Feral Jundi

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Jobs: Facilities Security, Afghanistan

Filed under: Afghanistan,Jobs — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 8:56 PM

SAIC logo

Force Protection Officer

Full Time 

posted 3/16/2009  

Job Category: FAC – Facilities / Physical Security

Req ID: 142713

Able to obtain security clearance?: None

Currently possess security clearance?: Secret

Location: APO, AE  

% Travel: 100

Relocation: No

Requirements: The SAIC Operations, Intelligence and Security Business Unit has an opening for a Force Protection Officer (FPO) in Kabul, Afghanistan.

POSITION SUMMARY:

The successful candidate will perform force protection for the entire SAIC team deployed to both the CFC and the MoI/CNPA facilities. The individual will have force protection experience and will have access to equipment, data, and networks required to perform job functions.

PRIMARY RESPONSIBILITIES:

•Provide all forms of security and individual force protection to the entire Cambridge team (three intelligence analysts and two analyst-linguists during their

deployment period).

(more…)

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Jobs: Security, Afghanistan

Filed under: Afghanistan,Jobs — Tags: , , — Matt @ 5:35 PM

   It doesn’t say specifically what the job is, but I am assuming it is security related.  You will have to contact these guys to learn more. This was posted on Lightfighter, and you won’t find this ad on their website (at least not yet). I am not a point of contact for this either.  –Matt

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Looking for former Marines, SF, SEALs and PJs for a US Government contract in Afghanistan with us.

– Honorable discharges only

– No Arrests

– No DUI’s

– No Domestic violence disputes or arrests

– Current on all state and federal taxes

– Weight in proportion to height, Marine Corps standards

– NO/NO/NO medical conditions of any type

– Background checks will be conducted!

Contract will run for at least one year with extensions dependent on performance.

Pay, leave, insurance etc comparable to Iraq

Deployment date will be 30-60 days from now.

Send Resume to   tony.deibler@cohortinternational.com

Website Here

 

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Jobs: Security Officer, Afghanistan

Filed under: Afghanistan,Jobs — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 10:28 AM

   I am not the POC for this, so use the link I provided below to apply.  This job ad is a little thin on info, and salary info, so I really cannot fully endorse it.  But it is work and if anyone else has anything about this, let me know.  One idea is to just contact KBR directly, and talk to a recruiter over the phone about the details.  –Matt 

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KBR Logo

Job Title    Security Officer

Req ID 24249

Category Security

Location Afghanistan

Other Locations 

Posted 2/23/2009

Requirements

Stands guard, walks, and/or patrols premises to prevent theft, violence, or infraction of rules. Logs all visitors, vendors, and deliveries in and out of job site. Gives direction to visitors or employees and answers questions relative to services of establishment. Enforces security rules and regulations. Reports irregular activities. Performs other duties as assigned. Requires a high school diploma with 3-5 years related experience.

Some locations require candidate to have a U.S. Secret Security Clearance.

Additional requirements:

    * Must be fluent in English

    * Must have a valid passport

    * Must have a valid driver’s license 

It should be understood that employment may be located in potentially dangerous areas, including combat or war zones. This might involve the possibility of suffering harm by dangerous forces or friendly fire. These dangers are inherent to working conditions in a dangerous environment.

Apply Here

 

Monday, March 9, 2009

Industry Talk: UN’s Procurement Business is Managerial Disaster, Report Reveals

Filed under: Industry Talk — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 11:45 PM

   Uggh.  It looks like the UN needs to do some serious house cleaning as well? This entire article is sickening to read. The one portion of this report that I wanted to point out, which ties in with what we have been talking about over on Jake’s and Eeben’s site lately, is this:

      Another recommendation is that the U.N. organizations “establish a vendor performance database to be utilized in the procurement process”-in other words, keep a systematic record of how well the companies that sell goods and services to the U.N. are actually performing. The absence of such a database, the inspectors point out, “practically renders evaluations useless.” 

    So who came first, poor PMC’s and PSC’s, or a poor system of procurement at the UN?  Either way, this is good.  The UN must become a learning organization, and the same scrutiny that is being leveled at the US contracting crap, is finally being aimed at the UN.  I also wonder how many lives have been lost, all because of the poor leadership and terrible architecture in this world sponsored organization? –Matt   

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UN’s Procurement Business is Managerial Disaster, Report Reveals

Monday , March 09, 2009

By George Russell

EXCLUSIVE: The United Nations’ $10 billion procurement business-the buying of goods and services for its operations worldwide-is a managerial disaster, in which its own procedures are not followed, documentation is often missing and the total amount spent on consultants is unknown, according to a damning report now being quietly circulated at the world body.

Moreover, the U.N.’s top managers have apparently been failing to meet requests from the U.N. General Assembly to fix the situation since at least 2001.

The conclusions appear in a sharply-worded, 40-page note to the U.N.’s top managers that was delivered in early December. The note, obtained by FOX News, appears to confirm a dismal portrait of the U.N.’s major money-spending activities that the organization has often vehemently denied.

The inspectors who prepared the latest management report work for a specialized, Geneva-based watchdog of the world organization known as the Joint Inspection Unit (JIU). The JIU’s job is to assess and improve the efficiency and coordination of the U.N. worldwide through its inspection and recommendation process.

Its prescriptions for improving management, however, only have the force of recommendations –and in this case, the inspectors note, they made some of the same suggestions as far back as 1999, with little apparent effect.

The new document bears the numbing title of “Corporate Consultancies in United Nations System Organizations,” and for its first 13 pages is mainly a highly-critical examination of U.N. usage of consultants for such things as information management, management restructuring and internal analysis.

Click here to read the report.

When it comes to hiring consultants, the inspectors also find the U.N. as a whole badly wanting — starting with the fact that, as the report notes, “in the United Nations system, there is no definition of corporate consultancy,” and the organization apparently doesn’t even know how much money it is spending on the service.

(more…)

Mexico: Texas Governor Screams For 1,000 Troops

Filed under: Mexico,Texas — Tags: , , , , , — Matt @ 2:22 PM

“Texas pleads for U.S. troops

Now, to hear Texas Gov. Rick Perry tell it, U.S. resources are being focused too much on Mexico and not enough on Americans on this side of the border.

Last month, Perry called on the Department of Homeland Security to send 1,000 troops to the U.S. side of the border. Complaining that the federal government had not done enough to protect Americans in the border region, Perry dismissed potential constitutional concerns about assigning active-duty U.S. personnel to military operations inside the United States, saying bluntly, ‘I really don’t care.’” 

And…

“I don’t care if they are military, National Guard or Customs agents,” Mr Perry said at a news conference at the border town of El Paso yesterday. “We’re very concerned that the federal Government is not funding border security adequately. We must be ready for any contingency.” 

    Thanks to Jeff for sending me this story.  I’m sorry, but when I hear the governor of a state screaming for troops, and we don’t answer the call, I have to say WTF? I mean the governor has the National Guard to draw from, but it sounds like Texas wants something more, in terms of money and commitment.   

    There is plenty of fire power to draw upon in the US, it’s just establishing the mechanism to get it done.  Law enforcement could deputize citizens and form a posse of volunteers.  The National Guard could send folks from some other state, if Texas can’t do it with their own NG.  The Border Patrol could up the recruitment tempo and infuse more folks into the program out there, and even draw upon ICE to throw more folks down there.  

    Or, the final solution is to contract it out.  Matter of fact, all of those groups I listed, could contract PSC’s to make this happen.  We did it during the Hurricane Katrina disasters, and private security companies like Blackwater, Steele Foundation, SOC or Armorgroup were able to respond very quickly and effectively. And to really emphasize this point of contractors on the border, we already use them for border duties in Iraq and Afghanistan. But I guess they are not good enough for the US border?  And during the Katrina disaster, PSC’s were deputized by the state of Louisiana.  It was an emergency, and establishing security in that disaster zone was the priority, no matter how they got it done.  I see no difference with the call for help in Texas, and in other border states.  

   Of course the Border Patrol and Local Law Enforcement should be the primary guardians of the border and those border cities and towns. But if they are overwhelmed and out gunned, and they lack the manpower or there is some legal stop sign about using US troops, then contract out the security.   

   Either way, I go back to leadership for this one.  There are plenty of ways to answer this call for security on the border, but it takes leadership and a plan to make it happen.  Texas and the border states are screaming for help, and we need to take care of our people. –Matt 

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 In Mexico’s drug wars, fears of a U.S. front

Violence that has killed thousands is beginning to cross border, officials say

By Alex Johnson

March. 9, 2009

With U.S. forces fighting two wars abroad, the nation’s top military officer made an important visit last week to forestall a third.

He went to Mexico.

Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, made the trip to confer with Mexican leaders about the Merida Initiative, a three-year plan signed into law last June to flood the U.S.-Mexican border region with $1.4 billion in U.S. assistance for law-enforcement training and equipment, as well as technical advice and training to bolster Mexico’s judicial system.

The assistance is intended to help Mexican President Felipe Calderón Hinojosa step up his war against drug cartels. The drug lords and their soldiers are blamed for having killed more than 6,300 people since January 2008, including more than 1,000 in the first two months of this year alone.

That’s about 100 people every week for the last 14 months. The cartels usually do not target civilians, but dozens, perhaps hundreds, have died in the crossfire.

(more…)

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