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[osint] Hired Gun Fetish

Beowulf
Fri, 28 Sep 2007 11:00:51 -0700

  

SPIEGEL ONLINE - September 28, 2007, 11:26 AM 
URL: http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,508419,00.html 


Hired Gun Fetish


By Paul Krugman 

As far as I can tell, America has never fought a war in which mercenaries
made up a large part of the armed force, as is the case in Iraq.

Sometimes it seems that the only way to make sense of the Bush
administration is to imagine that it's a vast experiment concocted by mad
political scientists who want to see what happens if a nation systematically
ignores everything we've learned over the past few centuries about how to
make a modern government work.

Thus, the administration has abandoned the principle of a professional,
nonpolitical civil service, stuffing agencies from FEMA to the Justice
Department with unqualified cronies. Tax farming - giving individuals the
right to collect taxes, in return for a share of the take - went out with
the French Revolution; now the tax farmers are back.

And so are mercenaries, whom Machiavelli described as "useless and
dangerous" more than four centuries ago.

As far as I can tell, America has never fought a war in which mercenaries
made up a large part of the armed force. But in Iraq, they are so central to
the effort that, as Peter W. Singer of the Brookings Institution points out
in a new report, "the private military industry has suffered more losses in
Iraq than the rest of the coalition of allied nations combined." 

And, yes, the so-called private security contractors are mercenaries.
They're heavily armed. They carry out military missions, but they're private
employees who don't answer to military discipline. On the other hand, they
don't seem to be accountable to Iraqi or U.S. law, either. And they behave
accordingly.

We may never know what really happened in a crowded Baghdad square two weeks
ago. Employees of Blackwater USA claim that they were attacked by gunmen.
Iraqi police and witnesses say that the contractors began firing randomly at
a car that didn't get out of their way.

What we do know is that more than 20 civilians were killed, including the
couple and child in the car. And the Iraqi version of events is entirely
consistent with many other documented incidents involving security
contractors.

For example, Mr. Singer reminds us that in 2005 "armed contractors from the
Zapata firm were detained by U.S. forces, who claimed they saw the private
soldiers indiscriminately firing not only at Iraqi civilians, but also U.S.
Marines." The contractors were not charged. In 2006, employees of Aegis,
another security firm, posted a "trophy video" on the Internet that showed
them shooting civilians, and employees of Triple Canopy, yet another
contractor, were fired after alleging that a supervisor engaged in "joy-ride
shooting" of Iraqi civilians.

Yet even among the contractors, Blackwater has the worst reputation. On
Christmas Eve 2006, a drunken Blackwater employee reportedly shot and killed
a guard of the Iraqi vice president. (The employee was flown out of the
country, and has not been charged.) In May 2007, Blackwater employees
reportedly shot an employee of Iraq's Interior Ministry, leading to an armed
standoff between the firm and Iraqi police.

Iraqis aren't the only victims of this behavior. Of the nearly 4,000
American service members who have died in Iraq, scores if not hundreds would
surely still be alive if it weren't for the hatred such incidents engender.

Which raises the question, why are Blackwater and other mercenary outfits
still playing such a big role in Iraq?

Don't tell me that they are irreplaceable. The Iraq war has now gone on for
four and a half years - longer than American participation in World War II.
There has been plenty of time for the Bush administration to find a way to
do without mercenaries, if it wanted to.

And the danger out-of-control military contractors pose to American forces
has been obvious at least since March 2004, when four armed Blackwater
employees blundered into Fallujah in the middle of a delicate military
operation, getting themselves killed and precipitating a crisis that
probably ended any chance of an acceptable outcome in Iraq. 

Yet Blackwater is still there. In fact, last year the State Department gave
Blackwater the lead role in diplomatic security in Iraq.

Mr. Singer argues that reliance on private military contractors has let the
administration avoid making hard political choices, such as admitting that
it didn't send enough troops in the first place. Contractors, he writes,
"offered the potential backstop of additional forces, but with no one having
to lose any political capital." That's undoubtedly part of the story.

But it's also worth noting that the Bush administration has tried to
privatize every aspect of the U.S. government it can, using taxpayers' money
to give lucrative contracts to its friends - people like Erik Prince, the
owner of Blackwater, who has strong Republican connections. You might think
that national security would take precedence over the fetish for
privatization - but remember, President Bush tried to keep airport security
in private hands, even after 9/11.

So the privatization of war - no matter how badly it works - is just part of
the pattern.



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