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The Business of War


A

mid the military downsizing and increasing number of small conflicts that followed the end of the Cold War, governments turned increasingly to private military companies – a recently coined euphemism for mercenaries – to intervene on their behalf in war zones around the globe. Often, these companies work as proxies for national or corporate interests, whose involvement is buried under layers of secrecy. Entrepreneurs selling arms and companies drilling and mining in unstable regions have prolonged the conflicts.


A nearly two-year investigation by the Center for Public Integrity’s International Consortium of Investigative Journalists has also found that a handful of individuals and companies with connections to governments, multinational corporations and, sometimes, criminal syndicates in the United States, Europe, Africa and the Middle East have profited from this war commerce – a growth industry whose bottom line never takes into account the lives it destroys.


Read more on this subject in ICIJ’s 11-part series, “Making a Killing: The Business of War.”



Release Schedule
ChapterRelease Date
Making a Killing: The Business of War 10/28/2002
Privatizing Combat, the New World Order 10/28/2002
Marketing the New 'Dogs of War' 10/30/2002
Greasing the Skids of Corruption 11/4/2002
The Curious Bonds of Oil Diplomacy 11/6/2002
Conflict Diamonds are Forever 11/8/2002
The Adventure Capitalist 11/11/2002
The Influence Peddlers 11/13/2002
The Field Marshal 11/15/2002
Drugs, Diamonds and Deadly Cargoes 11/18/2002
The Merchant of Death 11/20/2002


 
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