Sunday, March 04, 2007

Iraq, Contingency Contracting and the Defense Base Act

This is a reprint of my article,
Iraq, Contingency Contracting and the Defense Base Act
By Susie Dow, ePluribus Media, March 4, 2007

Introduction

Iraq contractor. Those two words evoke different reactions from different people. For the families of the contractors who have been injured, kidnapped or killed as a result of simply doing their jobs,there's a much more pressing concern than public opinion: insurance.

In early 2005, Susie Dow became aware that a civilian contractor, Kirk von Ackermann, was not covered by "insurance" when he disappeared in Iraq on October 9, 2003. She sought to find out why. The story that follows is based on research, interviews, correspondence, documents, emails, and phone calls over a two year time span.

The first part of this series traces how the lack of adequate insurance coverage impacted families already suffering the deaths or uncertainty surrounding the status of their family members serving in Iraq or Afghanistan as civilian contractors. Part II concentrates on why the appropriate Defense Base Act clauses that could have made a difference went "missing in action." Part III focuses on the lack of information, training and access to low cost coverage for contractors based overseas.

Susie Dow has followed the Missing Man story since February 27, 2005. Her first ePluribus Media story One Missing, One Dead; An Iraq Contractor in the Fog of War, follows the tale of two American civilian contractors.

Part I - Insurance

Kirk von Ackermann is missing.

So is his fellow worker, Ryan Manelick.

Although both men, contractors in the Iraq theater, have been declared dead, they are both missing from the official statistics of the injured or deceased maintained by the Department of Labor.

But let's back up a minute:

On March 18, 2003, one day before the start of the war in Iraq, Defense acquisition personnel were given a presentation that outlined recurring problems with insurance for contractors: contracts from the Department of Defense (DOD) were too often excluding Defense Base Act clauses, the very clauses that provided a modicum of insurance protection for civilian contractors. While both the State Department and the US Agency for International Development (USAID) secured low cost insurance for their overseas workers, the Pentagon consistently did not implement efforts for department-wide coverage. The rationale? To many, it seemed that for the DOD, saving money [1] was considered more important than broad access to coverage [2], coverage that would ensure surviving family members of kidnapped or killed contractors received compensation [3].

History of the Defense Base Act

Established in 1941, the Defense Base Act (DBA) [4] provides the equivalent of workers' compensation for civilian contractors working on contingency operations in overseas countries such as Iraq and Afghanistan. DBA provides benefits in the event contractors are injured, killed, or kidnapped in the course of their work for US government agencies such as the various branches of the Department of Defense, USAID, or the State Department. But this insurance is not automatic, employers must purchase it. And before they can do that, they must know about it.

According to a January 23, 2007 USA Today and AP wire services story, the Department of Labor who administers DBA benefits, reports that at least 770 contractors have died [5] and 7,761 contractors have been injured in Iraq between March 2003 to December 31, 2006.

At least two American contractors should be listed: Ryan Manelick and Kirk von Ackermann. They are not, however, included in DBA casualty figures.

[Editor's note: in October 2008, author Susie Dow learned that the Department of Labor did not release casualty information on companies with fewer than 7 incidents out of concern for privacy. However, the policy is not a legal requirement and as a result, its merit is questioned.]

The Slow Pace of Bureaucracy

Deirdre A. Lee, former Director of Defense Procurement and Acquisition, attended that March 18th, 2003 briefing [6] of the Defense Acquisition Excellence Council, highlighting that contracts with the Department of Defense did not always include the required DBA contract clauses.

Seven months after that briefing, on October 9, 2003, civilian contractor Kirk von Ackermann working for Ultra Services of Istanbul, Turkey, which fulfilled logistics contracts for the US Army, disappeared in Iraq.

Nine months after that same briefing, on December 8, 2003, Director Lee belatedly issued a policy memo to [7] Defense agencies indicating that DBA was a required contract clause that should be included in overseas contracts where appropriate. Within one week, von Ackermann's colleague, Ryan Manelick, was gunned down after leaving a meeting at a base in Iraq.

Eighteen months after that briefing, the two Ultra Services principals would learn for the first time of the necessity of DBA insurance, too late to cover either of the two men. With no coverage, both men are omitted from the statistics the Department of Labor compiles on Iraq contractors.

The Family Left Behind

When Kirk von Ackermann disappeared on that October day in 2003, he left behind a wife and three children.

Within a month of first learning about the Defense Base Act in March 2004, Megan von Ackermann filed a claim for compensation. To contact her husband's employer Ultra Services, which by that time had ceased operations, a claims examiner faxed a letter of inquiry dated August 5, 2004 ultimately reaching Ultra Services' principals John Dawkins and Geoff Nordloh. The inquiry requested information on von Ackermann's disappearance as well as the name and address of Ultra Services' Defense Base Act insurance carrier.

But, Ultra Services didn't have DBA insurance. In fact, the company principals had never even heard of DBA during the time of their work in Iraq despite the fact that Ultra Services had processed over $12 million in contracts.

And even though Nordloh and Dawkins had also fulfilled millions of dollars in contracts for the US Army in Afghanistan, they only had just first learned of the Defense Base Act requirement from another contractor, construction giant Perini, through a draft of a proposed subcontract for work with the US Army in Afghanistan in the summer of 2004. In none of Dawkins' or Nordloh's previous prime contracts had the US Army ever mentioned the need for DBA.

Meanwhile, Megan von Ackermann had another problem -- her husband was considered "missing," not dead. The Department of Labor initially indicated that they needed the US Army's Criminal Investigation Division's (CID) findings into her husband's disappearance before they could decide her claim's status.

On August 9, 2006 -- two years after the initial letter was faxed -- the CID informed Megan von Ackermann that they had determined that her husband, a former Air Force Captain, had been killed on October 9, 2003 during a botched kidnapping [8]. While CID's determination allows Megan to move forward with processing a claim, it doesn't resolve the issue that Ultra Services didn't have DBA insurance at the time of her husband's disappearance. To this date, his remains still have not been found.

The von Ackermann family is unlikely to ever collect DBA benefits. Worse, since Kirk von Ackermann was considered a missing person for almost three years, and as a result, his family was not eligible for Social Security survivors' benefits [9], until the determination by CID. For the von Ackermann family, meeting day-to-day expenses is an ongoing problem:
I worry about money constantly - and I hate it. I don't want to reduce our situation to finances, and in a way I'm afraid the stress over money is masking the pain of our loss. The two things are so huge... and that hurts too; it hurts that being poor is nearly as difficult as losing Kirk. -- Megan von Ackermann [10]
Unfortunately, the von Ackermann family's experience is not unique. An Associated Press article reported Lillian Ake, wife of missing Iraq contractor Jeffrey Ake, is also unable to collect benefits. While she and her four children have received financial support through her church, Lillian Ake has placed their family home on the market in addition to beginning bankruptcy proceedings for her husband's business. [11] Jeffrey Ake was last seen being held at gunpoint in an April 13, 2005 video.

Contingency Contracting

Like Jeffrey Ake, Kirk von Ackerman and Ryan Manelick were civilian contractors working in a "contingency operation." As designated by the Secretary of Defense, Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF) in Afghanistan [12] and Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) in Iraq [13] are both contingency operations. [14] As such, the procurement of goods and services in support of these operations is known as Contingency Contracting and is performed by Contingency Contracting Officers (CCOs). [15]

Contingency contracting, by its very nature of working in close proximity to the battlefield, brings high risks. Civilian contractors deliver much needed supplies and services and, in doing so, often find themselves situated closer and closer to hostilities as competitive outsourcing through the US government's A-76 [16] program increasingly determines the most cost-effective way to fulfill government operations is through the private sector.

Contractors

Based on a survey for CENTCOM [17], and as reported in a December 5th, 2006 Washington Post article, more than 100,000 American and Third Country National civilian contractors [18] are estimated to currently be working in Iraq. Notably, this number does not include their sub-contractors. Requiring DBA insurance coverage depends in part on the "type" of support a civilian contractor provides.

Three types of civilian contractors are on or near the battlefield supporting contingency operations:
Systems support contractors maintain specialized equipment, generally sophisticated weapons. [19]

Theater support contractors are contracted by contingency contracting officers to provide immediate goods and services, generally by local vendors.

External support contractors, perform logistical support such as base construction and maintenance.
Ultra Services, the company Von Ackerman and Manelick worked for, was an external support contractor, similar to the more well-known, although much larger, Halliburton subsidiary Kellogg, Brown and Root (KBR). In fact, as external support contractors, ------------. KBR administers the Logistics Civil Augmentation Program (LOGCAP) III contract for the US Army.

According to one former US Military contracting officer, as a result of LOGCAP, KBR has its own contracting officers who procure goods and services for the Department of Defense's contingency operations. KBR employees are required to be covered by DBA insurance and, per the terms of the LOGCAP contract, KBR also requires that their subcontractors be adequately covered by DBA insurance as well. [20]

Had everything gone according to the Pentagon's plans, Halliburton's KBR unit would have handled most of the contracts for logistics in Iraq. [21] Companies such as Ultra Services would have served as subcontractors to KBR so that, by default, their employees would have been covered by DBA insurance coverage. Unfortunately for the von Ackermann family, the Pentagon's assumptions met a different reality.

Who Cares?

The Department of Defense was obligated to have all of its contractors who are legally required to carry DBA insurance to do so. Unfortunately, the Department of Defense's implementation was less aggressive than other US governmental agencies.

Whereas the State Department and USAID had for many years secured reasonable rates from insurance carriers for DBA, rates that added less than 5% to contract costs, the Department of the Defense did not. For other agencies, rates remained low as underwriters spread risks, charging the same rates in safer countries. But for years, the Department of Defense resisted efforts to secure broad coverage for its contractors. By the time the Department of Defense solicited competitive bids, its efforts met failure:
"On August 8, 2003 after the invasion, the Defense Department asked insurance agencies to submit proposals for selling discounted death and injury coverage to military contractors in Iraq, Afghanistan and Kuwait.

Not a single insurance company bid on the solicitation, which expired September 2, 2003 because the risks were too high to make it profitable." [22]
At the same time that the Department of Defense was failing to secure DBA insurance for its contractors at a reasonable cost, Operation Enduring Freedom was nearing the end of its second year in Afghanistan; Operation Iraqi Freedom, was nearing the end of its first six months. Meanwhile, DBA insurance rates for Department of Defense contractors – not surprisingly -- had skyrocketed well above those of USAID and State Department contractors, in some cases almost doubling overall contract costs. [23]

Eventually, the Department of Defense would later learn it was paying out as much as 10 times more in premiums than the other two government agencies [24]. The US taxpayer, of course, picked up the tab. [25]

Part II: DBA Clauses Missing In Action

The first part of this series traced how the lack of adequate insurance coverage impacted families already suffering the deaths or uncertainty surrounding the status of their family members serving in Iraq or Afghanistan as civilian contractors. Part II concentrates on how the appropriate Defense Base Act contract clauses that could have made a difference went "missing in action."Missing in Action

For those writing and administering contracts, whether or not to include the appropriate Defense Base Act (DBA) clauses requiring insurance protection for civilian contractors is left to individual contracting officers. At best when the appropriate clauses are missing, the contract was mistakenly assumed to be exempt. At worst, the clause was overlooked or never considered.

Gray Zone

Department of Defense contracts are generally divided into three types: services, supplies, and construction.

Both "services" and "construction" contracts require DBA clauses. But civilian contractors who provide "supplies" on or near the battlefield are generally exempt from carrying DBA insurance. However, in some instances, contractors who provide supplies where the contract requires work on site -- known as "service incidental to supply" -- are not exempt. 1

Current language within Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) 2 is ambiguous and may appear to waive the requirement of DBA coverage by creating grey zones for service incidental to supply. These grey zones leave each contingency contracting officer to interpret FAR to the best of his or her ability and to determine when and where they should include DBA clauses.
The Defense Base Act clause is a mandatory clause that must be included in appropriately designated contracts awarded by any federal agency for overseas performance. It should be included in the "check list " provided to government contracting officers with responsibility for soliciting and awarding contingency (and any other) type of contracts for overseas performance. -- Alan Chvotkin of the Professional Services Council 3
One can argue that the work of Ultra Services and its employees, Kirk von Ackermann and Ryan Manelick, may have fallen outside of "service incidental to supply." That is, the contracts they worked under were exempt from DBA because they supplied US forces with prefabricated Containerized Housing Units (CHUs) and their work was not sufficient to warrant DBA coverage.

Although purchases of trailers such as Containerized Housing Units (CHUs) are handled by supply contracts and are usually exempt from DBA, CHUs require some supervision from the contracted vendor -- in this case, Ultra Services -- on the work site itself such as offloading from shipping trucks, placement on concrete pads, and hook-up of utility lines.

Given such activity at the worksite, should the supply contracts for the purchase of CHUs include DBA clauses? Contingency contracting officers were left to figure it out on their own. Complicating the matter, while deployed in a war zone, contingency contracting officers also had other priorities.

In 2003, during the time von Ackerman and Manelick were in Iraq, contingency contracting officers (CCOs) were expected to respond rapidly to the priorities set by their commanders for fulfilling the immediate needs of 173,000 troops. They were also expected to verify that, where needed, subcontractors also had DBA in place.

With upwards of 200 requisitions and 400 contracts on the CCOs' desks, each CCO had to decide between 1) carefully including all relevant contract clauses and verifying each contractor's insurance paperwork -- which could add delays or 2) quickly expediting the contracts to secure the needed supplies and services for troops.

A 21st-century military force "burns up" a tremendous volume of expendable supplies and continuously needs repairs to equipment as well as medical treatment. Without a plentiful and dependable source of fuel, food, and ammunition, a military force falters. First it stops moving, then it begins to starve, and eventually it becomes unable to resist the enemy.4 -- Patrick Lang, Christian Science Monitor.

Under such a pressure, it should come as no surprise that some supply contracts were little more than a statement of understanding, with an actual contract following months later. The Department of Defense placed its contingency contracting officers in an untenable position. Either the troops on the ground suffered shortages or the civilian contractors and their families faced the risk of being uninsured in a dangerous environment. Even today, unless more detailed language is added to the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR), contingency contracting officers are likely to be unaware of decisions that clarify policy5 -- most especially while deployed in war zones -- as they prioritize fulfilling troops' needs over paperwork.

Bandaid or Surgery?

The sheer volume of work, compounded by a lack of clear guidance from the Department of Defense promoted confusion. Confusion, the Department of Defense should have both expected and been prepared for.

And indeed, the Special Inspector General of Iraq Reconstruction (SIGIR) issued a report, Iraq Reconstruction: Lessons Learned in Contracting and Procurement which analyzed contracting problems and made several recommendations. One recommendation was to establish a new Contingency FAR specifically for contingency operations. Another prompted the Deputy Secretary of the Army for Policy and Procurement to prepare two new guidebooks: The Army Guidebook for OCONUS Contingency Contracting and CONUS Guide for Supporting Emergencies within the United States and Supporting Overseas Contingencies from CONUS Locations.

Drafts of the guidebooks reportedly rely on Special Operations Command (SOCOM) contracting documents as well as on the Air Force Guidebook on Contingency Contracting6 a source that a review showed7contained no reference to DBA insurance.

In September 2003, the US Army issued a new guidebook, Army Contractors Accompanying the Force (CAF) 8 which included two pages on the necessity of Defense Base Act coverage. Acquisition personnel knew contractors may not be aware of the DBA, as pointed out within the guidebook:
Pursuing benefits and remedies under these laws is the responsibility of the contractor employee and/or contractor. Since they may be unaware of this assistance, however, contracting personnel should inform the contractor of these laws if the situation arises. 9
The contractor is ultimately responsible.

Insurance in some circumstances is available under the Defense Base Act and Longshoreman's and Harbor Workers Compensation Act administered by the Department of Labor, and the War Hazards Act. It is the contractor's or employee's responsibility to pursue possible benefits under those Acts. 10

Yet, for the families of civilian contractors, it is imperative that both new guidebooks include clear guidance on the implementation of the Defense Base Act for the tens of thousands of civilian contractors working overseas.

Ducking Responsibility

The SIGIR report, Lessons Learned, confirmed that by Spring 2003 the Department of Defense had fully expected the Logistics Civil Augmentation Program (LOGCAP III), as administered by Halliburton's KBR, to reliably fulfill ALL logistics needs in Iraq. 11 Had KBR done as the Pentagon expected, companies such as Ultra Services would have clearly understood they were required to carry DBA insurance for their employees. Had Ultra Services secured coverage, Kirk von Ackermann's family would have received benefits during the entire duration he was considered missing, sparing his family the added burden of financial hardship.

But unfortunately, due to the urgency and sheer volume of needs required by deploying 173,00012 troops to the Iraq region, many of the responsibilities expected to be coordinated by KBR actually fell to Department of Defense contracting officers. Simply put: the Department of Defense had grossly underestimated and severely misjudged the abilities of LOGCAP III to handle Iraq contracts and by extension, insurance protection for its contractors. The Pentagon was unprepared to handle logistics on the battlefield.

As succinctly pointed out by Dov S. Zakheim, the Pentagon's comptroller from 2001 until 2004, "You're really asking too much of one firm to be able to manage all of this."13 As further proof of this basic fact -- that no one company could provide 100,000 contractors -- the Department of Defense announced in July 2006 that the next contract for logistics support, LOGCAP IV, would be split and awarded to three separate external support contractors. 14 And a fourth contractor will "monitor the performance" of the other three.

Finding Insurance On The Battlefield

While the Department of Defense in Washington DC expected external support contractor KBR to fulfill LOGCAP III, life in theater didn't cooperate. Contingency contracting officers were confronted with the necessity of working with local contractors to get urgently needed requisitions filled. Waiting for KBR to deploy sufficient staff and personnel to implement LOGCAP III throughout Iraq was not a viable option. Additionally, the expectation that contractors already operating in Iraq would have secured some form of local workers' compensation coverage was unrealistic.

Even if they'd known of the need for DBA insurance, local companies such as Ultra Services had few options. Iraq didn't have much in the way of a robust private insurance industry. Many Iraqis had relied on government insurance programs. Reporting on an early briefing held by Bechtel for local Iraqi companies in Baghdad, July 2003, Kelly Hayes-Raitt wrote:
Before this last war, there were six insurance companies in Iraq, the largest of which were run by Saddam Hussein's government. They offered basic auto and casualty insurance, workers compensation and liability insurance with maximum policies of either 200 million or 150 million dinars (about $100,000 or $60,000, respectively). As of July [2003], only one insurance company was operating. The others had been shut down or looted. 15
As one example of these difficulties, when local Iraqi companies first sought work as Bechtel subcontractors, they were told to get insurance. 16 But there was no mechanism in place to procure the three types of insurance Bechtel required -- indemnification, bid security, and performance, so eventually, Bechtel told their potential subcontractors that American companies would provide it. Finally, even unable to make that solution work, Bechtel waived their insurance requirements for Iraqi sub-contractors altogether17. Under LOGCAP III, today, KBR does not normally require liability insurance18 from its Iraq sub-contractors, but instead requires DBA coverage which is easier to obtain through a referral to its own insurance carrier, AIG. 19

Civilian Contractors Assuming Military RisksWhy is the insurance situation for civilian contractors important?

Since 2000, the number of contract obligations and contract actions by the Department of Defense has nearly doubled. 20 As more services within the military are privatized or outsourced, 21 reliance on civilian contractors supporting overseas contingency operations increases -- civilian contractors assume risks once handled entirely by military personnel.

The administration's own numbers illustrate how dramatically the warrior is becoming privatized.

With their increased presence, more civilian contractors, such as Ultra Services' von Ackermann and Manelick, face the possibility of injury, kidnapping and death. Accordingly, the Department of Defense and the Department of Labor have a responsibility to ensure broad implementation and uniform dissemination of DBA contract clauses.

Part III: Information, Training & Access

Part I of this series traces how the lack of adequate insurance coverage impacted families already suffering the deaths or uncertainty surrounding the status of their family members serving in Iraq or Afghanistan as civilian contractors.

Part II concentrates on why the appropriate Defense Base Act (DBA) clauses that could have made a difference went "missing in action."

Part III focuses on the Defense Department's (unlike its counterparts in the State Department and United States Agency for International Development (USAID)) inability to provide information, training and access to low cost coverage.

What Went Wrong?

Inadequate planning, staffing and implementation seem to be the main culprits in the Department of Defense's inability to implement Defense Base Act procedures, especially in light of the other government agencies' ongoing success in doing so.

Stepping back five years to see what happened to the Department of Defense's efforts, we start in March of 2002, when two former councils1 combined to create the Defense Acquisition Excellence Council (DAEC). The DAEC was established to:
...address acquisition, technology and logistics issues that cut across organizational and functional boundaries [and] to collectively work issues as well as take actions to accelerate implementation of the Under Secretary of Defense for Acquisition, Technology & Logistics (AT&T) initiatives to achieve acquisition excellence. 2
One of the earliest meetings of the new DAEC, 3 March 18, 2003 mentioned in Part I of this series was the same briefing that Deirdre A. Lee, then Director of Defense Procurement and Acquisition, attended but failed to act upon for over 9 months.

The presenter that day who outlined the difficulties with DBA was Alan Chvotkin of the Professional Services Council (PSC). PSC is "the leading national trade association representing the professional and technical services industry doing business with the Federal government"4 In his briefing, Chvotkin showed the slide on the left.


Alan Chvotkin's slide was clear. His action list provided immediate steps to solve the DBA problem. And those immediate steps weren't merely hypothetical -- Chvotkin based his presentation in part on an informal telephone survey he conducted with PSC member companies that had contracts from the Department of Defense.5 A number of those member companies' contracts had not included DBA clauses even though they should have been required to.
Like so many other government contracting matters, overseas contracting requires specialized training and experience. [...] We found that, during the initial phases of the Iraq conflict, the responsibility for contracting was more highly diffused among DoD contracting officers, some of whom did not traditionally award overseas contracts. That lack of familiarity, coupled with the urgency of some awards and the ambiguity of the scope of coverage of the DBA clause, probably contributed to the failures to include this specific provision in all contracts.6 -- Alan Chvotkin
Although it took 9 months to be issued, Director Deirdre A. Lee's memo clearly recognized the severity of the problem that Chvotkin had so succinctly outlined.
Subject: Inclusion of Defense Base Act Clause in DOD Overseas Contracts

It has come to my attention that there may be some inconsistency within the Department regarding the inclusion of the Workers' Compensation Insurance (Defense Base Act) clause at FAR 52.228-3 in our contracts to be performed outside of the United States. [...]

I want to emphasize that the Workers' Compensation Insurance (Defense Base Act) clause FAR 52.228-3 should be included in all DoD service contracts to be performed (either entirely or in part) outside of the United States, as well as in all supply contracts that also require the performance of employee services overseas. [sic]
Despite the strong wording of Director Lee's memo, there were (and continue to be) few opportunities for contingency contracting officers to learn how to determine where, how, and for whom to include the appropriate DBA clauses.

As just one example, as recently as November 2006, a contractor had to point out to its military contracting officer that DBA was required and should be included as a cost in a service contract proposal for the US Army. In response, the contracting officer replied -- in writing -- that having spoken with "legal," DBA was "not required." Yet, the contract was for trucking, a service that is known, even to the general public, as carrying a high risk of injury in its region of operations. [7]

Training for DBA requirements: A Well-Kept Secret

Prior to December 2003, contractors and subcontractors hoping to learn about DBA and its application to Department of Defense contracts would find little information. In 2001, two years prior to Director Lee's attendance of the meeting, the Department of Labor (DOL), which administers Defense Base Act claims, had growing concerns of employers not carrying DBA. [8] To rectify the situation, the DOL's Office of Workers' Compensation Programs (OWCP)'s initiated seminars domestically [9] "to inform employers about the obligation to insure their workers and about the severe costs for not doing so." Since this was before the Iraq and Afghanistan conflicts, at that time, there was no mention of seminars for overseas contractors. The OWCP was most concerned about employers, predominately in Florida, with maritime workers as their employees.

Web pages from the Department of Labor were light on DBA information.10 On the Defense Base Act (DBA) Information page, [11] there was one link to the DLHWC (Longshore) homepage for more detail on "periodic seminars and workshops for industry groups."

Defense Base Act Seminars and Workshops

The OWCP National Office and district offices hold periodic seminars and workshops for industry groups as the need arises, or upon request. For information on upcoming events, check the official Longshore website.

Indeed, the first known DBA workshop would not be announced until November 14, 2003 [12] and scheduled for December 15, 2003, the day after Ultra Services civilian contractor Ryan Manelick was killed in Iraq. The announcement read:
Due to overwhelming demand, the Department of Labor, Office of Workers' Compensation Programs, will conduct a one day workshop on the Defense Base Act and the War Hazards Compensation Act. The date of the workshop is Monday, December 15, 2003. [13]
Unfortunately, there appeared to be no such seminars or workshops scheduled for contractors in Afghanistan and Iraq. Unless they were in the United States, overseas contractors who didn't know to secure DBA insurance or its equivalent, they wouldn't learn about it through Department of Labor seminars and workshops.

And, if the civilian contractors working in Iraq looked to the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA) for information and training on DBA, they certainly wouldn't find much help. Of four documents available online through the CPA, two were dated June 11, 2004 -- 17 days before the CPA handed over sovereignty to the Iraqi people. Of the remaining two, the most extensive, from insurance company Rutherfoord, had a creation date of November 20, 2003 -- eight months after Coalition forces had moved into the region. [14] The last and earliest of the four, from American International Group Inc (AIG), with a May 16, 2003 creation date, contained only the following on DBA:
Defense Base Act (DBA) - AIG's member companies have been in the business of writing coverage in response to the DBA for many years. The Act was passed during World War II to provide compensation for disability or death to personnel employed at American military, air and naval bases outside the United States. The Act has evolved to cover contracts and subcontracts approved and financed by any independent establishment or agency of the United States ... Upon adequate lifting of sanctions, we plan to have employees on the ground in Iraq. [15]
Obviously, overseas contractors weren't going to learn about DBA from the CPA.

In September 2003, the US Army issued a new guidebook, Army Contractors Accompanying the Force (CAF). [16] which included two pages on the necessity of Defense Base Act coverage. Acquisition personnel knew contractors may not be aware of the DBA, as pointed out within the guidebook:
Pursuing benefits and remedies under these laws is the responsibility of the contractor employee and/or contractor. Since they may be unaware of this assistance, however, contracting personnel should inform the contractor of these laws if the situation arises. [17]
The contractor is ultimately responsible.

Insurance in some circumstances is available under the Defense Base Act and Longshoreman's and Harbor Workers Compensation Act administered by the Department of Labor, and the War Hazards Act. It is the contractor's or employee's responsibility to pursue possible benefits under those Acts. [18]

Eventually, in 2005, two years after the start of the Iraq war, the Defense Contract Management Agency at dcma.mil, which provides Contingency Contract Administration Services,19 published an article by Michael Dudley, Contractors on the Battlefield: Part III20 that summarized Chvotkin's 2003 PowerPoint presentation.

Congress Jumps In

Throughout the Iraq war, there continues to be problems with DBA implementation. Over 100 members of Congress requested reviews related to Iraq and DBA, and finally, in April 2005, the Government Accountability Office (GAO) reported that a review of costs and implementation was needed:
Defense Base Act Insurance: Review Needed of Cost and Implementation Issues [21]

This report explains DBA requirements; discusses DBA insurance rates, which are higher for DOD than for other agencies; identifies challenges and concerns that federal agencies face when implementing DBA; and suggests that Congress consider requiring that the Director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) determine, in coordination with DOD, the Departments of Labor and State, and the U.S. Agency for International Development, what actions should be taken to address issues that came to light during our review.
In response, the Department of Defense (DOD) provided details of a new 1-year pilot program for DBA insurance for the US Army Corps of Engineers, a decision based soley on the escalating costs rather than on protection for contractors who are working in the war theatre, even as the Department of Defense continued to replace its military personnel with private sector civilians.

DOD completed a congressionally directed study in 1996 on the feasibility and desirability of initiating a single-insurer program. While DOD concluded at that time that such a program would not lead to cost savings, the DBA insurance rates defense contractors are now paying have led to concerns among DOD officials over the cost of DBA insurance. To address these concerns, DOD, through the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, issued a solicitation on March 7, 2005, for a 1-year pilot contract to a single insurer for DBA insurance for all Army Corps of Engineers contractors performing work overseas. [22]

On December 1, 2005, the Department of Defense's U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) finally awarded CNA Financial Group the contract for the new Defense Base Act (DBA) pilot program. [23] As of December 2006, almost 4 years of war in the mid-east and, although during the same time period the USAID and State Department had had effective DBA coverage for its contractors, the Department of Defense has only just finished its pilot program.

If successful, the program could revolutionize consistent DBA implementation throughout the Armed Services for civilian contractors working overseas. For the eligible, but uninsured contractors who were kidnapped, injured or killed, the revolution comes much too late.

Contractors at Risk

Four years. Two wars. Two countries. Two contingency operations. Hundreds of billions of dollars in contracts. Tens of thousands of civilian contractors. Thousands of injuries. Hundreds of deaths.

Why was the Department of Defense so inept implementing the Defense Base Act --placing contractors, and their families, at risk? The Government Accountability Office's June 2006 report Contract Management: DOD Vulnerabilities to Contracting Fraud, Waste, and Abuse, [24] may reveal the answer:
DOD's tone at the top allows a certain level of vulnerability to enter into the acquisition process. Senior acquisition officials ultimately shape the environment that midlevel and frontline acquisition personnel operate within, and it is that tone that clearly identifies and emphasizes the values deemed acceptable within the acquisition function. [...] DOD officials told us that, in recent years, the tone set in DOD was one of streamlining acquisitions to get results as fast as possible. While this is a desired outcome of the acquisition process, the acquisitions should still be carried out within prescribed policies and practices.
As the Deputy Secretary of the Army for Policy and Procurement prepares two new guidebooks for contingency contracting: The Army Guidebook for OCONUS Contingency Contracting and CONUS Guide for Supporting Emergencies within the United States and Supporting Overseas Contingencies from CONUS Locations, it is imperative that both include clear guidance on the implementation of the Defense Base Act.

For the families of contractors such as Kirk von Ackermann and Ryan Manelick the Manuals come much too late.

ePluribus Media Contributors: rba, newton snookers, cho, intranets, steven reich, wanderindiana, standingup, roxy

Side Bars Part I & II

Defense Base Act
The Defense Base Act provides disability compensation, medical treatment, and vocational rehabilitation to workers injured at work and death benefits to survivors when the worker is killed on the job. You need not be a U.S. citizen or a U.S. resident to obtain these benefits. [SB1] Source: Department of Labor
Contingency Operations
A military operation that is designated by the Secretary of Defense as an operation in which members of the armed forces are or may become involved in military actions, operations, or hostilities against an enemy of the United States or against an opposing militaryforce; or results in the call or order to, or retention on, active duty of members of the uniformed services [...] or any other provision of law during a war or during a national emergency declared by the President or Congress. [SB2] Source: US Code
Contingency Contracting
Contingency contracting is direct contracting support to tactical and operational forces engaged in the full spectrum of armed conflict and military operations (both domestic and overseas), including war, other military operations, and disaster or emergency relief. [SB3] Source: US Army Standard Procurement System
Federal Aquisition Regulation
FAR 28.305 [SB4] Overseas workers' compensation and war-hazard insurance.

FAR 28.310 [SB5] Contract clause for work on a Government installation.
For more information on FARS, please see the endnote section.

References

Please email me if you need assistance locating original source material cited in the references.

Endnotes - Part I

1 http://www.gao.gov/htext/d05280r.html -- see notes on 1996 review, “DOD concluded at that time that such a program would not lead to cost savings

2 http://www.gao.gov/htext/d05280r.html; The title of one section is “Large Numbers of Contractors in Iraq Have Led to Concerns over the Cost of DBA Insurance”

3 Ibid. http://www.gao.gov/htext/d05280r.html

4 FAR 52.228-3 Workers Compensation Insurance (Defense Base Act)

5 Americans die in security contractor copter crash, USA Today, USA Today Staff and Wire Reports, AP, January 23, 2007
According to a Guardian article, http://www.guardian.co.uk/worldlatest/story/0,,-6436602,00.html, The AP had to file a Freedom of Information Act request to obtain figures on pre-2006 civilian deaths and injuries from the Labor Department.
ePluribus Media writer Ilona Meagher also reports on the secrecy of the Department of Labor at http://scoop.epluribusmedia.org/story/2007/2/24/123023/888

6 From this page on meeting notes: http://www.acq.osd.mil/dpap_archive/daec/index.htm
List of attendees: http://www.acq.osd.mil/dpap_archive/Docs/DAEC/DAECnotesFrom031803.doc

7 Inclusion of Defense Base Act Clause in DoD Overseas Contracts, 08 Dec 2003

8 Blog post from Missing in Iraq by Megan von Ackermann (aka “For Kirk”), August 18, 2006

9 Email correspondence with Megan von Ackermann

10 Email from Megan von Ackermann to Susie Dow Auguest 22, 2006 5:55 AM

11 Fund to help wife of Iraq kidnap victim by AP, January 12, 2007

12 Authorization to Utilize Contingency Operations Contracting Procedures, THE UNDER SECRETARY OF DEFENSE, E.C. Aldridge, Jr., October 9, 2001

13 MEMORANDUM FOR ALMAJCOM/FOA/DRU (CONTRACTING), Emergency Acquisitions in Direct Support of U.S. or Allied Forces Deployed in Military Contingency Operations during Operation Iraqi Freedom, CHARLIE E. WILLIAMS, JR., March 21, 2003

14 FAR 2.101 Definitions: "Contingency operation" (10 U.S.C. 101(a)(13)) means a military operation that: (1) Is designated by the Secretary of Defense as an operation in which members of the armed forces are or may become involved in military actions, operations, or hostilities against an enemy of the United States or against an opposing military force; or (2) Results in the call or order to, or retention on, active duty of members of the uniformed services under section 688, 12301(a), 12302, 12304, 12305, or 12406 of 10 U.S.C., Chapter 15 of 10 U.S.C, or any other provision of law during a war or during a national emergency declared by the President or Congress.

15 For the purposes of this article, contingency operations and contingency contracting refer to support of overseas US government agency missions on or near the battlefield as managed by the Pentagon.

16 Circular No. A-76 Performance of Commercial Activities, August 4, 1983, Revised 1999 & the Government shall not start or carry on any activity to provide a commercial product or service if the product or service can be procured more economically from a commercial source.

17 White House Office of Budget and Management, Robert A. Burton, Memorandum:Request Contracting Information on Contractors Operating in Iraq, May 16, 2006

18 Renae Merle, Census Counts 100,000 Contractors in Iraq Civilian Number, Duties Are Issues, Washington Post, Tuesday, December 5, 2006; Page D01

19 Is Force Protection For Contractor Personnel on the Battlefield Adequate? by Mr. Michael J. Dudley, DCMA, Spring Summer 2004 (I have reason to believe this article was intended to be published earlier – note footnote dates: May 2003)

20 Interview and follow up emails with Former US military contracting officer.

21 Iraq Reconstruction: Lessons Learned in Contracting and Procurement, Special Inspector General of Iraq Reconstruction, July 2006, p 14

22 Bechtel Benefits as Iraq Contractors Struggle to Get Insurance Bloomberg News, November 21, 2003

Iraq contractors' sky-high insurance costs hobble efforts (reprint of same article, slight variation) by Vernon Silver, Bloomberg News, November 27, 2003

23 IRAQ: Army and Insurer at Odds, by T. Christian Miller, The Los Angeles Times, June 13th, 2005

24 US: Defense Discovers Insurance Companies Charge Huge Fees for Contractors Overseas, by Elliot Blair Smith, USA Today, June 14th, 2005

25 Iraq contracts burden taxpayers, By Joseph Neff, McClatchy Newspapers, December 25, 2006

Sidebar I

SB1 U.S. Department of Labor, Working for U.S. Government Contractors Overseas, WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW BEFORE YOU ARE INJURED

SB2 10 U.S. Code 101(a)(13)

SB3 Standard Procurement System, SPS & Contingency Contracting

Endnotes - Part II

1 The Department of Labor Benefits Review Board had previously determined in 1988 in Alan-Howard v. Todd Logistics, Inc., 21 BRBS 70, that "individuals who work on-site to facilitate the utilization of such goods "constituted a service and as a result employees of such supply contractors were covered by DBA.
See: The Defense Base Act -- A Growth Industry? by Kerry J. Anzalone, Counsel for Longshore, Office of Administrative Law Judges, U.S. Department of Labor, 2004

2Federal Acquisition Regulation(FAR)

3 email from Alan Chvotkin to Susie Dow Friday, July 07, 2006 5:11 PM

4 The vulnerable line of supply to US troops in Iraq By Patrick Lang, Christian Science Monitor, July 21, 2006
5 ARMY CONTRACTORS ACCOMPANYING THE FORCE(CAF), Guidebook, September 8, 2003 page 17 & 18 include information on DBA

6 Iraq Reconstruction: Lessons Learned in Contracting and Procurement, Special Inspector General of Iraq Reconstruction, July 2006, pp 112-113 Also see...

7 Army Federal Acquisition Regulation (AFARS) Manual No. 2 for Contingency Contracting released November 1997
Air Force Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement (AFFARS)
APPENDIX CC Contingency Operational Contracting Support Program (COCSP), revised June 15, 2006,
Navy Contingency Contracting Handbook
Marine Corps Purchasing Procedures Manual Appendix B

8 ARMY CONTRACTORS ACCOMPANYING THE FORCE(CAF), Guidebook, September 8, 2003 page 18

9 ARMY CONTRACTORS ACCOMPANYING THE FORCE(CAF), Guidebook, September 8, 2003 page 17 & 18 include information on DBA

10 ARMY CONTRACTORS ACCOMPANYING THE FORCE(CAF), Guidebook, September 8, 2003 page 17 & 18 include information on DBA

11 Iraq Reconstruction: Lessons Learned in Contracting and Procurement, Special Inspector General of Iraq Reconstruction, July 2006, p 14

12 Total US and Coalition Troops in May 2003, The Iraq Index (PDF), May 30, 2006

13 Army to End Expansive, Exclusive Halliburton Deal, By Griff Witte, Washington Post, July 12, 2006

14 Army to End Expansive, Exclusive Halliburton Deal, By Griff Witte, Washington Post, July 12, 2006

15 Evidence Of Waste Of US Taxpayers' Dollars In Iraq Contracts Letter from Rep. Henry Waxman to Joshua Bolten, September 26, 2003

16 America's rebuilding of Iraq shuts out Iraqis by Kelly Hayes-Raitt, Santa Monica Daily Press, August 19, 2003

17 Bechtel's Outreach to Iraqi Subcontractors

18In a few instances, contractors from surrounding nations are able to obtain liability insurance. But more often, KBR requires DBA coverage.

19 Former US military contracting officer

20 Contract Management: DOD Vulnerabilities to Contracting Fraud, Waste, and Abuse, GAO-06-838R, p 8, Government Accountability Office, July 7, 2006

21Contract Management: DOD Vulnerabilities to Contracting Fraud, Waste, and Abuse, GAO-06-838R, Government Accountability Office, July 7, 2006, http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d06838r.pdf

Sidebar II

SB4 FAR 28.305

SB5 FAR 28.310 (2) (a)

Endnotes - Part III

1 Single Process Initiative (SPI) Executive Council and the Defense Systems Affordability Council

2 DAEC charter letter, March 14, 2002

3 Contractors on the Battlefield: Part III by Mr. Michael J. Dudley, U.S. Army Defense Leadership and Management Program Participant Fall 2004/Winter 2005 - page 3

4 A-76 Revisions, Testimony to US House of Representatives, Committee on Government Reform, by Stan Soloway, June 26, 2003, page 2 See menu: Policy Leadership > Outsourcing/A-76 > Testimony > A-76 Revisions -- 6/2003 (actual link to pdf not available)

5 email from Alan Chvotkin to Susie Dow Friday, July 07, 2006 5:11 PM

6 email from Alan Chvotkin to Susie Dow Friday, July 07, 2006 5:11 PM

7 email to Susie Dow -- source prefers to remain anonymous

8 as documented in the DOL's Office of Workers' Compensation Programs (OWCP)'s annual report.

9Office of Workers' Compensation Programs (OWCP), Annual Report to Congress FY 2001, page 28

10Internet Archive

11 Ibid Link shown to workshops and seminars

12 Ibid Announcement

13 Division of Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation

14 Rutherfoord The Assurance Company

15AIG Solutions for Iraq Reconstruction

16 ARMY CONTRACTORS ACCOMPANYING THE FORCE (CAF), Guidebook, September 8, 2003 page 18 -- ARMY CONTRACTORS

17 ACCOMPANYING THE FORCE (CAF), Guidebook, September 8, 2003 page 17 & 18 include information on DBA

18 ARMY CONTRACTORS ACCOMPANYING THE FORCE (CAF), Guidebook, September 8, 2003 page 17 & 18 include information on DBA

19 Contingency Contract Administration Services

20 Contractors on the Battlefield:Part III by Mr. Michael J. Dudley, DCMA Communicator, Fall 2004/Winter 2005

21United States Government Accountability Office Defense Base Act Insurance: Review Needed of Cost and Implementation Issues April 29, 2005

22 http://www.gao.gov/htext/d05280r.html

23 US Army Corps of Engineers Contracts with CNA for Defense Base Act Program, Global Risk Alert, AON, December 13, 2005

24 Contract Management: DOD Vulnerabilities to Contracting Fraud, Waste, and Abuse, GAO-06-838R, pp 6-7 Government Accountability Office, July 7, 2006

Friday, February 23, 2007

Death of a Contractor

Keep an eye out for the current issue of Rolling Stone magazine which features a new article by Daniel Halpern about Ultra Services. I understand the article centers around Ryan Manelick. Below is a photo of the online cover for February 21, 2007 but I haven't yet located the dead tree version on local news stands.

Rolling Stone

Update: The article is available online. Try to pick up the print version as it includes photos.
Death of a Contractor: Greed and Murder in Iraq's Lawless Desert (link expired) by Dan Halpern


Use this link:
Death of a Contractor - alternate link

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Obituary for Kirk von Ackermann

Obituary
The Albuquerque Journal
January 14, 2007

VON ACKERMANN -- Kirk von Ackermann was killed October 9, 2003 while acting as a contractor in Iraq. Kirk served his country with distinction, first as a Russian linguist in the army, then as an intelligence officer in the air force. He earned numerous awards including Army, Air Force, and joint service commendation medals. Kirk was passionate about his family and devoted to them and to his many friends. He pursued many activities, and taught his children his personal philosophy: live life, don't watch it.

More...

Saturday, January 06, 2007

Von Ackermann in AP Article

Two brief mentions of Kirk von Ackermann in a series from the AP on the kidnapping of Roy Hallums in Iraq. The article refers to and quotes Dan Shea, formerly of the Hostage Working Group of the US Embassy in Baghdad.

Important detail: this article includes the first known mention that the Hostage Working Group was actively looking into von Ackermann's disappearance. An Editor's Note on one version (oddly enough, it's titled Missing in Iraq), states the following:

This story is based on hours of interviews with Roy Hallums, Susan Hallums and Dan O'Shea, and their recollections of Roy Hallums' kidnapping in Iraq.
Excerpts below.

Family's nightmare begins at gunpoint Part 1
By Deborah Hastings, AP, Salt Lake Tribune, December 24, 2006, 01:20:45 AM MST
Dan O'Shea had more to worry about than the abduction of Roy Hallums. There was Kirk von Ackermann, an American contractor who went missing near Tikrit on Oct. 9, 2003. There was Timothy Bell, a Halliburton employee who disappeared on April 9, 2004.

Hallums was another soul added to the list. At the U.S. embassy in Baghdad, O'Shea worked in secret. The Hostage Working Group, started by the State Department in 2004 to deal with the rash of Iraqi kidnappings, was made up of FBI and CIA agents, hostage negotiators, counterintelligence operators, military analysts and special forces.

They numbered about 30 in all, working telephones and back channels, talking with local imams, police, messaging back and forth with Washington and military intelligence officials of all types.
Kidnapped Americans in Iraq
By Deborah Hastings, AP, Salt Lake Tribune, December 24, 2006, 03:10:26 AM MST
MISSING

Kirk von Ackermann, 37, of Moss Beach, Calif., vanished Oct. 9, 2003. He was driving alone between Tikrit and Kirkuk. His car was found abandoned.
Clarification for readers: As of August of 2006, Von Ackermann is no longer considered missing but is believed to have been killed on the day he disappeared.

Part 2 of the above series can be found here:

Rescuing Roy - Tip leads to rescue in Iraq Part 2
By Deborah Hastings, AP, North County Times, December 24, 2006

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

Light Reading

Clad only in seaweed, Ultra Services' John Dawkins makes an appearance in Honeymoon With My Brother by Franz Wisner.

It's really more of a summer time kind of read but might also make a good choice for waiting areas during holiday travels.

Friday, October 27, 2006

Dia De Los Muertos

Mexico is a long way from Iraq. Dia De Los Muertos is a three-day Mexican holiday to honor and celebrate loved ones who have died.

Needless to say, it caught me by surprise to see the name of Ryan Manelick listed in an honor roll at a Dia De Los Muertos installation in Los Angleles, California. One of the altars was comprised of lists of names of just some those who have died in Iraq: civilian contractors, American military personnel and Iraqis.

So while Iraq and Mexico may be thousands of miles apart, it turns out it's a very small world indeed.

Saturday, October 14, 2006

TV Ads in Iraq

Army Produces Ads To Find Missing Service Members
Fox News, October 13, 2006

A public service announcement airing on television stations in Iraq asks people to call a hotline so they can help the families of missing people find their relatives including Army Staff Sergeant Matt Maupin.

...the ad aired 108 times in August...
The US Embassy in Iraq has previously reported 13 Americans are known to be missing. Of those, five are civilian contractors. It is unknown if recent efforts by the US Army in Iraq included Kirk von Ackermann. CID determined von Ackermann died on the day he disappeared but his remains have not been found.

Monday, October 09, 2006

Three years

It was three years ago today that Kirk von Ackermann disappeared on a road in Iraq. His life is so much more than just that one day.

I hope you'll take the time to visit the blog written by his family Missing in Iraq. For it is there that you can learn about the person, the husband, the father, rather than just the contractor in news stories who mysteriously disappeared.

Sunday, October 08, 2006

Counter Terrorism and Kirk von Ackermann

There were a number of articles recently on the failure of the 9-11 Commission to include details of a July 10, 2001 briefing by George Tenet and Cofer Black to Condoleezza Rice regarding perceived threats of by Al Qaeda against the United States. What follows at the end of this long post is a brief review of some of those articles.

While this may seem out of place here at the Missing Man, I'd like to take this opportunity to remind visitors that Kirk von Ackermann was a former Air Force Captain who was assigned to a counter terrorism team. You'll find no mention of either Kirk von Ackermann or his team in the 9-11 Commission report.

Von Ackermann's family have a blog, Missing In Iraq. While the family admit to knowing little of his work, they have posted several entries that describe his role in protecting the United States from Terrorism that I'd like to call your attention to.

Well before 9-11, Kirk von Ackermann predicted aircraft could be hijacked and used as weapons against the United States. He also predicted potential targets.

Excerpts from Missing In Iraq

Getting to Iraq part two: Counter Terrorism March 24, 2006

After Y2K, Kirk became more and more consumed by the counter-terrorism world. He was read into higher and higher clearances, learned more and more about the largest threats to the US and her allies. Specifically he became deeply aware of Osama Bin Ladin and his organization.

Kirk was involved with designing readiness excercises - scenarios to be used by various units as they tested their skills. He proposed that a small boat filled with explosives be used as a weapon against a large warship - and was told it was an unrealistic idea. This was, of course, well prior to the USS Cole attack.

He also, along with his team, not only suggested that a commercial jet could be used as a terrorist weapon, but predicted the most likely targets that would be chosen. Again, he was ignored, and sometimes laughed at.
Moving and the British Navy July 26, 2006
Kirk had been doing some pretty amazing stuff over the last year or so. He had, I understand, been literally writing the book on info-ops. His theories, concepts and methods were innovative and exciting, and getting a fair amount of notice. Naturally this was all opaque to me. I heard things about 'briefings' and gradually recognized that the briefings were often to quite senior officers. I know there were commendations and awards, but details were obscured.
November, 1999. Welcome to Virginia. August 04, 2006
Within a week Kirk reported to the Naval base for work. He went through the rigmarole of getting a pass and signing in, and walked onto the floor. Ah, they said, the Air Force guy. Right. Well, actually we’ve decided we don’t really want an info ops unit. Instead, you’re going to join the counter terrorism group. We’re putting you in charge of Y2K.
How to Defeat Y2K Without Really Trying August 07, 2006
Anyway, Kirk became the Y2K goat. There was already a counter-terrorism unit so he was sort of cobbled onto that, and had to suddenly come up to speed on the counter-terrorism world in a matter of weeks. His initial focus was supposed to be on the rollover situation. He did his research, looked into the whole thing thoroughly, and when the briefing came around, he was ready.
A New Approach to The Pamper Problem August 22, 2006
They had a pretty major coup within weeks of Kirk's arrival. As always I don't know details. I think it might be the incident that got a little publicity - the one that was to come through Canada. I do remember Kirk saying there were some Mounties somewhere that he really wanted to buy a drink. And I remember the quote from the unit commander when they gave the briefing after it was all over.
New Year, New World August 25, 2006
There was a silent battle going on, one most people still know nothing about. It had nothing to do with computers or millennium viruses. It was the fight for the next millennium, and it was deadly.
A Little (off-white, clunky) Security August 29, 2006
'They're going to put a secure line in the house,' Kirk announced one day. It was well after Y2K, and no naturally I don't know why. I also didn't ask.

Hmmm... a secure line. Like in 'get the president on the line' - the secure line.
Writing Reality August 31, 2006
So in the Spring or Summer of 2000 Kirk wrote up a little scenario that involved a large navy ship. The idea was that a few terrorists would load up a small zodiac - an inflatable boat with a great little engine and no draft - with explosives, then float it up right next to the ship and detonate it.

The navy was not amused. Their ships, their nice, big, powerful ships, were not vulnerable to things like this. Terrorists would never attack a heavily armed and armored vessel - it just didn't make sense. The scenario was disgarded, never seriously looked at.

The USS Cole was bombed on October 12th, 2000. 17 sailors were killed.
dual lives September 05, 2006
One afternoon we were driving up the highway outside of Langley. I was reading a magazine - the Smithsonian I think - and I was chatting to Kirk about an article discussing the greatest achievement of modern medicine: the successful campaign against smallpox. Wasn't it amazing, I said, the way the WHO had managed it, wasn't it wonderful that the world was safe now from a disease that had been a deadly threat for thousands of years. Very quietly, his hands stiff on the wheel, he said 'it's not gone.'

Just that. But I knew - I knew that not only did he know that more than one country had kept live samples of the virus, he knew intimately the infection rate, the symptoms, the horrific scarring that those lucky enough to survive would suffer. He knew how it could be weaponized, had thought about delivery systems, had worked through countless scenarios in which various populations were targeted and infected.

And gradually I realized that he was living like that constantly. Everywhere we went, there was part of him looking around and evaluating targets, thinking about blast zones, considering mortality rates, political value, public reaction.
Torn September 06, 2006
The intelligence world is a strange place, a place where sources and information are impossibly valuable and are fiercely guarded - not just from the enemy without, but from other intelligence branches. CIA, DIA - all of those 'men in black' view eachother with deep suspicion. They do not, to put it mildly, play well with others.

And then there was the entrenched mindset, the very conservative status quo above Kirk. The people at that level had come into the intel world during the cold war, and their focus had never really changed. They were used to a particular kind of enemy - one that was established, codified, predictable; a known quantity with a home to protect. They were extremely good at dealing with this enemy, they knew it cold. But the new world, the world of Bin Laden was not like that, and they were slow to change. So Kirk was endlessly fighting against people who did not want to listen, people who firmly believed they knew everything.
Dies Irae September 27, 2006
He had written it. He had suggested that a terrorist could use a commercial plane, one loaded wtih fuel, as an effective bomb. What if, he had written, what would we do if... and they had laughed. No one would do that. No one had ever done that. It has never happened before.

There are buildings that will be targeted, he said. Bin Laden failed once with the Trade Center - he's going to try again. And there are others, and he listed them. The Pentagon. The White House.
Regrets October 03, 2006
He was approached about going back - not into the military, but as a civilian. There were a couple of offers, and he did seriously think about it. It would mean uprooting again, returning to the East Coast and taking the kids out of school yet again. And it would mean accepting the counter-terrorism world as his world for the rest of his career; there would be no going back from this one.

It was a long, and drawn out decision. We talked endlessly, he called friends for advice, talked to people still in the world, tried to get a feel for what was happening. There was chaos of course. This hit the intel world hard, and people were still trying to sort out the aftermath. Much of it sounded good though - many of the people who were most blind, most hidebound and obstructionist were gone. Change was happening, change that had been needed for years. What sort of useful role Kirk could play, however, wasn't clear. In the end he was afraid that once again he would be drawn into a dark and horrible world and still be unable to make a difference.
There is so much more about Kirk von Ackerman at Missing In Iraq. I hope you'll take the time to read the blog. Please be sure to read the archives.

Recent articles on Al Qaeda Threat in the summer of 2001

Because of the sheer seriousness of the recent articles, I feel the need to include excerpts rather than just providing reference links as I might normally have done. This isn't about politics but rather about the need for the United States to make Counter Terrorism a higher priority. And that means respecting, listening to, and encouraging people like Kirk von Ackermann in the work they do. Even if what they say or think is too far outside of the box to be comfortable to the status quo.

Excerpts

Tenet Recalled Warning Rice By Dan Eggen and Robin Wright, Washington Post, October 3, 2006
According to the transcript, Tenet told Rice there were signs that there could be an al-Qaeda attack in weeks or perhaps months, that there would be multiple, simultaneous attacks causing major human casualties, and that the focus would be U.S. targets, facilities or interests. But the intelligence reporting focused almost entirely on the attacks occurring overseas, Tenet told the commission.
Two Months Before 9/11, an Urgent Warning to Rice Washington Post, October 1, 2006
On July 10, 2001, two months before the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, then-CIA Director George J. Tenet met with his counterterrorism chief, J. Cofer Black, at CIA headquarters to review the latest on Osama bin Laden and his al-Qaeda terrorist organization. Black laid out the case, consisting of communications intercepts and other top-secret intelligence showing the increasing likelihood that al-Qaeda would soon attack the United States. It was a mass of fragments and dots that nonetheless made a compelling case, so compelling to Tenet that he decided he and Black should go to the White House immediately.

Tenet called Condoleezza Rice, then national security adviser, from the car and said he needed to see her right away. There was no practical way she could refuse such a request from the CIA director.

For months, Tenet had been pressing Rice to set a clear counterterrorism policy, including specific presidential orders called "findings" that would give the CIA stronger authority to conduct covert action against bin Laden. Perhaps a dramatic appearance -- Black called it an "out of cycle" session, beyond Tenet's regular weekly meeting with Rice -- would get her attention.
As a side note, the threats appear to have been taken seriously enough for John Ashcroft to have stopped flying commercial airlines in July 2001. Ashcroft has denied receiving Tenet's briefing.

Rumsfeld, Ashcroft said to have received warning of attack By Jonathan S. Landay, Warren P. Strobel and John Walcott, McClatchy Newspapers, October 2, 2006
Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and former Attorney General John Ashcroft received the same CIA briefing about an imminent al-Qaida strike on an American target that was given to the White House two months before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.

The State Department's disclosure Monday that the pair was briefed within a week after then-National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice was told about the threat on July 10, 2001, raised new questions about what the Bush administration did in response, and about why so many officials have claimed they never received or don't remember the warning.
Ashcroft Flying High, CBS, July 26, 2001
In response to inquiries from CBS News over why Ashcroft was traveling exclusively by leased jet aircraft instead of commercial airlines, the Justice Department cited what it called a "threat assessment" by the FBI, and said Ashcroft has been advised to travel only by private jet for the remainder of his term.

Friday, September 08, 2006

Office of Hostage Affairs

The AFP released an article today that mentions the "Office of Hostage Affairs" at the US Embassy in Baghdad. It sounds like the same organization as the Hostage Working Group also at the US Embassy in Baghdad, first organized in the summer of 2004.

US reveals Iraq 'hostage affairs' office
AFP, September 8, 2006

The White House revealed what may be a US diplomatic first: the US embassy in Baghdad houses a formal "Office of Hostage Affairs" to handle abductions of American citizens and other nationals.

"The United States, through the Office of Hostage Affairs in Embassy Baghdad, is addressing the scourge of kidnapping in
Iraq, a key source of terrorist financing," the White House said in an official document. [...]

The White House offhandedly revealed the office's existence on Thursday in a document released to bolster a speech by US President George W. Bush about the war on terrorism he declared after the September 11 attacks.

More...
The following is the phrase from the White House referenced in the AFP article:

9/11 Five Years Later: Successes and Challenges
See under section heading: Disrupting Financial Support
White House, September 7, 2006
The United States, through the Office of Hostage Affairs in Embassy Baghdad, is addressing the scourge of kidnapping in Iraq, a key source of terrorist financing. Through interagency and international efforts, hostages have been freed and/or rescued.

Sunday, September 03, 2006

Ryan Manelick - in his office

Two photos of Ryan Manelick in his Iraq office in September 2003. For readers unfamilliar with the background of Manelick, he was a contractor working for Ultra Services of Istanbul, Turkey. Ultra Services fulfilled logistics for the US Army in Iraq. Manelick was shot and killed on December 14, 2003. His colleague, Kirk von Ackermann, disappeared on October 9, 2003. The CID recently determined von Ackermann was killed that day.

According to data collected by Iraq Coalition Casualty Count, Manelick was the 18th contractor to die in Iraq. Today the number of contractors who have died while working in Iraq is over 550 (see ref below).

Ryan Manelick
Ryan Manelick. Photo courtesy of Robert Sinclair.


Ryan Manelick
Ryan Manelick. Photo courtesy of Robert Sinclair.


Ref:
Civilian Drivers Feel Neglected After Working in Iraq
NPR, May 26, 2006, Morning Edition

Addendum: ABC News reported on September 27, 2006 that 643 contractors have been killed in Iraq according to data from the Department of Labor. The ABC News report includes video of a convoy under attack.

World News: Anatomy of an Ambush
with Brian Ross, ABC News, September 27, 2006

Saturday, August 19, 2006

An Update

CID has apparently determined that Kirk von Ackermann was killed on October 9, 2003.

From Missing in Iraq

...it's important to say that Kirk was killed. On October 9th, 2003, Kirk was killed by Iraqi hostiles when a kidnap attempt went horribly wrong.
Addendum: information on status of the investigation.

Tuesday, August 01, 2006

Two Weeks in Baghdad

by Robert Sinclair, guest writer at the Missing Man

I met Ryan [Manelick] in the Al-Hamra Hotel in the Al-Jadriah District of Baghdad.

Al-Jadriah District was then, in September 2003, a relatively quiet district in Baghdad. There was a police station about 100 metres away, which then was always lined with potential and hopeful recruits each morning. The Australian embassy was very close and as such there was sometimes a detachment of Australian troops in the hotel who would be guarding Australian Personnel. The Al-Hamra was the ‘other hotel’ that was largely populated by Europeans and American’s who were not in The Palestine or the Sheraton, both which were heavily guarded and hard to go in and out of. By contrast, the Al-Hamra was lightly guarded with only one or two guards at any time along with the inevitable bomb blocks and sealed and taped windows. The Al-Hamra provided a relatively safe haven for weary journalists and contractors. It had a relaxed atmosphere and each evening groups of dusty people would gather around the pool to eat, drink, to discuss their days and to bemoan certain happenings, restrictions and the inevitable security situation.

I was a ‘tourist’ in Baghdad. Ryan introduced himself to me on my first evening there. He asked what I was doing, I told him and he responded ‘Good luck. I have only met one tourist here before and he got shot a few weeks ago’. He laughed and bought me a drink.

Over the two weeks that I knew Ryan he came across as a very friendly and generous character. Ryan believed in living life to the full and he worked hard too. I had a huge respect for Ryan. He was young and was dumped into the middle of a dangerous situation to run a multi-million dollar business whilst his bosses were mainly in Turkey. He did have a ‘fixer’, who was the very able ex-colonel of The Republican Guard, Majid Kadom. I spent one day with Ryan, and he delighted in taking me to the airport Palace, which was of course then used by the American military. He knew that he should not show me some of the sights of the palace, but risked his status by driving me around the grounds, remarking that he was happy to show me something that very few people would ever get to see. That evening, I recall Ryan delighting in listening to a rendition of Ave Maria by a Canadian girl who was practicing for a charity concert she was to perform in. It was certainly a surreal experience hearing this whilst bunkered in the restaurant of the Al-Hamra, which was bricked up and had tape all over the windows, to counter the damage from explosive devices.

Robert Sinclair - waterskiing
Robert Sinclair waterskiing on the Tigris. Photo courtesy of Robert Sinclair.

I had decided to water ski on the Tigris and suggested to Ryan that he might like to come too. His enthusiasm was infectious; however, we had no skis. Ryan set a contact on to designing a pair of skis for us. When this failed, he ordered his contact to ‘procure’ a pair. This happened. Ryan then drove us, along with some armed guards, to the Tigris. Majid Kadom was very nervous about the whole affair. One bank of the river was safe for us, yet the other was where there were a lot of drunks and also Saddam loyalists – the bank that we were skiing from. It was only as we were getting into the boat that Ryan told me that he had never been on water skis. This amused me and I thought how typical of Ryan to risk being shot at whilst performing his debut ski. In the event, I am proud to say that Ryan managed to get up on one (!) ski for a few wobbly moments. I was very proud of him. He also boogey boarded along the Tigris.

In his typically generous way, Ryan organised for safe transport for me to leave Baghdad at a moments notice. He also offered to loan me some money, as I was short of cash. Ryan was an interesting and informed character, who was often smiling, was kind hearted and too trusting. His death saddened me – he was one of life’s givers and doers – a rare commodity. I remember him to have huge affection for his family and he often spoke of his Father. It would be nice to think that his murderers will be found and punished in that hot, dusty lawless country. He helped me to have two memorable and rich weeks in Baghdad.

Robert Sinclair, Ryan Manelick, and Majid Kadom were featured in an article in a popular British tabloid: My Waterski Hol on Saddam River by Philip Cardy, The Sun, September 22, 2003

See previous posts:


Waterskiing on the Tigris

Waterskiing on the Tigris - Part 2

Saturday, July 29, 2006

Index

The following is a list of all posts at the Missing Man. It will be updated as new posts appear.

Note: In May of 2008, I added labels (also known as 'tags') to help locate related posts. A list of the labels is shown in the lower right hand side bar.

Truthout - Intelligence Witheld from Congress
June 13, 2011

Truthout - Unasked Questions
May 23, 2011

Dead Contractors
May 10, 2011

Counter Terrorism and JFIC
May 6, 2011

The Gossip Grapevine or the Anatomy of a Lie
April 14, 2011

Timothy E. Bell - missing 7 years
April 8, 2011

Infrared Video
March 20, 2011

The Birthday Boys - theater
March 6, 2011

Captivity - book
March 4, 2011

Old Photos
March 2, 2011

Hostage Negotiation
March 1, 2011

DBA Summary Reports at the Dept of Labor
February 25, 2011

Reading Room - bibliography of missing person resources
February 22, 2011

Missing Deserter
February 15, 2011

Kidnap & Rescue - Discovery Channel
February 1, 2011

Bob Hamza - missing
January 23, 2011

AP Article on Missing Americans
January 21, 2011

Homeland TV Pilot
January 7, 2011

Happy New Year
January 1, 2011

State Department Statistics
December 31, 2010

SIGACT Reports of Americans Missing in Iraq
December 17, 2010

New WikiLeaks Release - kidnapping reports
October 25, 2010

Come Hell or High Water
September 24, 2010

Coming Soon - Buried
September 5, 2010

Fantasy Finale
August 22, 2010

Joint Personnel Recovery Agency
August 13, 2010

Issa Salomi
August 12, 2010

August 8, 2010

Americans Missing in Iraq - - chart of missing Americans (master)
August 1, 2010
This chart is subject to revision and update.

July 29, 2010

July 25, 2010

July 9, 2010

July 8, 2010

June 28, 2010

June 21, 2010

Iraq Personnel Revocery Division June 2010 - chart of missing Americans
June 15, 2010

Searching for One White Nissan Patrol in Iraq
June 8, 2010

News on the South African Hostages
May 17, 2010

Miles Per Gallon
May 9, 2010

Jeffrey Ake - missing since April 11, 2005 - chart of missing Americans
April 11, 2010

Op-Ed on Hostage Reporting - strange editorial
April 9, 2010

Aerial Surveillance Footage - pt 2
April 6, 2010

Reintegration Program for Hostages
April 6, 2010

Lawsuit Filed Against US State Department
March 31, 2010

Issa Salomi - released
March 28, 2010

Alan McMenemy of Scotland
March 21, 2010

Evidence - physical and other
March 6, 2010

Foreign Affairs Manual - hostage and missing
March 5, 2010

1457 Civilian Contractors Have Died in Iraq
March 01, 2010

AFP - update on Issa Salomi
February 28, 2010

Route Clemson
February 24, 2010

DoD Instruction 1300.18 - update
February 22, 2010

Kidnapping
February 16, 2010

Uncertainty surrounding al-Taayie
February 14, 2010

Former Xe guards asked to leave Iraq
February 11, 2010


18 Americans Missing in Iraq - February 2010
February 08, 2010

Salomi and al-Taayie
February 06, 2010

Contractor Kidnapped in Iraq
February 05, 2010

Buried at Sundance
February 03, 2010

1459 Civilian Contractors Have Died in Iraq
February 01, 2010

Aerial Surveillance Footage
January 27, 2010

Questions for John Dawkins
January 18, 2010

Reading
January 15, 2010

T. Christian Miller on Fresh Air - radio interview
January 11, 2010

A Sliver of Justice - thank you note
January 10, 2010

Safety in Afghanistan
December 30, 2009

Roy Hallums Memoir
November 29, 2009

Americans Missing in Iraq - November 2009 - chart
November 30, 2009

Dream - about Ryan Manelick & Kirk von Ackermann
October 30, 2009

Wild Dogs - Anaconda burn pits
October 20, 2009

Heads
October 19, 2009

Six Years
October 9, 2009

Quiet on the Western Front
September 28, 2009

Hostage Remains Released to UK
September 2, 2009

Who Killed Jim Kitterman?
August 7, 2009

Remains of Capt Speicher found and Identified
August 2, 2009

Two More UK Hostages Believed Dead
August 1, 2009

Wandering Patrols
July 25, 2009

Update on Kitterman
July 20, 2009

New Satellite Imagery (satellite image)
July 19, 2009

Iraq Transition & Missing Americans in Iraq
June 25, 2009

Bodies of Two UK Hostages Identified
June 21, 2009

Satellite Phone GPS
June 20, 2009

Satellite Phone Delay
June 20, 2009

Contractor abducted and killed in Iraq with updates - photo
May 24, 2009

Weirdness
May 22, 2009

Website for Joint Base Balad
May 20, 2009

Contractors and Overseas Clinics
May 7, 2009

Tire
May 5, 2009

25 Fraud Investigations Underway
April 22, 2009

Iraq Contractors Fight for Care
April 17, 2009

FOIA Update
April 16, 2009

New Ruling on 2003 Iraq Fraud
April 11, 2009

Holder Memo
March 28, 2009

Contractor Deployment Guide
March 26, 2009

Base Access - images of id badges
March 20, 2009

Annual Longshore Conference - image
March 3, 2009

Appeal
February 23, 2009

Super Double Secret
February 21, 2009

New Remains Identified - Fouty and Jimenez
February 20, 2009

New Graft in Iraq Investigation
February 15, 2009

Colin Freeman - video
February 7, 2009

POW/MIA - National Security Act of 1947 - image
February 6, 2009

Rejection
January 23, 2009

The Missing Personal Effects - map
January 2, 2009

Defense Base Act vs War Hazards Compensation Act - graphic
December 23, 2008

Websites of Interest
December 15, 2008

Un-Justice for a Contractor in Iraq
December 11, 2008

Ultra Services Procured Cars - translation French news article
December 3, 2008

Contractor Fatalities as of September 2008
December 2, 2008

Book - Big Boy Rules by Steve Fainaru - image
November 23, 2008

Satellite Image of the Road - map & link
November 22, 2008

Passing Patrol & the Checkpoint - map, satellite image
November 21, 2008

From Point A to Point B
November 20, 2008

Five Years
November 12, 2008

Anaconda Burn Pit - photos
November 4, 2008

Ronald Schulz - remains recovered photo
October 30, 2008

Iraq Court Conviction in Kidnapping
October 28, 2008

Defense Base Act Conference
October 24, 2008

Defense Intelligence Agency - on hostages
October 13, 2008

Phone Taps
October 9, 2008

Baghdad to Samarra (map)
October 4, 2008

The Big Base Near Balad (map)
September 27, 2008

National POW/MIA Recognition Day (photos)
September 19, 2008

Security
August 31, 2008

Omar Taleb and Omar Hadi
August 28, 2008

Ahmed al-Taie (photo)
August 24, 2008

Curse of the al Dulaimi Hotel - Pt II (image)
August 16, 2008

Curse of the al Dulaimi Hotel - Pt I (image)
August 4, 2008

Casualty Status of Missing
July 26, 2008

Iraq, Contractors, and the Missing Persons Act
July 24, 2008

Remains of Two Missing Soldiers Identified (video & photos)
July 13, 2008

Map of Camp Anaconda (image & photo)
June 21, 2008

Technical
June 12, 2008

The Missing Notebook (image)
June 11, 2008

Irex Ltd (graphic)
June 2, 2008

Americans Missing in Iraq - June 2008 (photos)
June 1, 2008

Contractor Casualties: An Update
May 26, 2008

Spring Cleaning
May 25, 2008

Questions (von Ackermann)
May 13, 2008

Suspects
April 28, 2008

Time Line - Work in Progress (table)
April 27, 2008

Note to CID - about the NSA (chart)
April 21, 2008

Missing Contractor: U.S. Military Mechanics May Hold the Keys (full article reprint)
By Susie Dow, ePluribus Media, April 21, 2008

Could U.S. Military Mechanics Hold the Keys to Finding Missing Contractor? - my article at ePluribus Media
April 21, 2008

Unanswered Questions - Ryan Manelick
April 14, 2008

Most Wanted - unrelated
April 12, 2008

Health
April 10, 2008

LSA Anaconda - Virtual Tour & Dump (video)
April 08, 2008

Short Note
April 6, 2008

The Demountable Guard Shack (images, screen caps)
April 6, 2008

The Mind of Susie Dow (fiction - my conjecture of events)
April 6, 2008

Into A Dark Place
April 6, 2008

LSA Anaconda - Motor Pool (video, photo)
April 3, 2008

LSA Anaconda - General (satellite image, photo)
April 3, 2008

Americans Missing in Iraq (photos)
March 31, 2008

Thoughts on Conspiracy
March 27, 2008

The Bridge Theory (graphic, chart)
March 25, 2008

Sun, Moon, Weather Data (graphic)
March 17, 2008

Nice White Land Cruiser (images) - driven by Manelick's assailants
March 09, 2008

Ryan Manelick's Hyundai Galloper (images)
March 9, 2008

Kirk von Ackermann's Nissan Patrol SUV (images)
March 5, 2008

Ultra Services - Who, What, Where (photos)
February 19, 2008

Still Missing
February 16, 2008

Military Bases in North East Iraq (maps)
February 12, 2008

The Tikrit & Kirkuk Road (video, satellite image, photos)
January 24, 2008

Jabal Hamrin and Jabal Makhul (satellite image, photo & maps)
January 5, 2008

FOB Pacesetter (satellite image, photo & maps)
December 26, 2007

Safa Shukir & the Phone Call (photo)
December 9, 2007

Kirk's Car
December 4, 2007

Testimony at Oversight Hearing
November 24, 2007

Majid Kadom
September 27, 2007

Contractor Casualties - 1,001
August 10, 2007

Manelick in South Africa (image)
May 25, 2007

We Get Mail (image of ID badge)
April 18, 2007

The ID Badge
April 14, 2007

Jeffrey Ake
April 11, 2007

The Defense Base Act - insurance for contractors
April 6, 2007

Iraq, Contingency Contracting and the Defense Base Act (reprint)
March 4, 2007

Death of a Contractor (image)
February 26, 2007

Obituary for Kirk von Ackermann
January 16, 2007

Von Ackermann in AP Article
January 6, 2007

Light Reading
December 6, 2006

Dia De Los Muertos
October 27, 2006

TV Ads in Iraq
October 14, 2006

Counter terrorism and Kirk von Ackermann (see Missing in Iraq)
October 8, 2006

Office of Hostage Affairs (also see post on Hostage Working Group)
September 8, 2006

Ryan Manelick - in his office (photos)
September 3, 2006

An Update (von Ackermann presumed dead)
August 19, 2006

Two Weeks in Baghdad by Robert Sinclair, guest writer
August 1, 2006

Missing Man Index
July 29, 2006

Ryan Manelick Iraq 2003 (photo)
July 1, 2006

USA Today Article - side bar (image)
June 30, 2006

13 Americans Still Missing
June 21, 2006

One Missing One Dead: An Iraq Contractor in the Fog of War (full article reprint)
By Susie Dow, ePluribus Media, May 21, 2006

An Iraq Contractor in the Fog of War (summary of my article)
May 18, 2006

About Geoff Nordloh (photo)
May 18, 2006

For Kids in Iraq
May 2, 2006

Hostage Working Group
April 1, 2006

FBI
March 30, 2006

Missing in Iraq (von Ackermann family blog)
March 24, 2006

Technorati
March 12, 2006

Kidnapped and Missing in Iraq
March 12, 2006

Letter of Appreciation (image)
March 8, 2006

Waterskiing on the Tigris - Part 2 (photo)
February 18, 2006

One Year
February 16, 2006

Joint Service Commendation (image)
January 26, 2006

Wikipedia
December 10, 2005

A Book
November 27, 2005

Obituary for Ryan Manelick
September 13, 2005

Waterskiing on the Tigris
August 8, 2005

Bibliography
August 4, 2005

Short Clip
July 7, 2005

An Open Request
June 29, 2005

Reports of Corruption in Iraq
June 7, 2005

Fighting Fraud and Corruption
June 7, 2005

Memorial Day
May 30, 2005

WGAL
May 14, 2005

The Investigation
April 16, 2005

Editor's Note
March 12, 2005

Stratex Freedom Services (for complete details see One Missing, One Dead)
March 12, 2005

Irex Corp (inaccurate - see One Missing, One Dead)
March 5, 2005

A Grave Discovery
March 3, 2005

Bloggers
March 3, 2005

Letters to the Editor - Sojourner
February 27, 2005

Radio
February 26, 2005

Ultra Services (for a more complete history see One Missing, One Dead)
February 24, 2005

Sakhalin
February 22, 2005

Sojourner
February 20, 2005

A Sudden Flurry
February 18, 2005

Ryan Manelick
February 17, 2005

Kirk von Ackermann
February 16, 2005

Into Thin Air
February 16, 2005

Frequently Asked Questions
February 16, 2005 (back dated)

Introduction
February 16, 2005

Question (reprinted from my old blog)
June 1, 2004

Kirk von Ackermann (reprinted from my old blog)
January 1, 2004

The Employer of a Missing Man (reprinted from my old blog)
November 12, 2003

Saturday, July 01, 2006

Ryan Manelick Iraq 2003

This is a photo of Ryan Manelick (right) taken in Iraq in 2003.

Manelick was killed just after leaving a meeting at a base on December 14, 2003 by an unidentified gunman. Shortly before he died, he maintained the disappearance of his colleague, Kirk von Ackermann, was connected to fraud. Both worked for Ultra Services of Istanbul, Turkey. Ultra Services fulfilled logistics contracts for the US Army in Iraq.

The murder of Ryan Manelick is still under investigation.

Friday, June 30, 2006

USA Today Article - side bar

There seems to be alot more attention from the press to those still missing in Iraq since the kidnapping and later discovery of the bodies of U.S. Army Pfc. Kristian Menchaca and Pfc. Thomas Tucker. Details in the article on what happened to the two men are really gruesome. I've decided not to recount those details here.

Military releases new details about killing, recovery of kidnapped soldiers
From the Associated Press, USA Today, June 27, 2006
In a statement that provided additional details of the killings, the military said the bodies of U.S. Army Pfc. Kristian Menchaca of Houston and Pfc. Thomas Tucker of Madras were found at 7:50 p.m. on June 19 not far from where they were abducted when insurgents attacked their checkpoint.

The military said it waited until the next morning to recover the bodies because an Iraqi in the area had warned that the area was booby-trapped.

More...
Kirk von Ackermann is listed with Timothy Bell, Aban Elias, Sadeq Mohammed Sadeq, and Jeffrey Ake in a side bar to the above article titled Americans Still Missing.
Kirk von Ackermann, 37, contractor from Moss Beach, Calif., disappeared Oct. 9, 2003, while driving alone between Tikrit and Kirkuk; kidnapping suspected.
Earlier articles on the fate of Pfc. Kristian Menchaca and Pfc. Thomas Tucker also included the same side bar.

Military: Missing soldiers found dead
By Cesar G. Soriano, USA Today, June 20, 2006

Soldiers' bodies recovered
by Kim Gamel, AP, June 21, 2006

Rules usually protect GIs from capture
by Ryan Lenz, AP, June 21, 2006

Wednesday, June 21, 2006

13 Americans Still Missing

Brief mention today of Kirk von Ackermann in two articles from the Associated Press on Americans missing in Iraq.

13 Americans still listed as missing
AP, June 20, 2006

American military spokesman Maj. Gen. William Caldwell said Tuesday that there were still 13 Americans missing in Iraq — two soldiers and 11 civilians.

He identified the two soldiers as Sgt. Matt Maupin, missing since April 2004, and Capt. Michael Speicher, a Navy pilot missing since the 1991 Persian Gulf War.

"There are also 11 American citizens that today are still listed as missing in action," he said without identifying them. "Either DOD contractors, civilian contractors or others, but American citizens that have been reported as missing over the last three years."

An Associated Press tally shows the following five U.S. civilians still missing:
Kirk von Ackermann, 37: Contractor from Moss Beach, Calif., disappeared Oct. 9, 2003, while driving alone between Tikrit and Kirkuk; kidnapping suspected.

• Timothy Bell, 44: Contractor for Halliburton subsidiary KBR, of Mobile, Ala., disappeared April 9, 2004, after a fuel convoy attack.

• Aban Elias, 41: Iraqi-American engineer from Denver, was seized by the Islamic Rage Brigade on May 3, 2004.

• Sadeq Mohammed Sadeq: Lebanese-American who formerly worked for Virginia-based contractor SkyLink USA, was kidnapped from his home in Baghdad on Nov. 2, 2004.

• Jeffrey Ake, 47: Contract worker from LaPorte, Ind., was abducted April 11, 2005, while working at a water treatment plant near Baghdad.
A second article, also from the AP, includes similar information.

American soldiers and civilians kidnapped or missing in Iraq
AP, June 21, 2006