Bush's Shadow Army [Blackwater]
by Jeremy Scahill
The Nation magazine
http://www.commondreams.org/,
March 16, 2007
On September 10, 2001, before most Americans
had heard of Al Qaeda or imagined the possibility of a "war
on terror," Donald Rumsfeld stepped to the podium at the
Pentagon to deliver one of his first major addresses as Defense
Secretary under President George W. Bush. Standing before the
former corporate executives he had tapped as his top deputies
overseeing the high-stakes business of military contracting--many
of them from firms like Enron, General Dynamics and Aerospace
Corporation--Rumsfeld issued a declaration of war.
"The topic today is an adversary
that poses a threat, a serious threat, to the security of the
United States of America," Rumsfeld thundered. "It disrupts
the defense of the United States and places the lives of men and
women in uniform at risk." He told his new staff, "You
may think I'm describing one of the last decrepit dictators of
the world.... [But] the adversary's closer to home," he said.
"It's the Pentagon bureaucracy." Rumsfeld called for
a wholesale shift in the running of the Pentagon, supplanting
the old DoD bureaucracy with a new model, one based on the private
sector. Announcing this major overhaul, Rumsfeld told his audience,
"I have no desire to attack the Pentagon; I want to liberate
it. We need to save it from itself."
The next morning, the Pentagon would be
attacked, literally, as a Boeing 757--American Airlines Flight
77--smashed into its western wall. Rumsfeld would famously assist
rescue workers in pulling bodies from the rubble. But it didn't
take long for Rumsfeld to seize the almost unthinkable opportunity
presented by 9/11 to put his personal war--laid out just a day
before--on the fast track. The new Pentagon policy would emphasize
covert actions, sophisticated weapons systems and greater reliance
on private contractors. It became known as the Rumsfeld Doctrine.
"We must promote a more entrepreneurial approach: one that
encourages people to be proactive, not reactive, and to behave
less like bureaucrats and more like venture capitalists,"
Rumsfeld wrote in the summer of 2002 in an article for Foreign
Affairs titled "Transforming the Military."
Although Rumsfeld was later thrown overboard
by the Administration in an attempt to placate critics of the
Iraq War, his military revolution was here to stay. Bidding farewell
to Rumsfeld in November 2006, Bush credited him with overseeing
the "most sweeping transformation of America's global force
posture since the end of World War II." Indeed, Rumsfeld's
trademark "small footprint" approach ushered in one
of the most significant developments in modern warfare--the widespread
use of private contractors in every aspect of war, including in
combat.
The often overlooked subplot of the wars
of the post-9/11 period is their unprecedented scale of outsourcing
and privatization. From the moment the US troop buildup began
in advance of the invasion of Iraq, the Pentagon made private
contractors an integral part of the operations. Even as the government
gave the public appearance of attempting diplomacy, Halliburton
was prepping for a massive operation. When US tanks rolled into
Baghdad in March 2003, they brought with them the largest army
of private contractors ever deployed in modern war. By the end
of Rumsfeld's tenure in late 2006, there were an estimated 100,000
private contractors on the ground in Iraq--an almost one-to-one
ratio with active-duty American soldiers.
To the great satisfaction of the war industry,
before Rumsfeld resigned he took the extraordinary step of classifying
private contractors as an official part of the US war machine.
In the Pentagon's 2006 Quadrennial Review, Rumsfeld outlined what
he called a "road map for change" at the DoD, which
he said had begun to be implemented in 2001. It defined the "Department's
Total Force" as "its active and reserve military components,
its civil servants, and its contractors--constitut[ing] its warfighting
capability and capacity. Members of the Total Force serve in thousands
of locations around the world, performing a vast array of duties
to accomplish critical missions." This formal designation
represented a major triumph for war contractors--conferring on
them a legitimacy they had never before enjoyed.
Contractors have provided the Bush Administration
with political cover, allowing the government to deploy private
forces in a war zone free of public scrutiny, with the deaths,
injuries and crimes of those forces shrouded in secrecy. The Administration
and the GOP-controlled Congress in turn have shielded the contractors
from accountability, oversight and legal constraints. Despite
the presence of more than 100,000 private contractors on the ground
in Iraq, only one has been indicted for crimes or violations.
"We have over 200,000 troops in Iraq and half of them aren't
being counted, and the danger is that there's zero accountability,"
says Democrat Dennis Kucinich, one of the leading Congressional
critics of war contracting.
While the past years of Republican monopoly
on government have marked a golden era for the industry, those
days appear to be ending. Just a month into the new Congressional
term, leading Democrats were announcing investigations of runaway
war contractors. Representative John Murtha, chair of the Appropriations
Committee's Subcommittee on Defense, after returning from a trip
to Iraq in late January, said, "We're going to have extensive
hearings to find out exactly what's going on with contractors.
They don't have a clear mission and they're falling all over each
other." Two days later, during confirmation hearings for
Gen. George Casey as Army chief of staff, Senator Jim Webb declared,
"This is a rent-an-army out there." Webb asked Casey,
"Wouldn't it be better for this country if those tasks, particularly
the quasi-military gunfighting tasks, were being performed by
active-duty military soldiers in terms of cost and accountability?"
Casey defended the contracting system but said armed contractors
"are the ones that we have to watch very carefully."
Senator Joe Biden, chair of the Foreign Relations Committee, has
also indicated he will hold hearings on contractors. Parallel
to the ongoing investigations, there are several bills gaining
steam in Congress aimed at contractor oversight.
Occupying the hot seat through these deliberations
is the shadowy mercenary company Blackwater USA. Unbeknownst to
many Americans and largely off the Congressional radar, Blackwater
has secured a position of remarkable power and protection within
the US war apparatus. This company's success represents the realization
of the life's work of the conservative officials who formed the
core of the Bush Administration's war team, for whom radical privatization
has long been a cherished ideological mission. Blackwater has
repeatedly cited Rumsfeld's statement that contractors are part
of the "Total Force" as evidence that it is a legitimate
part of the nation's "warfighting capability and capacity."
Invoking Rumsfeld's designation, the company has in effect declared
its forces above the law--entitled to the immunity from civilian
lawsuits enjoyed by the military, but also not bound by the military's
court martial system. While the initial inquiries into Blackwater
have focused on the complex labyrinth of secretive subcontracts
under which it operates in Iraq, a thorough investigation into
the company reveals a frightening picture of a politically connected
private army that has become the Bush Administration's Praetorian
Guard.
Blackwater Rising
Blackwater was founded in 1996 by conservative
Christian multimillionaire and ex-Navy SEAL Erik Prince--the scion
of a wealthy Michigan family whose generous political donations
helped fuel the rise of the religious right and the Republican
revolution of 1994. At its founding, the company largely consisted
of Prince's private fortune and a vast 5,000-acre plot of land
located near the Great Dismal Swamp in Moyock, North Carolina.
Its vision was "to fulfill the anticipated demand for government
outsourcing of firearms and related security training." In
the following years, Prince, his family and his political allies
poured money into Republican campaign coffers, supporting the
party's takeover of Congress and the ascension of George W. Bush
to the presidency.
While Blackwater won government contracts
during the Clinton era, which was friendly to privatization, it
was not until the "war on terror" that the company's
glory moment arrived. Almost overnight, following September 11,
the company would become a central player in a global war. "I've
been operating in the training business now for four years and
was starting to get a little cynical on how seriously people took
security," Prince told Fox News host Bill O'Reilly shortly
after 9/11. "The phone is ringing off the hook now."
Among those calls was one from the CIA,
which contracted Blackwater to work in Afghanistan in the early
stages of US operations there. In the ensuing years the company
has become one of the greatest beneficiaries of the "war
on terror," winning nearly $1 billion in noncovert government
contracts, many of them no-bid arrangements. In just a decade
Prince has expanded the Moyock headquarters to 7,000 acres, making
it the world's largest private military base. Blackwater currently
has 2,300 personnel deployed in nine countries, with 20,000 other
contractors at the ready. It has a fleet of more than twenty aircraft,
including helicopter gunships and a private intelligence division,
and it is manufacturing surveillance blimps and target systems.
In 2005 after Hurricane Katrina its forces
deployed in New Orleans, where it billed the federal government
$950 per man, per day--at one point raking in more than $240,000
a day. At its peak the company had about 600 contractors deployed
from Texas to Mississippi. Since Katrina, it has aggressively
pursued domestic contracting, opening a new domestic operations
division. Blackwater is marketing its products and services to
the Department of Homeland Security, and its representatives have
met with California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. The company
has applied for operating licenses in all US coastal states. Blackwater
is also expanding its physical presence inside US borders, opening
facilities in Illinois and California.
Its largest obtainable government contract
is with the State Department, for providing security to US diplomats
and facilities in Iraq. That contract began in 2003 with the company's
$21 million no-bid deal to protect Iraq proconsul Paul Bremer.
Blackwater has guarded the two subsequent US ambassadors, John
Negroponte and Zalmay Khalilzad, as well as other diplomats and
occupation offices. Its forces have protected more than ninety
Congressional delegations in Iraq, including that of House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi. According to the latest government contract records,
since June 2004 Blackwater has been awarded $750 million in State
Department contracts alone. It is currently engaged in an intensive
lobbying campaign to be sent into Darfur as a privatized peacekeeping
force. Last October President Bush lifted some sanctions on Christian
southern Sudan, paving the way for a potential Blackwater training
mission there. In January the Washington, DC, representative for
southern Sudan's regional government said he expected Blackwater
to begin training the south's security forces soon.
Since 9/11 Blackwater has hired some well-connected
officials close to the Bush Administration as senior executives.
Among them are J. Cofer Black, former head of counterterrorism
at the CIA and the man who led the hunt for Osama bin Laden after
9/11, and Joseph Schmitz, former Pentagon Inspector General, who
was responsible for policing contractors like Blackwater during
much of the "war on terror"--something he stood accused
of not doing effectively. By the end of Schmitz's tenure, powerful
Republican Senator Charles Grassley launched a Congressional probe
into whether Schmitz had "quashed or redirected two ongoing
criminal investigations" of senior Bush Administration officials.
Under bipartisan fire, Schmitz resigned and signed up with Blackwater.
Despite its central role, Blackwater had
largely operated in the shadows until March 31, 2004, when four
of its private soldiers in Iraq were ambushed and killed in Falluja.
A mob then burned the bodies and dragged them through the streets,
stringing up two from a bridge over the Euphrates. In many ways
it was the moment the Iraq War turned. US forces laid siege to
Falluja days later, killing hundreds of people and displacing
thousands, inflaming the fierce Iraqi resistance that haunts occupation
forces to this day. For most Americans, it was the first they
had heard of private soldiers. "People began to figure out
this is quite a phenomenon," says Representative David Price,
a North Carolina Democrat, who said he began monitoring the use
of private contractors after Falluja. "I'm probably like
most Congress members in kind of coming to this awareness and
developing an interest in it" after the incident.
What is not so well-known is that in Washington
after Falluja, Blackwater executives kicked into high gear, capitalizing
on the company's newfound recognition. The day after the ambush,
it hired the Alexander Strategy Group, a K Street lobbying firm
run by former senior staffers of then-majority leader Tom DeLay
before the firm's meltdown in the wake of the Jack Abramoff scandal.
A week to the day after the ambush, Erik Prince was sitting down
with at least four senior members of the Senate Armed Services
Committee, including its chair, John Warner. Senator Rick Santorum
arranged the meeting, which included Warner and two other key
Republican senators--Appropriations Committee chair Ted Stevens
of Alaska and George Allen of Virginia. This meeting followed
an earlier series of face-to-faces Prince had had with powerful
House Republicans who oversaw military contracts. Among them:
DeLay; Porter Goss, chair of the House Intelligence Committee
(and future CIA director); Duncan Hunter, chair of the House Armed
Services Committee; and Representative Bill Young, chair of the
House Appropriations Committee. What was discussed at these meetings
remains a secret. But Blackwater was clearly positioning itself
to make the most of its new fame. Indeed, two months later, Blackwater
was handed one of the government's most valuable international
security contracts, worth more than $300 million.
The firm was also eager to stake out a
role in crafting the rules that would govern mercenaries under
US contract. "Because of the public events of March 31, [Blackwater's]
visibility and need to communicate a consistent message has elevated
here in Washington," said Blackwater's new lobbyist Chris
Bertelli. "There are now several federal regulations that
apply to their activities, but they are generally broad in nature.
One thing that's lacking is an industry standard. That's something
we definitely want to be engaged in." By May Blackwater was
leading a lobbying effort by the private military industry to
try to block Congressional or Pentagon efforts to place their
forces under the military court martial system.
But while Blackwater enjoyed its new status
as a hero in the "war on terror" within the Administration
and the GOP-controlled Congress, the families of the four men
killed at Falluja say they were being stonewalled by Blackwater
as they attempted to understand the circumstances of how their
loved ones were killed. After what they allege was months of effort
to get straight answers from the company, the families filed a
ground-breaking wrongful death lawsuit against Blackwater in January
2005, accusing the company of not providing the men with what
they say were contractually guaranteed safeguards. Among the allegations:
The company sent them on the Falluja mission that day short two
men, with less powerful weapons than they should have had and
in Pajero jeeps instead of armored vehicles. This case could have
far-reaching reverberations and is being monitored closely by
the war-contractor industry--former Halliburton subsidiary KBR
has even filed an amicus brief supporting Blackwater. If the lawsuit
is successful, it could pave the way for a tobacco litigation-type
scenario, where war contractors find themselves besieged by legal
claims of workers killed or injured in war zones.
As the case has made its way through the
court system, Blackwater has enlisted powerhouse Republican lawyers
to defend it, among them Fred Fielding, who was recently named
by Bush as White House counsel, replacing Harriet Miers; and Kenneth
Starr, former Whitewater prosecutor investigating President Clinton,
and the company's current counsel of record. Blackwater has not
formally debated the specific allegations in the suit, but what
has emerged in its court filings is a series of legal arguments
intended to bolster Blackwater's contention that it is essentially
above the law. Blackwater claims that if US courts allow the company
to be sued for wrongful death, that could threaten the nation's
war-fighting capacity: "Nothing could be more destructive
of the all-volunteer, Total Force concept underlying U.S. military
manpower doctrine than to expose the private components to the
tort liability systems of fifty states, transported overseas to
foreign battlefields," the company argued in legal papers.
In February Blackwater suffered a major defeat when the Supreme
Court declined its appeal to hear the Falluja case, paving the
way for the state trial--where there would be no cap on damages
a jury could award--to proceed.
Congress is beginning to take an interest
in this potentially groundbreaking case. On February 7 Representative
Henry Waxman chaired hearings of the Oversight and Government
Reform Committee. While the hearings were billed as looking at
US reliance on military contractors, they largely focused on Blackwater
and the Falluja incident. For the first time, Blackwater was forced
to share a venue with the families of the men killed at Falluja.
"Private contractors like Blackwater work outside the scope
of the military's chain of command and can literally do whatever
they please without any liability or accountability from the US
government," Katy Helvenston, whose son Scott was one of
the Blackwater contractors killed, told the committee. "Therefore,
Blackwater can continue accepting hundreds of millions of dollars
in taxpayer money from the government without having to answer
a single question about its security operators."
Citing the pending litigation, Blackwater's
general counsel, Andrew Howell, declined to respond to many of
the charges levied against his company by the families and asked
several times for the committee to go into closed session. "The
men who went on the mission on March 31, each had their weapons
and they had sufficient ammunition," Howell told the committee,
adding that the men were in "appropriate" vehicles.
That was sharply disputed by the men's families, who allege that
in order to save $1.5 million Blackwater did not provide the four
with armored vehicles. "Once the men signed on with Blackwater
and were flown to the Middle East, Blackwater treated them as
fungible commodities," Helvenston told lawmakers in her emotional
testimony, delivered on behalf of all four families.
The issue that put this case on Waxman's
radar was the labyrinth of subcontracts underpinning the Falluja
mission. Since November 2004 Waxman has been trying to pin down
who the Blackwater men were ultimately working for the day of
the ambush. "For over eighteen months, the Defense Department
wouldn't even respond to my inquiry," says Waxman. "When
it finally replied last July, it didn't even supply the breakdown
I requested. In fact, it denied that private security contractors
did any work at all under the [Pentagon's contracting program].
We now know that isn't true." Waxman's struggle to follow
the money on this one contract involving powerful war contractors
like KBR provides a graphic illustration of the secretive nature
of the whole war contracting industry.
What is not in dispute regarding the Falluja
incident is that Blackwater was working with a Kuwaiti business
called Regency under a contract with the world's largest food
services company, Eurest Support Services. ESS is a subcontractor
for KBR and another giant war contractor, Fluor, in Iraq under
the Pentagon's LOGCAP contracting program. One contract covering
Blackwater's Falluja mission indicated the mission was ultimately
a subcontract with KBR. Last summer KBR denied this. Then ESS
wrote Waxman to say the mission was conducted under Fluor's contract
with ESS. Fluor denied that, and the Pentagon told Waxman it didn't
know which company the mission was ultimately linked to. Waxman
alleged that Blackwater and the other subcontractors were "adding
significant markups" to their subcontracts for the same security
services that Waxman believes were then charged to US taxpayers.
"It's remarkable that the world of contractors and subcontractors
is so murky that we can't even get to the bottom of this, let
alone calculate how many millions of dollars taxpayers lose in
each step of the subcontracting process," says Waxman.
While it appeared for much of the February
7 hearing that the contract's provenance would remain obscure,
that changed when, at the end of the hearing, the Pentagon revealed
that the original contractor was, in fact, KBR. In violation of
military policy against LOGCAP contractors' using private forces
for security instead of US troops, KBR had entered into a subcontract
with ESS that was protected by Blackwater; those costs were allegedly
passed on to US taxpayers to the tune of $19.6 million. Blackwater
said it billed ESS $2.3 million for its services, meaning a markup
of more than $17 million was ultimately passed on to the government.
Three weeks after the hearing, KBR told shareholders it may be
forced to repay up to $400 million to the government as a result
of an ongoing Army investigation.
It took more than two years for Waxman
to get an answer to a simple question: Whom were US taxpayers
paying for services? But, as the Falluja lawsuit shows, it is
not just money at issue. It is human life.
A Killing on Christmas Eve
While much of the publicity Blackwater
has received stems from Falluja, another, more recent incident
is attracting new scrutiny. On Christmas Eve inside Baghdad's
heavily fortified Green Zone, an American Blackwater contractor
allegedly shot and killed an Iraqi bodyguard protecting a senior
Iraqi official. For weeks after the shooting, unconfirmed reports
circulated around the Internet that alcohol may have been involved
and that the Iraqi was shot ten times in the chest. The story
then went that the contractor was spirited out of Iraq before
he could be prosecuted. Media inquiries got nowhere--the US Embassy
refused to confirm that it was a Blackwater contractor, and the
company refused to comment.
Then the incident came up at the February
7 Congressional hearing. As the session was drawing to a close,
Representative Kucinich raced back into the room with what he
said was a final question. He entered a news report on the incident
into the record and asked Blackwater counsel Howell if Blackwater
had flown the contractor out of Iraq after the alleged shooting.
"That gentleman, on the day the incident occurred, he was
off duty," Howell said, in what was the first official confirmation
of the incident from Blackwater. "Blackwater did bring him
back to the United States."
"Is he going to be extradited back
to Iraq for murder, and if not, why not?" Kucinich asked.
"Sir, I am not law enforcement. All
I can say is that there's currently an investigation," Howell
replied. "We are fully cooperating and supporting that investigation."
Kucinich then said, "I just want
to point out that there's a question that could actually make
[Blackwater's] corporate officers accessories here in helping
to create a flight from justice for someone who's committed a
murder."
The War on the Hill
Several bills are now making their way
through Congress aimed at oversight and transparency of the private
forces that have emerged as major players in the wars of the post-9/11
period. In mid-February Senators Byron Dorgan, Patrick Leahy and
John Kerry introduced legislation aimed at cracking down on no-bid
contracts and cronyism, providing for penalties of up to twenty
years in prison and fines of up to $1 million for what they called
"war profiteering." It is part of what Democrats describe
as a multi-pronged approach. "I think there's a critical
mass of us now who are working on it," says Congressman Price,
who represents Blackwater's home state. In January Price introduced
legislation that would expand the Military Extraterritorial Jurisdiction
Act of 2000 (MEJA) to include all contractors in a war zone, not
just those working for or alongside the armed forces. Most of
Blackwater's work in Iraq, for instance, is contracted by the
State Department. Price indicated that the alleged Christmas Eve
shooting could be a test case of sorts under his legislation.
"I will be following this and I'll be calling for a full
investigation," he said.
But there's at least one reason to be
wary of this approach: Price's office consulted with the private
military lobby as it crafted the legislation, which has the industry's
strong endorsement. Perhaps that's because MEJA has been for the
most part unenforced. "Even in situations when US civilian
law could potentially have been applied to contractor crimes,
it wasn't," observed P.W. Singer, a leading scholar on contractors.
American prosecutors are already strapped for resources in their
home districts--how could they be expected to conduct complex
investigations in Iraq? Who will protect the investigators and
prosecutors? How will they interview Iraqi victims? How could
they effectively oversee 100,000 individuals spread across a dangerous
war zone? "It's a good question," concedes Price. "I'm
not saying that it would be a simple matter." He argues his
legislation is an attempt to "put the whole contracting enterprise
on a new accountable footing."
This past fall, taking a different tack--much
to the dismay of the industry--Republican Senator Lindsey Graham,
an Air Force reserve lawyer and former reserve judge, quietly
inserted language into the 2007 Defense Authorization, which Bush
signed into law, that places contractors under the Uniform Code
of Military Justice (UCMJ), commonly known as the court martial
system. Graham implemented the change with no public debate and
with almost no awareness among the broader Congress, but war contractors
immediately questioned its constitutionality. Indeed, this could
be a rare moment when mercenaries and civil libertarians are on
the same side. Many contractors are not armed combatants; they
work in food, laundry and other support services. While the argument
could be made that armed contractors like those working for Blackwater
should be placed under the UCMJ, Graham's change could result
in a dishwasher from Nepal working for KBR being prosecuted like
a US soldier. On top of all this, the military has enough trouble
policing its own massive force and could scarcely be expected
to monitor an additional 100,000 private personnel. Besides, many
contractors in Iraq are there under the auspices of the State
Department and other civilian agencies, not the military.
In an attempt to clarify these matters,
Senator Barack Obama introduced comprehensive new legislation
in February. It requires clear rules of engagement for armed contractors,
expands MEJA and provides for the DoD to "arrest and detain"
contractors suspected of crimes and then turn them over to civilian
authorities for prosecution. It also requires the Justice Department
to submit a comprehensive report on current investigations of
contractor abuses, the number of complaints received about contractors
and criminal cases opened. In a statement to The Nation, Obama
said contractors are "operating with unclear lines of authority,
out-of-control costs and virtually no oversight by Congress. This
black hole of accountability increases the danger to our troops
and American civilians serving as contractors." He said his
legislation would "re-establish control over these companies,"
while "bringing contractors under the rule of law."
Democratic Representative Jan Schakowsky,
a member of the House intelligence committee, has been a leading
critic of the war contracting system. Her Iraq and Afghanistan
Contractor Sunshine Act, introduced in February, which bolsters
Obama's, boils down to what Schakowsky sees as a long overdue
fact-finding mission through the secretive contracting bureaucracy.
Among other provisions, it requires the government to determine
and make public the number of contractors and subcontractors (at
any tier) that are employed in Iraq and Afghanistan; any host
country's, international or US laws that have been broken by contractors;
disciplinary actions taken against contractors; and the total
number of dead and wounded contractors. Schakowsky says she has
tried repeatedly over the past several years to get this information
and has been stonewalled or ignored. "We're talking about
billions and billions of dollars--some have estimated forty cents
of every dollar [spent on the occupation] goes to these contractors,
and we couldn't get any information on casualties, on deaths,"
says Schakowsky. "It has been virtually impossible to shine
the light on this aspect of the war and so when we discuss the
war, its scope, its costs, its risks, they have not been part
of this whatsoever. This whole shadow force that's been operating
in Iraq, we know almost nothing about. I think it keeps at arm's
length from the American people what this war is all about."
While not by any means a comprehensive
total of the number of contractor casualties, 770 contractor deaths
and 7,761 injured in Iraq as of December 31, 2006, were confirmed
by the Labor Department. But that only counts those contractors
whose families applied for benefits under the government's Defense
Base Act insurance. Independent analysts say the number is likely
much higher. Blackwater alone has lost at least twenty-seven men
in Iraq. And then there's the financial cost: Almost $4 billion
in taxpayer funds have been paid for private security forces in
Iraq, according to Waxman. Yet even with all these additional
forces, the military is struggling to meet the demands of a White
House bent on military adventurism.
A week after Donald Rumsfeld's rule at
the Pentagon ended, US forces had been stretched so thin by the
"war on terror" that former Secretary of State Colin
Powell declared "the active Army is about broken." Rather
than rethinking its foreign policies, the Administration forged
ahead with plans for a troop "surge" in Iraq, and Bush
floated a plan to supplement the military with a Civilian Reserve
Corps in his January State of the Union address. "Such a
corps would function much like our military Reserve. It would
ease the burden on the armed forces by allowing us to hire civilians
with critical skills to serve on missions abroad when America
needs them," Bush said. The President, it seemed, was just
giving a fancy new title to something the Administration has already
done with its "revolution" in military affairs and unprecedented
reliance on contractors. Yet while Bush's proposed surge has sparked
a fierce debate in Congress and among the public, the Administration's
increasing reliance on private military contractors has gone largely
undebated and underreported.
"The increasing use of contractors,
private forces or as some would say 'mercenaries' makes wars easier
to begin and to fight--it just takes money and not the citizenry,"
says Michael Ratner, president of the Center for Constitutional
Rights, which has sued contractors for alleged abuses in Iraq.
"To the extent a population is called upon to go to war,
there is resistance, a necessary resistance to prevent wars of
self-aggrandizement, foolish wars and in the case of the United
States, hegemonic imperialist wars. Private forces are almost
a necessity for a United States bent on retaining its declining
empire."
With talk of a Civilian Reserve Corps
and Blackwater promoting the idea of a privatized "contractor
brigade" to work with the military, war critics in Congress
are homing in on what they see as a sustained, undeclared escalation
through the use of private forces. "'Surge' implies a bump
that has a beginning and an end," says Schakowsky. "Having
a third or a quarter of [the forces] present on the ground not
even part of the debate is a very dangerous thing in our democracy,
because war is the most critical thing that we do."
Indeed, contractor deaths are not counted
in the total US death count, and their crimes and violations go
undocumented and unpunished, further masking the true costs of
the war. "When you're bringing in contractors whom the law
doesn't apply to, the Geneva Conventions, common notions of morality,
everything's thrown out the window," says Kucinich. "And
what it means is that these private contractors are really an
arm of the Administration and its policies."
Kucinich says he plans to investigate
the potential involvement of private forces in so-called "black
bag," "false flag" or covert operations in Iraq.
"What's the difference between covert activities and so-called
overt activities which you have no information about? There's
no difference," he says. Kucinich also says the problems
with contractors are not simply limited to oversight and transparency.
"It's the privatization of war," he says. The Administration
is "linking private war contractor profits with warmaking.
So we're giving incentives for the contractors to lobby the Administration
and the Congress to create more opportunities for profits, and
those opportunities are more war. And that's why the role of private
contractors should be sharply limited by Congress."
Jeremy Scahill reports on the Bush Administration's
growing dependence on private security forces such as Blackwater
USA and efforts in Congress to rein them in. This article is adapted
from his new book, Blackwater: The Rise of the World's Most Powerful
Mercenary Army (Nation Books).
Mercenaries
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