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LOGCAP IV

professional-overseas-contractors
According to the Department of Defense (DoD) — Jacobs Technology Inc., Ft. Walton Beach, Florida, was awarded an addtionation  $45,000,000 to a previously awarded contract W52P1J-13-D-0041 for global logistics and support services to the Army Sustainment Command Logistics Civil Augmentation Program (LOGCAP) and Army Contracting Command-Rock Island (ACC- RI) LOGCAP and Reachback Divisions. Funding and work location will be determined with each order with an estimated completion date of Oct. 20, 2016. Army Contracting Command, Rock Island Arsenal, Illinois, is the contracting activity.

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professional-overseas-contractors
The U.S. Army Sustainment Command has awarded DynCorp International two new task orders under the Logistics Civil Augmentation Program (LOGCAP) IV to provide support services to the Geographic Combatant Command (GCC) headquarters at the United States North America Command (NORTHCOM) and United States Pacific Command (PACOM) in several locations worldwide.

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“DI’s LOGCAP team is proud to provide operational planning support at the NORTHCOM and PACOM GCC headquarters, leading LOGCAP contingency requirements in these geographic regions,” said Randy Bockenstedt, senior vice president of DynLogistics, DynCorp International. “Through this opportunity, DI is well positioned for promoting our diverse capabilities in response to future military and disaster and humanitarian relief requirements.”

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Professional Overseas Contractors - www.Your-POC.com
For the past 11 years, logisticians have had their hands full in Afghanistan. For one, the country is landlocked and far from a seaport. The terrain, especially in the strategically important east, is covered with mountains; and the country’s road network is much less advanced than the one in Iraq. Over the years, the Air Force and Army airdropped supplies on remote bases, from large parts for military vehicles parachuted out of airplanes to “Speedballs,” body bags filled with water and ammunition, that could be tossed out of a helicopter to resupply troops under fire.

For most of the past decade, the logistical focus has been on getting equipment out to troops fighting in remote areas. “Doctrine states when you’re starting an operation, it’s always a push,” says Major Rosendo Pagan, executive officer of the 18th Combat Sustainment Support Battalion. But with less than 23 months before the vast majority of U.S. Troops are out of Afghanistan, logisticians have focused much of their efforts on what Pagan calls “the pull phase”: bringing equipment back from far-flung outposts.

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