OVERSEAS INTEL

Professional Overseas Contractors
West Africa faces the largest Ebola epidemic in history.  Every day, in extreme heat and humidity, health care workers are performing life-saving tasks to stop the spread of the virus. They face many obstacles in providing timely care to patients—heat stress caused by Personal Protective Equipment (PPE), lengthy infection control measures that leave no room for error, and communities reluctant to seek care are just a few.

President Obama has declared it a top national security priority,

“Faced with this outbreak, the world is looking to us, the United States, and it’s a responsibility that we embrace. We’re prepared to take leadership on this to provide the kinds of capabilities that only America has, and to mobilize the world in ways that only America can do. That’s what we’re doing as we speak.”

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Professional Overseas Contractors
Two employees have filed a lawsuit against DynCorp International Inc., a private military contractor that specializes in aviation facilities, training and equipment. According to the complaint, the employees allege that the company illegally overcharged for labor when it subcontracted its services to Northrop Grumman Corp. as part of a U.S. Army contract in Afghanistan. If true, this would be a violation of the False Claims Act.

In the suit, which seeks $150 million in damages from DynCorp International, the plaintiffs claim the company hired unqualified workers and paid them far below the rates required for government contract work, but it continued to bill for its services at the regular fixed rates. The employees also say that they warned DynCorp officials about the illegal practices, but senior managers failed to make any adjustments.

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Professional Overseas Contractors
The private security industry is still regarded as a relatively new phenomenon where both International and domestic law have not managed to catch up its rapid development. The emergence of private security in the Kurdistan Region can be seen as a result of the 2003 Iraq War, which is widely considered to be the first privatised war.

From the conflicts inception, coalition forces began to dismantle Saddam Husseins security apparatus, leading to a severe security vacuum across all of Iraq (with the exception of the Kurdistan Region, being governed by the KRG). This weakening of state security meant that coalition forces were unable to adequately provide security for diplomatic missions, NGO reconstruction efforts or humanitarian aid missions.

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