we are an important part of US history.  And I will continue to point that out in future posts. –Matt

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Legends of America-Butterfield

One of Butterfield’s stagecoaches.

A Journey to Denver via the Butterfield Overland Dispatch

New York Times

December 26, 1865

Smoky Hill Springs, Kansas, Saturday, November 25, 1865 –

 In my last epistle, I gave an account of the murder of several persons along the Smoky Hill route, and depredations of various kinds by a band of Indians, supposed to be Cheyennes, under the lead of one of their chiefs rejoicing in the soubriquet of “Fast Bear.” We, that is the Butterfield Overland Dispatch coach, containing General Brewster and several passengers, left Chalk Bluff Station with an escort of cavalry on the 23rd, arriving without adventure at Monument Station the same evening. At Monument there is a military post, so we considered our case a safe one.

A large wagon train with an escort of Infantry was also at this point en route for Pond Creek, a military post some twenty-five miles west of our present position.

We left Monument yesterday morning to continue our journey to Denver, accompanied by an ambulance, in which was Surgeon N.L. Whipple, who had been to Chalk Bluff to care for the soldiers wounded at that place in repelling an attack made by Indians a few days since.

Colonel Tamblyn seemed to think that there was so little danger that we felt very safe with an escort of eight men, three in the ambulance with the doctor, and five mounted men riding in advance of the coach.

We saw no sign of the presence of Indians during the morning, and had nearly reached the station when the ambulance driver took a short cut which did not pass the station, but joined the main road a mile beyond it.

When within fifteen hundred yards of the station, Mr. Davis, of Harper’s Weekly, discovered that a squad of Indians were charging down on us. He at once gave the alarm and opened on the redskins with his Ballard rifle, which performance was immediately initiated by General Brewster, Mr. Hasbrock and Your Own, Mr. Perrin doing duty his revolver from the outside of the coach.

As were all armed with Ballard guns, we drove the party off quite as fast as they came, two of them bearing tokens of our regard in the shape of curiously shaped cones of lead.

The driver of our coach was not wanting in pluck but quickly drove his team to the station.

We left the coach at once, and discovered that another party of Indians had rushed in among the horses and mules that were grazing near, stampeding them.

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Friday, October 16, 2009

War Art: ’Lost’, From LMS Defense-The Comics

Filed under: War Art — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 10:03 AM

‘Lost’, From LMS Defense-The Comics

Artwork by Righteous Duke

Monday, October 12, 2009

Legal News: Norwegian Security Contractors Launch Plea Against Congo Death Sentences

Filed under: Africa,Legal News — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 12:40 PM

   More news on the legal front for these poor guys.  I wish them well, but yet again, these guys are at the mercy of the legal system in the Congo.  What needs to happen is for the Norwegian government to put the full weight of diplomacy on this one, and demand a fair trial for these guys or have them sent to their home for trial.

    If there is doubt, as to who shot the driver and of the legal process in the Congo, then that is a huge red flag.  If they cannot do the job, then get them back to Norway and have the trial there.  Justice must be served, and if these guys are getting sucked into something political or anything other than justice and the rule of law, then they need to get out of there.  That is the right thing to do, and that is the least Norway can do in order to show respect for two men that had at once served them with service in the military. –Matt

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Guardian

Norwegians Tjostolv Moland (l) and Joshua French (r) attend a military tribunal in Kisangani, Democratic Republic of Congo. Photograph: Thomas Hubert/Reuters

Norwegian security contractors launch plea against Congo death sentences

 Monday 12 October 2009

Two Norwegian security contractors convicted of murder and espionage in the Democratic Republic of the Congo will tomorrow begin an appeal against their death sentences. Joshua French, 27, who spent part of his early childhood in Margate and holds dual British citizenship, was arrested with Tjostolv Moland, 28, in eastern Congo in May after their driver was found shot dead. The men denied shooting Abedi Kasongo in the head, and said he had been killed during an attack by unknown gunmen.

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Thursday, October 8, 2009

Video: Russian Security Contractors Gunning For the Iraq Market

Filed under: Industry Talk,Iraq,Russia — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 6:11 PM

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