The Mercenary Revolution:
Flush with Profits from the Iraq War, Military Contractors See
a World of Business Opportunities
by Jeremy Scahill
Published on Monday, August 13,
2007 by CommonDreams.org
Originally published by The Independent
newspaper
If you think the U.S. has only 160,000
troops in Iraq, think again.
With almost no congressional oversight
and even less public awareness, the Bush administration has more
than doubled the size of the U.S. occupation through the use of
private war companies.
There are now almost 200,000 private "contractors"
deployed in Iraq by Washington. This means that U.S. military
forces in Iraq are now outsized by a coalition of billing corporations
whose actions go largely unmonitored and whose crimes are virtually
unpunished.
In essence, the Bush administration has
created a shadow army that can be used to wage wars unpopular
with the American public but extremely profitable for a few unaccountable
private companies.
Since the launch of the "global war
on terror," the administration has systematically funneled
billions of dollars in public money to corporations like Blackwater
USA , DynCorp, Triple Canopy, Erinys and ArmorGroup. They have
in turn used their lucrative government pay-outs to build up the
infrastructure and reach of private armies so powerful that they
rival or outgun some nation's militaries.
"I think it's extraordinarily dangerous
when a nation begins to outsource its monopoly on the use of force
and the use of violence in support of its foreign policy or national
security objectives," says veteran U.S . Diplomat Joe Wilson,
who served as the last U.S. ambassador to Iraq before the 1991
Gulf War.
The billions of dollars being doled out
to these companies, Wilson argues, "makes of them a very
powerful interest group within the American body politic and an
interest group that is in fact armed. And the question will arise
at some time: to whom do they owe their loyalty?"
Precise data on the extent of U.S. spending
on mercenary services is nearly impossible to_obtain - by both
journalists and elected officials-but some in Congress estimate
that up to 40 cents of every tax dollar spent on the war goes
to corporate war contractors. At present, the United States spends
about $2 billion a week on its Iraq operations.
While much has been made of the Bush administration's
"failure" to build international consensus for the invasion
of Iraq, perhaps that was never the intention. When U.S. tanks
rolled into Iraq in March 2003, they brought with them the largest
army of "private contractors" ever deployed in a war.
The White House substituted international diplomacy with lucrative
war contracts and a coalition of willing nations who provided
token forces with a coalition of billing corporations that supplied
the brigades of contractors.
'THERE'S NO DEMOCRATIC CONTROL'
During the 1991 Gulf War, the ratio of
troops to private contractors was about 60 to 1. Today, it is
the contractors who outnumber U.S . forces in Iraq. As of July
2007, there were more than 630 war contracting companies working
in Iraq for the United States. Composed of some 180,000 individual
personnel drawn from more than 100 countries, the army of contractors
surpasses the official U.S. military presence of 160,000 troops.
In all, the United States may have as
many as 400,000 personnel occupying Iraq, not including allied
nations' militaries. The statistics on contractors do not account
for all armed contractors. Last year, a U.S. government report
estimated there were 48,000 people working for more than 170 private
military companies in Iraq. "It masks the true level of American
involvement," says Ambassador Wilson.
How much money is being spent just on
mercenaries remains largely classified. Congressional sources
estimate the United States has spent at least $6 billion in Iraq,
while Britain has spent some $400 million. At the same time, companies
chosen by the White House for rebuilding projects in Iraq have
spent huge sums in reconstruction funds - possibly billions on
more mercenaries to guard their personnel and projects.
The single largest U.S. contract for private
security in Iraq was a $293 million payment to the British firm
Aegis Defence Services, headed by retired British Lt. Col. Tim
Spicer, who has been dogged by accusations that he is a mercenary
because of his private involvement in African conflicts. The Texas-based
DynCorp International has been another big winner, with more than
$1 billion in contracts to provide personnel to train Iraqi police
forces, while Blackwater USA has won $750 million in State Department
contracts alone for "diplomatic security."
At present, an American or a British Special
Forces veteran working for a private security company in Iraq
can make $650 a day. At times the rate has reached $1,000 a day;
the pay dwarfs many times over that of active duty troops operating
in the war zone wearing a U.S. or U.K. flag on their shoulder
instead of a corporate logo.
"We got [tens of thousands of] contractors
over there, some of them making more than the Secretary of Defense,"
House Defense Appropriations Subcommittee Chairman John Murtha
(D-Penn.) recently remarked. "How in the hell do you justify
that?" In part, these contractors do mundane jobs that traditionally
have been performed by soldiers. Some require no military training,
but involve deadly occupations, such as driving trucks through
insurgent-controlled territory.
Others are more innocuous, like cooking
food or doing laundry on a base, but still court grave risk because
of regular mortar and rocket attacks.
These services are provided through companies
like KBR and Fluor and through their vast labyrinth of subcontractors.
But many other private personnel are also engaged in armed combat
and "security" operations. They interrogate prisoners,
gather intelligence, operate rendition flights, protect senior
occupation officials and, in at least one case, have commanded
U.S. and international troops in battle.
In a revealing admission, Gen. David Petraeus,
who is overseeing Bush's troop "surge," said earlier
this year that he has, at times, been guarded in Iraq by "contract
security." At least three U.S. commanding generals, not including
Petraeus, are currently being guarded in Iraq by hired guns. "To
have half of your army be contractors, I don't know that there's
a precedent for that," says Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio),
a member of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee,
which has been investigating war contractors.
"Maybe the precedent was the British
and the Hessians in the American Revolution. Maybe that's the
last time and needless to say, they lost. But I'm thinking that
there's no democratic control and there's no intention to have
democratic control here."
The implications are devastating. Joseph
Wilson says, "In the absence of international consensus,
the current Bush administration relied on a coalition of what
I call the co-opted, the corrupted and the coerced: those who
benefited financially from their involvement, those who benefited
politically from their involvement and those few who determined
that their relationship with the United States was more important
than their relationship with anybody else. And that's a real problem
because there is no underlying international legitimacy that sustains
us throughout this action that we've taken."
Moreover, this revolution means the United
States no longer needs to rely on its own citizens to fight its
wars, nor does it need to implement a draft, which would have
made the Iraq war politically untenable.
'AN ARM OF THE BUSH ADMINISTRATION'
During his confirmation hearings in the
Senate this past January, Petraeus praised the role of private
forces, claiming they compensate for an overstretched military.
Petraeus told the senators that combined with Bush's official
troop surge, the "tens of thousands of contract security
forces give me the reason to believe that we can accomplish the
mission."
Taken together with Petraeus's recent
assertion that the surge would run into mid-2009, this means a
widening role for mercenaries and other private forces in Iraq
is clearly on the table for the foreseeable future.
"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, whose organization has sued private contractors for alleged
human rights violations 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. Think about Rome and its increasing need
for mercenaries."
Privatized forces are also politically
expedient for many governments. Their casualties go uncounted,
their actions largely unmonitored and their crimes unpunished.
Indeed, four years into the occupation, there is no effective
system of oversight or accountability governing contractors and
their operations, nor is there any effective law - military or
civilian being applied to their activities. They have not been
subjected to military courts martial (despite a recent congressional
attempt to place them under the Uniform Code of Military Justice),
nor have they been prosecuted in U.S. civilian courts. And no
matter what their acts in Iraq, they cannot be prosecuted in Iraqi
courts because in 2004 the U.S. occupying authority granted them
complete immunity.
"These private contractors are really
an arm of the administration and its policies," argues Kucinich,
who has called for a withdrawal of all U.S. contractors from Iraq.
"They charge whatever they want with impunity. There's no
accountability as to how many people they have, as to what their
activities are."
That raises the crucial question: what
exactly are they doing in Iraq in the name of the U.S. and U.K.
governments? Rep. Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.), a leading member of
the House Select Committee on Intelligence, which is responsible
for reviewing sensitive national security issues, explained the
difficulty of monitoring private military companies on the U.S.
payroll: "If I want to see a contract, I have to go up to
a secret room and look at it, can't take any notes, can't take
any notes out with me, you know - essentially, I don't have access
to those contracts and even if I did, I couldn't tell anybody
about it."
'A MARKETPLACE FOR WARFARE'
On the Internet, numerous videos have
spread virally, showing what appear to be foreign mercenaries
using Iraqis as target practice, much to the embarrassment of
the firms involved. Despite these incidents and the tens of thousands
of contractors passing through Iraq, only two individuals have
been ever indicted for crimes there. One was charged with stabbing
a fellow contractor, while the other pled guilty to possessing
child-pornography images on his computer at Abu Ghraib prison.
Dozens of American soldiers have been
court-martialed - 64 on murder-related charges alone - but not
a single armed contractor has been prosecuted for a crime against
an Iraqi. In some cases, where contractors were alleged to have
been involved in crimes or deadly incidents, their companies whisked
them out of Iraq to safety.
U.S. contractors in Iraq reportedly have
their own motto: "What happens here today, stays here today."
International diplomats say Iraq has demonstrated a new U.S. model
for waging war; one which poses a creeping threat to global order.
"To outsource security-related, military
related issues to non-government, non-military forces is a source
of great concern and it caught many governments unprepared,"
says Hans von Sponeck, a 32-year veteran U.N. diplomat, who served
as head of the U.N. Iraq mission before the U.S. invasion.
In Iraq, the United States has used its
private sector allies to build up armies of mercenaries many lured
from impoverished countries with the promise of greater salaries
than their home militaries can pay. That the home governments
of some of these private warriors are opposed to the war itself
is of little consequence.
"Have gun, will fight for paycheck"
has become a globalized law.
"The most worrying aspect is that
these forces are outside parliamentary control. They come from
all over and they are answerable to no one except a very narrow
group of people and they come from countries whose governments
may not even know in detail that they have actually been contracted
as a private army into a war zone," says von Sponeck.
"If you have now a marketplace for
warfare, it is a commercial issue rather than a political issue
involving a debate in the countries.
You are also marginalizing governmental
control over whether or not this should take place, should happen
and, if so, in what size and shape. It's a very worrying new aspect
of international relations. I think it becomes more and more uncontrollable
by the countries of supply."
In Iraq, for example, hundreds of Chilean
mercenaries have been deployed by U.S. companies like Blackwater
and Triple Canopy, despite the fact that Chile, as a rotating
member of the U.N. Security Council, opposed the invasion and
continues to oppose the occupation of Iraq. Some of the Chileans
are alleged to have been seasoned veterans of the Pinochet era.
"There is nothing new, of course,
about the relationship between politics and the economy, but there
is something deeply perverse about the privatization of the Iraq
War and the utilization of mercenaries," says Chilean sociologist
Tito Tricot, a former political prisoner who was tortured under
Pinochet's regime.
"This externalization of services
or outsourcing attempts to lower costs - third world mercenaries
are paid less than their counterparts from the developed world
- and maximize benefits. In other words, let others fight the
war for the Americans. In either case, the Iraqi people do not
matter at all."
NEW WORLD DISORDER
The Iraq war has ushered in a new system.
Wealthy nations can recruit the world's poor, from countries that
have no direct stake in the conflict, and use them as cannon fodder
to conquer weaker nations. This allows the conquering power to
hold down domestic casualties - the single-greatest impediment
to waging wars like the one in Iraq. Indeed, in Iraq, more than
1,000 contractors working for the U.S. occupation have been killed
with another 13,000 wounded. Most are not American citizens, and
these numbers are not counted in the official death toll at a
time when Americans are increasingly disturbed by casualties.
In Iraq, many companies are run by Americans
or Britons and have well-trained forces drawn from elite military
units for use in sensitive actions or operations. But down the
ranks, these forces are filled by Iraqis and third-country nationals.
Indeed, some 118,000 of the estimated 180,000 contractors are
Iraqis, and many mercenaries are reportedly ill-paid, poorly equipped
and barely trained Iraqi nationals.
The mercenary industry points to this
as a positive: we are giving Iraqis jobs, albeit occupying their
own country in the service of a private corporation hired by a
hostile invading power.
Doug Brooks, the head of the Orwellian
named mercenary trade group, the International Peace Operations
Association, argued from early on in the occupation, "Museums
do not need to be guarded by Abrams tanks when an Iraqi security
guard working for a contractor can do the same job for less than
one-fiftieth of what it costs to maintain an American soldier.
Hiring local guards gives Iraqis a stake in a successful future
for their country. They use their pay to support their families
and stimulate the economy. Perhaps most significantly, every guard
means one less potential guerrilla."
In many ways, it is the same corporate
model of relying on cheap labor in destitute nations to staff
their uber-profitable operations. The giant multinationals also
argue they are helping the economy by hiring locals, even if it's
at starvation wages.
"Donald Rumsfeld's masterstroke,
and his most enduring legacy, was to bring the corporate branding
revolution of the 1990s into the heart of the most powerful military
in the world," says Naomi Klein, whose upcoming book, The
Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism, explores these
themes.
"We have now seen the emergence of
the hollow army. Much as with so-called hollow corporations like
Nike, billions are spent on military technology and design in
rich countries while the manual labor and sweat work of invasion
and occupation is increasingly outsourced to contractors who compete
with each other to fill the work order for the lowest price. Just
as this model breeds rampant abuse in the manufacturing sector
- with the big-name brands always able to plead ignorance about
the actions of their suppliers-so it does in the military, though
with stakes that are immeasurably higher." In the case of
Iraq, the U.S. and U.K. governments could give the public perception
of a withdrawal of forces and just privatize the occupation. Indeed,
shortly after former British Prime Minister Tony Blair announced
that he wanted to withdraw 1,600 soldiers from Basra, reports
emerged that the British government was considering sending in
private security companies to "fill the gap left behind."
THE SPY WHO BILLED ME
While Iraq currently dominates the headlines,
private war and intelligence companies are expanding their already
sizable footprint. The U.S. government in particular is now in
the midst of the most radical privatization agenda in its history.
According to a recent report in Vanity Fair, the government pays
contractors as much as the combined taxes paid by everyone in
the United States with incomes under $100,000, meaning "more
than 90 percent of all taxpayers might as well remit everything
they owe directly to [contractors] rather than to the [government]."
Some of this outsourcing is happening
in sensitive sectors, including the intelligence community. "This
is the magnet now. Everything is being attracted to these private
companies in terms of individuals and expertise and functions
that were normally done by the intelligence community," says
former CIA division chief and senior analyst Melvin Goodman. "My
major concern is the lack of accountability, the lack of responsibility.
The entire industry is essentially out of control. It's outrageous."
RJ Hillhouse, a blogger who investigates
the clandestine world of private contractors and U.S. intelligence,
recently obtained documents from the Office of the Directorate
of National Intelligence (DNI) showing that Washington spends
some $42 billion annually on private intelligence contractors,
up from $17.54 billion in 2000. Currently that spending represents
70 percent of the U.S. intelligence budget going to private companies.
Perhaps it is no surprise then that the
current head of the DNI is Mike McConnell, the former chair of
the board of the Intelligence and National Security Alliance,
the private intelligence industry's lobbying arm. Hillhouse also
revealed that one of the most sensitive U.S. intelligence documents,
the Presidential Daily Briefing, is prepared in part by private
companies, despite having the official seal of the U.S. intelligence
apparatus.
"Let's say a company is frustrated
with a government that's hampering its business or business of
one of its clients. Introducing and spinning intelligence on that
government's suspected collaboration with terrorists would quickly
get the White House's attention and could be used to shape national
policy," Hillhouse argues.
MUTLINATIONAL MERCENARIES
Empowered by their new found prominence,
mercenary forces are increasing their presence on other battlefields:
in Latin America, DynCorp International is operating in Colombia,
Bolivia and other countries under the guise of the "war on
drugs" - U.S. defense contractors are receiving nearly half
the $630 million in U.S. military aid for Colombia; in Africa,
mercenaries are deploying in Somalia, Congo and Sudan and increasingly
have their sights set on tapping into the hefty U.N. peacekeeping
budget (this has been true since at least the early 1990s and
probably much earlier). Heavily armed mercenaries were deployed
to New Orleans in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, while proposals
are being considered to privatize the U.S. border patrol.
Brooks, the private military industry
lobbyist, says people should not become "overly obsessed
with Iraq," saying his association's "member companies
have more personnel working in U.N. and African Union peace operations
than all but a handful of countries." Von Sponeck says he
believes the use of such companies in warfare should be barred
and has harsh words for the institution for which he spent his
career working: "The United Nations, including the U.N. Secretary
General, should react to this and instead of reacting, they are
mute, they are silent."
This unprecedented funding of such enterprises,
primarily by the U.S. and U.K. governments, means that powers
once the exclusive realm of nations are now in the hands of private
companies with loyalty only to profits, CEOs and, in the case
of public companies, shareholders. And, of course, their client,
whoever that may be. CIA-type services, special operations, covert
actions and small-scale military and paramilitary forces are now
on the world market in a way not seen in modern history. This
could allow corporations or nations with cash to spend but no
real military power to hire squadrons of heavily armed and well-trained
commandos.
"It raises very important issues
about state and about the very power of state. The one thing the
people think of as being in the purview of the government - wholly
run and owned by - is the use of military power," says Rep.
Jan Schakowsky. "Suddenly you've got a for-profit corporation
going around the world that is more powerful than states, can
effect regime possibly where they may want to go, that seems to
have all the support that it needs from this administration that
is also pretty adventurous around the world and operating under
the cover of darkness.
"It raises questions about democracies,
about states, about who influences policy around the globe, about
relationships among some countries. Maybe it's their goal to render
state coalitions like NATO irrelevant in the future, that they'll
be the ones and open to the highest bidder. Who really does determine
war and peace around the world?"
Jeremy Scahill is author of The New York
Times-bestseller Blackwater: The Rise of the World's Most Powerful
Mercenary Army. He is a Puffin Foundation Writing Fellow at the
Nation Institute. This article appears in the current issue of
The Indypendent newspaper. He can be reached at jeremy(AT)democracynow.org
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