Wary of putting combat troops in Iraq, the U.S. government is gauging
contractors' interest in advising the Iraqi Defense Ministry and
Counter Terrorism Service in a range of capacities, including force
development, logistics and planning and operations.
The U.S. Army Contracting Command posted a notice last month seeking contractors willing to work on an initial 12-month contract, who should be "cognizant of the goals of reducing tensions between Arabs and Kurds, and Sunni and Shias."
They would focus on administration, force development, procurement and acquisition, contracting, training management, public affairs, logistics, personnel management, professional development, communications, planning and operations, infrastructure management, intelligence and executive development, the notice stated.
Those services "fall within the existing mission" of the Office of Security Assistance-Iraq, "which is to help build institutional capacity of Iraq's security ministries," Defense Department spokesman Commander Bill Speaks said in an email.
Read Morre: Instead of Boots on the Ground, US Seeks Iraq Contractors | Military.com
The U.S. Army Contracting Command posted a notice last month seeking contractors willing to work on an initial 12-month contract, who should be "cognizant of the goals of reducing tensions between Arabs and Kurds, and Sunni and Shias."
They would focus on administration, force development, procurement and acquisition, contracting, training management, public affairs, logistics, personnel management, professional development, communications, planning and operations, infrastructure management, intelligence and executive development, the notice stated.
Those services "fall within the existing mission" of the Office of Security Assistance-Iraq, "which is to help build institutional capacity of Iraq's security ministries," Defense Department spokesman Commander Bill Speaks said in an email.
Read Morre: Instead of Boots on the Ground, US Seeks Iraq Contractors | Military.com
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