Forecast for LOGCAP Jobs: Continued above average growth

Posted on:
FacebookStumbleUponRedditDiggLinkedInYahoo BuzzShare

The infrastructure supporting the civilian army now slated to wage a war thought from the beginning to last only a short time, will require a continuation of Civilian Contractor’s on the Battlefield albeit on a smaller scale – initially.  Although then President George W. Bush declared “Mission Accomplished” aboard the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln on May 1, 2003, the mission continues to this day with no foreseeable end in sight.  With the current draw-down of troops – 20,000 departing by Aug. 31 with a limited presence remaining by the end of the year, and the corresponding mass exodus of civilian contractors supporting them, expect to see a resurgence of ethnic violence in a feudal system dominated society which has been at the core of the Iraqi culture since time immoral.  Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely – and nowhere does this sage expression apply more aptly than Iraq.

In a country epitomizing the golden rule honed and practiced for millennia, that is, “He who has the gold, rules”, the inevitable and unavoidable ensuing vacuum left by the departure of U.S. troops must and will be filled by thousands of employment-at-will civilians who, driven by the abysmal unemployment rate in the United States will be clamoring for the opportunity of drawing a steady paycheck.

David Isenberg of the Huffington Post in his article appearing June 30, 2010 entitled, The Perils of LOGCAP Job Seeking, observes in part of his assessment regarding my reasoning for the necessity of skilled leadership on LOGCAP, that “Still, his basic point is correct; it is all about the money…”

In the telling article written by Sandra Erwin appearing July 21, 2010 in the National Defense magazine, General Odierno: Iraq Will Be a ‘Civilian-Led Operation’ in 2012, General Odierno is quoted stating, “We are setting the stage from a military-led to a civilian-led operation”.  Erwin further reports “Odierno said that more than one thousand “tasks” will be reassigned. Some will be turned over to the Iraqi government, others to U.S. Central Command and the rest to the State Department.” Continuing, “State officials have asked the Army to extend contractor-support services that companies currently provide to the U.S. military in Iraq under the so-called LOGCAP contract. The Army indicated it wanted State to take over the oversight of the contract.”

The Implication is Clear

If the above bears-out, the current Personnel Alignment and Reduction currently taking place in Iraq as recently announced by ’s John Cusick, Principal Program Manager of LOGCAP III Middle East, and exhaustively discussed here within the viral blog of the irrepressible Ms Sparky, will not change the long-term goals of the Pentagon in terms of a continuing U.S. presence in the region, irrespective of popular opinion or progressive political objectives.

That being said, in the near-term future, expect an unprecedented surge of Contractors on the Battlefield to continue not only in terms of Private Security Contractors taking over the role of the military trigger-pullers, but also in terms of meeting corresponding logistical and supply demands inherent to supporting the enormous strategic objectives of trying to keep a lid on the boiling cauldron of blood-thirsty tribalism and opposing religious ideologies indigenous to the former lower Mesopotamia.

The task of utilizing a civilian-led army will be mind bogglingly complex and it will require leaders of uncompromising moral and ethical principles, but if that is what the Pentagon wants, then rest assured that as sure as God made little green apples, that is what the Pentagon is going to get.

Think tanks, along with inside the beltway MNC’s and military industrial complex defense contractors aligned with the Pentagon’s contingency plans for present and future wars, ensures long-term job security for those willing to take a walk on the wild side for a big fat paycheck.  LOGCAP is as inextricably joined at the hip with war strategists of today in supplying Contractors on the Battlefield as much as it ever has been – only now, it is going to become dramatically apparent and it is going to create an entirely new meaning to the definition of the Privatization of War.  It’s the ultimate model in outsourcing conflict resolution on a global scale, custom made for a brave new world.

The Center For Public Integrity points out KBR’s human trafficking issues

Posted on:
FacebookStumbleUponRedditDiggLinkedInYahoo BuzzShare

DEFENSE: War Contracting Commission Cites Center Article on Trafficking

By Nick Schwellenbach | July 28, 2010
The Center For Public Integrity

During a hearing on the oversight of subcontractors in war zones, the Wartime Contracting Commission on Monday cited the Center for Public Integrity/Washington Post investigation into the difficulty of enforcing a U.S. ban on contractors engaging in sex trafficking. It also delved into numerous instances of human trafficking and pressed government witnesses and contractors, especially Houston-based Kellogg, Brown, and Root (), on what they’re doing to stop these abuses.

Subcontractors are companies that work for “prime” contractors, which have a direct contractual relationship with the Pentagon or U.S. government.

“We all saw recently a news article that says the buck is being passed around here” regarding allegations of , said Charles Tiefer, a commission member. “And that is, the IG sends it to somebody else, the criminal people say it’s not ours, and the program manager says it’s not ours.”

“I wonder whether you would favor formalizing the responsibilities, so the program manager has to follow up any allegations,” Tiefer asked three government witnesses. That means a subcontractor or military contracting officer would be “obliged to follow up any allegations of human trafficking and cannot simply say ‘I’ve delegated that to somebody else’.” (Read the rest of the story here…)

US military investigates contractor work force (with docs-updated)

Posted on:
FacebookStumbleUponRedditDiggLinkedInYahoo BuzzShare

Philippine passport stamped "Not Valid For Travel To Iraq"

By REBECCA SANTANA (AP) – July 28, 2010

BAGHDAD — The U.S. military said Wednesday it is clamping down on contracting firms on American military bases using employees whose home countries ban travel to Iraq, raising questions about why the contractors were allowed to work in the country for so long despite the ban.

Philippines citizens have been banned since 2004 from traveling to Iraq after insurgents threatened to behead a Filipino truck driver, and officials in the Philippines say they have repeatedly asked the U.S. and other countries to respect their ban. Nepal also bans its citizens from working in Iraq due to security concerns.

Despite the ban, many citizens from Nepal and the Philippines still make the journey to Iraq, joining the tens of thousands of contractors working in jobs ranging from security to kitchen staff on bases. (Read the rest of the story here…)

Agility U.S. Unit Fraud Charges to Be Dropped

Posted on:
FacebookStumbleUponRedditDiggLinkedInYahoo BuzzShare

(Updates with court filing in second paragraph.)

By Edvard Pettersson – July 27 (Bloomberg) — ’s U.S. subsidiary may be dropped from a criminal case accusing the Kuwaiti logistics company of overbilling the military after prosecutors sought to dismiss the charges against the unit.

The request pertains only to Agility DGS Holdings Inc. and not to any other defendant, federal prosecutors in Atlanta said yesterday in a court filing. The revised indictment filed in February names as the two other defendants the parent company, Public Warehousing Co., or Agility, and its Agility DGS Logistics Services subsidiary.

“This request comes after motions filed by Agility DGS Holdings to discover the government’s evidence against it,” Agility said today in an e-mailed statement. “This case is, at most, a civil contract dispute over the interpretation of a contract drafted by the government.”

Assistant U.S. Attorney Barbara Nelan didn’t immediately return a call to her office after regular business hours.

The company was first indicted in November on allegations it overcharged the U.S. government on a multibillion-dollar contract to supply food for troops in Kuwait and Iraq.

The case is U.S. v. Public Warehousing Co., 09-cr-490, U.S. District Court, Northern District of Georgia (Atlanta).

–With assistance from David Beasley in Atlanta and William McQuillen in Washington. Editors: Peter Blumberg, Michael Hytha. (Click HERE for original article)

CWC hearing – Subcontracting: Who’s Minding the Store?

Posted on:

Defending KBR’s honor; the case of the missing CHU’s and other news

Posted on:
FacebookStumbleUponRedditDiggLinkedInYahoo BuzzShare

Here is what’s happening in the world of contracting.  , president of ’s Power and Industrial Business Unit, has channeled his inner Bill Bodie and submitted an OpEd defending (note to  legal team please add some new lines to your repertoire).  David Brooks’ girlfriend and brother were barred from the courtroom after contraband was found concealed in ink pens.  You would think that someone with a $350,000.00 pen collection would have at least one capable of concealing contraband.   A State Department employee has been indicted on Iraq fraud allegations and not to be out done an official from Army Space and Missile Defense Command, in Huntsville  Alabama,  has pled guilty to accepting bribes.  Meanwhile the Pentagon has spent millions and is forecasting billions of dollars to be spent on  and to handle media relations.  ~Forseti (Read the rest of the story here…)

West Virginia Soldiers’ Lawsuits Dismissed

Posted on:
FacebookStumbleUponRedditDiggLinkedInYahoo BuzzShare

WHEELING – Citing jurisdictional concerns, U.S. District has dismissed two separate lawsuits filed by 47 National Guard members who allege they were exposed to toxic chemicals while in Iraq.

The soldiers, most of whom were members of the 1092nd Engineering Battalion of the headquartered in Moundsville, filed the lawsuits last year against Kellogg Brown and Root Services Inc. and Technical Services.

Weirton attorney served as counsel on one of the two lawsuits, while Moundsville attorney served as counsel on the other. Kessler initially filed his lawsuit in Marshall County Circuit Court; the case later was moved to district court in Wheeling.

The soldiers allege in the lawsuits that they were exposed to in spring 2003 while stationed at the water plant in Iraq. U.S. troops provided security for those working to restore operations at the plant.

Sodium dichromate is a toxic chemical that was used at the site as an anti-corrosive agent. It contains nearly pure , a highly potent carcinogen and mutagenic substance.

The lawsuits suggest the defendants knew or should have known about both contamination at the site and the dangers of exposure to hexavalent chromium. It also asserts the companies concealed facts about the dangers of the contamination and exposure to the toxic substance at the water plant.

Stamp’s rulings, entered late Thursday, did not address the lawsuits’ specific allegations but instead noted West Virginia is not the appropriate venue in which to try the cases.