Assalamu aleikum.

Mujahideen have bagged 169 antichrist "Titan" mercenaries operating
under official cover as "interpreters", more than any other mercenary
outfit in Iraq. Titan mercenary fatalities outnumber the casualties of
any national antichrist minions other than those of the United States,
even exceeding UK Poodle fatalities. Titan's own fatalities form the
bulk of the 331 officially admitted mercenaries bagged by mujahideen.
Consequently, Titan mercenaries are turning tail, fleeing the field
and going home:

"That ambush really changed our minds," said [Titan employee and
former US Marine Frank] Sellin, who returned home to Kearny Mesa in
November after more than a year in Iraq. "After almost dying, I
realized it wasn't worth the $125,000."

>From the article below is one description of Titan's actual
"translating" duties:

"Drew Halldorson found himself playing such a role as an employee of
SOS Interpreting, a Titan subcontractor. Halldorson started his tour
in Iraq as a site manager but ended up with an U.S. Army combat unit
patrolling downtown Mosul, one of Iraq's more dangerous cities.
Attached to the 82nd Airborne Division and with an assault rifle
strapped to his shoulder, Halldorson spent January kicking in doors,
rounding up suspected insurgents and "shooting and being shot at" as
he helped make the streets safer for the Jan. 31 election. In just
under a month, he completed 40 combat missions, he said. "In January
alone I fired between 300 to 500 bullets in self-defense," Halldorson
said in April from his Maryland home."

Some "translating", eh? And it seems that the mercenaries aboard the
sinking ship "Titan" are reaching the same "interpretation" - it's
time to go home.


---


In harm's way: Titan in Iraq
Workers say 'Wild West' conditions put lives in danger
By David Washburn and Bruce V. Bigelow
SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE
July 24, 2005
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/business/20050724-9999-mz1n24titan.html


-
photo:
An Iraqi interpreter who works for Titan Corp. helped a U.S. soldier
inspect a man's identity papers. Insurgents have targeted Iraqis who
aid the U.S. occupation. ASSOCIATED PRESS
http://www.signonsandiego.com/uniontrib/20050724/images/titan.jpg
-


Frank Sellin went to work in Iraq for San Diego's Titan Corp. to serve
his country – and because the job paid far better than any other work
he could find in Southern California.

He knew it would be dangerous; he is an ex-Marine.

But his attitude about the job changed one blistering July morning in
2004, as he drove a Nissan SUV down a street in Mosul past a group of
men crouched around a red Opel sedan.

He heard the distinctive "pop-pop-pop" of an AK-47 assault rifle, then
a series of "tick-tick-ticks" as slugs punched through the SUV's thin
metal sides. A bullet ricocheted into his ankle, and he felt searing pain.

It was an ambush.

Sellin hit the gas pedal, but the engine died as more bullets slammed
into the truck and blasted through the windows. Bullet fragments
ripped through the upper back and neck of Scott Mahler, a former
Riverside County sheriff's deputy who was seated next to Sellin.

Bleeding and terrified, the Titan employees jumped from the crippled
SUV and scrambled into a friendly truck that was following them in the
convoy.

"That ambush really changed our minds," said Sellin, who returned home
to Kearny Mesa in November after more than a year in Iraq. "After
almost dying, I realized it wasn't worth the $125,000."

Like Sellin and Mahler, a growing number of civilian employees of U.S.
companies contracting with the military have come home wounded – both
physically and psychologically – by their on-the-job experiences in Iraq.

Operation Iraqi Freedom has put into practice the Pentagon's thinking
that the U.S. military can wage a cheaper, more efficient war by
outsourcing many of the behind-the-lines support functions. But the
lines between warriors and civilians have blurred amid the carnage of
Iraq's insurgency.

Employees of Titan and other corporations have become part of an
experiment in government contracting run largely by trial and error.
Several current and former Titan employees say they worked in a land
of chaos and lawlessness, where company rules were often vague and
employees were sometimes left to fend for themselves.

They complained of flak vests that lacked body armor, satellite phones
that never worked and unsafe vehicles. Some say they were asked to
drive Iraq's perilous roads in "thin-skinned" trucks while carrying
hundreds of thousands of dollars in payroll cash, but weren't allowed
to carry guns.

"We called it 'the Wild West.' It was uncontrollable," said Marc Hill,
a Titan manager from Arizona who was based near Baghdad from June 2003
until March 2004. "There was very poor planning, and they put people's
lives in danger."

Rick Inghram, who was Titan's highest-ranking executive in Iraq for
most of 2004, acknowledged that "a working experiment" aptly describes
Titan's experience in Iraq. But he said the company has worked with
the Army over the past year to better protect its employees.

169 employees killed

Titan and its subcontractors have lost 169 employees, more than any
other contractor in Iraq, according to the U.S. Department of Labor.
The company's fatalities outnumber the casualties of any coalition
force other than those of the United States and Iraq.

The defense contractor is among the three largest U.S. civilian
employers in Iraq. More than 4,000 translators and interpreters work
there for Titan under what has become a billion-dollar contract with
the Army that also includes 1,000 translators in 23 other countries.

Titan referred most questions about its activities in Iraq to Inghram,
who said management has done a good job under difficult circumstances
in administering a contract unlike any in the company's history.
Inghram said there was no precedent for training civilians to work
shoulder to shoulder with soldiers in the field.

"I never had that kind of training," said Inghram, who joined Titan in
2003 after retiring from the Marines as a colonel. "In 31 years in the
Marine Corps, nobody ever sat me down and gave me a class on
contracting on the battlefield. Ever."

Gene W. Ray, Titan's founding chairman and chief executive, has
described the company's contract as extremely dangerous work. He also
has often praised Titan's employees and translators in Iraq, saying
they have received hundreds of commendations from the military.

"There are a number of people who are playing a critical, critical
role for our armed forces," Ray said. "It's extremely important, from
my perspective, to support our military forces in Iraq."

Titan's linguists, most of whom are Iraqi nationals, are scattered
throughout the country. Some work on bases or in prisons; others are
attached to field units. They are managed primarily by U.S. employees
who usually have experience in the military or law enforcement.

Like everyone else in Iraq, the linguists and their managers have had
to cope with an increasingly deadly insurgency. The turning point for
many Americans came in April 2004 with the grisly killings of four
U.S. civilians in Fallujah. The four, including Oceanside resident
Scott Helvenston, were working for Blackwater Security Consulting of
Moyock, N.C.

>From March 2003, when the war began, to March 2004, before the attacks
in Fallujah, 48 U.S. civilian contract employees were killed in Iraq
and 379 were wounded.

Over the next 15 months, from April 2004 until June 30, 2005, 283 died
and 3,018 were wounded, according to data kept by the Labor Department.

Titan's Iraqi employees typically live in the communities where U.S.
military units are based and are paid about $800 a month, company
officials said. A second category of Titan linguists come from outside
Iraq, mainly from the United States, and earn $70,000 to $100,000 a
year. A handful of translators with "top secret" security clearances
work for Titan under a third category.

The site managers, who are usually stationed on a military base,
sometimes develop close relationships with the Iraqi nationals they
supervise. They "start feeling about these linguists the way they feel
about their own personal family," Inghram said.

By late 2003, it had become clear that insurgents were hunting down
Iraqis deemed to be cooperating with the U.S. occupation, including
those working for Titan.

A 41-year-old Titan linguist, Luqman Mohammed Kurdi Hussein, was
captured and beheaded last year by insurgents. A video of the
execution was posted on the Internet in October.

In late March, two carloads of insurgents shot five Iraqi women as
they traveled home in a car from their jobs on a U.S. base. All were
killed, and Iraqi police said at least one was working as a translator.

Sellin and Mahler said they were particularly upset by the murders of
a former Iraqi army general, Hakim al Jaboori, and his brother in late
2004. They were working as Titan linguists for a U.S. military
intelligence battalion when they were gunned down while returning home.

"He was a supporter of a free Iraq," Mahler said. "He was killed to
make a statement, and now his family is in hiding."

Inghram said Titan has tried to persuade linguists to leave their
families and move onto military bases. But critics say that regardless
of the security precautions Titan and other contractors take, some
employees have stepped into positions that require military training
and are too dangerous for civilians.

"It's taking people into roles that were never contemplated for
civilians," said Peter Singer, a Brookings Institution Fellow who has
done extensive research on the outsourcing of war.

A civilian on patrol

Drew Halldorson found himself playing such a role as an employee of
SOS Interpreting, a Titan subcontractor. Halldorson started his tour
in Iraq as a site manager but ended up with an U.S. Army combat unit
patrolling downtown Mosul, one of Iraq's more dangerous cities.

Attached to the 82nd Airborne Division and with an assault rifle
strapped to his shoulder, Halldorson spent January kicking in doors,
rounding up suspected insurgents and "shooting and being shot at" as
he helped make the streets safer for the Jan. 31 election.

In just under a month, he completed 40 combat missions, he said.

"In January alone I fired between 300 to 500 bullets in self-defense,"
Halldorson said in April from his Maryland home.

It wasn't what Halldorson had in mind four months earlier when he went
to Iraq to serve as a Kurdish-language specialist. In fact, the terms
of the contract forbade Halldorson from even possessing a gun.

"What I was doing was in direct violation of Titan's contract with the
Army, but everybody knew about it," he said.

Titan officials confirmed that Halldorson was stationed near Mosul,
but largely refused to comment on his service with the 82nd Airborne.
Inghram said he would be "surprised" if Halldorson did the things he
said he did with Bravo Company.

But Capt. Leo Coddington, an 82nd Airborne company commander,
confirmed Halldorson's story.

"He was with us from early January until the beginning of February. We
were very fortunate to have him," Coddington said. "He was carrying a
gun and had to engage for self-defense purposes."

Halldorson says he was fired by SOS in February for selling assault
rifles and handguns to fellow contractors and other civilians in Iraq.

The Brookings Institution's Singer isn't surprised by Halldorson's
story, but said it's something that should raise serious concerns
among policy-makers.

"We are talking about a sea change not only in what people are doing,
but what we are paying for," Singer said.

He added that Titan and other companies are working under contracts
with the Army that were signed in the late 1990s. The language and
terms of those contracts, which were written during a time now looked
upon as a bygone era, don't fit the realities of today's Iraq, Singer
said.

For example, some civilian interrogators at the U.S.-run prisons in
Iraq were hired under a 1998 contract the Army awarded to
Virginia-based CACI International for computer services.

Titan's contract goes back to 1999, when the Army awarded a $10
million contract with BTG, a small business in Fairfax, Va., to
provide fewer than 30 linguists to the Coalition Forces Land Component
Command in Kuwait. Titan bought BTG two years later for roughly $174
million, as the Army's demand for interpreters skyrocketed during the
U.S. invasion of Afghanistan.

"It started as a contingency contract. We are talking about a handful
of people," Inghram said. "Then, when 9/11 occurred, the Army had this
contract in place, and they went with it."

Last week, the Army extended the contract until May, when it would be
open to competition. Wall Street analysts view Titan as a leading
contender to win a five-year renewal. They say it would be difficult
for another company to supplant the San Diego company, which agreed in
June to a $2 billion buyout offer from L-3 Communications.

Army spokeswoman Debrah Parker said contractors have always supported
the Army on the battlefield, "but never as many as lately. That has
put a new dynamic in the situation. The world has changed tremendously."

Titan's contract is governed by a multipage "statement of work" that
is considered the operating manual for the company's employees in
Iraq. The statement, drafted for the original contract in 1999, was
geared toward an office setting, where linguists would work in shifts
to translate documents.

'Overly vague' guidance

Inghram acknowledged that the statement of work "is overly vague" and
"can be improved upon." Hill, the paymaster, said inconsistencies on
contractor travel and other work requirements make the document
"divorced from reality."

Hill added, "I wouldn't be here today if I had followed the statement
of work by the letter."

When he first arrived in summer 2003, Hill was told that he would have
to pay each linguist in person. So he would load as much as $700,000
in cash into the back of an ordinary Nissan SUV and drive throughout
the bases and battlefields of Iraq, passing out monthly stipends.

Hill said he realized after experiencing some close calls with enemy
fire that he was unnecessarily putting his life in danger.

"It was ridiculous, totally insane," said Hill, who eventually stopped
making the paycheck runs.

The most contentious section in the statement of work has to do with
gun possession. It states, "Contractor personnel are not authorized to
carry or possess personal weapons to include, but not limited to,
firearms and knives with a blade length in excess of 3 inches."

Yet a gun is among the first items many contractors seek when they
arrive in Iraq, say the former Titan employees. Anyone whose job takes
them off a protected military base needs to be armed, the contractors say.

Former employees say the company's unofficial policy about weapons was
"don't ask, don't tell." Inghram disputed that characterization.

The guns usually come from Army units that have stockpiled weapons
confiscated from insurgents. If one can't be obtained from an Army
unit – and contractors say they're easy to get that way – Russian-made
AK-47 assault rifles are readily available.

"You can buy an AK-47 for $40 in the streets," said Mazin al Nashi, a
La Mesa man who worked for Titan as a linguist in Iraq from March to
December 2003. "They sell guns as they sell eggs."

Inghram said the company has asked the Army to loosen its restrictions
on firearms for some contractors but has faced resistance from Army
commanders who worry about the many ramifications of arming civilians.

"This is going to be a topic at the war colleges for years to come,"
he said. "(It will) be very significant in the training of our future
officer corps." 

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/business/20050724-9999-mz1n24titan.html








***************************************************************************
{Invite (mankind, O Muhammad ) to the Way of your Lord (i.e. Islam) with wisdom 
(i.e. with the Divine Inspiration and the Qur'an) and fair preaching, and argue 
with them in a way that is better. Truly, your Lord knows best who has gone 
astray from His Path, and He is the Best Aware of those who are guided.} 
(Holy Quran-16:125)

{And who is better in speech than he who [says: "My Lord is Allah (believes in 
His Oneness)," and then stands straight (acts upon His Order), and] invites 
(men) to Allah's (Islamic Monotheism), and does righteous deeds, and says: "I 
am one of the Muslims."} (Holy Quran-41:33)
 
The prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him) said: "By Allah, if 
Allah guides one person by you, it is better for you than the best types of 
camels." [al-Bukhaaree, Muslim] 

The prophet (peace and blessings of Allah be upon him)  also said, "Whoever 
calls to guidance will have a reward similar to the reward of the one who 
follows him, without the reward of either of them being lessened at all." 
[Muslim, Ahmad, Aboo Daawood, an-Nasaa'ee, at-Tirmidhee, Ibn Maajah] 
--------------------------------------------------------------------------

All views expressed herein belong to the individuals concerned and do not in 
any way reflect the official views of IslamCity unless sanctioned or approved 
otherwise. 

If your mailbox clogged with mails from IslamCity, you may wish to get a daily 
digest of emails by logging-on to http://www.yahoogroups.com to change your 
mail delivery settings or email the moderators at [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the 
title "change to daily digest".  
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/islamcity/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 



Reply via email to