Vinnell

Vinnell Corporation
Company typeSubsidiary
Founded1931 (1931) in Alhambra, California
FounderAllan S. Vinnell
Headquarters,
United States
Parent

The Vinnell Corporation is an international private military company based in Herndon, Virginia,[1] United States, specializing in military training, logistics, and support in the form of weapon systems maintenance and management consultancy. Vinnell Corporation is a subsidiary of Northrop Grumman Corporation. They are also party to other joint-venture companies, e.g. Vinnell-Brown & Root (VBR). The Vinnell Corporation was mentioned in Fahrenheit 9/11 for its connections to the Carlyle Group, George W. Bush, and the Saudi Royal family.

They conducted training of portions of the Saudi Arabian National Guard as a joint Saudi/American owned company called Vinnell Arabia since the 1970s.[2] Vinnell Arabia was bombed on May 12, 2003 by Saudi terrorists. Eight Americans and two Filipinos were killed. Another employee was stalked from the military hospital to his home in Riyadh and assassinated on the street.

Vinnell Corporation was given the initial contract to recreate the New Iraqi Army in 2003 by the U.S. Department of Defense.[3] The contract was for nine battalions, with an option to extend the training to 27 battalions. Much of the actual training, however, was subcontracted to Military Professional Resources Inc., Science Applications International Corporation (recruiting stations, with a poster campaign), and smaller firms including Eagle Group International (which appears to have provided medical training), Omega Training Group, and Worldwide Language Resources.[4] There were early indications that the training was not going well; "too much emphasis on classroom studies of strategy and tactics and not enough on basic combat skills.."[5] and later trainees broke when committed to action in Fallujah. As a result, the second phase was taken over by the United States Army.

  1. ^ "Contact Us". Vinnell Arabia. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  2. ^ Fiscal year 1976 and July-September 1976 transition, pt. 2, pp. 494, 529.
  3. ^ Spearin, Christopher. "A Justified Heaping of the Blame? An Assessment of Privately Supplied Security Sector Training and Reform in Iraq - 2003-2005 and Beyond." In Military Advising and Assistance: From Mercenaries to Privatisation, 1815 - 2007, edited by Donald Stoker: Routledge, 2008.
  4. ^ Deborah Avant, "The Market for Force," Cambridge University Press, 2005, 124.
  5. ^ Dean Calbreath, “Iraqi army, police fall short on training,” San Diego Union-Tribune, 4 July 2004; Ariana Eunjung Cha, “Recruits Abandon Iraqi Army,” Washington Post, 13 December 2003, page A1, via Avant 2005.

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