Dogs of War: Lions and contractors and robots. Oh my!

By DAVID ISENBERG

WASHINGTON, April 10 (UPI) — This is my final Dogs of War column. Since starting in January 2008, I have covered many different aspects of private military and security contracting, but they have been only a small portion of the total number of issues worth examining.

Like any other issue, there is good and bad news when it comes to contractors doing work that once upon a time people could only conceive of the government doing.

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Job Tips: 11 General Orders for Marine Sentries…And for Contractors

By Feral Jundi

I got the idea for this post, while reading Eeben’s post on physical security.  It seems like this stuff should be common sense, but for some folks, they just don’t get it.  This will hopefully give the reader a starting point to grow from.  There are tons of resources on how to operate out there, and everyone has an opinion.  For me, I like to keep things basic, and stick to what works.  The Marines still use these 11 General Orders, and every Marine must learn them while at boot camp.  Although, if you don’t have the time to memorize this stuff, just copy them on a 3X5 and put them in your pocket.  Guys do that all the time, with all sorts of information they have to remember.  I also run around with maps, nine line, language stuff, compass, frequencies, POC, etc. I also keep a notebook and pen with me, so I can write stuff down–lots of common sense stuff, and excellent for those of us with a rough memory capability. lol 

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A (VERY) BRIEF LOOK AT PHYSICAL SECURITY

By Eeben Barlow

In a world where unemployment is on the rise, financial institutions are in melt-down and an ever-decreasing ability of law enforcement agencies to curb crime, it is obvious that crime will escalate. Coupled to these contributors to crime are marches, protests and riots that use a mass of normally law-abiding citizens as a cover to establish a base for anarchy to flourish. The recent actions witnessed at the G20 and NATO meetings reflect this growing problem. This, in turn, creates a viable base for terrorist actions to be implemented.

Physical security is usually defined as the protection of buildings, personnel, hardware, programmes, networks, other assets and data from violent and non-violent physical actions that can cause loss (of life) or damage to a facility, company, enterprise, agency or an institution. Such violent and

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Dogs of War: Let loose the legal beagles of war

By David Isenberg

WASHINGTON, April 3 (UPI) — Don’t look now but it is raining lawyers; or to be more precise, lawsuits. Just consider what has happened in the past two weeks.

There was a ruling on March 18 by the U.S. District Court in Virginia denying CACI’s motion to dismiss a case by four Iraqi plaintiffs alleging abuse at Abu Ghraib prison. This dates back to the original 2004 revelations made famous by the report of Maj. Gen. Antonio Taguba.

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Dogs of War: Have Ph.D., will travel

By David Isenberg

WASHINGTON, March 27 (UPI) — For more than six years, Iraq has served as a test case of the strengths and weaknesses of private military and security contractors. They most often operate well. At times, they are primarily bad. But most of the time, they have elements of both — meaning that even if a contractor does exactly what it is supposed to do, the end result may still be negative.

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Dogs of War: Theory is fine, action is better

By DAVID ISENBERG

WASHINGTON, March 20 (UPI) — The International Criminal Court issued a warrant on March 4 for the arrest of Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir for war crimes and crimes against humanity. Among other things, he is suspected of “intentionally directing attacks against an important part of the civilian population of Darfur, Sudan, murdering, exterminating, raping, torturing and forcibly transferring large numbers of civilians and pillaging their property.”

As a result, Bashir halted the work of relief organizations operating primarily in Darfur, leaving more than 1 million people without food, medical care or drinking water.

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Dogs of War: Can’t we all just get along?

By DAVID ISENBERG

WASHINGTON, March 13 (UPI) — If, as most people expect, private military and security contractors are increasingly part of America’s military establishment and future battlefields, they will need to improve the coordination of their operations with regular military forces.

In the past, there has been undeniable friction between soldiers and contractors on numerous occasions in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere.

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Considering the use of a PMC or PSC

By Eeben Barlow

I have always advocated the use of a Private Military Company (PMC) or a Private Security Company (PSC) above that of the UN or a foreign armed force’s training teams. The recent revelations of UN corruption and sexual abuse towards those they have undertaken to protect has simply strengthened my thoughts on the matter.

My belief is that the professional PMC/PSC comes with no political strings attached, views its mission as a matter of honour, is subject to the laws of the contracting country and is contracted to achieve an agreed aim within a defined time.

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Dogs of War: Contractors doomed to repeat the mistakes of the past

By DAVID ISENBERG

WASHINGTON, March 6 (UPI) — An army may travel on its stomach, but it lives to fight another day by studying its history. For the U.S. military, the study of history is not an academic pursuit but a deadly serious business. That is why there are offices like the Air Force Historical Research Agency, the Army Center for Military History, the Naval Historical Center, and the Historical Office of the Office of the Secretary of Defense, to name a few.

Military professionals understand that the unpredictability and chaos of war make the study of the past mandatory in an effort to try to avoid repeating its disasters. Keeping and preserving detailed records is not just a bureaucratic chore but a vital mission. Militaries have always understood, long before Spanish philosopher George Santayana famously said it, that “Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.”

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Dogs of War: Blue helmets and bottom lines

By DAVID ISENBERG

WASHINGTON, Feb. 27 (UPI) — Is the world ready to let private military and security contractors participate in U.N. peace operations? When I ask this, I’m not talking about Hollywood celebrities calling for the firm formerly known as Blackwater to work in Darfur.

In one respect, this is a trick question as contractors have been and are involved in such operations.

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