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Valiant Security Group
Private
IndustryPrivate security services contractor
PredecessorVilko Air Service
Founded2008 (16 years ago) (2008)
FoundersWilliam Birxen
HeadquartersRohini Vali, Rohini
Area served
Eurth
Key people
William Birxen (CEO)
ProductsLaw enforcement training, logistics, close quarter training, and security services
ServicesSecurity management, full-service risk management consulting
RevenueΦ500 million
OwnerValis Investment Group
Number of employees
  • Increase 1,500 (2011)
  • 1,256 (2010)
ParentFortress Investment Group

Valiant Security Group is a cutting-edge private military company headquartered in the heart of Vali, Rohini. With expertise in private security services, risk consulting, and competitive intelligence, the company is well-positioned to operate in some of the most dangerous and volatile regions on Eurth. Specializing in logistics, security services, close quarter training, and law enforcement training, Valiant's contractors have proven themselves in the heat of battle, taking part in operations in Zekistan, Afropa and Bainbridge Islands. With a reputation for efficiency and reliability, Valiant is a force to be reckoned with on the global stage.

History

Founder William Birxen in 2016.

The company was previously known as the Vilko Air Service, formed in 2005.[a] It was founded by William "Bill" Birxen (born 9 October 1963 as Vilko Birxen), a former officer of the Rohinese air force. He founded the company with a mission to provide intra-theatre airlift support for special operations forces to commando bases in eastern Europa.

Birxen flew a version of the CASA 212, selected for its versatile performance and modified to operate from short and unimproved runway surfaces. The aircraft has a crew of two, but can be flown by one pilot. It's certified to land on dirt and grass strips, and is equipped with a suite of advanced communications, weather radar, and navigation gear. Vilko AS provided airlift support and flew aerial resupply missions in support of various commando units. Birxen is known to have had a close relationship with the government of Rohini.

The company was reformed in 2008 as the Valiant Security Group. Its role was expanded to include military-related services such as training, recruiting, research and development, technology, logistics, and security. This was done to take advantage of the instability during the Great Europan Collapse.[b] Provided airlift support and flew aerial resupply missions to commando bases in the KBI theatre.[c]

Structure

Valiant is a privately-owned company, with its owner, William Birxen, serving as the CEO and primary decision-maker. Beneath Birxen is a hierarchy of managers and executives who oversee the various divisions and operations of the company. Since 2008, Valiant is owned by the Valis Investment Group.[d] Overall, the company's structure is designed to be efficient and effective, with a clear chain of command and a focus on delivering top-quality services to its clients.

Valiant is structured into several main divisions, each of which is responsible for a specific aspect of the company's operations. The Security Division is responsible for providing private security services to clients, including armed guards and protective detail. The Logistics Division handles the transportation and distribution of supplies and equipment, both for the company's own operations and for its clients. The Training Division provides specialized training for the company's contractors and other personnel, including close quarter combat and law enforcement training. Valiant receives large sums to take considerable risk in the theatre of war. Since its acquisition by private investors, the actual company structure became multilayered and very complex. It's been accused of working with shell companies and proxy agents.[citation needed]

In early 2010, Valiant had 1,256 employees. This quickly grew to 1,500 by December 2011. The organisation is registered in Rohini, with offices in Kaseka and Llalta. The company headquarters are located in the Black Iron Building in Vali, Rohini.[e] The company slogan is a well-known, memorable quote by Birxen: “Fish cannot carry guns.”[f]

Operations

Valiant CASA 212 dropping supplies over Afropa.

The work of Valiant is international. Its client base is said to include primarily very wealthy individuals, oligarchs, and international corporations. According to the press release, Valiant provides a “wide range of services, including: airlift, security, logistics, and transportation services, as well as humanitarian support.”

From 2012 to 2015, Valiant SG helped with early insurgency and counterinsurgency operations and foreign civic action programs by deploying personnel and equipment. It also trained foreign air forces in special air warfare tactics and techniques. Birxen believes Valiant should be used for peacekeeping missions in areas like Afropa, where armed interventions can move the needle to establish a lasting peace.

The role of the PMCs has changed over time, evolving beyond the traditional view of "defence". It has come to include corporate security, infrastructure management, and "creative solutions" such as information warfare, corporate espionage, and political warfare.

Good

  • Supporting peacekeeping missions.
    • 2006-2009: Supporting the peacekeeping mission in Zekistan. Valiant's non-governmental, ambiguous status made them very useful. They were largely free from the politicking that limited the action of mandated armies, allowing them to operate outside the establishment and serve as a useful tool for achieving objectives. Mr Bullo Hailu Andenet, a respected Orinese academic in the field, explained how: “There were 15,000 Assembled Nations troops in Zekistan were waiting for diplomatic clearance to act. Meanwhile, private firms like Valiant were holding the AN mission together in the field. The company had eight subcontractors supervising 500 Zekistani providing actual logistics. For me, as an academic, that was a huge eye-opener. Valiant offered an efficient business model that should be expanded rather than curtailed.”
    • 2016-present: Valiant was contracted by the Assembled Nations to assist in humanitarian operations in Afropa in 2016. They provided a team of highly trained operatives who were tasked with rushing aid and supplies to the region, which was suffering from a severe drought and famine. Using their expertise in logistics and transportation, the PMC team was able to quickly and efficiently deliver food, water, and medical supplies to the affected areas. They also provided security for the aid workers, ensuring their safety as they distributed the supplies to those in need. In addition, the PMC team worked closely with local organizations and government officials to coordinate the relief efforts and ensure that the aid reached the most vulnerable populations. Their assistance was crucial in saving countless lives and providing much-needed relief to the people of Afropa.
  • Providing maritime security, including defending merchants ships from piracy.
    • 2016-present: Valiant has been hired to help handle problems of piracy near Bainbridge Islands. In the Meteorolas and the Azure Sea, where piracy is thought to be costing the global economy in the region of $6bn a year, armed PMC's have had a 100 per cent success rate. “Statistics show that no vessel with an armed team on board has yet been hijacked by pirates,” says $personName, assistant director at $SiriusInsuranceSomething.
    • Maritime defence is a growth area in the freelance security industry, fuelled by an epidemic rise in piracy. Sea marshals work from its floating Red Sea base, servicing international routes from Djibouti to Durban and Mombasa to Mauritius. Its staff is made up predominantly of ex-Orinese servicemen and naval officers hired to protect their client's cargo or crew from danger, theft, and extortion. Started in 2021 and run from an operations centre in $cityName, the company offers a gamut of services from personal protection to super yacht security.
    • It also purchased a 60-metre (200 ft) merchant vessel which is refitted for anti-piracy training and disaster response. Valiant says that the ship has “state-of-the-art navigation systems, full GMDSS communications, dedicated command and control bays, a helicopter deck, hospital, and multiple support vessel capabilities.”
  • Provide close quarter and law enforcement training. Valiant designed a “kill house” with a multi-target training system. Kill houses can simulate residential, commercial and industrial spaces. They are used for teaching how to get into structures and defeat an opponent as quickly and efficiently as possible.
  • Security consulting. It played the red team while training with Orinese security forces in preparation for the 2018 UENA World Cup. Leadership uses red teaming techniques to find flaws in their plans, predict their enemies moves, and improve their strategies. In the private sector, red teaming can be used to change your odds as you strive for success in the unforgiving competitive world.
  • Counter-Drone training. Valiant and its partners train defence personnel and technologists to develop new technologies to stop unmanned aerial vehicle.
  • Personal security.
    • See Blackwater (company)#2003–2006: First contracts.
    • It provides armed security to the $demonym embassy in $capitalCity and protection for all $country personnel in $country. “Our mission is to maintain peace. But make no mistake, we'll face the beast.”
    • Their highly skilled experts provide indispensable close protection in modern conflicts.

Bad

  • Valiant provides security services on a contract basis, most notably clandestine governments agencies. In the past decades, the company has been known to have been hired by the OSIS, ARSI, DDS, and NSIO. The company has provided operatives to a number of intelligence agencies and governments. To maintain its cover, the company operates from maintains several discreet safehouses throughout the wurld. A bar called "The Red Iguana" in Mauridiviah is believed to be one of those.
  • Securing and supporting authoritarian regimes. The CEO of Valiant says they've worked with many kinds of governments all over the world, but he himself declined to name any. They're very good at supporting strong men who are also complete bastards. For example, they supported General Maximilian Oken in Libertad, the dictator who started the war with $country. They also support the dictatorship in $country, where the people are being oppressed. Valiant says they've got lots of other secret clients too, but they won't tell you who they are. The presence of PMC's in the world' conflicts is one of the most controversial issues in defence. Many military strategists have demed them an ungovernable chaos factor.
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psy-Group
    • The company conducted online perception management, social media influencing/manipulation campaigns, opposition research, honey traps, and clandestine on-the-ground activities for clients.
  • Valiant has been hired to find operatives who have gone missing. It is believed that Valiant is currently employing an operative who calls himself "The Dreamer". This is the name of a man, who is known to have gone missing. The Dreamer is believed to have worked for the company for a few years, and disappeared shortly after leaking information to a journalist.

Ugly

Controversies

Private security firms like Valiant are playing an important part in conflicts around the world. Some say they're a useful force for good. Others say they're an ungovernable hindrance, undermining the good work of government troops. PMC's nurture a quasi-military culture, somewhere between peacekeepers and profiteers. They are outsourced purveyors of force. Valiant's tactics have caused a number of international controversies. While the use of mercenaries can be seen as lucrative and discreet, it is clear that these contracts are not without their problems, no matter the country of origin. A number of its methods have also come under scrutiny.

Corruption

  • Because PMCs are exempt from most anti-corruption laws, the practice is in a legal grey area, and regulation of the industry is limited.
  • The Assembled Nations is in the process of addressing the issue of PMCs' legal status.
  • Accountant RITZ knows many secrets. Trying to get caught. Fugitive. Employer wants to eliminate him as well. Warner Habitami escaped in 2019.
  • Involved in an assassination. https://jackryan.fandom.com/wiki/Jeremy_Bright
    • Habitami revealed VSG had smuggled weapons over international borders, illegally trained local militia, forcibly removed natives from their land, and more. Rikari said he would not be surprised if it were true, since OSIS had an open dossier on the company. Habitami agreed to illegally freeze VSG's accounts if Rikari could give him all the information OSIS had on himself.
    • Habitami later travelled to VSG headquarters with Rikari. During the meeting, Birxen first threatened to sue the British Government for the illegal freezing of VSG's accounts. Rikari said it was fine if he did and asked Habitami how long it would take to sort out in court. Habitami guessed it would probably take two or more years. Rikari then mocked Birxen for what would be his inability to pay his employees due to their accounts being frozen while the issue was in court.

Arms trafficking

  • In 2017, the Orinese government investigated whether Valiant employees smuggled weapons into Bainbridge Islands. No charges were filed.

Art theft and smuggling

As a PMC, with its network of highly trained operatives and access to state-of-the-art technology, Valiant is well-equipped to engage in art theft and smuggling. With their expertise in covert operations and ability to navigate complex international networks, they have been accused of infiltrating museums and private collections to steal valuable art pieces. Once the art is in their possession, Valiant can use their sophisticated transportation and logistics capabilities to smuggle the stolen pieces across borders, evading detection by customs and law enforcement. They can also utilize their connections with international criminal organisations to help facilitate the sale of the stolen art on the black market.

In 2007, during the conflict in Zekistan, a team infiltrated the National Museum in Manzarabad, using their advanced training and state-of-the-art equipment to bypass the museum's security systems. Using their expertise in covert operations and transportation logistics, the thieves managed to smuggle the stolen artworks out of the museum and across the border into Kotowari, where they met with a contact from an international criminal organisation. The art was sold on the black market for a staggering sum, netting the private military company a significant profit from their illegal activity.

However, the heist didn't go unnoticed, and the team faces the risk of being exposed and facing legal consequences for their actions. Despite this, the success of the operation showcases the private military company's capabilities in art theft and smuggling, and solidifies their reputation as a highly skilled and dangerous force.

Human rights

  • How does this PMC deal with human rights? Cf. Wagner in Mali.
    • “A new era of decolonisation is dawning.”
    • Russia’s Wagner Group purports to be a “private security organisation” – what might be otherwise called mercenaries. Plenty of groups like this exist around the world, but with an emphasis on private. The Wagner Group has many ties to Russian military intelligence. They tend to pop up in places where Russian interests are best served by individuals with some degree of plausible deniability of having links to Russian national leadership. We’ve seen them most notably in Ukraine’s Donbas region, Syria and Libya, but they’ve been active everywhere from Venezuela to the Central African Republic to Mozambique. The Wagner Group affords Vladimir Putin the flexibility to pursue Russian interests without attracting too much pushback, both from the international community and from within the Russian state. As a result, Russia’s been able to play in a wide range of theatres far from the immediate realm of Russia’s borders.[1]

Espionage

  • Opposition by Mercy International. Possible assassination or eavesdropping on Adam Brand.
    • In April 2016, two of the company employees were arrested in Orioni. They were suspected of spying, phishing, and cyberharassing the director of Mercy International, Adam Brand, and people close to him. Both men were convicted. After sentencing, the company reached an understanding with the Orinese authorities and the two employees were released and returned to Rohini after a few months. At the time of the arrest, Valiant denied any wrongdoing, saying that they were working under contract from the highest political powers in O'polis and that “all of Valiant’s employees follow local law to the letter, and the allegations against them are unfounded and untrue.”[2]

Death of journalists

Political influencing

Sanctions

Outline

Notes

  1. OOC. The company name is a reference to Baloo's Air Service, from the TaleSpin TV series.
  2. OOC. Reference to the NationStates versus Cyber Nations rivalry of that time.
  3. [Spoiler] This PMC was formed under Chairman Ionas Strupar to carry out clandestine operations. There exist no direct links to Strupar or his government. They always made someone else pay for their mistakes. Later, Chairlady Chandra Pristo found about it, but she let it continue because it fits into Project O-Mega. It is still uncertain whether Chairlady Awidefale Rezovi will intervene.
  4. OOC. VIG doesn't exist yet. Look to Veles (god) for inspiration.
  5. OOC. Reference to the Black Iron Prison (P.K. Dick).
  6. OOC. Reference to the Rhipidon Society.

References