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You are here: Frontpage > Issues > 2452 >
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The outsourcing of
military operations to private companies is a growth area of the
defence industry. Frida Berrigan reports on the insidious
profiteering.
A growth industry
Frida Berrigan
In January 2003, as plans for war in Iraq mounted, US defence
secretary Donald Rumsfeld ruled out re-initiating the military
draft, saying, "there is no need for it at all. It seems to me that
the way we're currently organised and operating is vastly
preferable. We have people serving today - God bless them - because
they volunteered." In some sense he is right, the compulsory
draft was eliminated in the United States in 1973. However,
Rumsfeld's comment misses two important points with regards to
military service. The first is that while the draft is no longer
legal, the "poverty draft" is just fine--poor menand women are
enticed into the military by promises of college education, a
career,a leg up out of poverty. These promises seldom materialise.
An equally insidious,but not as well known, aspect of military
service that Rumsfeld fails to mention is agrowing trend towards
privatisation of military operations.
There are about 147,000 U.S. troops
positioned in the Persian Gulf region,about 10,000 in Afghanistan,
and smaller deployments throughout the world. TheUS government
threatens at least one new country almost every day, rotatingbetween
Iran, Syria and North Korea (and throwing in Cuba occasionally, just
tokeep everyone on their toes). At the same time, US troops in Iraq
are homesick,scared, bored, and increasingly vocal in their
frustration at the string of brokenpromises from their superiors
about when they will be able to go home.
So, the Bush administration struggles
with how to project massive militarypower throughout the world
without using the dreaded (and politically suici-dal) d-word--the
draft.
One contractor for ten soldiersIt is not surprising that an
administration headed by a silver spooned business schoolgraduate,
and staffed by former CEOs and draft dodgers, would come up with a
pri-vate sector solution to fill the Pentagon's need for troops on
the front line while atthe same time protecting themselves from
increased criticism about American menand women being killed and
injured there. Private militaries are
not a new idea.But in the post-Cold War era when massive standing
armies can no longer be jus-tified (the United States has cut its
military force from 2 million to about 1.4million in the last ten
years), and the post-9-11 world when the administrationsees new
threats at every turn, all of a sudden private military corporations
are agrowth industry. PW Singer, a
Brookings Institute Fel-low who recently authored Corporate
Warriors: The Rise of the Privatised MilitaryIndustry, notes that
there are some 20,000 employees of private military
corporations(PMCs) working as part of the US/UK occupation force in
Iraq and the sur-rounding region. That is one private military
employee for every ten soldiers. Twenty
years ago there were ten PMCs operating in the United States, now
thereare more than 30, and recently a number of them have been
absorbed into Fortune500 companies like L-3 Communications (which
owns MPRI--a consultancy set upby former US generals, which
allegedly conceived Operation Storm, perhaps theCroatian army's most
vicious and humanrights abusing campaign of the Croat-Serb war
during the 1990s) and Northrop Grumman (which owns the Vinnell
Cor-poration). Between 1994 and 2002, the Pentagon entered into
3,000 contractswith private military firms, for a total of $300
billion in business. And the United
States is not the only country with PMCs. According to
theInternational Consortium of Investigative Journalists, there are
more than 90 pri-vate military corporations (or PMCs) operating in
over 110 countries. In thelast decade, these companies have grown
from marginalised and maligned merce-naries to a thriving industry
with its own trade association, called the International Peace
Operations Association, and morethan a $100 billion in annual
revenue.
Maintaining weaponsPrivate employees now fill critical
roles for the United States military, providingservices and
consultation on everything from high tech warfare skills to
commu-nications, aerial surveillance, logistical support,
battlefield planning and train-ing. Civilians contracted with PMCs
fly fighter planes and perform routine main-tenance on a wide array
of military platforms and weapons systems. They alsodeliver mail and
empty trashcans. At this point, the Pentagon cannot not use PMCs.In
a July 2003 article titled Soldiers of Good Fortune, author Barry
Yeoman writ-ing for The Independent Weekly estimates that troops
rely on PMCs for maintenanceof 28% of all weapons systems.
The Bush administration would like tosee
that increased to 50%. Washington has wholeheartedly embrace
privatisationas cheaper, faster and more efficient and has sought to
turn over a whole swathe ofgovernment operations to private
companies. In fact, President Bush's "Competi-tive Sourcing
Initiative" has identified 850,000 federal jobs that could be
turnedover to the private sector.
A great record?But the benefits promised in privatisation
have not been quick to materialise. Justask the men of the Calvary
Regiment in east Baghdad. Months after their superiorssigned $8
million contracts with Kellogg Brown and Root (a subsidiary of
VicePresident Dick Cheney's former company Halliburton) to provide
troop housing,this army unit (and many others) is still living in
hot cramped temporary shelters.It turns out that Kellogg Brown and
Root can't pay the skyrocketing insurance ratesneeded to send
civilian contractors into the war-zone to erect the housing units.
Bechtel, the San Francisco services
giant, is a great example of why privatecompanies do not always do a
better job than government contractors.
In mid April the US Agency for
International Development granted Bechtel aninitial 18-month
contract worth up to $680 million to repair power
generationfacilities, electrical grids, water and sewage systems and
airport facilities as part of the rebuilding effort in Iraq.
Ascriticism about the secretive nature of the bidding process
mounted, USAID offi-cials responded that Bechtel is the best company
for the job. But it only takes aquick glance at the company's track
record to contradict these claims.
Bechtel was the major contractor on
Boston's "Big Dig" highway project,which has been plagued with cost
overruns, scandals and mismanagement. Thecompany said they could do
the job for $2.5 billion in 1985, but the citizens ofBoston are
being slammed with a $14.6 billion bill for the still unfinished
project.An investigation by The Boston Globe found that two-thirds
of the cost overrunsare directly tied to Bechtel mismanagement and
error. USAID administrator Andrew
Natsios, who oversaw the bidding contracts in Iraq,headed the "Big
Dig" construction process in Boston and in that capacity should
havebeen very well-versed in Bechtel's less than efficient track
record there. Bostonians are not the
only ones saddled with Bechtel's high bills and lousywork. The state
of California is still paying for Bechtel's big boo boo at a
SanDiego nuclear power plant. The company installed one of the
reactors back to front. With these and
countless other examples it becomes clear that Bechtel did notwin
the Iraq construction contracts because of its stellar work record,
butbecause of its star-studded board of directors and other
political connections. JackSheehan, a senior vice president at
Bechtel, is a member of the Defence PolicyBoard, an advisory board
that enjoys close relationships with the Pentagon and theWhite
House. Another senior vice president, Daniel Chao, serves on
advisoryboard of the US Export-Import Bank. And just two months
before war, presidentBush appointed Riley Bechtel, the 104th richest
man in the world and the CEO ofBechtel, to his Export Council where
he is now offering advice about how to createmarkets for US
companies overseas.
Serving a purposeClearly, PMCs are not more efficient and
they not cheaper. But they do serve a pur-pose at a time when
Americans are critically conscious of what the war is costingin
terms of lives and blood. Bringing in private military personnel
seems like oneway of dampening opposition to war in the United
States. As the administration faces
growing opposition to the war from military fami-lies and the troops
themselves, and the deaths of US military personnel in Iraq isthe
top news on every channel, one group being targeted by the armed
Iraqi resis-tance is escaping mainstream media attention. Civilians
working for private militarycorporations in Iraq and elsewhere are
being killed, but it is not creating a mediastorm or demonstrations
in the street. On 5 August an American
civilian,working for Kellogg Brown and Root (a subsidiary of
Halliburton), was killed inIraq as he drove his mail truck near
Tikrit. There was very little coverage.
In May of this year the Vinnell compound
in Saudi Arabia was bombed in aterrorist attack. Nine employees were
killed and scores more injured. There wasvery little coverage.
Vinnell is a subsidiary of military contractor NorthropGrumman and
is under contract to the US army to provide training services tothe
Saudi Arabian National Guard.
Plausible deniabilityThis strategy has worked in the past.
In the last ten years, eight DynCorp employ-ees have been killed in
Colombia and many more have been taken hostage.These stories rarely
make the evening news. A former US military officer, speak-ing off
the record with the Dallas Morning News about the role of private
militarycontractors in Colombia, emphasised this lack of attention
to casualties as a majorbenefit of outsourcing military operations.
He said that the "exposure risks for UncleSam" are greatly reduced
when private contractors instead of US troops are used."The life is
certainly just as important, whether it's a contract employee or a
sol-dier. But exposure-wise, whoa, it's much less... If something
goes wrong, it'simportant for Washington to be able to say, `there
wasn't a soldier killed'". Daniel
Nelson, a former professor of military-civilian relations at the
Depart-ment of Defence's Marshall European Centre for Security
Studies, notes that privatemilitary corporations help the
administration "create what we used to call `plausibledeniability'"
about controversial missions.
Avoiding scrutiny?In the US it is pretty easy to deny the
use of private military corporations wheneven Congress has no idea
how many PMCs are operating where and what theyare doing. The
Pentagon is authorised to sign contracts with PMCs for up to
$50million without seeking Congressional approval, and without even
notifyingCongress. Because so many different departments are signing
contracts all thetime, the Pentagon itself does not know how many
PMCs it has on contract at anygiven moment.
The Times Picayune reported in
early August that because of the overlapping contracts and multiple
contracting officesthe Pentagon cannot keep track of how much money
they are spending on privatemilitary contractors. White House Budget
Director Joshua Bolten recentlyadmitted that he could not even
estimate the costs of keeping troops in Iraq for fiscalyear 2004,
which begins on 1 October.
Representative Janice
Schakowsky(Democrat for Illinois) asks, "Are we outsourcing
[military operations] in order toavoid public scrutiny, controversy
or embarrassment? Is it to hide body bagsfrom the media and thus
shield them from public opinion? Or is it to providedeniability
because these private contractors are not covered by the same rules
asactive duty US service persons." It
seems like the answer is all three.
Frida Berrigan is the Senior Research Associate
for the World Policy Institute. World Policy Institute, 66
Fifth Ave-9th Floor, New York, NY 10011, USA (+1 212 229 5808; fax
229 5579; email BerrigaF@newschool.edu; http://www.worldpolicy.org/projects/arms
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