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The
Privatisation Of War
by
Ian Traynor, The Guardian, December 10, 2003
Private corporations have penetrated western warfare so deeply
that they are now the second biggest contributor to coalition
forces in Iraq after the Pentagon, a Guardian investigation has
established. While the official coalition figures list the British
as the second largest contingent with around 9,900 troops, they
are narrowly outnumbered by the 10,000 private military contractors
now on the ground.
The
investigation has also discovered that the proportion of contracted
security personnel in the firing line is 10 times greater than
during the first Gulf war. In 1991, for every private contractor,
there were about 100 servicemen and women; now there are 10.
The
private sector is so firmly embedded in combat, occupation and
peacekeeping duties that the phenomenon may have reached the point
of no return: the US military would struggle to wage war without
it.
While
reliable figures are difficult to come by and governmental accounting
and monitoring of the contracts are notoriously shoddy, the US
army estimates that of the $87bn (£50.2bn) earmarked this
year for the broader Iraqi campaign, including central Asia and
Afghanistan, one third of that, nearly $30bn, will be spent on
contracts to private companies.
The
myriad military and security companies thriving on this largesse
are at the sharp end of a revolution in military affairs that
is taking us into unknown territory - the partial privatisation
of war.
"This
is a trend that is growing and Iraq is the high point of the trend,"
said Peter Singer, a security analyst at Washington's Brookings
Institution. "This is a sea change in the way we prosecute
warfare. There are historical parallels, but we haven't seen them
for 250 years."
When
America launched its invasion in March, the battleships in the
Gulf were manned by US navy personnel. But alongside them sat
civilians from four companies operating some of the world's most
sophisticated weapons systems.
When
the unmanned Predator drones, the Global Hawks, and the B-2 stealth
bombers went into action, their weapons systems, too, were operated
and maintained by non-military personnel working for private companies.
The
private sector is even more deeply involved in the war's aftermath.
A US company has the lucrative contracts to train the new Iraqi
army, another to recruit and train an Iraqi police force.
But
this is a field in which British companies dominate, with nearly
half of the dozen or so private firms in Iraq coming from the
UK.
The
big British player in Iraq is Global Risk International, based
in Hampton, Middlesex. It is supplying hired Gurkhas, Fijian paramilitaries
and, it is believed, ex-SAS veterans, to guard the Baghdad headquarters
of Paul Bremer, the US overlord, according to analysts.
It
is a trend that has been growing worldwide since the end of the
cold war, a booming business which entails replacing soldiers
wherever possible with highly paid civilians and hired guns not
subject to standard military disciplinary procedures.
The
biggest US military base built since Vietnam, Camp Bondsteel in
Kosovo, was constructed and continues to be serviced by private
contractors. At Tuzla in northern Bosnia, headquarters for US
peacekeepers, everything that can be farmed out to private businesses
has been. The bill so far runs to more than $5bn. The contracts
include those to the US company ITT, which supplies the armed
guards, overwhelmingly US private citizens, at US installations.
In
Israel, a US company supplies the security for American diplomats,
a very risky business. In Colombia, a US company flies the planes
destroying the coca plantations and the helicopter gunships protecting
them, in what some would characterise as a small undeclared war.
In
Kabul, a US company provides the bodyguards to try to save President
Hamid Karzai from assassination, raising questions over whether
they are combatants in a deepening conflict with emboldened Taliban
insurgents.
And
in the small town of Hadzici west of Sarajevo, a military compound
houses the latest computer technology, the war games simulations
challenging the Bosnian army's brightest young officers.
Crucial
to transforming what was an improvised militia desperately fighting
for survival into a modern army fit eventually to join Nato, the
army computer centre was established by US officers who structured,
trained, and armed the Bosnian military. The Americans accomplished
a similar mission in Croatia and are carrying out the same job
in Macedonia.
The
input from the US military has been so important that the US experts
can credibly claim to have tipped the military balance in a region
ravaged by four wars in a decade. But the American officers, including
several four-star generals, are retired, not serving. They work,
at least directly, not for the US government, but for a private
company, Military Professional Resources Inc.
"In
the Balkans MPRI are playing an incredibly critical role. The
balance of power in the region was altered by a private company.
That's one measure of the sea change," said Mr Singer, the
author of a recent book on the subject, Corporate Warriors.
The
surge in the use of private companies should not be confused with
the traditional use of mercenaries in armed conflicts. The use
of mercenaries is outlawed by the Geneva conventions, but no one
is accusing the Pentagon, while awarding more than 3,000 contracts
to private companies over the past decade, of violating the laws
of war.
The
Pentagon will "pursue additional opportunities to outsource
and privatise", the US defence secretary, Donald Rumsfeld,
pledged last year and military analysts expect him to try to cut
a further 200,000 jobs in the armed forces.
It
is this kind of "downsizing" that has fed the growth
of the military private sector.
Since
the end of the cold war it is reckoned that six million servicemen
have been thrown on to the employment market with little to peddle
but their fighting and military skills. The US military is 60%
the size of a decade ago, the Soviet collapse wrecked the colossal
Red Army, the East German military melted away, the end of apartheid
destroyed the white officer class in South Africa. The British
armed forces, notes Mr Singer, are at their smallest since the
Napoleonic wars.
The
booming private sector has soaked up much of this manpower and
expertise.
It
also enables the Americans, in particular, to wage wars by proxy
and without the kind of congressional and media oversight to which
conventional deployments are subject.
>From
the level of the street or the trenches to the rarefied corridors
of strategic analysis and policy-making, however, the problems
surfacing are immense and complex.
One
senior British officer complains that his driver was recently
approached and offered a fortune to move to a "rather dodgy
outfit". Ex-SAS veterans in Iraq can charge up to $1,000
a day.
"There's
an explosion of these companies attracting our servicemen financially,"
said Rear Admiral Hugh Edleston, a Royal Navy officer who is just
completing three years as chief military adviser to the international
administration running Bosnia.
He
said that outside agencies were sometimes better placed to provide
training and resources. "But you should never mix serving
military with security operations. You need to be absolutely clear
on the division between the military and the paramilitary."
"If
these things weren't privatised, uniformed men would have to do
it and that draws down your strength," said another senior
retired officer engaged in the private sector. But he warned:
"There is a slight risk that things can get out of hand and
these companies become small armies themselves."
And
in Baghdad or Bogota, Kabul or Tuzla, there are armed company
employees effectively licensed to kill. On the job, say guarding
a peacekeepers' compound in Tuzla, the civilian employees are
subject to the same rules of engagement as foreign troops.
But
if an American GI draws and uses his weapon in an off-duty bar
brawl, he will be subject to the US judicial military code. If
an American guard employed by the US company ITT in Tuzla does
the same, he answers to Bosnian law. By definition these companies
are frequently operating in "failed states" where national
law is notional. The risk is the employees can literally get away
with murder.
Or
lesser, but appalling crimes. Dyncorp, for example, a Pentagon
favourite, has the contract worth tens of millions of dollars
to train an Iraqi police force. It also won the contracts to train
the Bosnian police and was implicated in a grim sex slavery scandal,
with its employees accused of rape and the buying and selling
of girls as young as 12. A number of employees were fired, but
never prosecuted. The only court cases to result involved the
two whistleblowers who exposed the episode and were sacked.
"Dyncorp
should never have been awarded the Iraqi police contract,"
said Madeleine Rees, the chief UN human rights officer in Sarajevo.
Of
the two court cases, one US police officer working for Dyncorp
in Bosnia, Kathryn Bolkovac, won her suit for wrongful dismissal.
The other involving a mechanic, Ben Johnston, was settled out
of court. Mr Johnston's suit against Dyncorp charged that he "witnessed
co-workers and supervisors literally buying and selling women
for their own personal enjoyment, and employees would brag about
the various ages and talents of the individual slaves they had
purchased".
There
are other formidable problems surfacing in what is uncharted territory
- issues of loyalty, accountability, ideology, and national interest.
By definition, a private military company is in Iraq or Bosnia
not to pursue US, UN, or EU policy, but to make money.
The
growing clout of the military services corporations raises questions
about an insidious, longer-term impact on governments' planning,
strategy and decision-taking.
Mr
Singer argues that for the first time in the history of the modern
nation state, governments are surrendering one of the essential
and defining attributes of statehood, the state's monopoly on
the legitimate use of force.
But
for those on the receiving end, there seems scant alternative.
"I
had some problems with some of the American generals," said
Enes Becirbasic, a Bosnian military official who managed the Bosnian
side of the MPRI projects to build and arm a Bosnian army. "It's
a conflict of interest. I represent our national interest, but
they're businessmen. I would have preferred direct cooperation
with state organisations like Nato or the Organisation for Security
and Cooperation in Europe. But we had no choice. We had to use
MPRI."
Source:
http://politics.guardian.co.uk/
foreignaffairs/story/0,11538,1103724,00.html
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