tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-75707616436637712282024-03-13T23:22:03.917-07:00Knights of AfghanistanPaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.comBlogger170125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-50199856960537802192010-10-05T09:00:00.000-07:002010-10-05T09:00:02.133-07:00Kunar ShakedownLast week, a Scottish development worker with DAI, Inc. <a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-11419865">was kidnapped</a> on her way back to Jalalabad from the city of Asadabad in Kunar province.*<br /><br /><em>*That’s “out east” to those of you unfamiliar with the geography of Afghanistan.</em><br /><br />According to reports, her two-car convoy was stopped by armed men on the road south of Asadabad and herself and three Afghans traveling with her were marched into the mountains at gunpoint. The official Taliban spokesman has said, “It wasn’t us,” but that’s really beside the point. If, as seems likely, she was grabbed by a criminal kidnap gang, the Taliban (assuming they want the hostage) will simply buy her off them for a small cash payment.<br /><br />The ANP immediately rounded up some village elders from the area and asked them to negotiate her release, but they were unsuccessful.*<br /><br /><em>*According to one of my guys who is related to one of the proposed negotiators, the elders basically said to the ANP, “You want us to go up in those mountains with a police escort and try to save a foreign female infidel. Are you shitting me?”</em><br /><br />DAI, Inc. is an “implementation partner” for USAID, which basically means that AID provides the funding and the scope/requirements of the project, and outfits like DAI go out and actually get it done. Or more accurately, they find local companies who can go out and get it done, since a lot of these projects are in unsafe areas (obviously) where Westerners fear to tread. DAI personnel maintain a project management and oversight role, with occasional trips to the project site. Except in this case, it didn’t seem to work out so well.<br /><br />The missing woman was traveling low-profile, in a couple of Toyota Corollas, with three of her local staff and no security detachment.* Now I’m on record as being a proponent of the low-profile approach, but no security is taking it a little far.<br /><br /><em>*As opposed to high-profile, which usually means B6 armored SUVs, a scout vehicle and a chase car/gun truck, at a minimum. Basically “guns up” from gate to gate. A big fat rolling target in my opinion.</em><br /><br />Perhaps she was in a bind and couldn’t wait for security, or maybe she got some bad advice. There’s even the possibility of some collusion from within the local staff. Either way, she’s gone and no one’s quite sure when/if she’s coming back.<br /><br />Right on the heels of that news comes word that <a href="http://articles.latimes.com/2010/sep/30/world/la-fg-taliban-payoffs-20101001">DAI is under investigation</a> from the Inspector General at USAID concerning roughly $5 million USD that was paid for security on their projects and may have found its way to the Taliban as part of a protection racket.<br /><br />Let me save the IG some time and a lot of paperwork. <br /><br />OF COURSE THE MONEY ENDED UP WITH THE BAD GUYS.*<br /><br /><em>*Although whether they are Taliban, Hezb-islami or just garden-variety scumbags is hard to say.</em><br /><br />When you pay cash for security directly to local power brokers in unsafe districts, it almost always ends up in the pocket of somebody you’d rather not know. Think about it. The powerful figures in these districts (every district has at least one) have the influence to pull together fifty or sixty fighters with weapons, and yet the district is still unsafe. That’s because the guys you’re paying for security are the same people who cause the problems that require the security in the first place. Where I come from, it’s called a shakedown.<br /><br />I wonder if somebody at DAI got wind of the USAID investigation and froze some payment to the local security force. If so, it’s possible that this kidnapping is nothing more than an attempt to collect on some outstanding debts.<br /><br />In fact, I hope that’s the case, because then it can be solved and this woman returned simply by paying out some cash. If instead she’s being held by hard-core jihadists, then it gets a lot tougher to secure her release.PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-75157848345550150562010-10-04T09:00:00.000-07:002010-10-04T09:00:03.160-07:00Jimi Heselden, O.B.E.The name Jimi Heselden probably doesn't mean much to most people. It didn't mean anything to me until I read <a href="http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/09/27/owner-of-segway-inc-dies-in-segway-crash/">his obituary</a> the other day.<br /><br /><br />Best known as the guy who bought the Segway scooter company, he is more importantly (to me at least) the man who invented the <a href="http://www.hesco.com/">HESCO barrier technology</a>.<br /><br /><br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhvSLLYD0eTN-t4jQwo7fz_HXAEWlGExTMVlRVLFPNydzI69h9_BM3oY-dnWnbQJK-xFhLBcGg-DQJS9LGW597gpmt9wVS9MrRqEny9j97jbhjxfdOJ9AkXAd4t4G4wzdgu5doBeAKtrQhx/s1600/hesco.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5523515602022058850" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 320px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 209px; TEXT-ALIGN: center" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhvSLLYD0eTN-t4jQwo7fz_HXAEWlGExTMVlRVLFPNydzI69h9_BM3oY-dnWnbQJK-xFhLBcGg-DQJS9LGW597gpmt9wVS9MrRqEny9j97jbhjxfdOJ9AkXAd4t4G4wzdgu5doBeAKtrQhx/s320/hesco.jpg" border="0" /></a> <br /><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hesco_bastion">HESCOs</a> are ubiquitous here in Afghanistan, providing force protection to every ISAF base and most ANSF posts and government ministries. Although simple in construction and concept, they are a major evolution on old-fashioned sandbags. It's impossible to calculate the number of lives saved by HESCOs in the past nine years, but I'm sure it's considerable.<br /><br /><br />Ironically for a man who invented such an important life-saving technology, Heselden was apparently killed when he accidentally drove a Segway scooter off a cliff and into a river near his home.PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-81556698929926393832010-10-03T09:00:00.000-07:002010-10-03T09:00:01.574-07:00Al-HindustaniLt. Srinivasan (or al-Hindustani as the ANA call him) has <a href="http://atwar.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/09/27/kandahar-roulette-with-a-9-millimeter/?ref=asia">another good post</a> up at the NY Times At War blog about his time down south co-located with an ANA unit.<br /><br />This bit reminded me of my first couple of days, now almost nineteen months ago:<br /><blockquote>This wasn’t about respect anymore. It was about trust. I could watch their eyes retelling my every move and word since I set foot on this post. They had been sizing me up this entire time.<br />I felt like a lamb surrounded by a herd of wolves, teasing me by keeping their fangs at bay.</blockquote><br />Plus, I'm curious to know where an ANA lieutenent got his hands on a chrome-plated 9mm Desert Eagle pistol when I have to get by with a crappy Smith & Wesson.PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-53736543864919502472010-10-02T10:53:00.000-07:002010-10-02T10:55:48.759-07:00Contractor Casualty Numbers<a href="http://www.propublica.org/article/this-year-contractor-deaths-exceed-military-ones-in-iraq-and-afgh-100923">According to ProPublica</a>, more contractors than soldiers were killed in Iraq and Afghanistan in the first six months of 2010, the first time that has happened since these wars began.<br /><br />The report mentions the local nationals who work as translators and drivers for the military, but it’s based on Department of Labor statistics so I suspect that the numbers of contractor deaths are actually underreported. For one, most locally-owned PSCs in Afghanistan aren’t required to report their LN losses to the USG, and those are the companies that typically suffer the heaviest casualties. Secondly, there are plenty of LNs (at least in Afghanistan) that work as subcontractors to Western-owned PSCs and those numbers aren’t usually reported either. <br /><br />If the employee isn’t on file with the USG, or if there are no DBA insurance payments involved, then the casualties don’t get entered into the official statistics. I don’t even want to guess how high the real numbers are.<br /><br />(h/t to <a href="http://feraljundi.com/2010/09/22/industry-talk-more-contractors-than-troops-killed-during-past-year-in-iraq-and-afghanistan/">Feral Jundi</a>)PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-883239632377634872010-09-29T08:00:00.000-07:002010-09-29T08:00:05.548-07:00I Like the Coen Brothers, but............WTF?I like Jeff Bridges, Matt Damon and Josh Brolin just fine, but <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yj-nt_v2xFI">this</a> is just wrong on so many levels.<br /><object height="385" width="640"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/yj-nt_v2xFI?fs=1&hl=en_US&rel=0"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/yj-nt_v2xFI?fs=1&hl=en_US&rel=0" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="640" height="385"></embed></object><br /><br />Some movies should never be re-made.*<br /><br /><em>*Or "reconceived" as I'm sure the Coen brothers will say. Note how they emphasize that they're staying true to the book, not the original movie. Except that the book sucked, a mediocre purple-sage Westerner written by a hack. The book didn't make the movie great. The Duke made the movie great.</em><br /><br />Casablanca, Lawrence of Arabia, Stars Wars, Caddyshack.......films such as these are sacrosanct. One simply cannot improve on greatness, and it's folly to try.PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-33250917603760426492010-09-28T09:00:00.000-07:002010-09-28T09:00:05.234-07:00Saving the World? Um......What?A while back, in response to <a href="http://knightsofafghanistan.blogspot.com/2010/08/updates.html">my post</a> about being worn-down and tired of Afghanistan, a commenter asked me if I was here because I "wanted to be a world-improver, or just because of a job?" A fair question, and not one with a quick and easy answer.<br /><br />To be clear, I have no illusions about "saving the world,"* And if I did, this place and this job is certainly not where I would start. <br /><br /><em>*I know, a HUGE shock to those of you who know me.</em><br /><br />The world has always needed "saving" in one way or another, and somehow those efforts never seem to pay off quite as permanently as their advocates would like. From the Peace Corps in the 20th century all the way back to Roman efforts to civilize the barbarians in the 2nd century BCE, people have been trying to "fix" the wide variety of misfortunes and ills of the world. Whenver I'm confronted by one of these well-meaning but tragically naive do-gooders extolling the virtues of their NGOs new program to bring Pashto-language Sesame Street to school girls in Kandahar or whatever, I always ask the same question: "So how's that working out for you?" The answers are usually disappointing. So no, I'm not here to "save the world" or even rescue a small Afghan portion of it.<br /><br />And I'm certainly not here for the money.* In fact, I venture to guess that most PSC contractors are not in it for the money. Sure, back in the crazy days of Iraq in 2003-4, a handfull of guys were getting paid big bucks to put their lives on the line, but pay scales aren't like that anymore, not in Iraq and not certainly not here. The competition is tougher and the industry has matured considerably in the last ten years.<br /><br /><em>*I could get paid more sitting behind a desk in DC wearing a tie. Except that I no longer own a tie.</em><br /><br />All that said, one does hope that there might be some small lasting positive effect from one's efforts. For me personally and for the company as a whole, the value we provide stems from two important factors: security and jobs. The service we provide is security, and in so doing we employ a large number of Afghans who would otherwise be forced to scratch out a living as farmers or laborers.<br /><br />All that other stuff, building schools, health clinics, instilling democracy, the empowerment of Afghan women, establishing a system of justice, all of that is necessary and good. But they are also irrelevant without security and jobs. Without at least a basic level of security and decent employment for most Afghans, we can build all the schools we want and this effort will still fail.<br /><br />So, are private security companies saving the world, or even saving Afghanistan? No, but then we don't claim to be. We simply enable others to make that effort, and hopefully keep them safe while they're doing it. And lots of Afghan men can support their families on the salaries that PSCs pay. That's good enough for me.<br /><br />But of course I never was an idealist.PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-57622896331770554842010-09-27T14:33:00.000-07:002010-09-27T14:56:13.833-07:00Mistakes and MosquitosBeen a crazy couple of weeks here lately, mostly due to internal company problems rather than external factors (i.e. bad guys). In the past month, we've wrapped up two big projects in Uruzgan and Nangarhar, mostly without incident but I'm still sad to see them go.*<br /><br /><em>*Closing down a project is almost as much work as starting one up, what with accountability lists for weapons and equipment, arranging transport and replacements and the general admin headaches.</em><br /><br />The Uruzgan project was a constant nightmare, a combination of poor pricing and a very tough operating environment. Nevertheless, we had finally got it to the point where it was profitable when The Rug Merchant pulled the plug and opted not to take the six-month extension the client was offering. Despite the problems,* we had finally sorted out the operational issues and amortized out the upfront costs. That was the point to sit back and start making decent coin. Alas, it was not to be.<br /><br /><em>*More on the peculiar joys of Uruzgan Province in a later post.</em><br /><br />No sooner had we pulled our people out of Uruzgan then word came down that we would be doing the same on the Nangarhar project. Unlike Uruzgan, Nangarhar is a reasonably safe place.* <br /><br /><em>*"Safe" is a relative term, of course.</em><br /><br />We had been on the job for twelve months and things were humming along nicely. We had excellent support from the US Army, a good site with LSA constructed and paid for, a well-trained crew of expats and locals who were operating like a finely-tuned machine, and no heavy contact for the last six months (and no casualties for the duration). And to top it off, a decent profit every month.<br /><br />Apparently, all that wasn't enough for the boss, so he pulled the plug. I fought that decision, but never did get a reasonable explanation. The client was left scratching their head, just as puzzled as I was.<br /><br />So, yesterday we pulled all our people and gear off the site and conducted a Relief in Place with the outfit who was taking over. The managers from the new outfit were all smug smiles, knowing as they did the gold mine they'd stumbled into. I suspect that in 30 days, when the income stops rolling in, The Rug Merchant will regret that decision, but there's nothing I can do about that now.<br /><br />Although I can't confirm it, I think the decisions to cut and run from Uruzgan and Nangarhar was a result of Karzai's latest brain cramp in which he announced his intention to close all PSCs by the end of the year. A couple of the big Western outfits have been raided and temporarily shut down, and I suspect that the boss wants to "fly under the radar" until the heat from MoI cools off. Last man standing after the bloodbath kind of thing. We'll see if that works. I have my doubts.<br /><br />Back in Kabul now, dodging the last of the summer's mosquitos. Normally the flies are the most prevalent and annoying pest, but two of the people in my villa and three of my guards have gone down with malaria in the past few weeks, so I've become somewhat obsessive about the nasty little buggers. Malaria is treatable, but it's still no joke. If not caught in time, it can do serious liver damage, and even kill if it's particularly virulent. And the basic prophylactic treatment is some of the nastiest-tasting pills you'll ever find. <br /><br />I spend a lot of effort listening for the telltale hum of a hungry mosquito, and keeping a can of industrial-stength bug killer handy.PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-88098075960959979592010-09-10T09:30:00.000-07:002010-09-10T09:30:01.043-07:00Best Idea I've Heard All Week<object height="385" width="640"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/aCbfMkh940Q?fs=1&hl=en_US&rel=0"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/aCbfMkh940Q?fs=1&hl=en_US&rel=0" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="640" height="385"></embed></object><br /><br />Or maybe I'm just bitter.PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-17720816977041474012010-09-09T09:30:00.000-07:002010-09-09T09:30:00.586-07:00Maximizing Self-InterestThe NY Times has a <a href="http://atwar.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/09/07/about-that-generator-captain/">good series of reports</a> running on their website currently, written by a US Army lieutenent who was stationed in Kandahar. Unlike most of the high-level analysis offered by traditional news sources, Lt. Srinavasan's stuff is local, personal and micro-scale news, about his day-to-day challenges in dealing with Afghans in his sector. (I believe that he's writing about stuff that happened on his recent deployment, rather than posting real-time events.)<br /><br />His latest column is chock full of interesting tidbits about the intricacies of dealing with locals, and neatly captures the shift that comes over an officious Afghan army officer when he realizes that he's not going to be able to take advantage of the newbies.<br /><br />Unfortuately, the lieutenent's conclusions are probably spot-on:<br /><blockquote>But Captain Kalay represented to me the greatest frustration and disappointment of all: no matter how many troops, how much time, or how much money we throw at Afghanistan, no democracy can take hold and nothing will change unless this country’s leaders want it for their own nation. Captain Kalay is a powerful man — he has no incentive to want anything more than the status quo.........I was right about one thing though; this is indeed a math problem, not only to me, but also to Captain Kalay and every Afghan leader in this country. It’s about the maximization of self-interest. No matter how much Captain Kalay likes me, or even identifies with me, it doesn’t change the fact that he will act only to maximize his personal gain.</blockquote><br />The truth of that was recently brought home to me when I was alerted to the fact that a man I considered a close friend in Afghanistan, and one of the best Afghans I had met thus far, was not as clean and as honest as I thought he was. He wasn't stealing from me directly, but he had kept certain information to himself and taken credit and profited personally from something I had worked very hard on. To make matters worse, the story of his deception was provided to me by another Afghan I had also considered to be trustworthy, but the revelation is causing me to question the trust I place in him as well.* Now I'm left wondering what kind of payment he will expect in return for revealing this secret.<br /><br /><em>*And yes, I did confirm the story through independent sources.</em><br /><br />First installment of Lt. Srinavasan's story <a href="http://atwar.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/07/23/of-friends-and-fighters/">here</a>. Second and third, <a href="http://atwar.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/08/16/wheres-my-generator-spy/">here</a> and <a href="http://atwar.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/09/07/about-that-generator-captain/">here</a>.PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-49475919320078066942010-09-08T09:36:00.000-07:002010-09-08T09:36:00.571-07:00Life's Little IroniesThere are still a large number (no one knows for sure how many) shoulder-launched surface-to-air missiles kicking around Afghanistan and Pakistan. Back in th '80s, the U.S. shipped hundreds of Stingers to the mujaheddin to fight the Soviets and not all of them were fired before the Red Army had had enough and bailed. In addition, the Afghan National Army of the time had some Soviet-made SAMs and there were even a few British Blowpipes shipped to the Northern Alliance.<br /><br />The presence of all these portable anti-air missiles has made the Pentagon nervous for the last nine years but there have been few credible reports of any of them actually being used by the Taliban. While the missiles and launchers themselves are fairly robust, they weren't designed to be buried in some Afghan's backyard for twenty years. Time, heat, moisture and dirt take their toll. In addition, the batteries required to run the things were not designed to last for twenty years either.*<br /><br /><em>*It's not like you can just pop in a few D-cells and fire away. The batteries are manufactured specifically for the launchers, and one can't just buy new batteries off the shelf.</em><br /><br />Still, the possibility exists that there are some functioning launchers and missiles out there and that sooner or later the trogs will find a way to get them in proper working order. There's also the chance that their friends in Iran or Pakistan could procure some more modern versions for them. Either way, it would be extremely hazardous to be a pilot in Afghanistan (especially a chopper pilot) if the bad guys get their hands on a number of SAMs.<br /><br />So, in typical Pentagon fashion, DARPA throws a lot of money at the question of how to effectively counter surface-to-air missiles. Flares, chaff and jammers are pretty much standard on NATO aircraft nowadays (not so for the civilian and charter aircraft here), but those are only of partial effectiveness, especially during the lift-off and landing phases of a flight, when an aircraft is particularly vulnerable.<br /><br />However, <a href="http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2010/09/army-turns-to-lasers-for-copter-defense/">some smarty-pants at the University of Michigan</a> is working on a cheap, solid-state laser to mount on military aircraft that will spoof or decoy incoming missiles. It's still in the early testing phases at this point, but looks promising.<br /><br /><em>*And is further anecdotal proof that the truly great ideas and most impressive people come out of the Big Ten, not those ivy-choked bastions of tweed and boat shoes on the East Coast.</em><br /><br />The reason for this post is not actually to discuss SAM-counter measures but to draw attention to the name of the researcher at U of M who's working on this project. In one of life's little ironies, his name is Professor Mohammad Islam. He's actually named after both the prophet and the religion. Kind of like if his name was Doctor Jesus Christian. <br /><br />I bet this year's Eid celebration at his house is going to kind of awkward.<br /><br />Mrs. Islam: "So, what have you done for the faithful this Ramadan, dear?"<br />Prof. Islam: "Umm......invented a device that will make it harder for us to kill the infidel?"<br />Mrs. Islam: "Excuse me? You invented what?"<br />Prof. Islam: "Never mind. This <em>mantu</em> is delicious. Is there anymore tea?"<br /><br />h/t to <a href="http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2010/09/army-turns-to-lasers-for-copter-defense/">Danger Room</a>PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-49355963748032097372010-09-07T11:16:00.000-07:002010-09-07T11:36:03.052-07:00And They Took My Dog Too......Last week we moved out of the palatial villa that had been home for the past eight months and into a much smaller, more modest place in the Shahr-e-Naw section of Kabul. Not a bad house overall, considerably more homey and less institutional than the last place,* but not without its difficulties.<br /><br /><em>*Which was a marvel of modern Kabul narco-techture.</em><br /><br />First, we’re on city power most of the time, which is unpredictable at best. We do have a generator, but only one and it’s ill-advised to run a generator 24/7. Sooner or later it burns out the motor and then you are well and truly screwed. So, we run it when we have to (or when I can convince the house manager to turn it on), but much of the time we draw power from the regular Kabul grid. That’s kind of like depending on three crackhead monkeys on exercise bikes to provide electricity. You never know how much you'll get and the cost of frustration is pretty high.*<br /><br /><em>*Actually, that’s not fair……to the crackhead monkeys. Drugged-up simians strapped to exercise bikes would at least have some entertainment value. The retards at the Ministry of Energy have nothing to recommend them, least of all entertainment value.</em><br /><br />Secondly, I no longer qualify for the room at the top of the house. A reorganization due to client demands means that I get the room right next to the main door on the first floor. The cleaning staff rolls in chattering like hens about 0630 every morning which makes it tricky to get a decent night’s sleep when I finally rack out, usually around 0230. More importantly, if any trogs manage to get past the gate guards………….first stop, my room! Needless to say, I check my AK every night and make sure it’s close at hand.<br /><br />This house does have a nice garden out back, which is useful in a country with a shortage of green spaces. Unfortunately, because the garden is so nice, the Safers decided that having Tiger digging up the flowers was not an optimum situation. And since he chews through any sort of leash or restraint in about three minutes flat, they insisted we leave him behind.<br /><br />I don’t even like dogs, but I’d come to enjoy Tiger’s company and all his bizarre quirks. His visceral hostility to any strange Afghans in the compound, his obsession with well-chewed footwear, his love of spaghetti and his penchant for lunging at unprotected genitals. A good (if slightly crazy) dog. But then again, if you were a dog here, you’d be slightly crazy too.<br /><br /><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhfIYtU-fmHYU06CMD-gN9duU1xc2s0mcq1wcvMpakKmoQkHhTU4Si0S0-CU2ZpLZhOgZsVQJIoiv6htEJHn1sRllKD11ASQn18jQNdlHGnk8umdSLhC7zWOw3NE2xV8xa5-jKpK4Ug_CxH/s1600/027.JPG"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5514240458777307842" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 400px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 300px; TEXT-ALIGN: center" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhfIYtU-fmHYU06CMD-gN9duU1xc2s0mcq1wcvMpakKmoQkHhTU4Si0S0-CU2ZpLZhOgZsVQJIoiv6htEJHn1sRllKD11ASQn18jQNdlHGnk8umdSLhC7zWOw3NE2xV8xa5-jKpK4Ug_CxH/s400/027.JPG" border="0" /> <p align="center"></a><strong>Tiger, showing his best "Crazy Eyes"</strong> </p><p align="left">So now Tiger is back on the mean streets of Kabul from whence he came. I hope that the six months of good food and proper care will have improved his health to the point that he can compete with the other strays, but I wonder if living with people who didn’t routinely beat him will have softened his survival instincts too much.<br /><br />I find I can’t look at the mangy, feral dogs in the streets anymore, for fear I might spot Tiger in a bad state. The fate of single dog is a small thing in a place with so much misery but ultimately it’s the small things that matter. At least to me.<br /></p>PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-17307987753325317502010-08-21T14:15:00.000-07:002010-08-21T14:26:39.579-07:00UpdatesAs some of you may have noticed, I haven't been writing much lately (for this blog or for other projects). Things have been a little thin around here lately.*<br /><br /><em>*A recurring problem.</em><br /><br />There's no shortage of things to write about, and discuss, but frankly, I'm too tired to do the issues justice.<br /><br />I'm tired of this job. I'm tired of this company. I'm tired of this industry. I'm tired of the Afghan government.* I'm tired of this war.<br /><br /><em>*And not all that enamored with the U.S. government at the moment.</em><br /><br />Most of all, I'm tired of this place. I've always been ambivalent about the mission here, but lately I find myself wandering to extremes. One day I'm convinced that we can do this right and that someday this country will be better off. The next day I'm emphatic that this country deserves it's self-inflicted fate. Whether either position is correct, I have no idea.<br /><br />Maybe I just need to get out and recharge my batteries. Or maybe I'm just done. I'm not sure which yet. What I am sure of is that something needs to change. Just haven't figured out what that "something" is yet.PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com9tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-32353114895343229892010-08-12T10:25:00.000-07:002010-08-12T11:21:47.423-07:00Kidnap & RansomLast Sunday night I got the sort of text message that everyone one in this business dreads. "Incident in Kabul. One of ours down. Details to follow."<br /><br />A message like that sets off several hours of frantic activity trying to trace the course of events, determine the casualties and sort out the next step. The Ops Manager, the Duty Officer, myself and the Deputy President all traded calls and texts for the next two hours until we pieced together the story.<br /><br />A kidnap attempt of a local national in Kabul had resulted in one of our guys being shot, and his protectee snatched by four men in a dark SUV. The puzzling thing was that the name of the protectee was not on our list of clients. WTF? What was our PSD doing with a high-risk target when we didn't even have a contract or an agreement to provide the service? And what exactly is the fallout when someone you are protecting is snatched when you weren't supposed to be protecting him in the first place?<br /><br />Turns out that one of actual clients, the president of an Afghan construction company, had contracted with us for static security at his office and a PSD team to cover his movements. Nothing unusual there. Where it gets strange is that this client had decided that his brother, the president of another separate Afghan construction company, ought to have protection as well. Rather than recommend that he contact us and write a proper contract, he simply phoned The Rug Merchant and asked if his brother could "borrow" one of our CPOs from time to time.*<br /><br /><em>*CPO= Close Protection Officer, i.e. a bodyguard; PSD= Personal Security Detail, i.e. a team of bodyguards.</em><br /><br />Now the obvious answer to a request like this is "Uhhhhh........no." <br /><br />Upon reflection, one might say, "Hell no." <br /><br />But, The Rug Merchant, renowned across two continents for his limited mental capacity, said, "Sure, why not?" And then didn't bother to inform Operations, or anyone else in the chain of command. Just one Afghan doing a favor for another, no reason to make it formal.<br /><br />The problem arises because a PSD team is calibrated and staffed to account for the anticipated threat and the likely movements of the client. Most importantly, there's more than one guy on a typcial PSD team, both to provide backup and to allow for downtime. In this case, the client's PSD team consisted of three guards, two of whom were with the client whenever he moved outside his office or residence.<br /><br />Last Sunday, the client decided to stay at home and give two of the CPOs the night off. The third he loaned out to his brother for the night, failing to consider that one CPO is rarely sufficient if there's trouble. And, as I said, he had verbal approval for this from The Rug Merchant himself.*<br /><br /><em>*It's not the client's job to understand the risks and tactical situation. Our job is to protect them and tell them when they're being stupid. A task that The Rug Merchant failed at spectacularly.</em><br /><br />So, the client's brother (whom I suspect is a deeply nefarious character with lots of enemies) goes off for a night on the town. His only protection is a CPO who has been loaned out without notice on his night off, has never met the protectee or his driver before, and has no idea of the destination or the schedule. Pretty much a recipe for disaster.<br /><br />Plan for disaster, you generally get disaster. On a side street in Sherpur, their car was blocked by a pair of SUVs and four armed men rapidly surrounded the car. One of them smashed the passenger-side window and stuck the barrel of an AK-47 in my guy's face. Unable to bring his own weapon to bear, the CPO simply grabbed the barrel and pushed it down, trying to get the muzzle away from his face.<br /><br />Generally, kidnap of locals in Kabul is a non-violent affair. The gangs who pull it off are usually experienced criminals and the last thing they want is shots fired in the middle of the night. They're also not used to being resisted and they certainly don't like it when someone grabs their weapon. In this case, I suspect that the kidnapper simply panicked, surprised that anyone would dare to argue with him. Unfortunately, his Kalashnikov was set to full-auto and in his surprise and anger he squeezed the trigger and put a burst into our CPO at a range of about ten inches.<br /><br />Because the CPO had pushed the muzzle downward away from his face, he took five rounds between the chest and the knees. Needless to say, he stopped resisting at that point (as one does with five bullets embedded in your soft tissue) and the kidnappers bustled the protectee into one of their vehicles and tore out of there before the cops could arrive.<br /><br />Despite several faults, the AK-47 is an effective weapon. The 7.62 x 39mm round is a powerful one (roughly equivalent to .30 caliber) and usually one is enough to put someone down, two is almost always fatal. Taking five, at point blank range, into the chest, stomach and upper thighs, is an invitation to Allah. Amazingly, not only did the CPO survive, but the doctors at the local hospital tell us that he'll make a full recovery. I've come close to death from a particularly bad hangover, and this guys gets punctured through his vitals by five bullets traveling over 2000 feet per second, and he's going to be fine, albeit after a long recovery. I'm told that his name in English means "strong" or "powerful" and now I don't doubt that it's appropriate.<br /><br />Now we're stuck with the fallout, including a lot of uncomfortable questions from the Ministry of Interior as to why were providing an armed escort to someone without a contract. As to the fate of the "protectee," I confess that I don't much care. He's not one of my clients, he's obviously a moron and he nearly got one of my people killed. His family will probably pay the ransom, but they better not come to me for donations.PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-69227478229822985112010-08-10T09:35:00.000-07:002010-08-10T10:08:09.990-07:00A Ramadan-Eve GiftTomorrow is the first day of Ramadan, the month-long Muslim festival. During Ramadan, it is forbidden to eat, drink, smoke or have sex during daylight hours. It's considered a time for reflection, practicing restraint and patience. Traditionally, things are more quiet around here during Ramadan, with even the Taliban taking a break from major operations.*<br /><br /><em>*Afghans will tell you that this pause is because of religious strictures against violence and the fact that Ramadan is a time for prayer and being with family. Personally, I think it has more to do with the fact that even the Taliban are tired and hungry. It's tough to go out and set an ambush at nightfall if you haven't eaten anything all day.</em><br /><br />I guess the trogs* decided that before Ramadan kicks off and they fall into a hunger-induced stupor they should use up the explosives they've managed to smuggle into Kabul recently. Use 'em or lose 'em, I guess the theory goes.<br /><br /><em>*Henceforth, my preferred designation for the Taliban will be "trogs" or "</em><em><a href="http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=troglodyte">troglodytes</a></em><em>," a more accurate term given their genesis as primitive, cave-dwelling, illiterate mouth-breathers. Plus, "booger-eaters" was taken.</em><br /><br />Today, they decided to use 'em. I was at my office when we heard the blast. It was close enough to be of concern, although far enough away that I knew right away that it sucked to be somebody else. My second thought was, "That sort of sounded like it came from the direction of my house."<br /><br />As it turns out, the attack was on a guesthouse about ten blocks from my office, and four blocks from my residence. Initial reports are still coming in and there's a lot of conflicting information, but it appears that two suicide attackers attempted to breach the gate at the guesthouse, were stopped by the Afghan security guards and that at least one detonated himself on the street. Both attackers died and they took at least two Afghan guards with them. Apparently, none of the guests inside the house were seriously hurt (but I bet their ears are still ringing).<br /><br />Tactically, it's very similar to the attack on the UN guesthouse last fall, except that in this case the trogs didn't get through the perimeter. That's the difference between properly-trained and motivated private security guards and the ANP that died defending the UN guesthouse. Proper procedures, a hardened perimeter and alert guards made all the difference. Could have been a nightmare scenario, but the security seems to have done their job. Of course, it cost two of them their lives.<br /><br />I'm told the guesthouse belonged to Hart Security, but I'm not sure if it was a simple hotel, or an operational center. Either way, if this turns out to be an attack specifically targeting a PSC, then this game is changing and fast.<br /><br />Hart Security is a proper outfit, so I'm sure they will do the right thing for the families of their men. And the imams say that the trog "martyrs" will by now be enjoying their 72 virgins in paradise.* But two of them for two of us is not even close to a fair trade.<br /><br /><em>*Is it written anywhere in the Koran that the virgins** are actually female? That's something I'd want to clarify before I strap on an explosive-vest. I think I'd want some assurances on that point.</em><br /><em>**And what exactly is the attraction of virgins anyway?</em><br /><br />Perhaps Ramadan is going to be busier than I thought.<br /><br />More from the NYTimes <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/11/world/asia/11kabul.html?_r=1&ref=rod_nordland">here</a>.PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-70842388381028135642010-08-04T12:38:00.000-07:002010-08-04T13:32:39.260-07:00Nation Building?<p>The other day, in a post titled <a href="http://knightsofafghanistan.blogspot.com/2010/08/taliban-justice.html">Taliban Justice</a>, I noted a Time Magazine story with a rather disturbing cover photo. The story was basically a human-interest piece about the fate of an Afghan girl named Aisha who had been horribly mutilated by the Taliban for fleeing an abusive, arranged marriage.</p><p>One commenter (known only as "b") wrote: </p><blockquote>The girl was mutilated a year ago. At that time there were some 100,000 NATO troops in country plus lots of contractors. So if a 100,000 troops can't prevent such, what are they doing there? And how would that change with 200,000 troops? Just asking ... </blockquote><p>A fair question, but here's the thing: no matter how many troops we have here, Western forces cannot ever put a stop to this sort of thing. The marginalization, diminution and sometimes abuse of women is part and parcel of Afghan culture. Western military force will never put an end to that. Only Afghans can end that, if they so choose.</p><p>I've been here nearly 18 months, working closely everyday with a large number of Afghans. In all that time, not once have I met the wives of any of my people, except for The Rug Merchant, and that was in Dubai and only briefly. Even modern-minded, relatively progressive Afghans like the men I work with keep "their" women sequestered. They may object to the depredations of the Taliban, but that doesn't extend to breaking ancient social taboos about women and public life.</p><p>So, once we accept that the social structure of this country is not something that can be adjusted by force, the real question becomes two-fold, "Can/should the social structure of this country be changed to a more progressive, modern approach, and if so, what (if anything) can Westerners do to assist that transformation?"</p><p>To me, the answer to the first part is fairly obvious. If Afghanistan is ever to be peaceful, prosperous and stable, then <em>some</em> of fundamental underlying principles of Afghan society will have to be cast aside. I'm not saying that will be easy, or even likely, but it is a cold, hard fact. Analysts and pundits like to make long-winded arguments about the Great Game, the Cold War, "strategic depth," etc., all intended to absolve Afghans of responsibility for their plight, but the basic truth is that Afghanistan is the way it is partly because of the atavistic elements present in Afghan culture.</p><p>The second part of the question is considerably more difficult. I'm not convinced that there is all that much that Westerners can do to promote the sort of "social adjustment" that I feel is necessary here. People everywhere are notoriously resistant to cultural change, especially when they feel that it is being imposed from outside. That said, I see some small signs of hope among the slowly-emerging Afghan middle class. Thus far, they are concentrated in the major cities, and greatly overshadowed by the oligarchs, warlords, and narco-terrorists who rule much of the countryside. But they do exist, albeit in small numbers, and they almost unanimously desire a society that affords the opportunities that Westerners tend to take for granted. Jobs, security, education, a government that is more protective than predatory, these are the things that this Afghan middle-class desires.</p><p>They're not about to give up their cultural identity, nor will they cease being devout Muslims, but they are willing to cast a critical eye on some of the traditions and structures that have given this country over thirty years of war.</p><p>And that, I think, is what ISAF can accomplish here: buy the Afghan middle-class the time necessary to make their own changes, and find their own, better way of doing things.</p><p>If that's "nation-building" then so be it. </p>PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-43317441688713189442010-08-03T06:00:00.000-07:002010-08-03T06:00:01.840-07:00I Love the Smell of Cordite in the MorningI'm not regular reader of The Guardian, but a friend of mine in DC alerted me to <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/video/2010/jul/29/afghanistan-war-us-military">this video report</a> on their website from last Thursday. It covers over a month that the reporter spent embedded with USAF and US Marines in Helmand Province.<br /><br />Note that a significant portion of the video shows US Marines on a combat patrol, so don't expect polite language. They are Marines, after all; they're not hired for their decorum.<br /><br />The one flaw is that the reporter, Sean Smith, keeps incorrectly referring to the USAF <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Air_Force_Pararescue">Pararescue Jumpers</a> (aka PJs) as "Prepared Jumpers." I'm sure they are "prepared" but that's not what the "P" stands for. Hey Sean, perhaps a quick Google search would be in order before you do your next voice-over.<br /><br />Best line in the video (at the 5:30 mark):<br /><br /><strong>Call over the radio to the Marine patrol leader:<br /></strong>"We don't know if it's your position or not, but there is a possible imminent attack"<br /><strong>Response:</strong><br />"Hey, you're using a double negative, dickhead. 'Possible' and 'imminent' are two different words. Which is it going to be?"<br /><br />One can imagine how the distinction between 'possible' and 'imminent' might be important to the guys in the field.PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-62281135411060994912010-08-02T06:00:00.000-07:002010-08-02T06:00:00.255-07:00Taliban Justice<em>Note: The links below connect to a disturbing story, and an even more shocking photograph. Not for the faint-hearted or the squeamish.</em><br /><br />A while back, I asked to be reminded of what we're doing here. Ultimately, is the cost of so many allied and Afghan lives, not to mention the financial burdens, worth it for what we may accomplish here. I still don't have an answer to that, at least not one that I find satisfying. My own opinion changes from day to day.<br /><br />Time Magazine has a <a href="http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,2007238,00.html">cover story</a> about one Afghan girl's experience with Taliban justice. Time even used a <a href="http://www.politico.com/static/PPM170_100728_afghanistancover.html">photo of the girl</a> on the cover of their latest issue. Needless to say, both are disturbing. The other day, in a post about WikiLeaks, I mentioned the Taliban's concept of "justice." That concept is on display in the Time story.<br /><br />I won't editorialize the story here, except to say that it is A) one individual's story and should be read as such, and B) it certainly highlights one of the things that is fundamentally wrong with this place. To all who claim that we should reduce our presence here to simply hunting Al Qaeda with drones and let the Afghans sort out the rest for themselves, try going to Aisha's house and tell her that Afghanistan will be a better place under the Taliban. Somehow, I don't think she would agree.PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-41602949417632940942010-07-31T06:00:00.000-07:002010-07-31T06:00:00.805-07:00The Dutch Go HomeThis has always been an "American" war, with insufficient attention paid to the other nations whose troops fight and die as part of ISAF. The Brits, Germans, French, Italians, Canadians and Poles all have sizeable contingents here, as does Australia, Turkey and Spain. Click <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Security_Assistance_Force">here</a> for a full list of ISAF contributing nations.<br /><br />Granted, not all of them are engaged at the same level of intensity. Most of the Turks are in Kabul, and most of the Italians are stationed in relative calm of the western provinces. In contrast, the Canadians and Brits are stuck in Helmand and Kandahar, two of the worst provinces in the entire country. And before anyone makes jokes about French military prowess, try and survive a week in Kapisa Province, where the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brigade_La_Fayette">Brigade de La Fayette</a> keeps the bad guys mostly on the run.*<br /><br /><em>*Note the </em><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilbert_du_Motier_de_La_Fayette"><em>historical allusion</em></a><em> in the name. Some people accuse the French of forgetting the long and firm ties of friendship with the US. Not true of the fusiliers in Kapisa.</em><br /><br />The Netherlands has long had a small, but vital role here, securing the south-central province of Uruzgan, one of the most underdeveloped places in the country. With insufficient troops, wavering public and government support and last-generation technology, the Dutch have<br />struggled to pacify the river valleys around Tarin Kowt and implement numerous reconstruction projects.<br /><br />Now the last of the Dutch are leaving Uruzgan Province, where they have battled against the Taliban for four years. Americans and Australians are already in the process of taking over the FOBs and outposts.<br /><br />With all due respect to the Dutch soldiers who have fought hard in Uruzgan, perhaps someone should tell the politicians in The Hague that a good guiding principle in wartime is do nothing that causes your enemy to <a href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/afghanistan/7916281/Taliban-congratulates-Netherlands-for-pulling-soldiers-out-of-Afghanistan.html">offer their public congratulations</a>.PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-56402591798447635012010-07-30T14:00:00.000-07:002010-07-30T14:00:02.507-07:00Julian's Hitlist<em>Warning: What follows is largely a policy discussion. Read at your own risk.</em><br /><br />Many people have already commented on the propriety of WikiLeaks and their release of thousands of pages of classified ISAF intelligence and incident reports from Afghanistan. As far as I'm able to determine, the responses have ranged from the overwhelmingly positive among the ardently free-speech/anti-secrecy crowd, to the crushingly negative from the big government hawks and GWOT fanatics.* Of course, the intel community is unsurprisingly alternating between horror and rage.<br /><br /><em>*In the former group seem to be a pretty high percentage of people who count The Pentagon Papers as a formative event in their lives, and probably consider the assassination of JFK an unresolved issue. The latter group, at the other end of the spectrum, is full of the same people who were puzzled by all the fuss over "enhanced interrogation" techniques.</em><br /><br />Not unexpectedly, various senior government and military figures have condemmed the release of the documents as a breach of security, a violation of ethics or simply bad faith. In truth, it's probably all of those things, but debating whether or not laws were broken is kind of missing the point.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/30/world/asia/30wiki.html?ref=charlie_savage">SecDef Gates</a> and <a href="http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2010/07/top-military-officer-wikileaks-has-blood-on-its-hands/">Chairman of the JCS Mullen</a> have both publically and strongly criticized WikiLeaks for making the information available without first vetting it for details that might potentially put people at risk. Most of the furor (at least on CNN and the BBC) has been about the risk to US and ISAF servicemembers. A careful study of the documents could allow a clever enemy to piece together useful intel about our TTPs (Tactics, Techniques and Procedures) and thereby develop some counter-measures. In addition, in theory, the Taliban could learn the identity or operating habits of ISAF personnel, especially those engaged in intelligence collection and contact with the local population.<br /><br />WikiLeaks' founder, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julian_assange">Julian Assange</a>, claims that the documents have been redacted to conceal the identities of ISAF personnel and this seems (so far) to be largely true. However, as Tom Coughlin and Giles Whittell <a href="http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/world/leaked-details-put-informant-lives-in-danger/story-e6frg6so-1225898206990">report</a> for The Australian, no such care appears to have been taken for the Afghans identified in the documents.<br /><br /><blockquote>In just two hours of searching the WikiLeaks archive, The Times found the names of dozens of Afghans credited with handing intelligence to US forces. Their villages are given for identification and, in many cases, their fathers' names.</blockquote><br />As anyone who has spent any time here can tell you, it's pretty simple to positively identify an Afghan with only his first name, his father's name and the name of his village. This is not like trying to find "Dave, son of Pete, from Cleveland." It's more like looking for "Dave Peterson from <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lexington,_Nebraska">Lexington, Nebraska</a>." Not all that hard, especially if the bad guys already have suspicions about their old friend Dave.<br /><br />And, of course, the Taliban have proven that they are not adverse to casting their net rather widely when it comes to retribution and public displays of dissatisfaction. Can't find Dave, 'cause he's fled to the nearest FOB for protection? No worries. Just shoot his uncle and throw rocks at his wife until she's dead. Dave will surrender voluntarily to prevent them from taking out their frustrations on his kids.<br /><br />So Mr. Assange and his cronies, under the guise of freedom of information, have just put hundreds, if not thousands, of Afghans in mortal danger.* Not just the informants who cooperate with ISAF or GIRoA, but their families and friends as well.<br /><br /><em>*Note that I say "under the guise of freedom of information" because I don't believe that Mr. Assange's** primary concern is dispelling the shadows of government secrecy. He's a modern tech-savvy equivalent of the anti-war protestors that were active during Vietnam. He's out to stop this war (perhaps all wars) and, ironically, he doesn't care who gets hurt in the process. </em><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kent_State_shootings"><em>Where's the Ohio National Guard when you need them</em></a><em>?</em><br /><em>**Is it just me, or does Julian Assange look like a guy who tried out for a role in the Twilight movies as "the geeky vampire?" Somebody should check his fridge and make sure there's no mysterious packages marked "Blood Bank" in there.</em><br /><br />ISAF is not sitting on their hands through all of this. According to the NY Times, <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/29/world/asia/29wikileaks.html?ref=asia">Pentagon officials are busy screening the documents</a> to determine which Afghans are at risk of reprisals, but that will take time. In the race between the Pentagon and the Taliban to see who reacts faster, my money is on the bad guys. And they're already on the job as well. <a href="http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/07/30/taliban-study-wikileaks-to-hunt-informants/">Also from the Times:</a><br /><blockquote><p>A spokesman for the Taliban told Britain’s Channel 4 News on Thursday that the insurgent group is scouring classified American military documents posted online by the group WikiLeaks for information to help them find and “punish” Afghan informers. </p></blockquote><br />We need not guess what kind of "punishment" they're contemplating.<br /><br />The point of all this, at least from my perspective, is fairly straightforward. We have over 1500 Afghans employed at my company, spread over every province in Afghanistan. Many of them have worked with or for the government, ISAF or the U.S. or Afghan military prior to coming to work for me. And a conservative estimate would be that there are thousands more in their extended families. Those are all people who are dependent on my company for a significant portion of their income and their continued well-being. In short, you're messing with my people. Even if only a small percentage of them could be classified as "informer" by the Taliban, that's still hundreds who are potentially named in the WikiLeaks report.<br /><br />Consider yourself on notice, Mr. Assange. If even one of my people suffers because of your pathetic attempt at relevance, they will all know who is to blame. And Afghan justice is often a very personal affair. I only promise that I won't let them throw rocks at your head.<br /><br />h/t to <a href="http://www.cnas.org/blogs/abumuqawama/2010/07/afghans.html">Abu Muqwama at CNAS</a>PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-48430910413315905392010-07-30T09:56:00.000-07:002010-07-30T10:19:22.365-07:00Policy PostsIn the past, I've largely stayed out of the big policy debates on this site, except for occasionally discussing the merits of specific elements of counter-insurgency doctrine as it applies to Afghanistan or to PSCs in particular. There are plenty of blogs, journalists, pundits and think-tanks out there that love nothing more than bloviating about this war*, usually after an arduous week in-country spent swilling beer in the garden at <a href="http://www.gandamacklodge.co.uk/">The Gandamack</a> and laughing about the funny hat their driver wears.<br /><br /><em>*Here's a tip: if the phrase "blood and treasure" appears anywhere in an article, it's probably not worth reading.</em><br /><br />However, I've recently had cause to re-evaluate my (mostly) policy-free content. Several people have written me from various places (mostly anonymously) and asked rather pointed questions about various aspects of this war. Mostly this is stuff that is above my pay grade or beyond my area of expertise, but that doesn't seem to stop others from writing about it. So why should I hold back, right?<br /><br />So, I will continue to point to other sources for more serious analysis, and I will try to keep this mostly a personal-focused blog,* but there will be some occasional pieces that delve into the more public side to all of this.<br /><br /><em>*Because, let's face it, my mother doesn't really care about COIN theory or practice and since she's about my only regular reader, I have to try to keep her happy.</em><br /><br />All of these "policy-posts" will come with a disclaimer up front, so consider yourself warned. If you don't care, or just come here to laugh about Afghans in funny hats, you can skip those posts.<br /><br />First up, sometime later today, will be a post on the recent WikiLeaks controversy.PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-17704969124365635132010-07-24T11:34:00.000-07:002010-07-24T11:54:40.833-07:00Personnel ChangesThe Rug Merchant has returned to his roots and is now concentrating on.........well, selling rugs. Which seems fitting. He's still the head of the company, but he spends a lot less time hanging around the compound and screwing things up. Which is nice.<br /><br />What's not so nice is that he took the Doctor with him to help develop the nascent carpet business. Which means that I've lost the single best employee the company had, a man whom I have depended on for 18 months to hold this outift together. He sticks his head in from time to time, and helps out when he can, but it's not the same as having him around on a daily basis. Needless to say, things are falling through the cracks and some of our supervisors have reverted to their status as useless mouth-breathers.<br /><br />By way of compensation, I got to pick my new Ops Manager and I think I found a good one. So far, he's professional, focused and competent. Within a couple of days of being hired, he took it upon himself to visit all of our local sites in Kabul and check on the status of the guards and the clients. He didn't need to be told to do this, just assumed (rightly) it was something he should do.<br /><br />As a former member of the Afghan Air Force (back in the 80s), he was trained by the Soviets (which is always a red flag; no pun intended). However, he spent the last twenty years living in the West and occasionally visiting family here, so he has a good grasp of the proper (i.e. Western) ways of doing business. As a bonus, much of his Western experience was actually in the security business, so I don't need to babysit him and he understands the basic concepts quite well.<br /><br />Tomorrow we take 40 of our guys to the firing range for basic marksmanship training, so we'll see what the new Ops Manager can do. And I get to take out some stress on innocent pieces of fruit, which is always a good time.*<br /><br /><em>*If you've never shot a watermelon with an AK-47, I highly recommend it. It's a waste of good food, I admit, but it still makes me laugh a day later. Just remember to save some for the other guys to eat. Fresh fruit is a luxury here, so it's not advisable to use it all for target practice. Good rule of thumb: shoot half the fruit, distribute the rest, buy extra. Have fun, make friends, earn some loyalty.</em>PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-36545525084142284562010-07-22T06:00:00.000-07:002010-07-22T06:00:08.291-07:00Highway OneAs a follow-up to yesterday's post about Team Canada down in Kandahar, here's <a href="http://kandahardiary.wordpress.com/2010/07/20/highway-to-hell/">a post from the anonymous expat</a> at Kandahar Diary about the dangers of operating in and around Kandahar.<br /><br />The PSC that he works for is heavily involved in some of the most difficult work in this country, escorting fuel convoys to ISAF bases. Highway One is dodgy pretty much anywhere, but it's especially bad between Kabul and Helmand, and KD's guys make the run from Kandahar west on a daily basis. Not a road I'd want to drive regularly.<br /><br />The Rug Merchant has accused me in the past of pricing us out of the lucrative logistics market in Kandahar and Helmand, and in a sense he's right. I won't put my people at risk on that road under those circumstances without a guarantee that we're making enough money to cover our expenses, including the inevitable death benefits we'd have to pay. Can't do it on the cheap, better to not do it at all.*<br /><br /><em>*The single most annoying trait of Afghan businessmen is to over-promise and under-deliver. Afghans, my boss included, will underbid every job just to get the work and then flounder about trying to find a way to make it work. Ultimately, with that approach, people get dead.</em><br /><br />That said, we're looking at a couple of large static jobs in Kandahar and Helmand that might deploy later this summer. Static security is considerably more manageable than mobile logistics security, but any operations down south come with considerable risks. All that remains is to convince the potential clients that their security is perhaps not the best place to cut costs.PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-51027857647283278102010-07-21T06:00:00.000-07:002010-07-21T06:00:06.874-07:00Ghost RidersTake a few minutes and read <a href="http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/afghanmission/article/837190">this article</a> from Canada's <em>The Star</em> about a group of expats doing difficult but vital work down in Kandahar.<br /><br />As Tim Lynch at <a href="http://freerangeinternational.com/blog/">Free Range International</a> has pointed out many times, the only way to truly influence the population is to be outside the wire of the big FOBs, interacting with them on a daily basis. These guys with "Team Canada" have been doing that for several years in one of the toughest operating environments in all of Afghanistan. ISAF, NATO and the Pentagon could all take a lesson from them.<br /><br />If you roll into a village in Strykers and MRAPs, with wrap-around sunglasses and bristling with high-tech weaponry, it should be no surprise that the locals don't come running to have a chat. Too often, ISAF forces* look and act like Imperial Stormtroopers, fearsome, intimidating and alien. Not exactly the best way to get the locals to trust you. <br /><br /><em>*The U.S. Army is particularly guilty of this sort of behaviour. Note that this is entirely due to Big Army's restrictive force protection rules, and not necessarily the choice of soldiers on the ground. Those rules are the result of the fact that the American public in general has not yet grasped the concept that we can't have a war without casualties.</em><br /><br />An important distinction to bear in mind is that "low profile" does not mean "low security." With the exception clients who require it, we never move in armored vehicles and always strive not to be "guns up." Knowing the environment and the people in it is a much more effective guarantee of security than all the armor and firepower in the world. I'd rather ghost through unnoticed with help of friends and allies than trust to armor and firepower. Better to avoid the confrontation in the first place than to count on winning it.<br /><br />This country has a myriad of problems that need fixing, but it all starts with two simple concepts: jobs and security. Everything else can wait. Without sufficient employment to give Afghans the chance at a better life, and the security to enjoy that life, nothing else matters. <br /><br />The Ghost Riders of Team Canada are doing both simultaneously.PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-59389160890001478972010-07-20T14:08:00.000-07:002010-07-20T14:41:37.844-07:00Gender PoliticsKabul is still on lock-down due to the latest international conference going on at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, so we're a bit professionally constrained right now. The usually laughable ANP checkpoints around the city* have been replaced/reinforced by much more serious ANA and NDS guys, under orders to use force if they feel it justified in any way. So, we're spending a lot of time indoors lately.<br /><br /><em>*Incidentally, I'd like to find out who the genius was at ISAF who decided that the standard ANP checkpoints should be fixed at permanent locations, and then came up with the new slogan. Every ANP checkpoint in Kabul now has a bright blue sign with a dual-language message announcing the "Ring of Steel" and denoting the number of that particular checkpoint. Seriously? That's what the ANP needs? A cheesy slogan? How about more ammunition and a requirement not to shake people down for bribes. The Brits are the "official" mentors to the MoI, but I bet the whole "Ring of Steel" thing is the product of an American mind. Only an American could come up with something so silly.</em><br /><br />With the city full of ANA, who are in charge of security after the ANP dropped the ball badly during the last conference, the ANP mostly stand around their blue signs and look sheepish, while the ANA strut around and wave M-16s at anyone who looks at them funny. And the deadly-serious NDS operatives lurk around and scare the shit out of everybody. In short, it's a good time to stay home. The local staff at the villa has been given a couple of days off,* and we're operating on half-staff at company HQ.<br /><br /><em>*While I don't generally rave about the skills of the locals, the ones we have at the villa are actually quite good. You never miss them until they're gone. After two days of eating meals prepared by South Africans, I'm beginning to appreciate the talents of our local cook. Plus, you'd think grown men would be able to clean up after themselves for a couple of days, but apparently not. Two days without the local cleaners and this place looks like a fraternity house after a particularly taxing weekend (minus the beer cans, of course).</em><br /><br />Anyway, being stuck inside with lots of downtime has allowed me to catch up on my reading (and the writing that inevitably follows), so I should have a series of posts up over the next week or so highlighting some recent items.<br /><br />In the meantime, ponder <a href="http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/07/19/female-afghan-governor-fears-taliban-deal/">this bit</a> from the NY Times about the governor of Bamiyan Province. Habiba Sorabi is the only female governor in the entire country and said this to Britain's Channel 4:<br /><blockquote>Why are they not doing the sacrifice? Always we women should do the sacrifice? Always women during the war and during the conflict, for a long period in Afghanistan, women sacrificed. So this is enough I think.</blockquote>Needless to say, Governor Sorabi was not invited to Kabul to meet with the foreign dignitaries. Methinks that perhaps SecState Clinton could at least have demanded that Sorabi be present at the conference. Even better, HRC could have made a trip out to Bamiyan by chopper to meet with her personally. That would have sent a powerful message to Karzai and his cronies that shit was going to change, or else.PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7570761643663771228.post-45468397567784569852010-07-11T12:23:00.000-07:002010-07-11T14:35:37.341-07:00Happy Birthday to MeWhen I was 20, armed with the certain immortality of youth, I was sure I'd live to 100.<br /><br /><br />When I turned 30, having learned something of the fragility of the human existence, I thought I might see 50.<br /><br />Today I'm 40, and the prospect of even ten more seems particularly daunting, not to mention increasingly improbable.<br /><br />Time is a harsh mistress.PaladinSixhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07567942781702178358noreply@blogger.com14