Feral Jundi

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Maritime Security: Blackwater Plans Effort Against Piracy

Filed under: Maritime Security,Somalia — Tags: , , — Matt @ 12:28 AM

     So far, I like this model of anti-piracy more than anything else that has come up.  I think what BW plans on doing, is just posting up in international waters so it can immediately cover down on clients when they enter the danger zone.  And in the mean time, BW can recce the routes with helicopters and ferry armed guards onto the boats that they are contracted with.  Although to do this safely, BW will have to coordinate with the client’s ships, so they are all within range of the McArthur.  

     And if you read the article below, deterrence and the right to self defense is BW’s ‘right’, according to their spokeswoman.   That says to me that they will have weapons and they will defend self and the client.  But because I am not in the loop, I am only making assumptions. I must say, a Mk 38 would look pretty nice on the bow of the McArthur.  –Head Jundi

——————————————————————- 

WSJ McArthur

The McArthur can carry helicopters and inflatable boats.   

 

Blackwater Plans Effort Against Piracy

DECEMBER 3, 2008

By AUGUST COLE

Private security firm Blackwater Worldwide began holding meetings in London on Tuesday with potential clients for a new business venture — protection from pirates.

The Moyock, N.C., firm, which has grown rapidly through State Department security work in Iraq, has been courting shippers and insurance firms about protecting ships in pirate-infested waters. It’s meeting with more than a dozen firms this week and hopes to drum up its first contract.

There have been almost 100 attempts this year to seize ships off East Africa, fewer than half of which were successful, according to the U.S. Navy. On Nov. 30, two skiffs harassed an Oceania Cruises Inc. ship passing through the Gulf of Aden. Eight shots were fired at the cruise liner, which evaded the boats, according to the Miami-based company.

(more…)

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Legal News: SOFA- Prosecuting Contractors for Previous Incidents?

Filed under: Iraq,Legal News,News — Tags: , , — Matt @ 12:02 AM

     Boy, so the paragraph that jumps up at me in this article, is this one:

 But the question of whether Iraqis could use the agreement to prosecute contractors for previous incidents wasn’t addressed in the new agreement. When security company officials asked Thursday, “We told them that’s a question we don’t know the answer to,” said a State Department official, who spoke to reporters about the meetings under the condition of anonymity.

     My guess is that they do know the answer, and they have been withholding that information to insure there wasn’t any real protest by the companies.  Especially Blackwater, because if the Iraqis can go back in time and prosecute contractors for previous incidents, well then that will cause a stampede of litigation.  Obviously the Iraqis would want to go after those implicated in the Nisour Square incident as the first case.  But where would it stop, and how far will they go back?  This smells.  

   To me, I think the companies were pretty much in wait and see mode, with what they ‘thought’ was the SOFA. Hell, I even posted the copy that was released over at Fox News.  But if this paragraph up top is an indicator of the holes in this thing, then I think all of us in this industry deserve a full explanation of what really is going to happen?  And why is there an Arabic draft available only to Iraqi lawmakers, yet no official copy of the final draft in English for the rest of us to read?  

   The other thing that gets me, is that the companies should not be surprised about anything.  If they would have had the guts to confront the client about this matter, and demand to be included in the loop, then we wouldn’t be playing this guessing game right now.  How many of us have died in defense of the client/Coalition? There are 230,000 plus civilian contractors in this world wide war, and we continue to be treated like the elephant in the room that no one wants to acknowledge. –Head Jundi

——————————————————————-

Elephant in the Room

US-Iraq Pact Ends Contractor Immunity

November 21, 2008

Knight Ridder

WASHINGTON – Contractors working for the United States in Iraq, including armed security outfits such as Blackwater Inc., will be subject to Iraqi law under the new U.S.-Iraq security pact. Not only that, they could face Iraqi prosecution for acts committed when they supposedly had immunity from Iraqi law, U.S. officials said Nov. 20.

A new U.S.-Iraq security agreement doesn’t specifically prevent Iraqi officials from bringing criminal charges retroactively in cases such as the September 2007 shooting deaths of 17 Iraqi civilians by contractors protecting a State Department convoy, officials told security company officials during meetings in Washington Thursday.

The news caught company officials by surprise.

“We are still trying to make sense of it,” said Anne E. Tyrrell, a spokeswoman for Blackwater Inc., whose security guards have been involved in some of the most controversial incidents in Iraq, including the Sept. 16, 2007, shooting at al Nisoor Square in Baghdad.

(more…)

Monday, November 17, 2008

Industry Talk: The Future of Security Contracting on the Border?

Filed under: Industry Talk — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 1:29 PM

   Interesting little interview with a former Security Chief with DHS about Dyncorp at the border, and the future of contractor use by DHS.  –Head Jundi 

——————————————————————- 

 

 

The Future of Security Contracting on the Border?

November 17, 2008

As the former chief security officer for the Department of Homeland Security, Dwight Williams directed and managed security matters related to the department and its 200,000 employees and contractors for close to three years. Williams, a 30-year security veteran whose resume also includes over a decade with the Washington D.C. Metropolitan Police Department, now serves as a vice president overseeing security at DynCorp International, a private defense contractor, which he joined in June 2007. CSO caught up with Williams for his thoughts on the future of homeland security and its increasing partnership with private contract firms.

CSO: Dyncorp has had a presence with contract security forces on the border, as well as with contingency efforts in the Gulf after Hurricane Katrina. Drawing upon your expertise both with DynCorp, and previously with the Department of Homeland Security, do you anticipate an increasing private presence in homeland security efforts?

Williams: From its formation, DHS relied heavily on contractor support to stand up the organization and roll out new initiatives. From my experience, it was a public-private partnership that worked very well. I am certain the private sector will continue to play a prominent role with DHS, particularly in the development of new technologies to protect the homeland and by providing surge support in response to natural or man-made disasters.

Other key roles for the private sector include the protection of our critical infrastructure and government facilities, thus freeing valuable government resources to concentrate on detection and elimination of threats to our way of life.

(more…)

Industry Talk: Two Reports about Contractors from the Army War College Quarterly

Filed under: Industry Talk — Tags: , , — Matt @ 1:12 PM

PARAMETERS

US Army War College Quarterly

Autumn 2008, Vol. XXXVIII, No. 3

Website Here

Contractors:  The New Element of Military Force Structure

By Mark Cancian

From Parameters, Autumn 2008, pp. 61-77.

Read the Whole Report Here

Conclusion

There is still a great deal of hand-wringing related to “relying on mercenaries” and nostalgia about returning to an all-military warfighting force. As a result many are in denial with regard to contractors. But it is time to move forward. The experiences in Iraq and Afghanistan have shown what future conflict will look like when fought by an all-volunteer force. On the whole the record is vastly superior to the experience in Vietnam, a war fought by a conscript Army. 

(more…)

Sunday, November 16, 2008

News: Logistics Hell in Afghanistan and Pakistan

Filed under: Afghanistan,News,Pakistan — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 1:21 PM

 

     If there was any an indicator of how things are going in a war, you can always look at the health of the logistics tail.  And to me, just looking at these three stories that cover Pakistan and Afghanistan, it is obvious that there are some serious security issues with logistics going on.  

     The first story is one that I posted before, about Commando Security (a local national security company in Afghanistan) and their efforts in the war.  The loss of life and the amount of actual fighting that this PSC is doing is stunning. Stacks of coffins…fighting daily?  

     The second story is about Pakistan shutting down the Khyber Pass. The Taliban and the various tribes are raping these convoys.  Just lask week, these guys were able to attack a convoy and steal some Humvee destined for Afghanistan.  The pictures of these things in Taliban hands are embarrassing to say the least.

     The final story is about Highway One in Afghanistan, and how dangerous that has become.  It sounds like IED hell, and the Taliban and company are certainly applying the lessons of Iraq to their own campaign in Afghanistan and Pakistan.

     On Feral Jundi, we talked about this before.  That our achilles heel in the war over there is logistics.  The Taliban know this, and they are doing what they can to shut it down and/or plunder it.  All I know is that Task Force Odin better get busy and get some eyes on these routes, and start working with the hunters to protect these routes.  Or maybe out of pure human decency, they could also give a heads up to these PSC’s that are operating over there. That means communicating with PSC’s like Commando Security, or we can continue to stand by while these forces get mutilated by these guys.  

     The other thing that bothers me about this, is commerce. If we want the Afghani people to be happy with their government, security of commerce must be a priority.  Take charge of the roads and own them.  That means patrol, post overwatch on stretches of road, and work with the villages that are near these roads.  Set up a text messaging/mobile phone road watch crew, and pay them to report on Taliban activity in the villages and roads.  Do something to empower the local populations, and get the police busy on this stuff.  The security of logistics and commerce on these roads are vital, and we must do a better job of protection of said  activities.  –Head Jundi 

——————————————————————- 

 Taliban

Baitullah Mehsud’s Taliban pose in front of a captured US Humvee. Baitullah’s Taliban flag is draped over the hood. Photo from AFP. 

‘Every moment is frightening’

Private security personnel easy targets in Afghanistan

Tom Blackwell,  National Post  

Published: Monday, October 20, 2008

As he girded himself for another shift protecting a massive NATO supply convoy this week, Rozi Mohammed made a frank admission: The work terrifies him.

“We are afraid of IEDs, we’re afraid of rockets, we’re afraid of bullets, we’re afraid of ambushes,” said the boyish-looking 18-year-old, an AK-47 slung over his narrow shoulders. “Every moment is frightening.”

He has good reason to be fearful. Just this year, about 160 of Mr. Mohammed’s colleagues have been killed defending such convoys against almost daily Taliban attacks. Only the day before, two died in a roadside blast.

In his compound, a stack of empty coffins sits ready for the next victims.

“Every day, we have seen our men wounded and killed,” the teenager said.

Mr. Mohammed does not belong to any military or police organization. He is part of Afghanistan’s growing private army: security contractors who fill the gaps in the foreign military and development mission here, protecting diplomats, aid workers, outposts and the all-important convoys.

To satisfy the voracious appetite of thousands of NATO troops for food, fuel and other supplies, hundreds of trucks a week must traverse highways that more and more are rife with insurgents.

(more…)

« Newer PostsOlder Posts »

Powered by WordPress