Matthew VanDyke. All photos courtesy of VanDyke
Matthew VanDyke. All photos courtesy of VanDyke
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Matthew VanDyke: Sons of Liberty International is the first military contracting firm operating on non-profit principles, providing free security consulting and training services to vulnerable populations to enable them to defend themselves against terrorists, insurgents, and oppressive regimes.We will step in where the international community has failed, reacting quickly to security crises and enabling local forces to defend their own communities.Where is SOLI currently involved? What kind of impact is the organization having?
SOLI is currently active in Iraq, is in negotiations with a militia in Syria, and has received requests for our assistance in three other regions of the world. We were instrumental in the creation of the Nineveh Plain Protection Units (NPU), an Assyrian Iraqi militia based in northern Iraq. We have advised and trained them since their inception, serving as their closest advisors from December 2014 through May 2015, advising on everything from personnel decisions to their force structure, right down to the small details like the design of their insignia and what camo pattern they should be using. We have trained an entire 330 man battalion of the NPU. [We've also trained] their sergeants and officers in a special leadership course led by a former West Point instructor who serves as SOLI's lead trainer. We also served as a liaison between [the NPU] and US State Department personnel in Erbil. We have also supplied them, and are still providing them, with some funding.
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You launched SOLI in late 2014, not long after the horrible murders of James Foley and Steven Sotloff at the hands of ISIS in Syria. You had close friendships with both these men. How did their deaths impact you personally?Anyone who kills friends of mine has made me their target. I won't stop until ISIS is destroyed.
I met James Foley in Libya a few days after I escaped from prison in Tripoli, and we soon became good friends. He became my roommate at the Corinthia Hotel in Tripoli, where the Libyan rebel government had given me a room—it had an extra bed so I invited James to stay there. When I returned to combat, I used to take him and many other journalists, including John Cantlie, in my military vehicle to the front lines so they could have better access and report safely. I last saw James in Aleppo a couple of weeks before he and John Cantlie were kidnapped, when he was reporting for GlobalPost and I was working on my film Not Anymore: A Story of Revolution.
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Anyone who kills friends of mine has made me their target. I won't stop until ISIS is destroyed, and SOLI is going to do whatever it takes to help make that happen.
SOLI fighters
I chose to work with Christian militias because they were being overlooked by the international community and weren't being helped by anyone.Iraqi Christians (Assyrians) have been persecuted in Iraq for over a decade; their people [are] fleeing Iraq, going from a population of around 1.3 million in 2003 to perhaps 300,000 now. Their entire existence is at stake. Northern Iraq is the homeland of the Assyrian people, who have been there for thousands of years, long before Arabs or Kurds. They are losing their ancestral homeland as their people flee to other countries because neither the Arabs nor the Kurds have protected them so they feel they have no choice but to leave.
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Yes, I was the Nineveh Plain Protection Units (NPU) closest military advisor from December 2014 to May 2015. I worked very closely with their leadership to help establish and prepare the NPU for combat. I bring a unique perspective as an advisor, combining an academic background (a Master's degree in Security Studies with a Middle East concentration), with my experiences fighting in Libya in a conflict very similar to those currently taking place in Syria and Iraq.Although my primary duties are leading SOLI and serving as an advisor to militia leadership, I also participated in training the NPU on occasion, and assisted with the development of the training curriculum and its implementation. The training programs, however, are designed and run by our ex-military trainers, as this is their field of expertise.
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The Assyrian people and Christianity in Iraq are being erased from the country, both by ISIS and by other groups in Iraq that seek to marginalize and control the Assyrian/Christian population. SOLI stands shoulder to shoulder with the Assyrian people in the face of the myriad challenges they are confronting, which extend beyond just ISIS. These include political and security challenges that will affect them both now and after ISIS is defeated, which is why we are providing them with long-term, sustainable solutions for their self-defense.Other challenges they face are internally displaced persons, refugees, the loss of their lands to ISIS, economic difficulty, and widespread traumatization of their community.
SOLI handing out presents on Christmas Day
My most powerful experience was my military service in the early days of the Libyan Revolution, before the involvement of NATO. There I saw the best and bravest of the Libyan people stand up against all odds, grab a weapon, and jump in pickup trucks heading to the front lines to face Gaddafi's tanks and jets. It was an honor to serve with such men.Many of those that help with SOLI's training program are army veterans with practical field experience and expertise. What motivates them to become involved?
So far all of our personnel have been US military veterans, though we have had applicants from the UK and Europe. We have nearly 1,000 applicants, most US veterans and some of whom are retired high-ranking officers.
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SOLI is not incorporated as a non-profit but operates on non-profit principles by offering its services for free to those who need them, and SOLI is funded by generous contributions from people around the world. Our contributors come from over 20 countries, but the vast majority are Americans.American Christians have been especially supportive. Everyone who makes a contribution to SOLI is having a tangible impact on the fight against ISIS and is part of a movement that takes action when the international community fails. And every dollar counts. SOLI is more efficient than governments, but our budget depends mostly on contributions.Is it surreal to return to the US or West after long periods in Iraq and Syria?
No, not at all. I enjoy my time in the USA and have no difficulty transitioning between the two worlds. I can be in camo working with an Iraqi militia, and the next day in a suit meeting with officials in Washington, DC.The fight against ISIS feels, in some ways, like it has just started. Is frontline activism a life's work for you?
Sons of Liberty International is likely going to remain my life's work. SOLI is innovative and effective. It has the ability to affect change on the ground in conflicts around the world. We intend to expand SOLI over the next few years until there is no terrorist group or dictator safe from being in the crosshairs of a group that we're ready and able to support.We're able to do this far more effectively and efficiently than the government. The US government spent $250 million to train 60 Syrian rebel fighters, while SOLI spent around $50,000 to train 330 Iraqi fighters. Our model is one for the 21st century and we intend to have a significant impact on conflicts around the world in the coming years. The West may get tired of Syria, Iraq, and ISIS, but it is a daily reality over there and it isn't going away.